Tag: neighbors-2

  • Rose Byrne: Oiling Up Shirtless Zac Efron Was ‘Disgusting’

    US-ENTERTAINMENT-CINEMA-NEIGHBORS 2Rose Byrne is a comedy star on the rise, whether you (or she) realizes it or not.

    With comedically supercharged co-stars like Seth Rogen, Zac Efron, Dave Franco, Ike Barinholtz, Carla Gallo, and Lisa Kudrow, the actress is in hilarious company in “Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising,” but let’s not forget that Byrne herself has an enviable Hollywood comedy career, with huge hits like “Bridesmaids,” “Neighbors,” and “Spy” under her belt. And she’s showing no signs of slowing down.

    We recently sat down with Byrne to talk about why it made sense for her to do a sequel to 2014’s comedy hit “Neighbors,” why she and Seth make such a great team, how her pregnancy affected filming, and what oiling up a shirtless Zac Efron is really like (hint: it’s not as sexy as it sounds).

    Moviefone: At one point did you decide you’d be game for a follow-up — immediately after the first one? After the script?

    Rose Byrne: Pretty early. … I wanted to know what the idea was. It evolved until I was ready to say yes. It was always a collaboration, too. They’re very collaborative — Nick [Stoller], Seth, and Evan [Goldberg] — the whole team. So I definitely loved doing the first one. I loved working with Seth and Zac and Nick, who is a dear friend and gave me my break in comedy. So when I got the chance to work with him again, I was like, ‘I would love to do a sequel. Obviously, it would be really fun.’ Yeah, it was pretty fast, really. It’s 2016, and the movie — the other one — only came out in 2014. So it is a pretty incredibly fast turn around if you think about it.

    What makes you and Seth such a great on-screen team?

    He very much entertains me, Seth. And perhaps maybe I entertain him. I’m not sure — you’ll have to ask him. But I think we have a sense of entertaining one another, so that’s a big plus. That gift goes a long way. And he’s very perceptive. His comedy always comes from such great observational moments and beats, and it always catches me unaware. Chemistry’s so strange, isn’t it? It’s something that you can’t predict. It doesn’t matter. Even when people hate each other, that’s good chemistry.

    I’ve given up trying to figure out how you get it or how you don’t because you do your best on the day and everything, but you just never know what’s going to read and what isn’t. So we were really lucky with it. Nick Stoller’s a really incredible director, and he’s very good at casting. He’s such a big part of it, obviously, and he’s always consistently — always his movies have great actors in them.

    Seth is famously improvisational, but where do you fall on the improv scale?

    I’m OK. I’ve gotten to see and watch the best people in the world, like Seth and Kristen Wiig and Melissa McCarthy and Maya Rudolph, Russell Brand, Jonah Hill — these incredible people I’ve watched do it. But my talent is a little ephemeral — sometimes it’s there and sometimes it’s not. It’s not effortless to me, whereas it is for those guys. I didn’t come from an improv background.

    Why do you think it’s important to portray women behaving badly on screen?

    It’s interesting. I just did this film with Susan Sarandon called “The Meddler,” and we were promoting it the last few weeks. She’s one of my idols — I love her. She somehow brought up “Thelma & Louise.” We were talking about that in the interview, and she was saying that at the time, it was so controversial because it was women behaving badly, and they were all like, “This is going to be groundbreaking and this is going to change everything.” And I was like, wow, that’s exactly what they said when we did “Bridesmaids.” It’s the same thing. It’s a cyclical thing.

    I guess it’s gotta come to a point where it’s not a talking point, which would be interesting, that it’s like, oh, women can behave any way they want because they’re fully fledged human beings with lots of different interesting things. They can be flawed and they can be brilliant and they can be dull and they can be as mean as the guys. So that was really sort of interesting thing to hear her talk about and realize, oh, things have changed, but have they changed that much? Not really. So films like “Neighbors” are great because they enable the women to be in on the fun. In films like “The Hangover” or “Grown Ups” or whatever other types of comedies like that, the women aren’t always allowed in on the fun. Something like this is very different.

    You oiled up a shirtless Zac Efron in this movie. What was that like?

    That was hilarious. It was with Ike as well, so we were just laughing, and Nick just kept encouraging us to take it very seriously and to really enjoy it — and the more we sat there, the more we started laughing. We were rubbing pork fat on him. It’s ridiculous. The actual stuff was disgusting. It was like a real piece of meat that had been cooked and seasoned in all this oregano and thyme, and then it was injected with baby oil to make it really, really greasy. So it was disgusting. It was absolutely disgusting. I couldn’t get it off my hands. It was this whole thing. So we were also totally grossed out.

    The sex scenes in both “Neighbors” movies are so funny — how are they choreographed?

    It’s funny — it’s much harder to do an intimate one that is actually very real. That’s a more challenging [thing], whereas a comedy sex scene, it’s comedic. It’s supposed to be ridiculous and funny. We’ve done the first one, so after being milked, really nothing is that bad. Everything else is like, you can’t really throw anything at me now.

    You were actually pregnant during filming, so did that affect the story?

    They had actually toyed with the idea of making Kelly pregnant before I told them, so when I told them, they were fine. They were like, ‘Great! That’s it.’

    Did you have to scale back on the physical comedy?

    A little bit. I think there was a scene where they wanted me to do a cartwheel. I was like, ‘Uh, I can’t do a cartwheel.’ So a little bit, but not too much. I really enjoyed working through my pregnancy. Everyone was very nice to me. So I plan to do it on every job. Wish me luck.'Neighbors 2' Interview: The Objectification of Zac Efron

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  • Chloe Moretz Says Zac Efron Has a Great Personality Under All Those Abs


    Neighbors 2” stars Chloë Moretz, Kiersey Clemons, and Beanie Feldstein might not have a crush on Zac Efron, but they definitely didn’t hate staring at his abs. The ladies of “Sorority Rising” sit down with Moviefone to explain why ogling Efron’s abs is all about female empowerment.

  • Seth Rogen & Rose Byrne Couldn’t Stop Laughing While Filming This ‘Neighbors 2’ Scene

    Neighbors 2” is a comedy, so it’s supposed to make the audience laugh out loud. But even the actors couldn’t get through the movie without laughing in the middle of a scene… or all of them. Seth Rogen, Rose Byrne, and Zac Efron tell us which scene was the hardest to film without breaking character.

  • Zac Efron ‘Signed Up’ to Be Objectified in ‘Neighbors 2’

    At this point, Zac Efron is probably used to being stared at. He is Zac Efron, after all! So it’s no surprise that he was down to show off his abs for “Neighbors 2.” He sat down with Moviefone to talk about what it’s truly like to play a piece of man candy.

  • ‘Neighbors 2’ Stars Reveal What Feminism Means to Them

    Wanna know surprising fact about “Neighbors 2“? It’s actually a feminist film. Stars Chloë Moretz, Kiersey Clemons, and Beanie Feldstein sat down with Moviefone to tell us what feminism means to them.

  • Sorority Girls Go Wild in ‘Neighbors 2’ Trailer

    Neighbors 2Only thing worse than living next to a frat house? Living next to a sorority house.

    That’s the lesson Seth Rogen and Rose Byrne learn in “Neighbors 2,” the follow-up to the 2014 hit comedy. A bunch of boozing, drugging, hard-partying girls, led by Chloe Grace Moretz, moves in next door to Rogen and Byrne, and just like in the first movie, the couple declares war on the Greeks. This time, though, they call on their former frat boy enemy (Zac Efron) to get these girls out so they can sell their house and move to the suburbs.
    “Neighbors 2” is certainly not going for Most Inventive Sequel Ever; the plot looks nearly identical to the original. Even some of the slapstick is recycled. But the first one was pretty funny, and Rogen’s physical comedy never gets old.

    “Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising” opens in theaters May 20.

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  • Chloe Grace Moretz Circling Role in ‘Neighbors 2’

    Louis Vuitton  : Outside Arrivals  - Paris Fashion Week Womenswear Fall/Winter 2015/2016Neighbors” was a surprise hit when it debuted last year, and now, the cast for its sequel is starting to take shape.

    Variety reports that Chloe Grace Moretz is currently in negotiations to co-star in “Neighbors 2,” which is re-teaming leads Zac Efron and Seth Rogen. There’s no word yet on who Moretz is playing, and no plot details about the sequel have been released so far.

    “Neighbors 2” will mark a rare foray into comedy in Moretz’s already-impressive career. Perhaps this is a turning point for the young actress? After all, her soon-to-be-costar, Rose Byrne (who’s also reprising her role from the original), was also a primarily dramatic actress before she became a comedic powerhouse in flicks like “Bridesmaids” and “Spy.”

    Along with Efron, Rogen, and Byrne, director Nicholas Stoller will also return for round two. Stoller’s co-writing the screenplay with a team that includes Rogen, Evan Goldberg, Andrew Jay Cohen, and Brendan O’Brien.

    “Neighbors 2” is due out on May 13, 2016.

    [via: Variety]

    Photo credit: Getty Images

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  • Seth Rogen, Zac Efron, and Rose Byrne Return for ‘Neighbors 2’

    NeighborsWhat’s worse than living next door to a frat led by Zac Efron? Living next door to a sorority, apparently. In “Neighbors 2,” Seth Rogen and Rose Byrne will reprise their roles from “Neighbors” as harried suburbanites Mac and Kelly Radner, but instead of fighting with Teddy (Efron) and his host of bros as in the first movies, they get the frat brothers to help them put the kibosh on their new neighbors’ sisterly shenanigans.

    Writers Andrew Jay Cohen and Brendan O’Brien and director Nicholas Stoller will also return, because why not? The first “Neighbors” was unique in that it was an original property (i.e. not based on a comic book, toy, franchise, etc.) that still made buckets of money. And, it looked really fun to make. We can only hope that Cohen and O’Brien will take some inspiration from the insane emails from sorority sisters that have been posted on sites like Gawker and Jezebel. (Beware of some seriously adult language.) We can’t wait to see who they cast as the leader of the pack.

    [Via The Hollywood Reporter]
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