Tag: michaela-watkins

  • Movie Review: ‘Heart Eyes’

    The Heart Eyes killer from Screen Gems and Spyglass Media Group's 'Heart Eyes'. Photo: Christopher Moss.
    The Heart Eyes killer from Screen Gems and Spyglass Media Group’s ‘Heart Eyes’. Photo: Christopher Moss.

    ‘Heart Eyes’ receives 6.5 out of 10 stars.

    Opening in theaters February 7 is ‘Heart Eyes,’ directed by Josh Ruben and starring Olivia Holt, Mason Gooding, Gigi Zumbado, Michaela Watkins, Devon Sawa, and Jordana Brewster.

    Related Article: Jordana Brewster Talks ‘Cellar Door’ and Upcoming ‘Fast X: Part 2’

    Initial Thoughts

    The Heart Eyes killer from Screen Gems and Spyglass Media Group's 'Heart Eyes'. Photo: Christopher Moss.
    The Heart Eyes killer from Screen Gems and Spyglass Media Group’s ‘Heart Eyes’. Photo: Christopher Moss.

    Forget “elevated” horror. The last few years have seen a new crop of self-aware horror comedies populated (in varying degrees) by likable if often socially inept protagonists, copious amounts of gore played for laughs, a smattering of pop culture references, and a deluge of ironic needle drops. Think ‘Happy Death Day,’ ‘Freaky,’ and ‘It’s a Wonderful Knife,’ and now add ‘Heart Eyes’ to that list.

    It shouldn’t come as a surprise that two of the writers of ‘Heart Eyes’ are Christopher Landon, who directed and wrote ‘Death Day’ and ‘Freaky,’ and Michael Kennedy, who co-wrote ‘Freaky’ and penned ‘Knife.’ With director Josh Ruben (‘Werewolves Within’) at the helm, much of ‘Heart Eyes’ feels a lot in tone and aesthetic like those other films. ‘Heart Eyes’ is entertaining, with two charismatic leads at its center and a number of laughs (if no real scares), but it also feels like it adheres to a formula set down by those earlier pictures (and even going back to the likes of ‘Scream’) without adding any particularly new wrinkles.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Jordana Brewster as Detective Jeanine, director Josh Ruben, and Mason Gooding as Jay on the set of Screen Gems and Spyglass Media Group's 'Heart Eyes'. Photo: Christopher Moss.
    (L to R) Jordana Brewster as Detective Jeanine, director Josh Ruben, and Mason Gooding as Jay on the set of Screen Gems and Spyglass Media Group’s ‘Heart Eyes’. Photo: Christopher Moss.

    If there is anything different about ‘Heart Eyes,’ it’s that the film more or less functions as a rom-com in conjunction with its slasher narrative. The latter is introduced in the opening scene, when a couple and their photographer are turned into bloody human debris by the title killer, who strikes on Valentine’s Day (a nod to slasher classics like ‘My Bloody Valentine’) and wears a pretty neat mask with two glowing hearts as eyes (which also nicely double as night-vision goggles). HEK, as the murderer is known, tends to visit various cities and slice up as many romantic couples as possible on the annual holiday for reasons that chattering heads on news programs endlessly debate.

    While weary detectives Hobbs (Devon Sawa) and Shaw (Jordana Brewster) – yes, you read that rather pointless ‘Fast and Furious’ reference right – try to determine who HEK is before he lays more waste to the dating scene in Seattle, we switch to the rom-com portion of our story, in which recently single marketing exec Ally (Olivia Holt) has a meet-cute (with a bit of blood involved) in a coffee shop with the outrageously handsome, alluring Jay (Mason Gooding). But the “cute” part dissipates when Ally finds out a short time later that Jay has been hired by her boss (Michaela Watkins) to salvage a Valentine’s Day campaign launched by Ally that rather tastelessly links the holiday to dead lovers.

    Jay pours on the charm despite their new circumstances, while Ally – who has some rather bitter opinions about love – wants to keep things professional even though she’s attracted to her new colleague. She slips up, however, when she spontaneously kisses Jay during a chance meeting with her ex and his new squeeze. That lip-lock, unfortunately, is also spied by the Heart Eyes Killer, who mistakes Jay and Ally for a real couple and decides to set his glowing sights on them – even as they try to convince him otherwise as they attempt to fight him and his formidable array of deadly weapons off.

    (L to R) Gigi Zumbado as Monica, and Olivia Holt as Ally in Screen Gems and Spyglass Media Group's 'Heart Eyes'. Photo: Christopher Moss.
    (L to R) Gigi Zumbado as Monica, and Olivia Holt as Ally in Screen Gems and Spyglass Media Group’s ‘Heart Eyes’. Photo: Christopher Moss.

    The plot takes a few twists and turns from there, with Jay briefly (and implausibly) considered a suspect in the killings and a few red herrings thrown into the mix. The violence is grisly but handled in glib fashion (although we’re getting a bit tired of the “camera pulls back through a bloody hole in a body” shot), designed to generate both laughs and groans of disgust, and while the movie does pick up a decent amount of energy and momentum, it develops a stop-and-start quality in its third (and fourth, sort of) acts, with a too-long sequence in a police station and a convoluted, not especially impressive climactic revelation of who’s behind HEK’s mask and what their game is.

    Even if the slasher tropes feel a little threadbare, the rom-com conventions actually help pick the film up, from a “getting dressed for a date” montage to a ticking-clock pursuit in an airport. On the other hand, an extended slaughter at a drive-in feels labored (it goes on forever with HEK openly filleting people and not a cop in sight), as does the ending, a fault more on the page than in Ruben’s mostly efficient direction, which offers up some imaginative setpieces and kills earlier on.

    The Cast

    (L to R) Olivia Holt as Ally and Mason Gooding as Jay in Screen Gems and Spyglass Media Group's 'Heart Eyes'. Photo: Christopher Moss.
    (L to R) Olivia Holt as Ally and Mason Gooding as Jay in Screen Gems and Spyglass Media Group’s ‘Heart Eyes’. Photo: Christopher Moss.

    Singer and actress Olivia Holt rose through the Disney and Freeform ranks (doing time in Marvel series ‘Cloak and Dagger’ and ‘Runaways’) before graduating to her first slasher comedy vehicle opposite Kiernan Shipka in 2023’s ‘Totally Killer.’ The young thespian clearly has chops as she balances the many sides of the surprisingly well-written Ally. She’s terrific at the physical comedy and double-takes, while also bringing needed vulnerability and empathy to a woman whose views on love have been soured in both her childhood and adult life.

    Holt has fine presence and a real spark, and importantly shares great chemistry with Gooding, who’s been a supporting player in the recent ‘Scream’ outings but hasn’t really had a chance to shine. He gets his chance here, not only playing well off Holt but bringing shades of complexity to a role that could have easily been one-dimensional. Jay’s unabashed but non-toxic romanticism has its own troubled origins, and the fact that he and Ally come to each other from extreme ends of the emotional spectrum makes the tension between them both palpable and affecting.

    Gigi Zumbado blasts off like a rocket as Ally’s best friend, Monica, although her character rehashes the “brash best friend” trope that also seems to be a staple of recent horror-comedy fare. What she lacks in depth she makes up in charisma and good humor, although there could be more to the character. Meanwhile, Michaela Watkins channels a more dazed ‘Devil Wears Prada’-era Meryl Streep as Ally’s boss, and while it’s nice to see Jordana Brewster get out of the shadow of the ‘Fast and Furious’ franchise, her Detective Shaw has dating and motivational problems of her own.

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R) Jordana Brewster as Detective Jeanine, Devon Sawa as Detective Zeke Hobbs and Mason Gooding as Jay in Screen Gems and Spyglass Media Group's 'Heart Eyes'. Photo: Christopher Moss.
    (L to R) Jordana Brewster as Detective Jeanine, Devon Sawa as Detective Zeke Hobbs and Mason Gooding as Jay in Screen Gems and Spyglass Media Group’s ‘Heart Eyes’. Photo: Christopher Moss.

    As slasher comedies go, ‘Heart Eyes’ is a perfectly good time. The leads are effortlessly watchable and appealing, the kills channel some of the macabre fun inherent in the best of the genre, and Josh Ruben manages to maintain a consistent level of energy throughout the proceedings. Yet the tone fluctuates here and there, and the script is less sharply written than some of its predecessors and even current genre cousins like ‘Companion,’ resulting in a film with a muddled message.

    If it’s a hit, however, you might expect to see those glowing heart eyes again at some point, and in the meantime we hope that the likes of Landon, Kennedy, Ruben, et al. don’t settle for formula as they further explore genre mash-ups like this.

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    What is the plot of ‘Heart Eyes’?

    Professional colleagues Ally (Olivia Holt) and Jay (Mason Gooding) find themselves trying to outwit and outrun the Heart Eyes killer, who slaughters couples on Valentine’s Day and mistakes the pair for romantic partners.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Heart Eyes’?

    • Olivia Holt as Ally McCabe
    • Mason Gooding as Jay Simmonds
    • Gigi Zumbado as Monica
    • Michaela Watkins as Crystal Cane
    • Devon Sawa as Detective Zeke Hobbs
    • Jordana Brewster as Detective Jeanine Shaw
    Screen Gems and Spyglass Media Group's 'Heart Eyes'.
    Screen Gems and Spyglass Media Group’s ‘Heart Eyes’.

    List of Jordana Brewster Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Jordana Brewster Movies On Amazon

  • ‘The American Society of Magical Negroes’ Cast Interview

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    Opening in theaters on March 15th is the new comedy ‘The American Society of Magical Negroes,’ which was written and directed by Kobi Libii (‘We Broke Up’) and stars Justice Smith (‘Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves’), David Alan Grier (‘Boomerang’), An-Li Bogan (‘After Yang’), Rupert Friend (‘Asteroid City‘), and Nicole Byer (‘Ruby Gillman, Teenage Kraken’).

    Related Article: ‘The American Society of Magical Negroes’ Exclusive Featurette

    Justice Smith and An-Li Bogan talk 'The American Society of Magical Negroes.'
    (L to R) Justice Smith and An-Li Bogan talk ‘The American Society of Magical Negroes.’

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Justice Smith and An-Li Bogan about their work on ‘The American Society of Magical Negroes,’ Smith’s first reaction to the screenplay, collaborating with director Kobi Libii, Bogan’s character and her relationship with Smith’s Aren, and working with legendary comedic actor David Alan Grier.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Smith and Bogan, Nicole Byer, and director Kobi Libii.

    Director of photography Doug Emmett, actor Justice Smith and writer/director Kobi Libii on the set of 'The American Society of Magical Negroes,' a Focus Features release.
    (L to R) Director of photography Doug Emmett, actor Justice Smith and writer/director Kobi Libii on the set of ‘The American Society of Magical Negroes,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Tobin Yelland / Focus Features.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Justice, can you talk about your first reaction to the screenplay and what were some of the aspects of this character that you were excited to explore on screen?

    Justice Smith: I got sent the script. I was going to workshop it with Kobi at the Sundance Labs. He invited me out there, and when I first read it, I was like, “Oh, this is my experience. I could lend so much to this character because I understand this arc.” I think I knew how to play the specific complicated feelings, the specific rabbit hole that Aren was in, of feeling discomfort, trying to mitigate that discomfort by appeasing, but then indirectly allowing them to treat him in a way that, again, which makes him uncomfortable. So, I understood that vicious cycle and I understood how complicated that makes you feel. So, I knew I could do it. I knew I could lend myself to it.

    Writer/director Kobi Libii (right) on the set of 'The American Society of Magical Negroes,' a Focus Features release.
    Writer/director Kobi Libii (right) on the set of ‘The American Society of Magical Negroes,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Anne Marie Fox / Focus Features.

    MF: To follow up, director Kobi Libii has said that he based the character of Aren on his own life experiences. Did you feel at times like you were playing a version of Kobi?

    JS: Yes, but only because I was playing myself. I’m so grateful because it’s the first time I worked with a director who looked like me and understood my specific racial experience and it was cathartic. I had never worked with someone who I didn’t have to explain myself to and it was freeing, and it allowed me to just explore what he wrote and bring my truth to it, which was fortunately, very similar to his truth. So, if anything, I was just playing myself.

    An-Li Bogan as "Lizzie" and Justice Smith as "Aren" in director Kobi Libii's 'The American Society of Magical Negroes,' a Focus Features release. Credit: Tobin Yelland / Focus Features.
    (L to R) An-Li Bogan as “Lizzie” and Justice Smith as “Aren” in director Kobi Libii’s ‘The American Society of Magical Negroes,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Tobin Yelland / Focus Features.

    MF: An-Li, can you talk about your approach to playing Lizzie, and the relationship she forms with Aren?

    An-Li Bogan: Kind of similarly to Justice, a lot of Lizzie felt like she was already in me, so that was great. That was easy just for day one. Then actually getting to work with Kobi in rehearsals and on set, he just included who I was into the character and the development of the character. I feel like he kind of did that too for our relationship. We were allowed to bring ourselves. We weren’t trying to hit certain points necessarily and how they connected, it came very naturally. I feel like we were given a lot of freedom to be comfortable and to be ourselves and that was important for playing these characters.

    Justice Smith as "Aren", David Alan Grier as "Roger" and Aisha Hinds as "Gabbard" in writer/director Kobi Libii's 'The American Society of Magical Negroes,' a Focus Features release.
    (L to R) Justice Smith as “Aren”, David Alan Grier as “Roger” and Aisha Hinds as “Gabbard” in writer/director Kobi Libii’s ‘The American Society of Magical Negroes,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Tobin Yelland/Focus Features.

    MF: Finally, Justice can you talk about working with the great David Alan Grier and the friendship that forms between Aren and Roger?

    JS: David is incredibly funny off-screen as he is on. He would tease me constantly, bully me constantly on set, and make fun of me. But he’s just surprisingly caring. He would send me gospel music, which was cool. It was amazing to work with him because I couldn’t really hold myself together when he would do his scenes because he’s very funny. But also, I feel like he taught me a lot in a similar way that Roger teaches Aren, where Roger mentors him. I felt that same mentorship from David.

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    What is the Plot of ‘The American Society of Magical Negroes’?

    Aren (Justice Smith) is recruited into a magical society of African Americans to follow their lifelong cause: to make the lives of white people easier.

    Who is in the Cast of ‘The American Society of Magical Negroes’?

    'The American Society of Magical Negroes,' a Focus Features release.
    ‘The American Society of Magical Negroes,’ a Focus Features release.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘The American Society of Magical Negroes’:

    Buy Justice Smith Movies on Amazon

     

  • Movie Review: ‘You Hurt My Feelings’

    Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Beth in A24's 'You Hurt My Feelings.'
    Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Beth in A24’s ‘You Hurt My Feelings.’

    In theaters May 26th, ‘You Hurt My Feelings’ represents a reunion for director Nicole Holofcener and star Julia Louis-Dreyfus, and a welcome one at that.

    In an era when adult dramas and comedies have a hard time finding space between giant franchise behemoths crowding the multiplex, it’s reassuring to know that ‘You Hurt My Feelings’ represents the latest reliable low-key laugh-grabber from Holofcener, who specializes in stories of characters obsessed with their emotional and life status, whose worlds are thrown for a loop by unexpected circumstances.

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    What’s the story of ‘You Hurt My Feelings’?

    The film charts the emotional rollercoaster of married couple Louis-Dreyfus’ Beth (a writer whose memoir was published to some acclaim and whose latest book, a work of fiction, is still in progress) and Don (Tobias Menzies), a therapist who is losing faith in his ability to counsel his increasingly dissatisfied patients and in his own appearance.

    Their seemingly happy, if slightly rut-riding marriage is plunged into disarray when Beth overhears Don telling brother-in-law Mark (Arian Moayed) that he doesn’t really like her new novel after reading many drafts. Stunned, Beth begins to question whether he’s ever truly been honest with her, and how real she has been with others in her life, including sister Sarah (Michaela Watkins) and son Eliot (Owen Teague), an aspiring writer himself currently biding his time managing a New York cannabis store.

    As the ripples of the unlikely drama spread out through both partners’ work and family groups, real truths start to swim to the surface of this seemingly happy relationship.

    Jeannie Berlin as Georgia in A24's 'You Hurt My Feelings.'
    Jeannie Berlin as Georgia in A24’s ‘You Hurt My Feelings.’

    Who else is in the movie?

    Aside from the leads, Holofcener’s latest also features Jeannie Berlin as Beth and Sarah’s grouchy mother Georgia, Amber Tamblyn, David Cross, Zach Cherry and Sarah Steele among Don’s patients, plus Bryan Reynoso, Karolena Greenidge, Doug Moe, Lynnsey Lewis and Claudia Robinson.

    Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Beth and director Nicole Holofcener on the set of A24's 'You Hurt My Feelings.'
    (L to R) Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Beth and director Nicole Holofcener on the set of A24’s ‘You Hurt My Feelings.’

    Related Article: Movie Review: ‘You People’

    A welcome reunion

    The biggest advantage that ‘Feelings’ has –– beyond Holofcener’s typically incisive, funny script and subtle direction –– is her welcome reunion with Louis-Dreyfus after 2013’s ‘Enough Said’. She may have some way to go to be a Holofcener collaborator on the scale of, say, Catherine Keener, but the two have clearly found a solid vibe.

    As Beth, Louis-Dreyfus switches tracks from (mostly) contented wife and mother to puddle of neuroses, perfectly conveying the sort of nervy artistic character yearning for approval from those around them and saddled with a mother (Berlin’s Georgia is more of a standard character type but gives her layers) who is never quite satisfied. Louis-Dreyfus sells every moment of Beth’s journey, turning what could be a frustrating archetype into a relatable woman. She’s given more to do than, say, her turn as Jonah Hill’s overzealous Jewish mother in ‘You People’.

    Tobias Menzies as Don in A24's 'You Hurt My Feelings.'
    Tobias Menzies as Don in A24’s ‘You Hurt My Feelings.’

    As Don, meanwhile, British actor Menzies is also great. Far from being a stock husband in a movie like this, he has his own inner life and a clutch of funny, grumpy therapy clients with their own issues (Cross and Tamblyn bring humorous real-life married couple energy to two of them) and is the perfect twitchy complement to Beth. It’s also entertaining how he’s the sort of therapist quick to offer advice to others about how to figure out their relationships but seemingly stymied by the mildest issue arising in his own.

    And their marriage comes across as realistic and nuanced, rather than schticky, even when in the midst of their disagreement.

    Yet while Beth and Don are the focus, the film shares the care and attention beyond them, building up Watkins’ Sarah and her frustrations as an interior designer, picking out ever more ridiculous/ugly lamps for a choosy client (Clara Wong’s Ali), and questioning whether she’d be better off ditching the job and finding something more meaningful. Moayed, meanwhile, Sarah’s schlubby actor husband, is dealing with his own career crisis. Mildly successful in movies, he’s now struggling with his latest job in the theater and beginning to wonder whether acting is something he should do at all. More normally found being much slicker and successful on ‘Succession’, Moayed is a great fourth pillar in the central story.

    Tobias Menzies as Don and Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Beth in A24's 'You Hurt My Feelings.'
    (L to R) Tobias Menzies as Don and Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Beth in A24’s ‘You Hurt My Feelings.’

    Are there issues?

    As is normal for Holofcener, the stakes are incredibly low-level, seen as a problem only really by the people involved. And there is a chance that will turn off some audiences –– is it really possible to truly empathize with wealthy (or at least comfortable) New Yorkers whining about someone not liking their latest work or feeling let down by their professional choices? Fortunately, the writer/director finds the humanity in these characters, and the various actors give you enough to make you care how their stories turn out.

    Yet in a movie where there are so many well-drawn characters, it’s only really Eliot who suffers from a slightly undernourished take; it’s no fault of Teague, who offers a funny performance, but he really only has one opportunity to shine, in a minor breakdown in front of his parents about how his mother’s encouragement set him up to fail at life.

    But those are relatively minor complaints in the effective new film from a writer/director whose keen sense of comedy and character are undimmed. It’s a pleasure to have new work from Holofcener, and something reliably entertaining for anyone who isn’t drawn to capes fluttering in the wind, or cars racing around the streets.

    It might not be quite on the same level as ‘Enough Said’, or the Oscar-nominated, Melissa McCarthy-starring ‘Can You Ever Forgive Me?’, but ‘You Hurt My Feelings’ is a solid entry in Holofcener’s neuroses-laden character canon.

    ‘You Hurt My Feelings’ receives 7 out of 10 stars.

    Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Beth and Tobias Menzies as Don in A24's 'You Hurt My Feelings.'
    (L to R) Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Beth and Tobias Menzies as Don in A24’s ‘You Hurt My Feelings.’

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    Buy Tickets: ‘You Hurt My Feelings’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Julia Louis-Dreyfus Movies on Amazon

    ‘You Hurt My Feelings’ is produced by Likely Story, and FilmNation Entertainment. It is set to release in theaters on May 26th, 2023.

  • ‘Tiny Beautiful Things’ Interview: Kathryn Hahn

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    Premiering April 7th on Hulu is the new series ‘Tiny Beautiful Things,’ which is based on the novel of the same name by Cheryl Strayed (‘Wild’), and is executive produced by Oscar winners Reese Witherspoon (‘Walk the Line’) and Laura Dern (‘Marriage Story’).

    What is the plot of ‘Tiny Beautiful Things?’

    Based on the best-selling collection by Cheryl Strayed, ‘Tiny Beautiful Things’ follows Clare (Kathryn Hahn) a floundering writer who becomes a revered advice columnist while her own life is falling apart. When we first meet Clare, her marriage to her husband Danny (Quentin Plair) is barely limping along; her teenage daughter, Rae (Tanzyn Crawford), is pushing her away; and her once-promising writing career is non-existent.

    So when an old writing pal asks her to take over as the advice columnist Dear Sugar, she thinks she has no business giving anyone advice. After reluctantly taking on the mantle of Sugar however, Clare’s life unfurls in a complex fabric of memory, exploring her most pivotal moments from childhood through present day, and excavating the beauty, struggle, and humor in her unhealed wounds. Through Sugar, Clare forms a salve for her readers – and for herself – to show us that we are not beyond rescue, that our stories can ultimately save us, and, perhaps, bring us back home.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Tiny Beautiful Things?’

    ‘Tiny Beautiful Things’ stars Kathryn Hahn (‘Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery’) as Clare, Sarah Pidgeon (‘Gotham’) as young Clare, Quentin Plair (‘The Good Doctor’) as Danny, Tanzyn Crawford (’Servant’) as Rae, Merritt Wever (‘Michael Clayton’) as Frankie, and Michaela Watkins (‘Paint’) as Amy.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Kathryn Hahn about her work on ‘Tiny Beautiful Things,’ what excited her about the role, Clare’s decision to become Sugar, and working with actress Sarah Pidgeon to create both versions of Clare as one seamless character.

    Kathryn Hahn as Clare in Hulu's 'Tiny Beautiful Things.'
    Kathryn Hahn as Clare in Hulu’s ‘Tiny Beautiful Things.’ Photo: Jessica Brooks/Hulu.

    You can read our full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Hahn, Sarah Pidgeon, Quentin Plair and Tanzyn Crawford, and series creator Liz Tigelaar and author Cheryl Strayed.

    Moviefone: To begin with, what were some of the aspects of the character that you were excited to explore with this series?

    Kathryn Hahn: I was excited about her change, about her willingness, and about her courage to change. I was excited about really digging deep into how difficult it is to reframe and re-address how trauma lodges in someone. How hard it is, difficult it is to change as a human especially when you are in a long-term relationship, and especially when you’re a mother or when you’re defined as other things. That felt very compelling to me.

    Kathryn Hahn as Clare in Hulu's 'Tiny Beautiful Things.'
    Kathryn Hahn as Clare in Hulu’s ‘Tiny Beautiful Things.’ Photo: Elizabeth Morris/Hulu.

    Related Article: Aubrey Plaza Joins ‘Agatha: Coven of Chaos’

    MF: Can you talk about Clare’s decision to become Sugar and how that changes her outlook on life and her future?

    KH: I think that’s the inciting incident for her for all of this change. I think that she had always wanted to be a writer, and a lot of that happened to do with her mother’s desire for her to be a writer, her mother who had died when she was very young, and that certainly was a starting point for her. She thought she was unworthy of being a writer, unworthy of any of it because of the self-destruction she had done once her mother died. She kind of threw herself into a pretty nasty degree of self-harm, and so it was impossible for her to see that there was a track back. Then, this man from her past played by the amazing Zak Orth, kind of got her back on track with this opportunity anonymously. I think it was once she started reading the letters and saw the radical, blindingly naked vulnerability in these letters that compelled her. She had no choice but to answer back with her own nakedly vulnerable and honest self in a way that she even was not quite ready to examine in her own voice. It was only through her writing.

    Sarah Pidgeon as young Clare in Hulu's 'Tiny Beautiful Things.'
    Sarah Pidgeon as young Clare in Hulu’s ‘Tiny Beautiful Things.’ Photo: Elizabeth Morris/Hulu.

    MF: Finally, you share your role with actress Sarah Pidgeon, who plays the younger version of Claire. Did you work closely with her to create a seamless performance for the character?

    KH: Sarah Pidgeon is so extraordinary. We did not have much time to work together. I saw her amazing audition tape, and then she was cast. We had a very short workshop together, and that was basically it. She shadowed me, but I wish we had had more time. But she shadowed me, I think, for the first couple of episodes when we didn’t have as many flashbacks. She watched the monitor, and then it was off to the races, but the way you look at her, she had no idea who she was to become. She had no idea what her older self was going to be, so she was playing in this very raw emotional state, like the trauma had just happened. She was in the scene with her mom, so I was able to take a few things from her. 20 years is a long time, I’ve dyed my hair so many times since then, and I also shrank about a foot and a half. I feel like we were able to just seamlessly and wordlessly become one. Our transition seemed so seamless, and we would send each other poems and send each other pieces of music, and it was very nonverbal. I think it kind of worked in our favor because it was very important to me, and I think to Liz as well that it not feel like mimicry because, again, 20 years is a long time. So it just felt very organically and just perfect. I think she’s incredible.

    Kathryn Hahn as Clare in Hulu's 'Tiny Beautiful Things.'
    Kathryn Hahn as Clare in Hulu’s ‘Tiny Beautiful Things.’ Photo: Jessica Brooks/Hulu.

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  • ‘Paint’ Interview: Owen Wilson Talks New Comedy

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    Opening in theaters on April 7th is the new comedy ‘Paint,’ which marks the feature film debut of writer and director Brit McAdams.

    What is the plot of ‘Paint?’

    ‘Paint’ stars Owen Wilson as Carl Nargle, Vermont’s #1 public television painter who is convinced he has it all: a signature perm, custom van, and fans hanging on his every stroke. Everything changes for Carl when the station hires Ambrosia (Ciara Renée), a younger, better artist who begins to steal everything and everyone Carl loves, including his producer and ex-lover, Katherine (Michaela Watkins).

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    Who is in the cast of ‘Paint?’

    ‘Paint’ stars Owen Wilson (‘The Royal Tenenbaums,’ ‘The French Dispatch’) as Carl Nargle, Michaela Watkins (‘Wanderlust’) as Katherine, Ciara Renée (‘DC’s Legends of Tomorrow’) as Ambrosia, Wendi McLendon-Covey (‘Bridesmaids’) as Wendy, Lusia Strus (’50 First Dates’) as Beverly, Elizabeth Loyacano (‘Demolition’) as Alexandra Moore, Stephen Root (‘Office Space’) as Tony, and Lucy Freyer as Jenna.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Owen Wilson about his work on ‘Paint,’ playing Carl Nargle, taking inspiration from Bob Ross, finding the humor in the awkward moments, how Ambrosia threatens Carl’s position of power, and his relationship with Katherine.

    Owen Wilson as Carl Nargle in the comedy film, 'Paint,' an IFC Films release.
    Owen Wilson as Carl Nargle in the comedy film, ‘Paint,’ an IFC Films release. Photo courtesy of IFC Films.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Wilson and writer/director Brit McAdams.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Carl Nargle is based on Bob Ross, but he’s not Bob Ross, he’s his own individual character. Could you talk about the challenges of discovering who Carl really was and what was your approach to playing the character?

    Owen Wilson: Obviously, kind of his look and everything Carl, it’s a nod to Bob Ross, and I think I was a little bit, sort of anxious in the beginning preparing for it. You know, Bob Ross has such a great quality that comes across when you watch him, and I think that explains how he’s endured and how we could with Carl Nargle, explain that he also has people that passionately tune in and watch his show? The script was very specific about his voice having a soothing quality, and it was just trying to get that right. I think because of his look and the idea of everything going perfect in his life, he hasn’t needed to change. That’s why he’s sort of stuck in 1978. It was just a fun, funny character to play.

    Owen Wilson as Carl Nargle in the comedy film, 'Paint,' an IFC Films release.
    Owen Wilson as Carl Nargle in the comedy film, ‘Paint,’ an IFC Films release. Photo courtesy of IFC Films.

    Related Article: Owen Wilson and Walker Scobell Talk ‘Secret Headquarters’

    MF: Some of the funniest moments in the movie come from the characters’ reactions and the way the camera stays on them during the silent awkward moments. Is that where you found the humor of the movie?

    OW: I think some of the awkwardness or the pain of having something like being rejected or not being popular, I think unless you’ve had a pretty incredible life, we’ve all felt that, and that’s a big part of growing up. I don’t think in some ways we ever lose that feeling or can certainly sympathize. Carl, he’s dealing with some of that. It’s funny to me kind of reading it, but of course it’s very painful for him. That I think is what made the character, what I liked about playing it. It’s not winking at the audience. It means everything to Carl.

    Ciara Renée as Ambrosia Long, Owen Wilson as Carl Nargle, and Lucy Freyer as Jenna in the comedy film, 'Paint,' an IFC Films release.
    (L to R) Ciara Renée as Ambrosia Long, Owen Wilson as Carl Nargle, and Lucy Freyer as Jenna in the comedy film, ‘Paint,’ an IFC Films release. Photo courtesy of IFC Films.

    MF: Can you talk about how Carl’s inflated ego and position of power is threatened by the arrival of Ambrosia, and how he reacts to that?

    OW: I think that the reason why Carl looks the way he does and drives the van is because he’s stuck in this time where he began the show and everything has gone so well. So there’s been no reason to change. Then all of a sudden Ambrosia, this new painter, comes along and begins to take everything and everyone that Carl loves. That’s a scary feeling because we all, to some degree can’t help but identify who we are with what we do. So if that’s put in jeopardy, it’s funny to see how people deal with that, struggle with it and react to it.

    Michaela Watkins as Katherine in the comedy film, 'Paint,' an IFC Films release.
    Michaela Watkins as Katherine in the comedy film, ‘Paint,’ an IFC Films release. Photo courtesy of IFC Films.

    MF: Finally, can you talk about Carl’s relationship with Katherine and working on those scenes with Michaela Watkins?

    OW: I know that we had some of the flashback scenes where we’re first becoming romantic, falling in love and even embracing. There’s a scene where I believe I’m kind of stroking her arm and she goes, “Oh, I think that’s the armrest of the van.” Then I’m like, “Oh, okay.” Then I go back to her arm. She’s like, “That’s me, that’s all me.” It was funny, and I think it made us both laugh.

    Owen Wilson stars in 'Paint,' an IFC Films release.
    Owen Wilson stars in ‘Paint,’ an IFC Films release.

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    ‘Paint’ is produced by Silver Lining Entertainment, White Birch Films, Blue Creek Pictures, and Balcony 9 Productions. It is set to release in theaters on April 7, 2023.

  • Jason Mantzoukas on ‘The House,’ Adapting ‘Battling Boy,’ and Playing Pimento

    Premiere Of Warner Bros. Pictures' 'The House' - ArrivalsJason Mantzoukas knows that audience members who spot him in his seemingly ceaseless and always wildly comedic appearances on scores of TV and film projects are more than likely to say, “Oh — that guy!” rather than recognize his name in the screen credits, And he’s totally okay with that.

    A self-described “comedy character actor” and veteran of the revered improv troupe Upright Citizens Brigade, Mantzoukas’s profile has been continuously on the rise for the better part of the past decade-and-a-half thanks to his status as a strategic weapon deployed in all manner of comedies, from TV series like “Parks and Recreation,” “Brooklyn Nine-Nine,” “The League,” “Modern Family,” “Broad City,” “Childrens Hospital,” and “Transparent” to films including “The Dictator,” “Baby Mama,” and “Neighbors.” He also wrote the screenplay for buddy comedy “Ride Along” and frequently appears as his comically well-informed and cinematically erudite self as a host and guest on a number of popular podcasts.

    Now, Mantzoukas has what’s easily his highest profile turn yet, playing a central role opposite his longtime UCB cohort Amy Poehler and Will Ferrell in “The House” — as the couple’s friend who’s reeling in denial over his impending divorce, he offers up his home to be transformed into an underground casino to help raise money for their daughter’s non-existent college fund. Yet, as Mantzoukas reveals to Moviefone, comedy superstardom isn’t at the top of his agenda — making audiences laugh is.

    Moviefone: With this role, you might as well be right up there on the posters with Amy and Will. This is one of the biggest things we’ve seen you in. What did it mean to you to get the opportunity?

    Jason Mantzoukas: It was pretty exciting, and not lost on me. This was an enormous opportunity and certainly a much bigger opportunity than I’d ever been given before. I was so psyched to get it, but also so happy that I got to do it with people that I had worked with before, or have known for a long time, and felt really comfortable and easy. So the minute we started to shoot, it was just easy to kind of flip into the dynamics that we three already have. So it’s pretty terrific.

    You have been a go-to comedic actor for characters that are right on the razor’s edge. Frank in “The House” has a few more dimensions to him. Tell me what’s fun about delving into those characters, and especially with this one, having the opportunity to make him a little more well-rounded.

    The characters that I’ve played, like you’re describing, the guys that kind of pop in and out of TV or movies, your Dennis Feinsteins [on “Parks and Recreation”], your Rafis [on “The League”], your Adrian Pimentos [on “Brooklyn Nine Nine”], these are all characters that bear no emotional responsibility to the stories being told, really. There’s never an episode of “The League” where Rafi is responsible for the plot. In a way, it’s really fun to be freed from that, because you can just, in my case on that show, or in others, you’re really just there to serve as jokes, or to serve as something funny, which is, is there anything funnier? Not really.

    It’s a blast to play those kind of characters. But then there’s something really rewarding in this case with this movie, to kind of trek in a more emotional through line. What I really liked in this movie was, this wasn’t just some kind of maniac character, or some sort of disposable comedy character. This is a guy who was heartbroken, and all of his bad decisions are coming from a place of real pain and loss, and it’s channeled into funny stuff.

    It was really cool to kind of track his emotional growth, and have that relationship with Michaela Watkins’s character be so meaningful to him, and have that really weigh on my character, and try and figure out what that would be like. We’ve all been through the catastrophic breakups in our lives, and we all deal with our heartache and our heartbreak in different ways. It was really fun to channel that kind of heartbreak and heartache into terrible character life decisions. It was really fun and exciting, actually, to have more to do and more … I guess more responsibility is what it ends up being.

    What’s the fun of mining comedy out of aggression and confrontation, and some of those edgier, in-your-face qualities? What do you enjoy about that brand of funny?

    It’s interesting. I don’t necessarily think about it like that. I more think about a lot of my characters as just having different limits than other people. That they are more, I guess they are more aggressive. You’re not wrong. There is something funny about characters who are, I find — I find it very fun to play characters who really are filterless characters who don’t have checks and balances on their emotions or what’s going on with them.

    So for me, that’s what a lot of these people share. A lot of these characters share a certain kind of emotional abandon, or a chaotic nature, that makes them make decisions that are sometimes aggressive, sometimes confrontational, but also, what’s great to me about whether it’s Rafi, or Dennis — maybe less Dennis, but Adrian Pimento, these are people who are really emotionally available.

    So Rafi isn’t just like an aggressive monster, although at times he is, he’s also convinced that all the guys in “The League” are his best friends and is heartbroken when it looks like they might be breaking up or fighting. He’s in equal measure an emotional kind of love friendship aggressive person, as he is an aggressive murder person. All of his emotions are kind of, he’s experiencing them all. Again, he’s like without any kind of ability to stop himself from engaging fully in any emotional feeling that comes his way, which I love.

    As an actor, you’ve really been in a sweet spot. I feel like producers and showrunners see you as a comedy closer. If not a household name, you are definitely recognized by audiences all over. What do you like about that space that you’re occupying right now?

    I’m very lucky to get to work on like some of the best stuff that’s going. I like that people use me on their shows, whether those shows are “Brooklyn,” or whether it’s “Transparent,” or whether it’s any of these kind of — I get a real kick out of doing to do shows that I myself love. Like that’s really exciting to me. It’s a very cool thing.

    And truth be told, I would like a career where I get to work on lots of stuff, and I get to have those people, those directors, those show creators, those producers, whoever, that they want to use me in their stuff. I care about that a lot more than, kind of like you said, being a household name, for example. I think the more and more you become a household name, the less and less you are able to be in a whole bunch of stuff.

    I like kind of getting to be a comedy character actor, and I do think a lot of people get very excited to be like, “Oh, there’s that guy again!” I think most of those people are like, “Oh, there’s that guy again,” more people say that than say, “Oh look, there’s Jason Mantzoukas again.”

    What is, as far as your writing projects, what’s sort of front and center for you right now?

    Right now, front and center, is a movie I’m writing for Paramount called “Battling Boy,” which is an adaptation of a Paul Pope graphic novel. That’s really the primary thing I’m doing right now.

    I’ve read the graphic novel, and always love Paul Pope’s work. What’s got you excited about it?

    I love that book, and the kind of ancillary Aurora West book. I’m a huge Paul Pope fan. What I love about this specifically was that, I love coming-of-age stories. This is, like, really a story that exists in kind of superhero archetype universe, but the stars of it, the leads of it — it’s kind of a Batman/Superman type story, but the Batman character is a 17-year-old girl, and the Superman character’s like a 12-year-old boy.

    That’s, to me, really cool. You’ve got these kids who are, for each of them, it’s a kind of coming-of-age story. He’s on his kind of walkabout year of becoming a man from his culture, and she has just lost her father, and is grappling with kind of becoming an adult, and being forced into adulthood, and what that means. Both of them kind of pushing those two people together is pretty cool and exciting.

    And then, obviously, it’s otherwise a big story with kids fighting monsters, and all that stuff, and has the kind of fairy tale element. So it’s just a lot of stuff that I like all kind of in one place. It’s exciting.

    What character of yours are you excited to play again? You create these memorable characters on all these different shows. Is there one you’re really eager to get another crack at?

    That’s a good question. I have, like, real genuine fondness for a lot of my characters … I’m excited to jump back into “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” next year. I love playing Pimento. I love playing Pimento, but I also love, frankly, I love playing Pimento with that ensemble of actors. I love doing Adrian Pimento scenes with Andre Braugher, or with people who you’re like, “This is a funny juxtaposition of energy. Mostly I get excited to just work with those people again.

    I love Dr. Steve on “Transparent.” Again, it’s such a fun character, but what I love about it is getting to play with all those actors.

    “The House” is in theaters now.

  • Michaela Watkins Takes ‘Casual’ in Bold New Directions for Season 3

    US-ENTERTAINMENT-HULU-UPFRONTThere’s nothing casual happening in Michaela Watkins‘s career.

    As the actress/writer’s critically lauded streaming series “Casual” returns for a surprising third season on Hulu — surprising in that the final episode of the second season appeared to satisfyingly tie up the show’s central storylines — she remains one of Hollywood’s consistent go-to talents: she maintains a unique, multi-character recurring role on Amazon’s “Transparent,” is an in-demand TV guest actor with recent appearances on “Speechless,” “Nobodies” and “Angie Tribeca,” and has a busy slate of film work as well in movies like the recent “How to Be a Latin Lover” and the upcoming Will Ferrell/Amy Poehler comedy “The House.”

    Somewhere in there Watkins found a few spare moments to sit down with Moviefone to discuss the return of “Casual” and take a look at the unique, diverse creative run she’s been enjoying.

    Moviefone: With this show, you get this spectacular and potentially series-ending Season 2 finale that brought every bit of emotion out of you and the viewers — and then you get another season. What was your immediate thought once you knew you were coming back?

    Michaela Watkins: That’s a great question. It was multi-fold: I felt like one of those things, remember when “Enlightened” ended after two seasons? It was like, “That’s a bummer.” I thought that was a really quality show, but it told a great story in two seasons.

    I know that that third season could have been really interesting to see, what does this character do in success? So we’ve killed off the patriarch of the family. But I’ve seen the scripts coming — also Tommy [Dewey] and I are writing part of the scripts this year, so we’ve been in the writers’ room.

    It’s so interesting. It really goes into a completely, “What happens after Val and Alex are no longer living under the same roof?” Second season they were under the same roof, but they couldn’t have been further apart. Then what happens in the third season when they are apart? What is the intimacy there?

    While the second season was really about friendship, everybody trying to find friendship, I think the third season really, ironically, is about family, everybody searching for family, in whatever machination that can be. Family means something different to everybody, so it’s really interesting. It’s really staying in the pocket of what the show is, but also bringing a totally new storyline, new information — and none of it feels out of character.

    Did you get a sense there was a freeing nature from the way Season 2 concluded that opened up all these possibilities? Or was there a struggle at first to figure out where to go?

    It was always [series creator] Zander [Lehman’s] deep plan that, if there were three seasons, where this would go. So it’s not like they all were scrambling going, “Oh sh*t, what do I do? We’ve completed the story. Now what?” So luckily, there’s a lot of meat on that bone.

    I think they know where everybody goes. It’s how they get there is what the writers’ room is, essentially. It’s breaking out how are we going to go to where we want them to go emotionally? But that’s the fun part, is figuring out the day-to-day within these characters’ lives. Who do they meet? What does that inform? And then how do they handle it?

    What do you like about having a voice in where Valerie goes? More so than if you were just coming in to play the role, but you get to be behind the scenes and contributing to it as well?

    Always keeping in mind to be very respectful of the fact that, no matter what, this is Zander’s show. It’s his vision. He knows exactly the chord that the show is doing. Nothing goes in a direction that he’s not completely comfortable with. So that’s the first layer.

    The second is, it’s just fun to be in the room with Tommy as well, because we’re writing it together. The third season, we know these characters so well that I think it was fun for the other writers to be able to have somebody who is going to eventually be playing them, knows intimately what they would do.

    So it was really fun and different in any other writing capacity I’ve ever been in, where I had felt like I knew the characters so well. I can sit with all of them and think, what would they do? What would they do? You essentially know. Now, do I like that better than showing up and having a script that tells you what happens? I don’t know. Because the truth is like, I love the surprise of cracking that script and seeing where my character goes.

    Do these characters continue to grow? Do they evolve? What happens when they evolve enough that they don’t really, does that kill storyline? And the truth is, it doesn’t, because we’re who we are. We come to the world with so many issues, and triggers, and things like that. And how we perceive, how we evolve, is all part of our becoming. So while we may be improving, improvement is not an axis up. It’s going to be up and down, and up and down, and sometimes you really screw up. It’s great to see them screw up in their evolution.

    Nobody evolves at the same pace. So if you’re in a good place, other people around you may not be.

    Exactly. You might be having a killer year because you just finally realized that you don’t have to date an asshole. But you have a friend who’s, like, dating a married man, and they’re still working that out.

    Tell me about the joys of being on the cutting edge of the way people are consuming their entertainment now. Have you felt any sort of difference in that aspect, both with this job and with “Transparent”?

    I love streaming, just in general. I think it’s been the best thing for me and my sensibility, and what I like to do. Just because, whether it’s something as broad as “Wet Hot American Summer,” or as like visceral as “Transparent,” or as thoughtful and relevant as “Casual,” it feels like it’s such a unique way to get to tell story, and for people to take it in. They don’t miss it.

    With network, I feel like if you didn’t get on that train early, then it’s gone, and there’s going to be another show soon. But with streaming, they live there, and they stay there, and people can come to it and find it eventually.

    I know I’m somebody who needs to hear something 100 times before I finally act on it, and I’m just starting to watch “Black Mirror,” and I’m like, “What? This show! I’m running out and telling everybody. Everybody’s like, yeah “Duh.” I’m going, “But–!” “Yeah, we know.”

    Tell me about the opportunities that “Transparent” has given you, because that’s got to feel pretty special, creatively, for you, in the way that they use you in particular.

    It’s funny, because it uses me in a very strange way. The first season I played someone close to my age, but in a ’90s flashback. In the second season, it was somebody older than me, but in 1930s Berlin. The third season, it was somebody in their 60s or something, and it was still here in California.

    So it’s a fun range, and only Jill Soloway, I feel, has the chutzpah, if you will, to sort of run with her instincts in that way. Everybody does, believe me. Zander does. But I’m just saying, because that show can really push boundaries, I feel like she’s somebody who has the room and the ability, because of the nature of that show, to really say, what happens? What happens if? What happens if we shoot in Israel? What happens if we do this? What happens if we have a flashback about that? I just don’t think she has that thing that says, “You probably shouldn’t …”

    Do you have any insight as to why you got that opportunity with “Transparent”? Why Jill said, “I’m going to bring her back in these different ways.”

    I don’t know. Jill decided early on. When I first met her, she said, “I think you might be my muse.” And I don’t know why. Like I said, she’s somebody who when she has a gut feeling, she runs with it. And I have learned that when she has a gut feeling, it’s always best to listen to it. So I say yes to everything she has me do, no matter how potentially embarrassing and humiliating it might be. Eventually, now it’s really paying off.

    Especially in the last few years, you’ve been getting all these great opportunities in so many different styles of shows and different types of characters. Did you worry at any point that you had to make a choice between comedy, like straight up comedy, or would you be able to indulge your dramatic side? Was there any trepidation about being pigeonholed?

    When “Casual” came about and I auditioned for it, and I found out I got it, I was so thrilled, because it was exactly what I wanted to do next. It was like the exact thing I wanted. I love all the work I do, the opportunities, and those are all wonderful, and I get to do some really fun roles. But that’s it. They’re fun roles that sort of pop in, give some information, and then the story continues, and then they leave. I felt like I really want to chew the meat. I just really want to get to know somebody in a consistent way.

    I love coming in and changing character, costume, and face, and age, and all those things. That’s fun. I’ve come from improv and sketch comedy as well, and theater. But I really never — other than “Trophy Wife,” which was a very short-lived show, “SNL” was a sketch show — I never got to really sustain one character, who’s got a depth of field like Valerie does. This is a dream come true for me.

    It’s also considered a comedy, but I guess we can call it a dramedy. It’s a challenge because I know I have to pull back on the jokes. I know a funny reading of whatever it is, but that’s not the character. That’s not the tone of the show. That’s not the intention. And the challenge more is, don’t be funny on this line. This is who they are. This is how they live. Not everything I say I do as a joke.

    More so than Valerie, certainly. I’m a sillier person than she is. Valerie has a sense of humor, it’s just not what she leads with. To really commit to that character, I have to commit to that, too. Sometimes I’m like, “I know what the funny version is, but I can’t do it. I can’t do it.” I know what it is, but I can’t do it.

    Who are the people who inspired you? The actors and comedians that you took inspiration from.

    You know who really inspires me a ton? I used to recur on her show, “New Adventures of Old Christine”: Julia Louis-Dreyfus. I said to myself, “If I ever had my own show, that’s exactly how I’m going comport myself and run it.” I had a show that I co-wrote with my friend Damon [Jones], co-created, called “Benched” on USA. I always had Julia in my head as somebody who’s just like a hard worker, super warm, and capable, and made everybody feel valued, and respected, and all those things.

    She’s somebody that I always think about, because I love her. I respect her so much. I find her so inspiring. I think she’s so funny. She’s so her. She’s so uniquely herself. I don’t see her apologizing for that, ever, or playing small. And she’s also not putting on airs and fluffing up. She’s just her, completely her, and I just love her.

    Give me your bucket list of things you still want to do in your career.

    Okay. I’ll tell you right now: I want to do like a big floofy — it’s a word, “floofy” — big budget period piece biopic. Of like, ideally, Lucille Ball. Really, anybody. I want to do like a full-tilt period drama. Pre-’50s. Anything beyond. I don’t care if it’s medieval times. I don’t care. I love Edwardian. That would be fun. You know what would be great? A Jane Austen film!

    If you come to our set, it’s so homey and delicious. I actually love our set, because it’s like an alternate reality, but one I know well. But it would be fun though to go into the full regalia. I’d love to do “Downton Abbey.” I know it’s done, but still. Let’s do it.

  • ‘Wet Hot American Summer’ Netflix Show Adds Tons of New Campers

    Wet Hot American Summer
    Camp Firewood, home to the many high jinks of the “Wet Hot American Summer” crew, is getting crowded with all sorts of new characters.

    The upcoming Netflix show has added a host of actors to the sprawling original cast, which will include practically all of the stars from the movie, even the really big ones, like Bradley Cooper, “Ant-Man” Paul Rudd, Amy Poehler, and Elizabeth Banks.

    A lot of the newest additions to the gang are all sort of regular collaborators with David Wain and his “State” crew by one or two degrees of separation, like Michaela Watkins, Lake Bell, Paul Scheer, and Rob Huebel, but there will be a few new faces as well. Josh Charles (“The Good Wife”), John Slattery (“Mad Men”), Jayma Mays (“Glee”), and Richard Schiff (“The West Wing”) will also be joining us in the arts and crafts tent.

    We’re still waiting on a premiere date, but in the meantime, be sure to share your fondue and extra sweaters and cans of talking vegetables with the newcomers, okay? Make them feel at home!

    [Via Vulture]

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