Tag: michelle-dockery

  • ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale’ Cast Interview

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    Opening in theaters on September 12th is the third and final movie in the ‘Downton Abbey’ franchise entitled ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale‘, which was directed by Simon Curtis (‘My Week with Marilyn’).

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    The film stars Hugh Bonneville (‘Paddington’), Michelle Dockery (‘The Gentlemen’), Elizabeth McGovern (‘Ordinary People’), Allen Leech (‘Bohemian Rhapsody’), Kevin Doyle (‘Good’), Dominic West (‘The Wire’), Alessandro Nivola (‘Kraven the Hunter’), Joely Richardson (‘The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo’), and Paul Giamatti (‘The Holdovers’).

    (L to R) Hugh Bonneville, Allen Leech, and Kevin Doyle star in 'Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale'.
    (L to R) Hugh Bonneville, Allen Leech, and Kevin Doyle star in ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale’.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Hugh Bonneville. Allen Leech and Kevin Doyle about their work on ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale’, Bonneville’s first reaction to the final screenplay, ending the franchise, what the series has meant to Leech personally, how Doyle’s character has changed since the last film, and the genius of series creator Julian Fellowes.

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

    Related Article: Beloved Acting Icon And Oscar Winner Dame Maggie Smith has Died Aged 89

    Hugh Bonneville stars as Robert Grantham in 'Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale', a Focus Features release. Credit: Rory Mulvey / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.
    Hugh Bonneville stars as Robert Grantham in ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Rory Mulvey / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Hugh, what was your first reaction to reading the final screenplay and was it bittersweet making this movie knowing that it would be the last time you would play this character?

    Hugh Bonneville: Well, we always knew that this was going to be the third and final film. The script went through many changes during its development. Julian was batting it back and forth, and the final iteration seemed the appropriate one. Where there are so many farewells within the story, so many elements of regime change, if you like, both upstairs and down, with the changing of the guard. It just felt like a good farewell to our audience who have been the real driving force in sustaining us for so long.

    Allen Leech stars as Tom Branson in 'Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale', a Focus Features release. Credit: Rory Mulvey / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.
    Allen Leech stars as Tom Branson in ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Rory Mulvey / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.

    MF: Allen, as an actor, what has it meant to you personally to work with this cast and to be a part of this franchise?

    Allen Leach: It’s been an absolute joy and a pleasure to be part of it, and something I don’t think any of us have expected. Certainly, for myself and Kevin, with our roles, we were only hired for a couple of episodes. So, it’s very surreal after fifteen years and the whole six seasons and three movies, to be here talking to you about this final part of it. It really has been such an incredibly important part of my life and I’m very grateful to Julian for including an Irish character first off, and then also not killing him off in the first couple of seasons. So, it’s been wonderful and it’s something I will miss terribly and that’s only really hitting home now as we do these last couple of days of the press tour that I won’t get to annoy Hugh as much as I normally would or Kevin.

    (L to R) Kevin Doyle stars as Mr. Molesley and Michael Fox as Andy Parker in 'Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale', a Focus Features release. Credit: Rory Mulvey / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.
    (L to R) Kevin Doyle stars as Mr. Molesley and Michael Fox as Andy Parker in ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Rory Mulvey / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.

    MF: Kevin, can you talk about how your character has changed since the last movie and where we find him when this movie begins?

    Kevin Doyle: Well, he’s got a lot wealthier. He’s got a nice house, he’s got a lovely car, he’s got a beautiful wife. Yet, dot, dot, dot, there’s a lot of anxiety, there’s a lot of pressure on him to get these scripts out. He’s a bit of a perfectionist, and nothing has ever quite right for him, and so there’s a lot of self-imposed pressure, and he’s finding it difficult to live with.

    (L to R) Producer Liz Trubridge, director Simon Curtis and writer/creator/producer Julian Fellowes on the set of 'Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale', a Focus Features release. Credit: Rory Mulvey / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.
    (L to R) Producer Liz Trubridge, director Simon Curtis and writer/creator/producer Julian Fellowes on the set of ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Rory Mulvey / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.

    MF: Hugh, can you talk about the genius of Julian Fellows and this incredible international phenomenon that he has created?

    HB: Well, Julian, as an actor by his initial trade, has a good ear for dialogue, clearly. I can remember reading the very first script and finding all these characters so vivid. They really sprung into my mind’s eye, and I could see each of them well, before they were cast, and so that doesn’t always happen. Often, you can find the characters are interchangeable in a script, but these all had their own voice, and the narrative had such forward momentum that, like everyone who then came to watch the show, I wanted to know what happened next. So, I think that is what is part of the genius of Julian. Not only does he write great lines, but he inhabits these characters. He really cares about them, each of them, and they are complex and three dimensional. But they all come from a place of inherent goodness or a generosity of spirit, and I think that’s been the underlying tone of the show, that there is a warmth about it. It is a world of fiction. I mean, some UK journalists used to get a bit uppity that it wasn’t a documentary and wasn’t correct about the social injustices of the aristocracy. But nevertheless, millions of people have enjoyed visiting this fictional world and taking part in its stories and that they’ve been universal stories. So that’s what Julian’s knack has been to create a fast-paced narrative, but with characters with whom you want to spend time.

    (L to R) Allen Leech stars as Tom Branson, Dominic West as Guy Dexter and Robert James-Collier as Thomas Barrow in 'Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale', a Focus Features release. Credit: Rory Mulvey / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.
    (L to R) Allen Leech stars as Tom Branson, Dominic West as Guy Dexter and Robert James-Collier as Thomas Barrow in ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Rory Mulvey / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.

    MF: Finally, Kevin, what has your experience been like working with Julian on this franchise?

    KD: In terms of Julian’s craft, it’s astonishing that he’s been able to sustain twenty odd characters for this length of time, and quite honestly, to keep all those actors happy as well with good storylines and within this one movie, he’s had to wrap it up. Well, not so much wrap up, but he’s had to suggest an ongoing life for twenty odd characters, which is an extraordinary achievement, I think.

    (L to R) Laura Carmichael stars as Lady Edith, Harry Hadden-Paton as Bertie Hexham, Elizabeth McGovern as Cora Grantham, Hugh Bonneville stars as Robert Grantham and Michelle Dockery as Lady Mary in 'Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale', a Focus Features release. Credit: Rory Mulvey / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.
    (L to R) Laura Carmichael stars as Lady Edith, Harry Hadden-Paton as Bertie Hexham, Elizabeth McGovern as Cora Grantham, Hugh Bonneville stars as Robert Grantham and Michelle Dockery as Lady Mary in ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Rory Mulvey / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.

    What is the plot of ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale’?

    The film follows the Crawley family and the Downton Abbey staff as they enter the 1930s. When Mary (Michelle Dockery) finds herself at the center of a public scandal caused by her divorce and the family faces financial trouble, the entire household grapples with the threat of social disgrace. The Crawleys must embrace change as the staff prepare for a new chapter with the next generation leading Downton Abbey into the future.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale’?

    'Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale' opens in theaters on September 12th.
    ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale’ opens in theaters on September 12th.

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

    Buy ‘Downton Abbey’ Movies On Amazon

  • Movie Review: ‘Please Don’t Feed the Children’

    Giancarlo Esposito as Fitz and Michelle Dockery as Clara in 'Please Don't Feed the Children.' Photo: Tubi.
    Giancarlo Esposito as Fitz and Michelle Dockery as Clara in ‘Please Don’t Feed the Children.’ Photo: Tubi.

    ‘Please Don’t Feed the Children’ receives 2 out of 10 stars.

    Premiering on Tubi June 27th is ‘Please Don’t Feed the Children,’ directed by Destry Allyn Spielberg and starring Michelle Dockery, Zoe Colletti, Regan Aliyah, Dean Scott Vazquez, Andrew Liner, and Giancarlo Esposito.

    Related Article: Giancarlo Esposito Reportedly Playing a Villain in New ‘Captain America’ Movie

    Initial Thoughts

    (L to R) Vicky (Regan Aliyah), Ben (Andrew Liner), Jeffy (Dean Scott Vazquez), Mary (Zoe Colletti), and Crystal (Emma Meisel) study a chess game in 'Please Don't Feed the Children.' Photo: Tubi.
    (L to R) Vicky (Regan Aliyah), Ben (Andrew Liner), Jeffy (Dean Scott Vazquez), Mary (Zoe Colletti), and Crystal (Emma Meisel) study a chess game in ‘Please Don’t Feed the Children.’ Photo: Tubi.

    Let’s get the elephant in the room out of the way first: the director of this film, Destry Allyn Spielberg, is in fact the daughter of Steven Spielberg. Whether that helped her land the gig is beside the point, as is the whole “nepo babies” argument. Why wouldn’t at least one offspring of one of the most famous directors in history show interest in pursuing the same career? Filmmaking – or any creative pursuit – can be just as much a family business as a restaurant or a construction company.

    It ultimately comes down to whether said offspring has the talent to make a go of it on their own, and in the case of Destry Allyn Spielberg…the jury is still out. One thing she doesn’t have for now, however, is good taste in material. Spielberg has chosen for her feature directorial debut a script (by Paul Bertino) that is as generic as they come, a viral outbreak zombie horror pastiche loaded with standard genre tropes and saddled with a collection of flat, forgettable characters. It makes for an utterly boring experience, and it’s hard to say if even a better director could make something interesting out of this.

    Story and Direction

    Director Destry Allyn Spielberg on the set of 'Please Don't Feed the Children.' Photo: Tubi.
    Director Destry Allyn Spielberg on the set of ‘Please Don’t Feed the Children.’ Photo: Tubi.

    “Harboring minors is a punishable offense.” That’s what we’re told as ‘Please Don’t Feed the Children’ begins, with an opening montage informing us that a deadly new virus has spread rapidly throughout the world. The plague turns adults into – surprise! – flesh-eating zombies, but it’s carried by kids (of whom very few end up getting the disease), which leads to a worldwide effort to capture children and quarantine them into detention camps.

    The notion of adults all over the globe willingly turning their children in for incarceration or worse is difficult to believe even for a dystopian horror film, but Bertino’s screenplay doesn’t spend much time ruminating on the morals and ethics of the situation. It doesn’t spend much time on anything, really, as we meet Mary (Zoe Colletti), a young girl who is trying to escape being captured by getting on a bus going to “the border,” wherever that is (so much about this movie is frustratingly non-specific). But when she’s spotted by soldiers, she only gets away with the help of Jeffy (Dean Scott Vazquez), a rather annoying little kid who spirits her on his bike to the large abandoned warehouse he calls home along with his sister Vicky (Regan Aliyah) and a few other teens.

    We’ve barely had time to get to even know these kids’ names when the soldiers show up (don’t ask me how Jeffy and his friends avoided this before) and roust them out. Fleeing in a van, the kids draw even more attention to themselves by bungling a convenience store heist before ending up at the door of Clara (Michelle Dockery), who lives in her huge house by herself while her police officer husband is away working. And before you can say ‘don’t eat those,’ Clara has fed the kids drugged milk and cookies and imprisoned them all in her surprisingly spacious attic, for purposes known only to her.

    All this plays out in listless, predictable fashion, with a rinse-repeat second act that finds one or more kids getting out of the attic and either meeting a grim fate (Clara also has something in the basement) or getting caught by their hostess and imprisoned again. Spielberg pulls off a few nice compositions here and there, but also suffers from that debut-director syndrome of being in love with camera moves that draw attention to themselves, such as a shot in the kids’ warehouse lair that spins around and around like it wants you to call it out. There is gore and nastiness aplenty, but very little in the way of scares or emotional involvement, since there are no characters here for which we feel the least empathy.

    All ‘Please Don’t Feed the Children’ (even its title doesn’t really make much sense in context) does is make you think of those other, better horror movies it’s riffing off, whether it’s ’28 Days Later,’ ‘Contagion,’ ‘Children of Men,’ or several others. There’s even a plot point reminiscent of ‘Bring Her Back’ from earlier this year. But all this only emphasizes how unoriginal ‘Please Don’t Feed the Children’ is. It’s like a zombie movie written by AI and directed by committee.

    Cast and Performances

    Michelle Dockery as Clara in 'Please Don't Feed the Children.' Photo: Tubi.
    Michelle Dockery as Clara in ‘Please Don’t Feed the Children.’ Photo: Tubi.

    There’s no easy way to say this: the young actors in this movie are almost all lacking. Whether that’s a comment on their own talent or Spielberg’s aptitude with actors isn’t clear. Zoe Colletti as the ostensible protagonist, Mary, just doesn’t have the personality to carry a story like this, and with the exception of Regan Aliyah – who at least shows some spark, even with a cliched character – the rest of the ensemble also exhibits little to remember them by.

    As for the two major adult names in the movie, Giancarlo Esposito shows up in a handful of scenes but doesn’t have much to do, and even this usually reliable veteran seems like he’s just collecting a paycheck. Michelle Dockery’s Clara, meanwhile, is unremittingly cruel and one-dimensional, and Dockery seems unsure whether to play it up for camp value or try for a genuinely evil portrayal. She ends up somewhere in a weird limbo between the two. It’s a very different role that what we’ve seen Dockery in before and she is game for it, pulling off a few creepy moments but also let down by the material.

    Final Thoughts

    Destry Allyn Spielberg directing 'Please Don't Feed the Children.' Photo: Tubi.
    Destry Allyn Spielberg directing ‘Please Don’t Feed the Children.’ Photo: Tubi.

    Everybody starts somewhere, right? There are plenty of well-known directors out there who are probably embarrassed by their first attempts at making a feature film. The problem for Destry Allyn Spielberg is that, unfairly or not, she will probably get called out for leveraging her famous name while delivering a disappointing product.

    Whether she can continue from here and forge a career on her own – and we wish her nothing but the best – she’ll have to pick her material more carefully. Shot in just 18 days (and feeling like it), ‘Please Don’t Feed the Children’ is vague, super-derivative, and mundane, with nothing to say thematically and nothing to add to an already well-worn genre.

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    What is the plot of ‘Please Don’t Feed the Children’?

    In a not-so-distant future where society is battling a deadly virus that is carried by children and afflicts the entire adult population, a group of orphans flee in search of a new life — only to be taken hostage by a woman hiding a sinister secret.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Please Don’t Feed the Children’?

    • Michelle Dockery as Clara
    • Zoe Colletti as Mary
    • Regan Aliyah as Vicky
    • Dean Scott Vazquez as Jeffy
    • Andrew Liner as Ben
    • Josh Melnick as Seth
    • Emma Meisel as Crystal
    • Vernon Davis as Hank
    • Giancarlo Esposito as Fitz
    (L to R) Vicky (Regan Aliyah) watches as Ben receives treatment from Clara (Michelle Dockery) in 'Please Don't Feed the Children.' Photo: Tubi.
    (L to R) Vicky (Regan Aliyah) watches as Ben receives treatment from Clara (Michelle Dockery) in ‘Please Don’t Feed the Children.’ Photo: Tubi.

    Movies Similar to ‘Please Don’t Feed the Children’:

    Buy Michelle Dockery Movies on Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘Here’

    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in 'Here'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in ‘Here’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Opening in theaters November 1st is ‘Here,’ directed by Robert Zemeckis and starring Tom Hanks, Robin Wright, Paul Bettany, Kelly Reilly, Michelle Dockery, Gwilym Lee, Ophelia Lovibond, and David Fynn.

    Related Article: Tom Hanks Features in First Pictures of Robert Zemeckis’ ‘Here’

    Initial Thoughts

    (L to R) Robin Wright and Tom Hanks star in 'Here'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    (L to R) Robin Wright and Tom Hanks star in ‘Here’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Robert Zemeckis has made some genuinely great films, including the ‘Back to the Future’ trilogy, ‘Contact,’ and ‘Who Framed Roger Rabbit,’ and the mark of much of his career has been his endless fascination with pushing the boundaries of filmmaking and visual effects forward with new technologies and techniques. But for much of the past two decades, he has focused on the latter seemingly at the expense of the former, turning out a variety of films that may offer up new and sometimes dazzling effects while skimping on good stories and well-developed characters.

    Such is the case with ‘Here,’ Zemeckis’ formally experimental new film in which he positions his camera, so to speak, slightly above and to the right of a single piece of land in Pennsylvania. The film then documents events that have happened on that spot, from millions of years ago when it was a dinosaur-inhabited swamp wiped out by an asteroid, to the romance between two First Nations lovers, to the series of families who inhabit a modest house over the course of the last century. Most of the focus, however, centers on one family and their rather banal history, with Zemeckis’ distant camera and constant changing of the scene failing to allow even the most perfunctory connection to these characters. The result is a shallow, trite film that also doesn’t do its lead actors any favors with the distracting digital de-aging foisted upon them.

    Story and Direction

    Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of 'Here'.
    (L to R) Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    ‘Here’ is based on a 2014 graphic novel by Richard McGuire, which he expanded from a six-page comic strip he first wrote and drew in 1989. In both the strip and the graphic novel, McGuire drew panels within panels, showing the space in different periods of time and connecting events from one panel to another whether they took place in the past, the present, or the future. Working from a screenplay he co-wrote with Eric Roth, Zemeckis attempts the same thing on film: as one scene plays out, a panel opens in a section of the screen and either expands or dissolves into the next scene, with the eras in time overlapping.

    The problem is that Zemeckis and Roth do very little to make connections between the different eras, and with the exception of the period during which the house (which is built in 1907) is owned by the Young family, not enough time is spent in any of the eras to give us meaningful insight into how these different periods correspond or how life plays out in similar ways even in varied circumstances. After a while the continually opening frames just become annoying because they signify little.

    That the most time is spent with the Young family is the second major problem with ‘Here.’ After a brief prologue in which the aged Richard (Hanks) and Margaret (Wright) enter the now-empty house, we flash back to when Richard’s dad Al (Bettany) and his new wife Rose (Reilly) first purchased it after World War II for the princely sum of $3,400. Beset by PTSD, Al drinks too much but nevertheless dutifully goes off to work for an insurance company, while Rose stays home and tends to their kids. They squabble, the frugal (almost penny-pinching) Al loses his job, they need to take out a second mortgage at one point, and their three kids grow up, including Richard, who is actually quite talented as an artist and harbors dreams of becoming one professionally. “Get a job where you wear a suit,” Al barks at him, giving us a preview of what’s ahead.

    Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of 'Here'.
    (L to R) Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Sure enough, Richard gets his sweetheart Margaret pregnant at 18, and he’s forced to abandon his dreams and go into the insurance business as well. We find out later on that Margaret also gave up on a whole slew of ambitions, including owning their own house: Richard is even more thrifty than his dad, always coming up with reasons to keep their family under his parents’ roof instead of making a home of their own. And that’s how it goes for the Youngs, whose repressed dreams, secret yearnings, family get-togethers and fights, and ultimate destinies offer nothing we haven’t seen before in numerous family dramas, and doesn’t even absorb us in any way because our view hangs in one place above the living room like a security camera we might as well be checking on our phone.

    The rest of the stories – minus the earliest dinosaur days and subsequent ice age – get even shorter shrift. The best is that of Leo (David Fynn) and Stella (Ophelia Lovibond), a free-spirited, bohemian couple in the 1920s who hit the big time when Leo invents the La-Z-Boy recliner (spoiler alert: it’s not true). The story of the First Nations couple goes nowhere (and seems tokenistic), nor does the tale of a woman (Dockery) who is worried sick that her early adopter aviator husband will die in a crash. A peek into the era of the Revolutionary War, when Benjamin Franklin lived a few hundred feet from where the Young house is eventually built, is simply pointless (the big connection? Richard and his brother wear Ben Franklin costumes at a family Halloween party).

    The sole story that takes place after the Young family sells the house, about the well-off Black couple who purchase it, settles on the father (Nicholas Pinnock) and mother (Nikki Amuka-Bird) instructing their teenage son (Cache Vanderpuye) on how to behave if he’s ever pulled over by a cop as its big moment. Instead of adding depth to their lives or how the neighborhood around them is changing, Zemeckis and Roth settle for simple button-pushing before paneling back to the whitebread, flavorless Youngs.

    In the end, none of it really sticks. The Youngs are too stereotypical to come across as real, and nobody else gets enough time to breathe. The single-shot framing becomes a box from which the story and the people in it cannot escape.

    The Cast

    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in 'Here'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in ‘Here’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Much has been made of the fact that the teaming of Zemeckis, Roth, Wright, and Hanks constitutes a reunion of the principal creatives of 1994’s ‘Forrest Gump,’ perhaps accentuating the director’s sentimentality over the passage of time. But trying to turn back time for his stars by de-aging them is not the best way to address this. While de-aging has come a long way – even in just the past few years – it’s still a weird, jarring sensation to see Tom Hanks and Robin Wright with smoother versions of their faces plastered on their heads, especially when their voices and physical movements are of the moment.

    Wright probably fares best here, even given her stereotypical character and some of the grating dialogue that comes out of her mouth, while Tom Hanks continues his recent stretch of stilted performances and never relaxes into the role of the unmotivated Richard. Paul Bettany’s Al is supposed to be hard of hearing as a result of his WWII injuries, but the usually reliable Bettany ends up shouting most of his lines theatrically – as if projecting to the back row – whenever he speaks. The bottom line, however, is that it’s a shame to see capable actors like Bettany and Kelly Reilly do their best to animate these stock, post-war suburban disappointments.

    Zemeckis doesn’t do them any favors either with his fixed gaze, which forces the actors to move closer to the camera when it’s time to deliver important bits of story or foreshadowing (speaking of which, the latter is incredibly heavy-handed: one character makes sure to let us know three times that they’ve forgotten something before – surprise! – they end up with Alzheimer’s). This all just heightens the artificiality of the whole setup – bringing the actors closer to the lens ironically adds more distance to what we’re watching.

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in 'Here'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in ‘Here’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    We’ll always respect Robert Zemeckis for giving us some of our favorite films of all time – we stand by our assertion that ‘Contact’ is one of the finest sci-fi films of its time, while ‘Back to the Future’ is just about a perfect film (and the trilogy as a whole comes damn close to that hat-trick as well). And even when we don’t admire the films much – ‘Beowulf,’ ‘Death Becomes Her,’ or a truly dreadful outing like ‘Welcome to Marwen’ – we appreciate his curiosity about how far the medium can go and how it can continue to deliver sights that audiences have never seen.

    But he’s paid a price for that quest along the way – sacrificing stories and characters with depth and nuanced emotional honesty for stunts that try fruitlessly to replace both — and ‘Here’ is the latest casualty of that journey.

    ‘Here’ receives 4 out of 10 stars.

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    What is the plot of ‘Here’?

    A single area of land and the dwellings built on it is the scene for literally millennia of events, from the extinction of the dinosaurs to the COVID pandemic, with much of the focus on one mid-20th century family who live there for decades.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Here’?

    • Tom Hanks as Richard Young
    • Robin Wright as Margaret Young
    • Paul Bettany as Al Young
    • Kelly Reilly as Rose Young
    • Michelle Dockery as Mrs. Harter
    • Gwilym Lee as John Harter
    • Ophelia Lovibond as Stella Beekman
    • David Fynn as Leo Beekman
    'Here' director Robert Zemeckis and Tom Hanks attend the AFI Fest Director's Spotlight. Photo by Stewart Cook/Sony Pictures via Getty Images.
    ‘Here’ director Robert Zemeckis and Tom Hanks attend the AFI Fest Director’s Spotlight. Photo by Stewart Cook/Sony Pictures via Getty Images.

    Other Robert Zemeckis and Tom Hanks Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Here’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Robert Zemeckis Movies on Amazon

  • First Images from Robert Zemeckis’ New Movie ‘Here’

    Robin Wright and Tom Hanks star in 'Here'.
    (L to R) Robin Wright and Tom Hanks star in ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Preview: 

    • The first look at Robert Zemeckis’ new movie, ‘Here’ is online.
    • Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in the time-spanning drama.
    • It’s another experimental project for the ‘Forrest Gump’ team.

    The filmmaking team behind ‘Forrest Gump’ certainly know a thing or three about a story that spans a large amount of time, and one that required considerable effect advances to support its main character’s encounters with historical figures.

    So, as you might presume, their reunion –– and in this case, we mean specifically ‘Gump’ director Robert Zemeckis, stars Tom Hanks and Robin Wright and screenwriter Eric Roth –– also offers an expansive chronological storyline and some experimental techniques.

    The first look at the result, ‘Here’, is now online via Vanity Fair.

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    What’s the story of ‘Here’?

    Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in 'Here'.
    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Here’ finds scriptwriter Roth adapting Richard McGuire’s much-loved graphic novel title.

    First published as a six-page comic strip in 1989, before being turned into a full graphic novel decades later, ‘Here’ is a high-concept story that focuses on one single room, telling the interconnected, overlapping stories of the many people who’ve inhabited that room over thousands of years.

    The film will feature a locked-down camera that never moves, with the action all occurring in one space, and, like the source material, overlapping panels representing changes in design for scene/time zone transitions.

    Hanks stars as baby boomer Richard, who grows up in the same house he ends up raising his own family in during the 1970s and 1980s, with Wright as his wife, Margaret.

    Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in 'Here'.
    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Zemeckis and his effects team are using a mixture of traditional make-up and cutting-edge digital techniques to portray the characters at different ages, and the story expands out further either way through time, showing Richard’s parents (played by Paul Bettany and Kelly Reilly), occupants of the house long before them and even people –– and creatures –– living in the space before the place was built. There will also be a segment set in 2020, following the couple who inhabit the house after Richard and Margaret.

    And though it features the very top end of de-aging effects, Zemeckis soon realized one way to make them work beyond what other filmmakers have tried:

    “It only works because the performances are so good. Both Tom and Robin understood instantly that, ‘Okay, we have to go back and channel what we were like 50 years ago or 40 years ago, and we have to bring that energy, that kind of posture, and even raise our voices higher. That kind of thing.”

    The aim, according to the director, is to show characters with whom the audience can connect.

    Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of 'Here'.
    (L to R) Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Here’s what Zemeckis says about that concept:

    The whole point was to make the story identifiable. We didn’t want people [in the house] to be criminals or spies in highly dramatic situations. There are some people who probably won’t like the fact that the conflicts in the movie are not over the top—that they’re pretty rooted in reality.”

    Who else is in ‘Here’?

    Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in 'Here'.
    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    The cast also includes Michelle Dockery, David Fynn, Ophelia Lovibond, Nicholas Pinnock, Nikki Amuka-Bird and Anya Marco Harris.

    When will ‘Here’ be in theaters?

    Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in 'Here'.
    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Sony aims to have ‘Here’ in theaters on November 15th. So if you’re itching to see what Team ‘Gump’ have been up to, you only have a few months to wait now.

    Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of 'Here'.
    (L to R) Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Other Robert Zemeckis and Tom Hanks Movies:

    Buy Robert Zemeckis Movies on Amazon

    You can watch the new trailer for ‘Here’ by clicking on the video player below:

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  • Movie Review: ‘Boy Kills World’

    Bill Skarsgård in 'Boy Kills World'.
    Bill Skarsgård in ‘Boy Kills World’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    In theaters on Friday, April 26th, ‘Boy Kills World’ is a revenge thriller that choose to layer dark, madcap humor over its clear ‘John Wick’ influence. Powered by a solid, committed central performance from Bill Skarsgård and some entertaining quirk from elsewhere in the cast, it does somewhat fall victim to a thin storyline that gives it much more of a style over substance feel and sometimes comes across as a video game rather than a movie.

    Still, with some interesting permutations later in the plot, it does prove to have a little more going on under the surface.

    Related Article: Famke Janssen and Brett Gelman Talk Action Thriller ‘Boy Kills World’

    Does ‘Boy Kills World’ punch above its weight?

    Yayan Ruhian in 'Boy Kills World'. Photo: Lionsgate.
    Yayan Ruhian in ‘Boy Kills World’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    If you only watch one movie this year where Bill Skarsgård goes on a violent rampage intent on wiping out the people who did him wrong… well, we’ve yet to see ‘The Crow’, so we can’t tell you whether ‘Boy Kills World’ is the better of the two.

    But it certainly has a level of originality to put it above a new adaptation of a graphic novel that was first brought to screens in 1994. That said, what we have here is very much a blend of ‘John Wick’, ‘The Hunger Games’ with just a dash of a twisted take on ‘The Karate Kid’.

    Script and Direction

    Sharlto Copley in 'Boy Kills World'.
    Sharlto Copley in ‘Boy Kills World’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    Tyler Burton Smith wrote the script here, working with Arend Remmbers to adapt the short film that the latter created alongside director Moritz Mohr.

    While Skarsgård’s performance is mute, the screenplay for the movie is nevertheless full of entertaining voice-over from H. Jon Benjamin (‘Bob’s Burgers’), who provides an insight into what’s going through his character’s head. Whether it’s quoting from the dictionary that the younger version of Boy studies or commenting on what’s going on, it’s a real highlight of the movie as a whole –– all credit to the team for hiring someone who knows what they’re doing on the voice-over front.

    Yet for the most part, the movie is reliant on its fight scenes, and they are certainly numerous, even if they eventually start to make you a little numb. Even with the invention on display here, the sheer brutality of every clash is to such a level that you start to feel battered by it yourself. Still, as the credit implies, it’s fight designer/director and coordinator Dawid Szatarski who deserves the lion’s share of the credit here.

    But Mohr, who expands his original concept here, certainly has a lot of flare to spare when it comes to camera moves and performances. It’s clear he and his team were working to a tighter budget than the likes of either ‘Wick’ or ‘Hunger Games’, but he gets a lot out of it.

    Performances

    Michelle Dockery in 'Boy Kills World'.
    Michelle Dockery in ‘Boy Kills World’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    Appearing in almost every scene (aside from early story moments when the younger version of his character is on screen, played by twins Nicholas and Cameron Crovetti), Skarsgård brings his typical intensity to the role, and very clearly threw himself into training (he’s essentially carved from stone here) to pull off the various fights.

    And his “Boy” is more than simply a savage, revenge-happy warrior –– he’s a damaged personality who has suffered years of trauma and has a mission on his mind (even if it’s not the mission he thinks it is). In tandem with Benjamin’s quirky delivery, it combines to make for a watchable lead role.

    As his Guru, Yayan Ruhian channels the film’s anarchic style, bringing a deranged Mr. Miyagi energy to the screens, the world’s most dangerous mentor. He doesn’t have a lot to do besides show off his considerable martial arts skills (you’ll have seen him in the ‘Raid’ movies and the third ‘John Wick’ outing), but he does the job well.

    On the villainous side of things, we have an assembled group who are clearly having a blast playing atrocious, dystopian autocrats, a collection of paranoid ramblers and scheming social climbers.

    Michelle Dockery in 'Boy Kills World'.
    Michelle Dockery in ‘Boy Kills World’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    Famke Janssen does a lot with relatively little as the power-obsessed Hilda Van Der Koy, one part Hitler, one part Margaret Thatcher. Around her are the likes of Brett Gelman (superbly sleazy as the script-happy brother-in-law Glen), while Sharlto Copley leans into his ability to make smarmy assholes likeable. Well, sort of. But even when he’s at his worst, he’s utterly entertaining.

    Michelle Dockery, meanwhile, is creepy on a whole other level as Hilda’s sister Melanie, the real power behind the throne.

    And then there’s June 27, played by Jessica Rothe. The star of the ‘Happy Death Day’ movies is just as committed as the rest, and proves she’s got the action chops as much as Skarsgård. Plus, she delivers when called upon to show other sides to her character.

    Final Thoughts

    Jessica Rothe in 'Boy Kills World'.
    Jessica Rothe in ‘Boy Kills World’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    ‘Boy Kills World’ is certainly frenetic and action-packed, with a healthy line in dark, zany comedy and some clever ideas.

    But in a world where movies such as ‘Scott Pilgrim vs. the World’, ‘John Wick’ and other exist, it doesn’t seem as completely original as it might, and it frequently mistakes punching for plot. Don’t let that stop you from checking out something that could use the support, though.

    ‘Boy Kills World’ receives 6 out of 10 stars.

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    What’s the story of ‘‘Boy Kills World’?

    The new movie stars Bill Skarsgård as a young man known only as “Boy”, who vows revenge after his family is murdered by Hilda Van Der Koy (Famke Janssen), the deranged matriarch of a corrupt post-apocalyptic dynasty that left the boy orphaned, deaf and voiceless.

    Driven by his inner voice, one which he co-opted from his favorite childhood video game, Boy trains with a mysterious shaman (Yayan Ruhian) to become an instrument of death and is set loose on the eve of the annual culling of dissidents. Bedlam ensues as Boy commits bloody martial arts mayhem, inciting a wrath of carnage and blood-letting.

    As he tries to get his bearings in this delirious realm, Boy soon falls in with a desperate resistance group, all the while bickering with the apparent ghost of his rebellious little sister.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Boy Kills World’?

    • Bill Skarsgård as Boy
    • H. Jon Benjamin as Boy’s “inner voice”
    • Jessica Rothe as June 27
    • Michelle Dockery as Melanie van der Koy
    • Brett Gelman as Gideon van der Koy
    • Isaiah Mustafa as Benny
    • Andrew Koji as Basho
    • Famke Janssen as Hilda van der Koy
    • Sharlto Copley as Glen van der Koy
    • Yayan Ruhian as a shaman
    Brett Gelman in 'Boy Kills World'.
    Brett Gelman in ‘Boy Kills World’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    Movies Similar to ‘Boy Kills World’:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Boy Kills World’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Bill Skarsgård Movies On Amazon

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  • ‘Boy Kills World’ Interview: Famke Janssen and Brett Gelman

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    Opening in theaters on April 26th is the new action thriller ‘Boy Kills World,’ which was directed by Moritz Mohr and stars Bill Skarsgård (‘John Wick: Chapter 4‘), Jessica Rothe (‘La La Land’), Michelle Dockery (‘The Gentlemen‘), Brett Gelman (‘Lyle, Lyle, Crocodile’), Famke Janssen (‘X-Men‘) and Sharlto Copley (‘The A-Team‘).

    Related Article: Bill Skarsgård Talks ‘John Wick: Chapter 4’ and Working with Keanu Reeves

    Famke Janssen and Brett Gelman talk 'Boy Kills World'.
    (L to R) Famke Janssen and Brett Gelman talk ‘Boy Kills World’.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Famke Janssen and Brett Gelman about their work on ‘Boy Kills World’, the plot, their characters, the action, their first reaction to the screenplay and working with director Moritz Mohr.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Janssen and Gelman, Isaiah Mustafa, and Andrew Koji.

    Michelle Dockery in 'Boy Kills World'.
    Michelle Dockery in ‘Boy Kills World’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Famke, can you talk about your character and why everyone fears her?

    Famke Janssen: Well, I think she’s misunderstood. I think this is someone who’s being confronted with her past, and it’s been a bit dodgy and shady. So, she’s now down a very slippery slope of a mental state that’s not stable, a family history that’s probably very troubled, and a very violent, obviously present time that we’re in, in the world and in this movie. So, I would say unhinged, to put it lightly.

    MF: Brett, can you talk about your character and his odd commitment to theater? Did you draw influence from any former directors that you have worked with?

    Brett Gelman: It was fun. I mean, that was great to sort of be this maniacal dictator who wants to be an artist and a writer. There’s nothing more fun than playing an insane director, even if it’s just for a few moments like it is in the film. Yeah, I’m always channeling some of the stranger directors that I’ve worked with in the past who would flip out, or acting teachers.

    Brett Gelman in 'Boy Kills World'.
    Brett Gelman in ‘Boy Kills World’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    MF: Famke, what was your first reaction to the screenplay and the ‘Boy Kills World’ universe?

    FJ: It was different. To me it was all going to be about, what’s the execution going to be like? How is this going to look visually? That’s where I think I was pleasantly surprised. We had an idea about it in terms of production design, costumes, the stunt team and stunt coordinator and the visuals of all of it, and the acting. But it’s a visual feast unlike anything you’ve ever seen. It’s a hyper-reality.

    MF: Finally, Brett, what was your experience like collaborating with director Moritz Mohr on this project?

    BG: Moritz is the opposite of how Gideon behaves as a director in the movie. Moritz is like somebody who you’d always picture holding a chocolate bar and giggling. But in a wholesome way. He was a dream to work with. He’s the perfect combination of somebody who knows exactly what they want, but then is also open to collaborating with you. The best kind of directors, beyond having vision, are the directors who have vision and then also enjoy actors. Because a lot of them hate us. Some of us deserve to be hated. Moritz didn’t give us less love. Moritz gave us Moritz love, and you can quote me on that. That’s the best quote I’ve ever quoted.

    sk8VVk7yZ1DJyGiQwYrDL6

    What’s the plot of ‘‘Boy Kills World’?

    The new movie stars Bill Skarsgård as a young man known only as “Boy”, who vows revenge after his family is murdered by Hilda Van Der Koy (Famke Janssen), the deranged matriarch of a corrupt post-apocalyptic dynasty that left the boy orphaned, deaf and voiceless.

    Driven by his inner voice, one which he co-opted from his favorite childhood video game, Boy trains with a mysterious shaman (Yayan Ruhian) to become an instrument of death and is set loose on the eve of the annual culling of dissidents. Bedlam ensues as Boy commits bloody martial arts mayhem, inciting a wrath of carnage and blood-letting.

    As he tries to get his bearings in this delirious realm, Boy soon falls in with a desperate resistance group, all the while bickering with the apparent ghost of his rebellious little sister.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Boy Kills World’?

    • Bill Skarsgård as Boy
    • H. Jon Benjamin as Boy’s “inner voice”
    • Jessica Rothe as June 27
    • Michelle Dockery as Melanie van der Koy
    • Brett Gelman as Gideon van der Koy
    • Isaiah Mustafa as Benny
    • Andrew Koji as Basho
    • Famke Janssen as Hilda van der Koy
    • Sharlto Copley as Glen van der Koy
    • Yayan Ruhian as a shaman
    Bill Skarsgård in 'Boy Kills World'.
    Bill Skarsgård in ‘Boy Kills World’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    Movies Similar to ‘Boy Kills World’:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Boy Kills World’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Bill Skarsgård Movies On Amazon

     

     

  • Theo James to Lead ‘The Gentlemen’ TV Series

    Theo James
    Theo James in HBO Max’s ‘The Time Traveler’s Wife.’

    Guy Ritchie launched his directing career with the likes of ‘Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrells’ and ‘Snatch’, but in more recent years, he moved on to movies such as ‘Aladdin’ and ‘The Man from U.N.C.L.E.

    Still, in 2020, he released what many people saw as a return to his roots, ‘The Gentlemen’, a crime caper set in London stocked with colorful characters. And since March of this year, Netflix has been looking to lock down a TV version with Ritchie involved.

    Fast-forward a few months and it’s a reality, the streaming service handing out a straight-to-series order and Ritchie casting Theo James in the lead role.

    ‘The Gentlemen’, in case you didn’t catch it, follows American expat Mickey Pearson (Matthew McConaughey), who built a highly profitable marijuana empire in London. When word gets out that he’s looking to cash out of the business forever, it triggers plots, schemes, bribery and blackmail in an attempt to steal his domain out from under him.

    Among the rest of the cast, the standouts were Colin Farrell, Charlie Hunnam, Henry Golding, Jeremy Strong and Hugh Grant, who brought to life an assembly of oddball gangsters, sleazy journalists and assorted thugs.

    Hugh Grant, Jeremy Strong, Henry Golding, Colin Farrell, Matthew McConaughey, Charlie Hunnam, and Michelle Dockery in Guy Ritchie's 'The Gentlemen.'
    (L to R) Hugh Grant, Jeremy Strong, Henry Golding, Colin Farrell, Matthew McConaughey, Charlie Hunnam, and Michelle Dockery in Guy Ritchie’s ‘The Gentlemen.’ Photo courtesy of STX Films.

    All we know of the show’s cast so far is James, playing Eddie Halstead, who has inherited his father’s sizeable estate only to discover that it’s sitting on top of a weed empire owned by the legendary Mickey Pearson. Has this straight-up soldier got what it takes to master the dark arts of the British criminal underworld and take control of the entire operation?

    No word on whether McConaughey or any of the others could pop up in the series, but we’ll find out soon enough. Ritchie wrote a pilot script with ‘Peaky Blinders’ veteran Matthew Read and is about to start shooting. He’ll direct the first two episodes (setting up the show’s feel) and is an executive producer overseeing the rest.

    Ritchie’s TV work is rare, but not unheard of, as he’s adapted his films before – he created and co-wrote ‘Lock, Stock….’, which turned his debut into a show for UK broadcaster Channel 4.

    And the director is busy on the big-screen front, too. He has action comedy ‘Operation Fortune: Ruse de guerre’ complete and headed to screens next year, and is attached to develop and direct a new, live action/CG ‘Hercules‘ movie for Disney with Joe and Anthony Russo producing.

    But before that one can even think about moving forward, there is Ritchie’s next actual gig, ‘The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’, which has Henry Cavill aboard as its lead.

    Produced by Jerry Bruckheimer and co-starring Eiza González, the based-on-truth World War II spy thriller will focus on Winston Churchill’s and Bond writer Ian Fleming’s secret combat organization. The clandestine squad’s unconventional and entirely ‘ungentlemanly’ fighting techniques against the Nazis helped change the course of the war and in part gave birth to the modern Black Ops unit.

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  • ‘Downton Abbey’ Movie Trailer Welcomes the King and Queen

    ‘Downton Abbey’ Movie Trailer Welcomes the King and Queen

    Laura Carmichael, Michelle Dockery, and Elizabeth McGovern in Downton Abbey
    Focus Features

    Your majesties, welcome to “Downton Abbey.”

    The trailer for the follow-up movie to the Emmy-winning series is here, chock full of earls, countesses, marquesses, barons, and the aforementioned King George V and Queen Mary.

    Picking up in 1927, the house is all aflutter when Lord Grantham (Hugh Bonneville), Lady Grantham (Elizabeth McGovern), and daughter Lady Mary (Michelle Dockery) receive a visit from the royals, which includes a two lavish meals and a parade.

    But there’s equal focus on the activity downstairs, with retired butler Carson (Jim Carter) stepping in to help Downton shine.

    The trailer also hints at some big changes in the air, with Mary discussing possibly leaving Downton with maid Anna (Joanne Froggatt). There’s also intrigue: gay butler Thomas Barrow (Rob James-Collier) seems to have a new love interest, finally! And as ever, the Dowager Countess (Maggie Smith) is there to deliver her signature witty opinions on it all.

    “Downton Abbey” the movie opens in theaters September 20.

  • Michelle Dockery to Star Opposite Chris Evans in Apple’s ‘Defending Jacob’

    Michelle Dockery to Star Opposite Chris Evans in Apple’s ‘Defending Jacob’

    Michelle Dockery in Good Behavior
    TNT

    Apple has landed “Downton Abbey” star Michelle Dockery for its upcoming limited series “Defending Jacob.”

    The cast has grown with the additions of both Dockery and Jaeden Martell (“It”), Deadline reports. They’ll play a mother and son, and their TV family will be rounded out by Chris Evans. The “Avengers: Endgame” actor was reported in September to be starring in and executive producing the miniseries.

    “Defending Jacob” is created by Mark Bomback, who adapted it from the 2012 crime-drama novel by William Landay; he’ll also serve as showrunner. The story centers on Andy Barber (Evans), a father dealing with a murder accusation against his son (Martell). Dockery is set to Laurie Barber, Andy’s wife and Jacob’s mother.

    The actress is currently working on the “Downton Abbey” movie, which is due out on Sept. 20, 2019. She previously starred in the series from 2010 to 2015. Following its end, she went on to star in the series “Good Behavior” and “Godless” as well as the film “The Sense of an Ending.”

    “Defending Jacob” comes from Paramount Television and Anonymous Content. Evans is joined as an executive producer by director Morten Tyldum and Anonymous’ Rosalie Swedlin and Adam Schulman.

    [via: Deadline]

  • Colin Farrell, Michelle Dockery Join Guy Ritchie’s ‘Toff Guys’ Crime Drama

    Colin Farrell, Michelle Dockery Join Guy Ritchie’s ‘Toff Guys’ Crime Drama

    Columbia Pictures

    Colin Farrell and Michelle Dockery are ready to mix it up with the “Toff Guys.”

    They are joining the star-studded cast of Guy Ritchie’s upcoming crime drama, which also includes Matthew McConaughey, Hugh Grant, and Henry Golding. “Downton Abbey’s” Dockery is replacing Kate Beckinsale.

    The movie is reminiscent of Ritchie’s earlier gangster movies like “Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels” and “Snatch.”

    McConaughey plays a businessman who has built a weed empire and now wants out. Dockery is the man’s wife, while “Crazy Rich Asians” star Golding is a Vietnamese gangster. Grant is a photographer who snaps scandalous photos and uses them to blackmail McConaughey. Farrell will play an MMA fighting trainer.

    Farrell can currently be seen in “Widows” and next stars in the live-action remake of “Dumbo.” Dockery is currently shooting the “Downton Abbey” movie.