Jeremy Allen White as Bruce Springsteen in ‘Deliver Me From Nowhere.’ Photo: 20th Century Studios.
Preview:
The first look at Jeremy Allen White as Bruce Springsteen is online.
He’ll star in ‘Deliver Me from Nowhere,’ directed by Scott Cooper.
Jeremy Strong, Paul Walter Hauser and Stephen Graham co-star.
The musical biopics continue to arrive, and many of them are choosing to go the segment-of-life route (see: ‘Bob Marley: One Love’) as opposed to the cradle-to-grave approach.
With the cameras now rolling, we have our first look at ‘Deliver Me from Nowhere,’ which will detail the recording of one particular album in iconic rocker Bruce Springsteen’s back catalogue.
Starring as Springsteen is Jeremy Allen White, who knows a little something about playing people who are dedicated to the act of creation after playing the driven Carmy in ‘The Bear,’ even if here, he’s swapping cooking for music.
Here’s what Cooper had to say about working on the new movie:
“Beginning production on this film is an incredibly humbling and thrilling journey. Bruce Springsteen’s ‘Nebraska’ has profoundly shaped my artistic vision. The album’s raw, unvarnished portrayal of life’s trials and resilience resonates deeply with me. Our film aims to capture that same spirit, bringing Warren Zanes’ compelling narrative of Bruce’s life to the screen with authenticity and hope, honoring Bruce’s legacy in a transformative cinematic experience.”
What’s the story of ‘Deliver Me from Nowhere’?
Bruce Springsteen in ‘Springsteen On Broadway’. Photo: Netflix.
The new movie will follow Springsteen as he struggles to make 1982 album “Nebraska.” The development of the record, which followed Springsteen’s 1981 “The River Tour,” marked a pivotal time in his life, one that he would only openly talk about decades after its release.
It’s regarded as a landmark in his musical odyssey and a source of inspiration for a generation of artists and musicians. Recorded on a 4-track recorder in Springsteen’s New Jersey bedroom and without The E Street Band, “Nebraska” is considered one of Springsteen’s most enduring works — a raw, haunted acoustic record populated by lost souls searching for a reason to believe.
When will ‘Deliver Me from Nowhere’ be in theaters?
While it doesn’t have a specific date on the books, 20th Century Studios is looking to have this one on screens in 2025. If it turns out well, we’d guess it’ll be looking to debut during awards season.
Bruce Springsteen in ‘Springsteen On Broadway’. Photo: Netflix.
Other Movies Similar to ‘Deliver Me from Nowhere’:
(L to R) June Squibb and Fred Hechinger in ‘Thelma’, a Magnolia Pictures release. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.
Arriving in theaters on Friday June 21st, ‘Thelma’ is combines fun action moments, a winning star turn from June Squibb and some knowing talk about the vagaries of aging, all wrapped up in a confident, humorous tale.
(L to R) Richard Roundtree and June Squibb in ‘Thelma’, a Magnolia Pictures release. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.
A crowd-pleasing hit out of the Sundance Film Festival, ‘Thelma’ is a movie that works on various different levels, to differing levels of success. But the whole is more than the sum of its parts, and this makes for a refreshing take on action comedy blended with honest emotion and observation.
And if you’ve ever wondered whether Tom Cruise might still be looking to do the sort of stunts for which he’s become famous via the ‘Mission: Impossible’ franchise (a direct influence here, referenced early on) in his later years, June Squibb provides the answer. Admittedly, she’s not jumping motorbikes off cliffs or hanging from planes as they take off, her stunts more limited to some nifty scooter driving, a gentle roll across a bed or hilarious moments wielding a gun, but she certainly gives it her all to a degree that Cruise would surely offer a thumbs up to.
Script and Direction
‘Thelma’ director Josh Margolin. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.
Writer/director Josh Margolin infuses real emotion and truth into his story since it is partly based on his interactions with his own grandmother (also named Thelma and glimpsed in real-life video during the end credits).
It all powers a story that feels real while also making for a truly entertaining experience. Margolin’s screenplay also works like a finely-crafted watch, setting up concepts that pay off perfectly down the line –– a subtle reference to a class at Ben’s (Richard Roundtree) retirement community that ends up paying off, and a literal example of the Chekhov’s gun idea (even if it ends up going off long before the final act).
Margolin has also concocted truly watchable characters, the role of Thelma herself a gift for any actor, but perfectly tailored to Squibb’s particular vibe. Don’t go into the movie expecting a pulse-pounding thriller, this is much more a deliberate, quietly-paced comedy drama with a keen eye for small details that add up and creative a convincing world.
Beyond the driving –– literally in several moments –– central plot of an elderly woman looking to get her money back after she falls victim to a scam, there are carefully observed touches such as Thelma constantly thinking she knows people around town, being befuddled by modern technology and dealing with her anxious family.
Yet there is no mockery of those at a later stage of life: while she’s introduced trying to get to grips with the confusing world of a computer, Thelma and her fellow pensioners are portrayed as smart, fearless and using the valuable experience gathered in a lifetime to solve problems, including the smart use of a lifeline emergency tracking gadget to evade discovery and real tenacity in the face of danger.
The resulting film is a real delight, shot unfussily but with real style in a few places, happily spoofing some action movie angles, and, in one pyrotechnic moment, the whole concept of lead actors walking away from an explosion without looking back (in this case, also not being able to hear it). Margolin lets his actors do their jobs without needing to jazz up the frame.
Performances
(L to R) Parker Posey, Fred Hechinger and Clark Gregg in ‘Thelma’, a Magnolia Pictures release. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.
This is most definitely June Squibb’s film. The actor, who was 93 when she shot the movie, fully engages with the fact that this is her first leading role in a movie. And on the evidence of this (and, let’s be honest, performances in movies such as ‘Nebraska’), it was long, long overdue.
Squibb brings Thelma to life perfectly, channeling Margolin’s script and working to bring the character to the screens in believably fun ways. And her interactions with the rest of the cast are just as memorable.
Richard Roundtree –– the man who was Shaft back in the day –– is warm and involving as Thelma’s slightly estranged friend Ben, who she ropes into her mission mostly because she needs his motorized scooter. Roundtree, in his final performance, has easy chemistry with Squibb and the pair play well off of each other.
Fred Hechinger is also solid as her grandson Danny, a young man still searching for his place in life, who is fresh off a breakup and can’t seem to find the right gear (unless he’s driving). Hechninger has a fun vibe with Squibb, and also his own arc.
While Parker Posey and Clark Gregg don’t have the same screentime, and the nervy family subplot doesn’t always offer the same compelling reason to watch, they’re always entertaining and put their all into the roles.
Final Thoughts
(L to R) Richard Roundtree and June Squibb in ‘Thelma’, a Magnolia Pictures release. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.
A truly original film that deserves to see success, ‘Thelma’ is well-written and superbly performed.
Action stars rarely see awards love, and even given the mid-year release, we wouldn’t be surprised if Squibb in particular ends up in the Oscar conversation for a nomination at the very least.
‘Thelma’ receives 8.5 out of 10 stars.
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What’s the story of ‘Thelma’?
The action comedy follows Thelma Post (June Squibb), a feisty 93-year-old grandmother who gets conned by a phone scammer pretending to be her grandson Danny (Fred Hechinger) and sets out on a treacherous quest across Los Angeles, accompanied by aging friend Ben (Richard Roundtree) and his motorized scooter, to reclaim what was taken from her.
Who else is in ‘Thelma’?
The cast also features Parker Posey as Thelma’s daughter Gail, Clark Gregg as son-in-law Alan, and Malcolm McDowell as Harvey, the scammer she ultimately confronts.
Theatrical one-sheet for ‘Thelma’, a Magnolia Pictures release. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.
Reuniting with actor Paul Giamatti for the first time since 2004’s ‘Sideways,’ director Alexander Payne delivers his best movie since the acclaimed Wine-themed film. ‘The Holdovers’ is a smart, sensitive and awkwardly funny movie, which is wonderfully acted and directed and is not only set in the 1970s but is also brilliantly structured like a film from that era.
Set in the early 1970s, screenwriter David Hemingson’s beautiful screenplay first introduces us to Paul Hunham (Paul Giamatti), a grumpy teacher at the Barton Academy, a New England boarding school for boys, who is equally disliked both by the students and the faculty. Approaching the holidays, and with no real plans of his own, Hunham is forced to stay on campus and supervise the few students who are not going home for Christmas. Eventually he is left with only Angus Tully (Dominic Sessa), a smart but difficult student who is struggling with the loss of his father and his Mother’s new marriage. Along with Mary Lamb (Da’Vine Joy Randolph), a cafeteria worker dealing with her own family tragedy, the three lost souls find friendship and love together over the holidays.
Director Alexander Payne has always excelled at finding humor in the most tragic and awkward of circumstances. That is clearly on display in some of his best movies including ‘Election,’ ‘About Schmidt,’ ‘Sideways,’ ‘The Descendants,’ and ‘Nebraska.’ With ‘The Holdovers,’ Payne not only finds the humor but also goes deep into the human emotions of the characters in a way that he has only been able to scratch the surface with in his earlier films. This is a master filmmaker just hitting the apex of his talents after almost 30 years of the craft. Every shot meticulously framed, every edit perfectly placed, and every scene masterfully directed, as only someone with Payne’s experience could achieve.
Payne’s choice of shots and his framing with cinematographer Eigil Bryld (‘No Hard Feelings’) helps add to the 1970’s feel of the movie. There are also some beautifully framed shots of when the characters take a trip to Boston. That city has changed tremendously since the 1970s, (I know, I grew up there), and Payne and Bryld are able to capture it in a way that it really looks like the city of my childhood. Many of the movie’s best moments play out in long masters, that never feel rushed and really take their time much like the films of the 1970s. Crafting a movie that is set in the ‘70s to feel like a movie that would have been made in that era was a neat trick, and helps the audience immerse itself in the story. The music, editing and production design also helped tremendously in this endeavor, but more on that in a moment.
While ‘Sideways’ made Paul Giamatti a household name, the actor has carved out a brilliant career for himself since appearing in other modern classics like ‘Cinderella Man,’ ’12 Years a Slave,’ ‘Love & Mercy’ and ‘Straight Outta Compton,’ but ‘The Holdovers’ might just be the best performance of his career. Giamatti is perfectly cast as Hunham, as the actor is excellent at playing a curmudgeon, but also has a likable venerability. While he is very funny in the most awkward moments, it’s his more sensitive and emotional scenes that really open up the honest pain of the character. Giamatti has a fun dynamic with Da’Vine Joy Randolph, but his chemistry with newcomer Dominic Sessa is really at the heart of the movie.
Previously mentioned newcomer Dominic Sessa gives a sensational debut performance playing smartass teenager Angus Tully. It would be easy for a character like this to come off bratty and unlikable very quickly, but Sessa’s performance never crosses that line, as his emotional pain his apparent from the first time we meet him. It’s obvious from the performance that he is a smart and sweet kid that feels abandoned by his mother and is just looking to be seen. The reluctant friendship that forms between Paul and Angus through the course the film feels truly earned, thanks to Sessa and Giamatti’s strong performances.
Actress Da’Vine Joy Randolph, best known for her breakout performance in ‘Dolemite Is My Name,’ is as much a revelation in this movie as she was in that one. Randolph’s emotional range is absolutely captivating on screen and the actress has some great moments to explore that in this movie. Her character very much becomes a mother to both Angus and Paul, at a very difficult time in her life personally, where she needs that. But she also has a deep respect and affection for Paul, which at a point you wonder if it might not be something more. But Randolph is wonderful in her scenes with both actors and is a fantastic addition to the cast.
The film’s production design is exquisite, and instantly transports you to a New England boarding school in the 1970s. Barton Academy comes alive in the most palpable ways when it is bubbling with students, but then feels cold and alone when the school is empty over the holidays. The brilliant costumes also help set the 1970’s vibes, as does the smart musical choices, including the film’s score.
But it is really the impressive pacing and editing of the movie that gives it the authentic ‘70s look and feel. Editor Kevin Tent has cut every feature film Alexander Payne has ever directed, but I think this is truly his best work. From the opening credits that look like they belong at the beginning of a movie from the ‘70s, to the pacing and cutting between shots, Tent is invaluable to Payne in truly achieving the look and feel he was going for.
It’s always difficult predicting the Oscar race this early in the season, especially in a year like 2023, but with the movie’s impressive pedigree, I’d be shocked if at least the film, screenplay, director and lead actor were not on most shortlists of awards contenders. Both Payne and Giamatti deliver some of their best work in years and deserve recognition. Giamatti has never been nominated for Best Actor at the Oscars, and Payne has only won Best Adapted Screenplay (albeit twice), so it would be nice to see them recognized in the Best Actor and Best Director categories, respectively, at least with nominations this year.
While Dominic Sessa is excellent in his debut, I’m always reluctant to nominate first time actors, but Da’Vine Joy Randolph, who was criminally overlooked for Best Supporting Actress for ‘Dolemite Is My Name’ definitely deserves attention this time around. And in addition to nominations in Cinematography, Production Design, and Score, I would also like to push a nomination for Editing, which often goes to action-driven movies like the last two winners ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’ and ‘Dune,’ but it’s some of the best work I’ve seen in this category in years.
Final Thoughts
‘The Holdovers’ is a masterfully directed movie with humorous and emotional performances from the entire cast including Paul Giamatti, Dominic Sessa and Da’Vine Joy Randolph. Director Alexander Payne is at the top of his game, as is his entire production team, delivering a heartwarming movie framed with the loving nostalgia of a time (and almost a type of filmmaking) that no longer exists.
‘The Holdovers’ receives 10 out of 10 stars.
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What is the plot of ‘The Holdovers’?
Set in the early 1970s, the film follows Paul Hunham (Giamatti), a disliked teacher at Barton Academy, who’s responsible for supervising students who are unable to return home for the Christmas holidays. During this process, Hunham is forced to deal with one particularly rebellious but troubled student, Angus (Sessa), who is grieving the loss of his father.
Who is in the cast of ‘The Holdovers’?
Paul Giamatti (‘Sideways’) as Paul Hunham
Dominic Sessa as Angus Tully
Da’Vine Joy Randolph (‘Dolemite Is My Name’) as Mary Lamb
(Left) Director Alexander Payne attends the Focus Features’ ‘The Holdovers’ Special Screening at Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 23, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. Photo by Eric Charbonneau/Getty Images for Focus Features. (Right) Editor Kevin Tent attends the Focus Features’ ‘The Holdovers’ Special Screening at Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 23, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. Photo by Eric Charbonneau/Getty Images for Focus Features.
Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Oscar-winning filmmaker Alexander Payne, as well as his longtime collaborator and editor Kevin Tent, about their work on ‘The Holdovers.’
They discussed their new movie, how Payne developed the idea for the film, crafting a movie that looks like it was made in the 1970’s, reuniting with Paul Giamatti, discovering young actor Dominic Sessa, Da’Vine Joy Randolph’s emotional performance, their working relationship, and if their filmmaking process has changed over the years.
You can read the full interviews below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Payne, Tent, and screenwriter David Hemingson.
Moviefone: To begin with, Alexander can you talk about having the idea for this movie, developing it with screenwriter David Hemingson, and the themes that you wanted to explore?
Alexander Payne: So first, just on a nuts and bolts level, the premise for the film was suggested by a 1935 French movie, which I saw at a film festival about a dozen years ago. I did nothing with the idea, but when about five years ago, I read a pilot script for a proposed TV series written by David Hemingson. It was a contemporary story at a private school, a boarding school. That’s when a light bulb went off and I thought, “Well, maybe this guy can get the film up and running.” I called him and asked him, and to both of our benefit, he agreed. Theme is a more unconscious thing for me personally. I just think, “Well, I’m going to write a story and themes will come unconsciously just through the process of what feels right.”
MF: Kevin, what was your first reaction to the screenplay, and as an editor, were you already assembling the movie in your head while you were reading it?
Kevin Tent: A little bit, but I don’t really know what he’s going to do when I read it, and I don’t know who the cast is. Although on this one, I think I knew that it was going to be Paul Giamatti. But on ‘The Holdovers,’ I think he gave me the first 30 pages and he wanted to know what I thought of that. He was trying to figure out what he wanted to do next. I read the first 30 pages. I was like, “This seems cool. It seems like a good idea. You should go for it.” So it took a while for him to get the rest of it done. But usually he’ll send me the script, almost always the first draft. He’ll usually send it to me and then I’ll read subsequent drafts and I’ll give my notes, my thoughts on things and stuff like that. But this one was in pretty good shape right from the get go and I was like, “This is going to be cool.” I think I gave him some thoughts, but I don’t know if he took them or not.
MF: Kevin, you’ve edited every feature film Alexander has ever directed, so what is the shorthand like between the two of you at this point? When you’re assembling the movie, do you know what he’s looking for, and does he ever go in a direction that you weren’t expecting?
KT: Yes and no. ‘Sideways,’ for example, when all that footage came in of the migrant workers picking grapes, I remember it was a second unit crew and there was thousands of feet of it. I remember calling him and saying, “Where’s this going?” He said, “I was thinking we’d do a split screen montage,” but he had never told me that beforehand. So I’m like, “Okay, great.” We had been big fans of ‘The Thomas Crown Affair,’ the original, and their split screen sequence. So that’s why when I started seeing all this footage, it made sense to me. But sometimes he’ll surprise me with stuff. I will know scenes are coming, but they’re always a surprise and fun to watch, since I’m not on the set.
MF: ‘The Holdovers’ is set in the 1970s, but it also looks and feels like a movie that was made in the 1970s. Alexander, can you talk about how you achieved that?
AP: I don’t know at what point I made the decision to try this little trick of making a period film, not just set in 1970, but that it looks, feels and sounds like a movie made in 1970. A big part of me wishes I had been working then and making films then. Again, I don’t remember exactly the moment, but connecting the dots, I thought it would be neat for the movie, to just give it something special. ‘Nebraska‘s in black and white, which just gives it something a little special formally. I just thought, “Well, wouldn’t it give this movie something special if we make it look and sound like a movie made in 1970.” But what it did, especially as my first period film, was give us the idea that we’re not from today presenting period from 1970, but rather pretending that we’re working in 1970 making a low budget contemporary film at that point. I think that helped our sense of aesthetic, that the sets and the costumes look as lived in, grimy and old as they would’ve been had we been making just a low budget contemporary movie back then. But it takes a bit of doing. You have to make sure all the period clothes are kind of lived in and frayed, and all the cars have to be not brand new-looking, but dirty. What’s hard to get is old cars that are dented. Because when you’re making a movie, they usually belong to collectors who are like, “My car is my baby.” So it’s hard to get dented ones. But at least we caked in with money. I always put a lot of thought into the movies in terms of what car the protagonist drives. It’s always an important thing to think about. It tells you as much about the character as their apartment does. The good ones, I think were, Paul Giamatti’s red Saab in ‘Sideways.’ Then the best one is Matthew Broderick‘s Ford Festiva, a little teeny tiny pathetic Ford Festiva in ‘Election.’
MF: Kevin, from an editing standpoint, how did you achieve the 1970’s look and feel of the movie?
KT: We didn’t really do a lot of things differently than we normally do. We basically cut the same way we always do, which is cutting for performances in our story and our characters. Alexander has said this before, but when you think about it, we’ve always been making ‘70s movies, and that is kind of true, but visually, this one is obviously a period piece. We did do some tricks and we have some fun with adding grain and some positive and negative dirt, and stuff like that. Some people have been mentioning the dissolves, but we always use dissolves. We used them in ‘Sideways’ and have always used them. So I think that we just did what we normally do, but with all the other elements added it feels more like a ‘70s movie than maybe his other movies. But that’s just because of the locations, cars, clothes and wigs, and everyone did a great job.
MF: Alexander, what was it like reuniting with Paul Giamatti after ‘Sideways,’ and did you always envision him for this role?
AP: Answer to the second part of your question first. Yes. The character’s name is Paul. Very early on when David started writing the script, I let Paul know what we were doing just to keep him in the loop and engaged. I showed him a couple of drafts later just to get his input because he’s such a smart guy, and good with film and narrative, and to keep him engaged from early on, thinking about his character. Then what’s it like working with him? Heaven.
MF: Kevin, what was it like for you to be working with Paul’s performance again in the cutting room on ‘The Holdovers’?
KT: I mean, he’s just so good. He was so good on ‘Sideways,’ and he’s so good here. I mean, he’s a different human than he was then and all that stuff, but he’s just phenomenal. He’s so solid and such a generous actor too, to his other actors. He was there for them all the time. David wrote complicated lines to deliver quickly, but he was so locked into the character, that it’s phenomenal. I just find him to be amazing.
MF: Alexander, can you talk about discovering young actor Dominic Sessa for this film and was it difficult finding an actor to play that role?
AP: I had the same experience on ‘Election’ years ago. It’s hard to find teenagers to be in your movie if you want some veneer of reality about the movie, because the ones who are very experienced, if not famous, not that I know who they are, but that they’re in some teen TV show or something, they’re often too polished. They’re too confident and too polished. I’m sure there are exceptions to that, but in general I have that feeling. Then on the flip side, if you try to cast a non-professional actor or a non-actor, then you’re rolling the dice with how experienced they are, can they remember their dialogue and how bulletproof are they going to be? So the answer is usually that those actors are out there, but it takes time to find them. You might luck into it and find them the very first week, like how Mike Mills found that little kid (Woody Norman) in ‘C’mon C’mon.’ If you Remember that movie, ‘C’mon C’mon,’ it’s a wonderful movie. But the kid in it, even with the camera three inches from his grill, he’s just completely natural and how he behaves, that’s a phenomenal kid performance. Well, Mike Mills, and I think he used Jennifer Venditti, the New York casting director, found him the first week. Plus that, he was a Brit, so he was even affecting an American accent. We didn’t have that luck. It took months and months and over 800 submissions. You can read of a casting call and then email your audition in. So finally we were casting at the five schools where I was actually going to be shooting. There he was waiting for us in the drama department of Deerfield Academy. It worked out really nicely for him in his first role to be a student at one of those academies, playing a student at one of those academies. It worked out just perfectly for him. But he had some personal experience as well that he was able to channel for his role in the movie.
MF: Kevin, what is like for you as an editor to cut the performance of a first time actor such as Dominic?
KT: It’s actually a real excitement, a real pleasure when you’re the first editor to see somebody who’s really good, exciting and new. Same thing with Shailene Woodley in ‘The Descendants.’ Her first scene was this amazing shot with her in a pool, and a scene that they shot afterwards with George Clooney. I was like, this girl is incredible. I felt so privileged to be the first person to see that performance. I felt the same way about Dom too. It’s just a personal thing. It’s just a geeky editing thing that you feel lucky to be the first person to see this performance except for the assistant editors and maybe the other people in the room. But you’re the first one to see it on a screen, how it will be someday in a movie. That’s kind of a thrilling thing, in a geeky editing world kind of way.
MF: Actress Da’Vine Joy Randolph gives an incredibly emotional performance in the movie. Kevin, what was it like for you to have that powerful of a performance to work with in the cutting room?
KT: She’s got an incredibly expressive face and being. She doesn’t even have to say anything, and you just show her, cut to her, and it’s just so powerful. So that was another exciting performance to work with. She gave us lots of options on things. But even that, we had so many takes in the Avid, we can stack the different takes. We had probably about five or six on just that shot when the priest at the beginning is talking about her son. We had ones that were angry. We had ones that were just devastated. Each one was different. So we kind of went with one where she’s still in disbelief in some ways, and then at the end, it’s like she’s barely able to stomach what the priest is saying. We didn’t go full angry. We went with hurt and angry. But anyways, she gave us lots of options, which was really amazing.
MF: Finally, technology has changed filmmaking a lot since you both started making movies. But has the process of making movies changed for either of you over the years, or are you still basically making movies in the same way?
KT: I think it’s just the technology that’s changed. We still approach everything in an old-fashioned film way. So ‘Citizen Ruth’ was on film. ‘Election’ was on Avid but we had film, and ‘Sideways’ was on Avid but we had film. Now the last few years, we haven’t had film. We’ve just been all digital. But we work how we used to work, how we first worked on ‘Citizen Ruth,’ which is lining up takes, examining them over and over, picking our takes, and trying not to cut too much. We try not to over-cut. So trying to get the best performances to last as long as they can, that’s kind of our thing. We really haven’t changed much in our process. Of course, we can do way more now with Avid. We can add music and sound effects, and we do all that kind of stuff. But basically, we still approach things how we always have with our performance choices.
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What is the plot of ‘The Holdovers’?
Set in the early 1970s, the film follows Paul Hunham (Giamatti), a disliked teacher at Barton Academy, who’s responsible for supervising students who are unable to return home for the Christmas holidays. During this process, Hunham is forced to deal with one particularly rebellious but troubled student, Angus (Sessa), who is grieving the loss of his father.
Writer and director Alexander Payne is one of the most accomplished and acclaimed filmmakers of his generation.
With only eight feature films to his name, including his latest – ‘The Holdovers,’ which opens in theaters on October 27th, five of his movies including ‘Election,’ ‘About Schmidt,’ ‘Sideways,’ ‘The Descendants,’ and ‘Nebraska‘ were all nominated for Academy Awards with Payne winning Best Adapted Screenplay for both ‘Sideways’ and ‘The Descendants.’
In honor of ‘The Holdovers,’ which reunites Payne with ‘Sideways’ star Paul Giamatti, Moviefone is counting down every movie Alexander Payne has directed, including his latest.
A kindly occupational therapist (Matt Damon) undergoes a new procedure to be shrunken to four inches tall so that he and his wife (Kristen Wiig) can help save the planet and afford a nice lifestyle at the same time.
“Citizen Ruth” is the story of Ruth Stoops (Laura Dern), a woman who nobody even noticed — until she got pregnant. Now, everyone wants a piece of her. The film is a comedy about one woman caught in the ultimate tug-of-war: a clash of wild, noisy, ridiculous people that rapidly dissolves into a media circus.
A recently retired man (Jack Nicholson) embarks on a journey to his estranged daughter’s wedding, only to discover more about himself and life than he ever expected.
An aging, booze-addled father (Bruce Dern) takes a trip from Montana to Nebraska with his estranged son (Will Forte) in order to claim what he believes to be a million-dollar sweepstakes prize.
With his wife Elizabeth on life support after a boating accident, Hawaiian land baron Matt King (George Clooney) takes his daughters on a trip from Oahu to Kauai to confront a young real estate broker (Matthew Lillard), who was having an affair with Elizabeth before her misfortune.
Reese Witherspoon as Tracy Enid Flick in director Alexander Payne’s ‘Election.’
Jim McAllister (Matthew Broderick), a well-liked high school government teacher, can’t help but notice that successful student Tracy Flick (Reese Witherspoon) uses less than ethical tactics to get what she wants. When Tracy runs for school president, Jim feels that she will be a poor influence on the student body and convinces Paul (Chris Klein), a dim-witted but popular student athlete, to run against Tracy. When she becomes aware of Jim’s secret involvement in the race, a bitter feud is sparked.
From acclaimed director Alexander Payne, ‘The Holdovers’ follows a curmudgeonly instructor (Paul Giamatti) at a New England prep school who is forced to remain on campus during Christmas break to babysit the handful of students with nowhere to go. Eventually he forms an unlikely bond with one of them — a damaged, brainy troublemaker (newcomer Dominic Sessa) — and with the school’s head cook, who has just lost a son in Vietnam (Da’Vine Joy Randolph).
(L to R) Paul Giamatti and Thomas Haden Church in director Alexander Payne’s ‘Sideways.’ Photo: Fox Searchlight.
Two middle-aged men (Paul Giamatti and Thomas Haden Church) embark on a spiritual journey through Californian wine country. One is an unpublished novelist suffering from depression, and the other is only days away from walking down the aisle.
The adventures of a group of explorers led by Joseph Cooper (Matthew McConaughey) who make use of a newly discovered wormhole to surpass the limitations on human space travel and conquer the vast distances involved in an interstellar voyage, which eventually allows Cooper to communicate with his adult daughter (Jessica Chastain).
When a rare phenomenon gives police officer John Sullivan (Jim Caviezel) the chance to speak to his father (Dennis Quaid), 30 years in the past, he takes the opportunity to prevent his dad’s tragic death. After his actions inadvertently give rise to a series of brutal murders he and his father must find a way to fix the consequences of altering time.
Keller Dover (Hugh Jackman) faces a parent’s worst nightmare when his 6-year-old daughter, Anna (Erin Gerasimovich), and her friend go missing. The only lead is an old motorhome that had been parked on their street. The head of the investigation, Detective Loki (Jake Gyllenhaal), arrests the driver (Paul Dano), but a lack of evidence forces Loki to release his only suspect. Dover, knowing that his daughter’s life is at stake, decides that he has no choice but to take matters into his own hands.
George Banks (Steve Martin) is an ordinary, middle-class man whose 22 year-old daughter Annie (Kimberly Williams-Paisley) has decided to marry a man (George Newbern) from an upper-class family, but George can’t think of what life would be like without his daughter. His wife (Diane Keaton) tries to make him happy for Annie, but when the wedding takes place at their home and a foreign wedding planner (Martin Short) takes over the ceremony, he becomes slightly insane.
Set in the Bronx during the tumultuous 1960s, an adolescent boy (Lillo Brancato, Jr.) is torn between his honest, working-class father (Robert De Niro) and a violent yet charismatic crime boss (Chazz Palminteri). Complicating matters is the youngster’s growing attraction – forbidden in his neighborhood – for a beautiful black girl (Taral Hicks).
Jack (Michael Keaton) and Caroline (Teri Garr) are a couple making a decent living When Jack suddenly loses his job. They agree that he should stay at home and look after the house while Caroline works. It’s just that he’s never done it before, and really doesn’t have a clue…
An aging, booze-addled father (Bruce Dern) takes a trip from Montana to Nebraska with his estranged son (Will Forte) in order to claim what he believes to be a million-dollar sweepstakes prize.
Nemo (Alexander Gould ), an adventurous young clownfish, is unexpectedly taken from his Great Barrier Reef home to a dentist’s office aquarium. It’s up to his worrisome father Marlin (Albert Brooks) and a friendly but forgetful fish Dory (Ellen DeGeneres) to bring Nemo home — meeting vegetarian sharks (Barry Humphries), surfer dude turtles (Andrew Stanton), hypnotic jellyfish, hungry seagulls, and more along the way.
Mike Sullivan (Tom Hanks) works as a hit man for crime boss John Rooney (Paul Newman). Sullivan views Rooney as a father figure, however after his son (Tyler Hoechlin) is witness to a killing, Mike Sullivan finds himself on the run in attempt to save the life of his son and at the same time looking for revenge on those who wronged him. The film also stars Daniel Craig, Jude Law, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Ciarán Hinds, and Stanley Tucci.