Tag: nicholas braun

  • Movie Review: ‘Splitsville’

    Dakota Johnson in 'Splitsville'. Photo: Neon.
    Dakota Johnson in ‘Splitsville’. Photo: Neon.

    Opening in limited theaters on August 22nd before expanding wide on September 5th is the new comedy ‘Splitsville‘, directed by Michael Angelo Covino (‘The Climb’) and written by Covino and Kyle Marvin (‘80 for Brady’).

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    In addition to Covino and Marvin, the film also stars Dakota Johnson (‘Materialists’), Adria Arjona (‘Hit Man’), Nicholas Braun (‘Succession’), O-T Fagbenle (‘Black Widow’), David Castañeda (‘The Umbrella Academy’), and Charlie Gillespie (‘Julie and the Phantoms’).

    Related Article: Dakota Johnson and Adria Arjona Talk New Comedy ‘Splitsville’

    Initial Thoughts

    (L to R) Michael Angelo Covino, Kyle Marvin, Adria Arjona and Dakota Johnson in 'Splitsville'. Photo: Neon.
    (L to R) Michael Angelo Covino, Kyle Marvin, Adria Arjona and Dakota Johnson in ‘Splitsville’. Photo: Neon.

    A bracing comedy blast from start to finish, ‘Splitsville’ uses the foibles of two mixed-up couples – who really don’t know what the hell they want out of love and marriage, especially the men – to power a hilarious farce that often feels like it’s spiraling out of control even as it reveals some raw truths about the way we handle our most intimate relationships.

    Director/co-writer Michael Angelo Covino and co-writer Kyle Marvin both star in the film as the hapless best friends who turn on each other, while Dakota Johnson and Adria Arjona ground the story with what could be career-best performances for both.

    Story and Direction

    Michael Angelo Covino on the set of 'Splitsville'. Photo: Neon.
    Michael Angelo Covino on the set of ‘Splitsville’. Photo: Neon.

    Seemingly happy married couple Ashley (Arjona) and Carey (Marvin) have just witnessed a terrible car crash on the road to their friends’ summer house in the Hamptons – a tragic occurrence that ends bizarrely with the first of many moments of male nudity – when Ashley delivers a second shock to the kind-hearted but kind of sad-sack Carey: she wants a divorce. She’s been unfaithful, and she wants her freedom.

    Carey literally jumps out of the car and runs miles through woods and streams to their destination, where his best friend Paul (Covino) and Paul’s wife Julie (Dakota Johnson) reveal to him that the secret to their marital success is an open marriage. But all is not quite well beneath the surface for them either, and when Carey and Julie sleep together, all hell breaks loose.

    From there, ‘Splitsville’ becomes an increasingly absurd whirlwind of people jumping in and out of bed, falling in and out of love, being dishonest, then honest, and then dishonest again, and trying to navigate their own increasingly confused feelings. Carey offers Ashley an open marriage too, but ends up befriending her succession of flaky lovers, all of whom camp out together at their apartment. Meanwhile, Julie and Carey explore the possibility of finding happiness together, while Paul schemes to win his wife back against increasingly difficult odds.

    (L to R) Dakota Johnson and Adria Arjona on the set of 'Splitsville'. Photo: Neon.
    (L to R) Dakota Johnson and Adria Arjona on the set of ‘Splitsville’. Photo: Neon.

    Covino films all this in either tight shots of his actors’ faces or long takes that follow the characters like a bemused observer, the highlight being one long, almost uninterrupted fight scene between Paul and Carey that wallows in a Three Stooges-like symphony of slapstick and destruction (both men also get their eyebrows singed off at separate points in the movie). Another long take follows the procession of men into Ashley’s life as she dates them, dumps them, and then leaves them to hang about the house with Carey as therapist and erstwhile squad leader.

    Not surprisingly, it’s the men who have the hardest time reconciling their own feelings, expressing themselves through half-hearted violence or man-childish pouting. It all spins madly and madly around, leaping from one laugh-out-loud moment to another, and while ‘Splitsville’ may not possess enough emotional resonance to make it really stick, it will still leave you buzzing with laughter over the absurdity of the situation and the way the characters act out.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Michael Angelo Covino, Simon Webster and Dakota Johnson in 'Splitsville'. Photo: Neon.
    (L to R) Michael Angelo Covino, Simon Webster and Dakota Johnson in ‘Splitsville’. Photo: Neon.

    Dakota Johnson is even better here than she was in ‘Materialists,’ displaying an emotional depth and sensuality that was perhaps not visible in the latter film’s transactional matchmaker. Her Julie is the most grounded of the central quartet, realizing the soonest what she wants and understanding that all her choices haven’t been wise ones. Adria Arjona shows off great comic timing here, also keeping her wits about her while she barrels through a cavalcade of unworthy men only to circle back to where she started.

    Kyle Marvin and Michael Angelo Covino use their own real-life friendship to create the bond between Carey and Paul, two lifelong pals who nevertheless hide a secret competitiveness over everything from the size of their bank accounts to the size of their personal equipment (one’s is far larger than the other’s). While their friendship is stretched far past the breaking point, there’s still an underlying attachment: ‘No knives!’ they both shout at one point in their centerpiece fight, both somehow knowing to stop their toxic masculinity from turning uglier even if they still wreck the place.

    Final Thoughts

    Adria Arjona in 'Splitsville'. Photo: Neon.
    Adria Arjona in ‘Splitsville’. Photo: Neon.

    With humor not in abundance at the box office these days, ‘Splitsville’ manages to resurrect the rom-com, the screwball comedy, and the bedroom farce in one fell swoop. It’s manic, zany, and often absurd, yet still manages to get in a few salient points about the social construct of marriage – mainly that once you unzip that most intimate of relationships, it’s difficult to zip it back up again without leaving a few precious things outside.

    ‘Splitsville’ receives a score of 85 out of 100.

    (L to R) Adria Arjona and Kyle Marvin in 'Splitsville'. Photo: Neon.
    (L to R) Adria Arjona and Kyle Marvin in ‘Splitsville’. Photo: Neon.

    What is the plot of ‘Splitsville’?

    After Ashley (Adria Arjona) asks for a divorce, good-natured Carey (Kyle Marvin) runs to his friends, Julie (Dakota Johnson) and Paul (Michael Angelo Covino), for support. He’s shocked to discover that the secret to their happiness is an open marriage — that is until Carey crosses the line and throws all of their relationships into chaos.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Splitsville’?

    • Dakota Johnson as Julie
    • Adria Arjona as Ashley
    • Kyle Marvin as Carey
    • Michael Angelo Covino as Paul
    • Nicholas Braun as Matt the Mentalist
    • David Castañeda as Fede
    • O-T Fagbenle as Brent
    • Charlie Gillespie as Jackson
    'Splitsville' opens in limited theaters on August 22, 2025, before expanding wide on September 5, 2025. Photo: Neon.
    ‘Splitsville’ opens in limited theaters on August 22, 2025, before expanding wide on September 5, 2025. Photo: Neon.

    List of Dakota Johnson Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Splitsville’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Dakota Johnson Movies on Amazon

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  • ‘Splitsville’ Interview: Dakota Johnson and Adria Arjona

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    Opening in limited theaters on August 22nd before expanding wide on September 5th is the new comedy ‘Splitsville‘, which was directed by Michael Angelo Covino (‘The Climb’) and written by Covino and Kyle Marvin (‘80 for Brady’).

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    In addition to Covino and Marvin, the film also stars Dakota Johnson (‘Materialists’), Adria Arjona (‘Hit Man’), Nicholas Braun (‘Succession’), O-T Fagbenie (‘Black Widow’), David Castañeda (‘The Umbrella Academy’), and Charlie Gillespie (‘Julie and the Phantoms’).

    (L to R) Dakota Johnson and Adria Arjona star in 'Splitsville'.
    (L to R) Dakota Johnson and Adria Arjona star in ‘Splitsville’.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of sitting down in person with Dakota Johnson and Adria Arjona to talk about their work on ‘Splitsville’, their first reactions to the screenplay, their characters, and working with actors and filmmakers Michael Angelo Covino and Kyle Marvin.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Johnson, Arjona, Michael Angelo Covino and Kyle Marvin.

    Related Article: Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal and Chris Evans to Star in ‘Materialists’

    Dakota Johnson in 'Splitsville'. Photo: Neon.
    Dakota Johnson in ‘Splitsville’. Photo: Neon.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Dakota, the movie is very funny. Can you talk about your first reaction to the screenplay, and did it read funny on the page?

    Dakota Johnson: I mean, yes, especially because I had the tone of in my head because I had seen ‘The Climb’ and I feel like when you know their voices and you know their candor, you implement that into reading the script. So, it’s a very specific tone of comedy, you know.

    MF: Just to follow up, do you think you found a lot of the humor in the movie organically on set?

    DJ: Yeah, there was a lot of improvisation and a lot of moments like that. I feel like the funniest moments in the movie are the devastating ones where it’s like humans not getting it right with each other and feeling so uncomfortable, rather than like a set-up and joke.

    Adria Arjona in 'Splitsville'. Photo: Neon.
    Adria Arjona in ‘Splitsville’. Photo: Neon.

    MF: Adria, can you talk about your first reaction to the screenplay and what were some of the characteristics of Ashley that you were excited to explore on screen?

    Adria Arjona: When I read it was like, “What in the world am I reading?” Especially the opening of this film, it’s probably one of the craziest openings of any movie I’ve ever read. In the first 10 minutes, the movie kind of just slaps you in the face in the best way possible. So, it was funny, and I had also watched ‘The Climb’, so it was one of those things that it was an undeniable, yes for me. Then, you know, Ashley, she just goes through so much in this film. She starts off having everything she ever wanted and taking it for granted in ways and then jumping through hoops to realize that maybe she was wrong or maybe she was right. She dives into the definition of what an open relationship is, and she’s excited about it. She’s a woman in her 30s that’s trying to discover who she is and feels like she’s letting herself go, she doesn’t have this exploration, which is something that I bet a lot of women who get married kind of feel, and then she teaches you this beautiful lesson. So, I was interested in kind of exploring that.

    (L to R) Michael Angelo Covino, Kyle Marvin, Adria Arjona and Dakota Johnson in 'Splitsville'. Photo: Neon.
    (L to R) Michael Angelo Covino, Kyle Marvin, Adria Arjona and Dakota Johnson in ‘Splitsville’. Photo: Neon.

    MF: Finally, Dakota, as a producer and an actor, what was it like working with Kyle Marvin and Michael Angelo Covino as both actors and filmmakers on this project?

    DJ: Contentious. I think it’s kind of what I love so much about this movie is the contention that you see between the characters on screen, it also was happening behind the scenes with producers and the filmmakers and the DP. Everyone was heightened creativity, and it just was a very collaborative experience, but fiery. Everyone was quite into their own opinions. I mean, I think we made a good movie, so ultimately in a good way.

    (L to R) Michael Angelo Covino, Simon Webster and Dakota Johnson in 'Splitsville'. Photo: Neon.
    (L to R) Michael Angelo Covino, Simon Webster and Dakota Johnson in ‘Splitsville’. Photo: Neon.

    What is the plot of ‘’Splitsville’?

    When his wife Ashley (Adria Arjona) asks for a divorce, Carey (Kyle Marvin) runs to his friends (Michael Angelo Covino and Dakota Johnson) for support, only to learn that the secret to their happiness is an open marriage; that is, until Carey crosses the line and throws all their relationships into chaos.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Splitsville’?

    • Kyle Marvin as Carey
    • Michael Angelo Covino as Paul
    • Dakota Johnson as Julie
    • Adria Arjona as Ashley
    • Nicholas Braun as Matt the Mentalist
    • David Castañeda as Fede
    • O-T Fagbenle as Brent
    • Charlie Gillespie as Jackson
    (L to R) Dakota Johnson and Adria Arjona on the set of 'Splitsville'. Photo: Neon.
    (L to R) Dakota Johnson and Adria Arjona on the set of ‘Splitsville’. Photo: Neon.

    List of Dakota Johnson Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Splitsville’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Dakota Johnson Movies on Amazon

     

  • Jason Reitman’s ‘SNL’ Movie is Called ‘Saturday Night’

    'Saturday Night Live's Studio 8H.
    ‘Saturday Night Live’s Studio 8H. Photo: NBC.

    Preview:

    • Jason Reitman’s ‘SNL’ movie is now titled ‘Saturday Night’.
    • Dylan O’Brien, Lamorne Morris and Cooper Hoffman are among the cast.
    • The film has now landed an October release date.

    Jason Reitman might have been busy of late either co-writing and directing (in the case of ‘Afterlife’) or co-writing and producing (on ‘Frozen Empire’) the continuation of his father Ivan’s much-loved ‘Ghostbusters’ franchise.

    Yet he’s also found time to work on another passion project, a chronicle of the tough birth of long-running (the series’ 50th season kicks off in the fall) sketch show ‘Saturday Night Live’.

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    With a script by Reitman and his regular ‘Ghostbusters’ collaborator Gil Kenan, he’s been wrapped filming for a while on the movie, now titled ‘Saturday Night’, and Sony has handed down an October release date for what is expected to start its run at festivals and –– depending on critical reaction –– could be taking aim at the awards season.

    Surely Sony hopes that one of the cast, which includes Dylan O’Brien, Lamorne Morris and ‘Licorice Pizza’s Cooper Hoffman, might end up hosting an episode of ‘SNL’ itself to promote the new movie.

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    What’s the story of ‘Saturday Night’?

    Laraine Newman, John Belushi, Jane Curtin, Gilda Radner, Dan Aykroyd, Garrett Morris and Chevy Chase on 'Saturday Night Live.'
    (L to R) Laraine Newman, John Belushi, Jane Curtin, Gilda Radner, Dan Aykroyd, Garrett Morris and Chevy Chase on ‘Saturday Night Live.’ Photo: NBC.

    On October 11, 1975, a ferocious troupe of young comedians and writers changed television forever. ‘Saturday Night’ is the true story of what happened behind the scenes that night in the moments leading up to the first broadcast of NBC’s ‘SNL’. It depicts the chaos and magic of a revolution that almost wasn’t, counting down the minutes in real time to the infamous words, “Live from New York, it’s Saturday Night!”

    The screenplay is based on an extensive series of interviews conducted by Reitman and Kenan with all the living cast, writers and crew.

    Who is starring in ‘Saturday Night’?

    (Left) Lamorne Morris in 'Fargo' Season 5. Photo: FX. (Center) Dylan O'Brien in 'American Assassin.' Photo: Lionsgate. (Left) Cory Michael Smith in 'Gotham.' Photo: Warner Bros. Television.
    (Left) Lamorne Morris in ‘Fargo’ Season 5. Photo: FX. (Center) Dylan O’Brien in ‘American Assassin.’ Photo: Lionsgate. (Left) Cory Michael Smith in ‘Gotham.’ Photo: Warner Bros. Television.

    O’Brien will play Dan Aykroyd, while Morris is Garrett Morris (the two are not related), Cory Michael Smith is Chevy Chase and Matt Wood will play John Belushi.

    Also on the cast front, Ella Hunt has the role of Gilda Radner, Jon Batiste is play Billy Preston (who was the first musical guest on the show), Kim Matula will be Jane Curtin and Emily Fairn is Laraine Newman, with Nicholas Braun as Jim Henson.

    There are also those behind the scenes of ‘Saturday Night Live’, with Gabriel LaBelle playing Lorne Michaels, the legendary creator and producer of the show whose eye for talent has led to careers for a host of people, with Hoffman as Dick Ebersol, an ambitious NBC executive who helped shepherd the show to air.

    Related Article: Jason Reitman’s ‘SNL 1975’ Adds Dylan O’Brien, Lamorne Morris and More

    Rachel Sennott will be Rosie Shuster, a Canadian comedy writer and actor who was married to Michaels at the time and worked on the show.

    Finally, we have Willem Dafoe as David Tebet, Vice President of Talent Relations at NBC, and because it surely wouldn’t be a Reitman movie without him, J.K. Simmons as Milton Berle, who had a famously awful one-night stint as host and ended up banned from the show (though that was in 1979, so it remains to be seen how he ties into the movie’s story of the first night).

    When will ‘Saturday Night’ be in theaters?

    Sony, which produced the new movie, has now set an October 11th release for ‘Saturday Night’ via its Columbia Pictures arm. There is already talk that it could premiere at the Toronto Film Festival. And that release, as you might have noticed from its mention in the earlier section, is the same day as the first episode of ‘SNL’ itself. Fitting!

    Jason Reitman and Ivan Reitman at Premiere of 'Ghostbusters: Afterlife.'
    (L to R) Jason Reitman and Ivan Reitman at Premiere of ‘Ghostbusters: Afterlife.’ Photo Courtesy of Reuters.

    Movies Based On ‘Saturday Night Live’ Sketches:

    Buy ‘SNL’ Movies on Amazon

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  • Hugh Jackman Starring in ‘Three Bags Full: A Sheep Detective Movie’

    (Left) Hugh Jackman attends 'The Adam Project' World Premiere at Alice Tully Hall on February 28, 2022 in New York City. Photo by Noam Galai/Getty Images for Netflix. (Center Left) Emma Thompson in Prime Video's 'Late Night.' (Center Right) Hong Chau attends the 'The Night Agent' Los Angeles special screening at Netflix Tudum Theater on March 20, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. Photo by Rodin Eckenroth/Getty Images for Netflix. (Right) Nicholas Braun on season 4 of HBO's 'Succession.' Photograph by Macall B. Polay/HBO.
    (Left) Hugh Jackman attends ‘The Adam Project’ World Premiere at Alice Tully Hall on February 28, 2022 in New York City. Photo by Noam Galai/Getty Images for Netflix. (Center Left) Emma Thompson in Prime Video’s ‘Late Night.’ (Center Right) Hong Chau attends the ‘The Night Agent’ Los Angeles special screening at Netflix Tudum Theater on March 20, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. Photo by Rodin Eckenroth/Getty Images for Netflix. (Right) Nicholas Braun on season 4 of HBO’s ‘Succession.’ Photograph by Macall B. Polay/HBO.

    Preview:

    • Hugh Jackson will play a farmer in ‘Three Bags Full: A Sheep Detective Movie’
    • Emma Thompson, Nicholas Braun and more are also in the cast.
    • Animation veteran Kyle Balda is directing the live-action mystery comedy.

    Here’s an unusual project, which almost sounds more like a project for Britain’s Aardman Animation (given their success with ‘Shaun the Sheep’) but is in fact a new live-action comedy.

    Hugh Jackman is on board to lead the cast for new movie ‘Three Bags Full: A Sheep Detective Movie’ (we just checked the date to be sure, and it’s not April 1st), which will follow some ovine crime solvers raised on murder mysteries who have to figure out who killed their shepherd.

    Related Article: Next on Netflix Animation Preview Announces Upcoming Movies and TV Shows

    What’s the story of ‘Three Bags Full: A Sheep Detective Movie’?

    Aardman Animations' 'Shaun the Sheep'.
    Aardman Animations’ ‘Shaun the Sheep’. Photo: Netflix.

    The film follows George Hardy (Jackman), a shepherd who loves his sheep and raises them only for their wool. Every night he reads aloud a murder mystery, pretending his sheep can understand, never suspecting that not only can they understand but they argue for hours afterwards about whodunnit.

    When George is found dead under mysterious circumstances, the sheep realize at once that it was a murder and think they know everything about how to go about solving it. The local cop Tim Derry (Nicholas Braun), on the other hand, has never solved a serious crime in his life, so the sheep conclude they will have to solve it themselves, even if it means leaving their meadow for the first time and facing the fact that the human world isn’t as simple as it appears in books.

    Who will be in the cast for ‘Three Bags Full: A Sheep Detective Movie’?

    Hugh Jackman as Wolverine/Logan in 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios' 'Deadpool and Wolverine.
    Hugh Jackman as Wolverine/Logan in 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios’ ‘Deadpool and Wolverine. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios / © and ™ 2024 MARVEL.

    Alongside Jackman and Braun, the cast is an eclectic mix of big names and rising actors including Emma Thompson, Nicholas Galitzine (‘The Idea of You’), Molly Gordon (‘Theater Camp’), Hong Chau (‘The Whale’), Tosin Cole (‘Bob Marley: One Love’), Kobna Holdbrook-Smith (‘Wonka’), Conleth Hill (‘Game of Thrones’) and Mandeep Dhillon (‘Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker’).

    Who is making ‘Three Bags Full: A Sheep Detective Movie’?

    2017's 'Despicable Me 3.'
    2017’s ‘Despicable Me 3.’ Photo: Universal Pictures.

    Behind the camera for this one is Kyla Balda, who has largely spent his career in animation, and has directed the likes of ‘Minions’ and ‘Despicable Me 3’.

    The script comes from Craig Mazin, who these days is more known as the executive producer behind dark dramas ‘Chernobyl’ and ‘The Last of Us’, but before that wrote the comedic likes of the ‘Scary Movie’ franchise and ‘The Hangover’ movies.

    He’s adapting Leonie Swann’s novel, which was published in Germany in 2005 under its original title ‘Glennkill’. The book became an instant hit, leading the German bestseller charts for months and winning Swann the prestigious Glauser Prize for crime fiction in the debut category, as well as a PETA Award.

    When will ‘Three Bags Full: A Sheep Detective Movie’ be in theaters?

    Amazon MGM is backing the new movie, and has penciled in a February 20th, 2026 theatrical release for the new movie. If that changes, we will keep ewe… sorry, you, informed.

    Aardman Animations' 'Shaun the Sheep'.
    Aardman Animations’ ‘Shaun the Sheep’. Photo: Netflix.

    Other Movies from Aardman Animations:

    Buy Aardman Animations Movies On Amazon

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  • ‘Succession’ to End with Season 4

    Brian Cox in season 4 of HBO's 'Succession.'
    Brian Cox in season 4 of HBO’s ‘Succession.’ Photograph by David Russell/HBO.

    If you’re a fan of the squabbling siblings and cranky patriarch of the Roy family –– AKA the main characters of successful HBO series ‘Succession’, then bad news is on the way.

    Creator/showrunner Jesse Armstrong has told The New Yorker that the show will end with the incoming fourth season.

    Commenting on the reasons for the end, Armstrong said the following,

    “Who knows about the psychological reasons, but the creative ones were that it felt really useful to not make the final, final decision for ages. You know, there’s a promise in the title of ‘Succession.’ I’ve never thought this could go on forever. The end has always been kind of present in my mind. From Season 2, I’ve been trying to think: Is it the next one, or the one after that, or is it the one after that?”

    And as for his decision to tip viewers off about the end of the show, Armstrong said,

    “There are a few different aspects. One, we could have said it as soon as I sort of decided, almost when we were writing it, which I think would be weird and perverse. We could have said it at the end of the season. I quite like that idea, creatively, because then the audience is just able to enjoy everything as it comes, without trying to figure things out, or perceiving things in a certain way once they know it’s the final season. But, also, the countervailing thought is that we don’t hide the ball very much on the show. I feel a responsibility to the viewership, and I personally wouldn’t like the feeling of, ‘Oh, that’s it, guys. That was the end.’ I wouldn’t like that in a show. I think I would like to know it is coming to an end. And, also, there’s a bunch of prosaic things, like it might be weird for me and the cast as we do interviews. It’s pretty definitively the end, so then it just might be uncomfortable having to sort of dissemble like a politician for ages about it. Hopefully, the show is against bullshit, and I wouldn’t like to be bullshitting anyone when I was talking about it.”

     

    Jeremy Strong, Alan Ruck, Kieran Culkin, Brian Cox, and Sarah Snook in HBO's 'Succession.'
    (L to R) Jeremy Strong, Alan Ruck, Kieran Culkin, Brian Cox, and Sarah Snook in HBO’s ‘Succession.’

    Related Article: ‘Succession’ Season 4 Teaser

    Who stars in ‘Succession’?

    ‘Succession’ is the story of the Roy family, headed by Logan Roy (Brian Cox), an elderly but stubborn patriarch and billionaire who is deciding which of his children to hand his giant Waystar Royco business off to. Or whether he wants to at all…

    The competition between the siblings is strong –– there’s driven Kendall (Jeremy Strong), who is plotting to overthrow his father, ambitious Shiv (Sarah Snook) who wants to succeed him, snarky Roman (Kieran Culkin) who is more about having a good time than business but thinks he could do the job. Oldest son Connor, meanwhile, is focused on politics over profits.

    Around this core orbits a group of related family members, staff and advisors, including Shiv’s nervy husband Tom (Matthew MacFadyen), Cousin Greg (Nicholas Braun), and dedicated Roy employee Gerri Kellerman.

    Jeremy Strong, Sarah Snook, and Kieran Culkin in season 4 of HBO's 'Succession.'
    (L to R) Jeremy Strong, Sarah Snook, and Kieran Culkin in season 4 of HBO’s ‘Succession.’ Photograph by Claudette Barius/HBO.

    What happens in ‘Succession’ Season 4?

    In Season 4, the sale of media conglomerate Waystar Royco to tech visionary Lukas Matsson (Alexander Skarsgård) moves ever closer. The prospect of this seismic sale provokes existential angst and familial division among the Roys as they anticipate what their lives will look like once the deal is complete. A power struggle ensues as the family weighs up a future where their cultural and political weight is severely curtailed.

    ‘Succession’ Season 4 will start on HBO on Sunday, March 26th.

    Brian Cox in season 4 of HBO's 'Succession.'
    Brian Cox in season 4 of HBO’s ‘Succession.’ Photograph by Macall Polay/HBO.

    Movies Similar to ‘Succession:’

    Buy ‘Succession’ on Amazon

  • Taylour Paige on ‘Zola’ and Her “Wizard of Oz trip to Hell”

    Taylour Paige on ‘Zola’ and Her “Wizard of Oz trip to Hell”

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    “Y’all wanna hear a story about why me and this b*tch fell out???????? It’s kinda long, but it’s full of suspense” So started the infamous 2015 Twitter thread that’s been adapted into a movie, directed by Janicza Bravo, and starring Taylour Paige and Riley Keough. The director and the movie’s cast recently sat down with Moviefone to talk about their new film.

    Moviefone: Taylour, what was the preparation like for you for this role?

    Taylour Paige: The preparation was life experiences and ghetto ass twenties. And I worked at Crazy Girls for four weeks before I left. And I worked with this guy Miles, he goes by @youngpolemaster. I did two privates with him. Talked to, made some friends at the strip club, shout out to Savage, her name Savage, aka Valencia, and yeah. And Tashina the Warrior in Tampa. She helped me with the pole and yeah.

    MF: And for you, Riley, you’re doing some racial appropriation in this movie. So what was that preparation like for you?

    Riley Keough: Well, she was very clearly written on the page, so I had wonderful source material to work with. So the way that she looked, the way that she spoke was Janicza and Jeremy had very much fleshed out this character. So for my prep, it was literally a lot of mostly dialect coaching and talking to Janicza, figuring out how far we wanted to go with it. Janicza was very interested in making it as offensive as possible and as horrible as possible. So that was sort of the direction. And that was in my dialect, in my hairstyle and my actions, all of it was sort of dictated by making her this inappropriate demon.

    MF: Taylour, why does Zola agree to go on this trip?

    Paige: I mean, wouldn’t you between 19 and 22 go on a road trip where you can make maybe $5,000 a night? I mean, look, I’ve had a lot of odd jobs… I’ve cleaned toilets, I’ve nannied, I’ve done concierge at Barry’s Bootcamp, I’ve worked at a weed dispensary, I’ve taught kids acting, I’ve done all kinds of retail and restaurant jobs, and it’s hard to pay the bills and survive and make your dreams pop. So I think the idea of making $5,000 a night is a no-brainer.

    Keough: Not to mention that they sort of have this moment where they fall in love with each other, and you meet this girl, and you’re like, “Ooh, why not?” Yeah, this sounds like a fun time and relationship. And I think there’s that moment that Janicza and Taylour talk about, which is that sort of fish tank moment in Romeo and Juliet where you’re like, “I see you. And I see you.” And this kind of wild lustful collision that she doesn’t know is going to end up in being Hell.

    MF: It absolutely does turn into that. That weekend turns into a colossal mess, but Zola really turns out to be the heroine of the story.

    Paige: Yeah. She’s definitely the heart and brains of this Wizard of Oz to Hell. Yeah, I think her mentality is like, “Look, no one’s looking out for me, but look, if we’re going to do this, let’s do it right.” And yeah, I think symbolically I feel like I had mentioned this, throughout the movie she has all these bags and no one asks how heavy they are, if anyone can help her with them. And Stephanie, Riley’s character, has a trash bag and a small bag that can’t even fit anything, but maybe lip gloss in it. And you just think about the symbolism of the bags that I think black women carry or that they’re assumed to carry, and no one really asks how heavy they are or what’s in them.


    Director Janicza Bravo also talked about the movie.

    Moviefone: What was it about this story that was so interesting to you?

    Janicza Bravo: The voice. There’s just so much agency. This was written by a 19-year-old girl, and if I had had one shred of the confidence and the power that she had at 19, I can’t imagine the woman I would be today.

    MF: Let’s talk about where she wrote this story.

    Bravo: She wrote it in Detroit. She wrote it in Detroit, on Twitter. This was her third time writing the story. She had written it first on Tumblr. The second time she wrote it was on Twitter, and this was her third draft. The one that I read was the third draft, which was much more humored. It started in a more morose place, and then the farther she got away from the experience, the more she was able to process and exorcise it, and the funnier it got for her.

    MF:This could be very uncomfortable for a lot of people, this subject matter. So, talking about sex trafficking using some humor is helpful.

    Bravo: I think that if the film or if the source material had not woven humor throughout, I don’t know that I would have been the right director for it, because I consider myself a comedy director. I consider myself a director of stressful comedy, specifically. And so I feel I was the right person for it, because it was in my wheelhouse, so to speak. And what I thought was such a triumph of the piece was that it was using humor around subject matter that had been very much devoid of humor because it should be, but she had used humor to get us to the end, and that you walk out of this movie being able to have a conversation on subject matter that people are too uncomfortable to engage with, that many of us probably have an arms’ length distance to, about a group of people, women specifically, that it’s easy for us to shut the door on.

    So I hope that the film brings us a little bit closer. I hope that the humor invites the audience in and allows us to engage on subject matter that we feel has nothing to do with us.

    MF: What kind of conversations did you have with your two lead actresses, Taylour Paige, and Riley Keough, about their character and especially Riley, because she’s really playing a character that is a little inappropriate?

    Bravo: With both of them, I said, “I want to approach this like I would a classic comedy. And that is to say, one of you is a straight man and the other is the buffoon.” So we have a straight man and a clown, Taylour being the straight man, our heart, our narrator, and Riley being the clown, or the menace. And that was where we started was, that’s the approach to this. One of you is a demon. The other of you is more angelic and there is humor through and through.


    Lastly, Colman Domingo and Nicholas Braun talked about the movie with us.

    Moviefone: Nicholas, were you aware of the series of tweets before signing on to this movie?

    Nicholas Braun: I was not. I was not aware, I had not read them. They just didn’t land on my radar because I’m not on Twitter very much. I’m not very good at Twitter. I would say I’m not concise. So yeah, they sent me the script, and they sent the tweet thread along alongside it. And so I read that first, then I read the script and the script just extended and fleshed out and made sort of fully realized what the tweets were.

    MF: How about you, Domingo? Were you aware of the thread first?

    Colman Domingo: No, not at all. But I read the script first more than anything. And then I went back to the tweets as a source material, and I was just blown away by the writing. I mean, who can write that in a Twitter feed? I think that she’s a very talented writer and a great thinker, I think it’s awesome.

    MF: And I think she had more freedom in that format than if it were been somewhere else.

    Domingo: Absolutely because she just got straight to it, and it was just concise. So she understood, it actually was in a new generation of writers. People who can only write with what was 140 characters and it has to be concise, and you have to be very, very meticulous with your language. I think she’s supposed to be a modern day Shakespeare.

    MF: This story is certainly outrageous. Nicholas, why is Derek on this 48-hour trip?

    Braun: Not a question he asked himself, for sure. He really just wanted to follow his girlfriend, and she’s making him believe that she’s done sleeping with men for money. She’s done a good job convincing him of that. So he goes just to help her make some money stripping and be her loyal puppy dog, and support her and tell her ‘girl, you’re a good dancer’ and so he’s just there to support her goal of making money, and maybe he’ll get a cut of it. I think.

    MF: He has issues himself.

    (Domingo laughs.)

    Braun: Yes.

    Domingo: It’s a little like judgment. That sounds a little judgey I think!

    MF: It seems as if he’s….

    Domingo: Special?

    Braun: Trouble.

    MF: Special. That’s a good word.

    (Domingo laughs again.)

    Braun: I think when I read the script, he says in the tweets and in the movie, I don’t know if it’s stayed in the movie, but he says ‘I’m bipolar, my whole family is bipolar’. I looked up bipolar, he’s not bipolar. He’s actually borderline personality disorder. So he doesn’t eat, he’s never been checked out. He’s not a guy who goes to a therapist or anybody like that. So he is borderline. So he does all these compulsive things, and he’s afraid of getting abandoned, and he threatened suicide in order to make somebody stay with them, all of these symptoms of borderline personality disorder. He is troubled in that way.

    MF: X kind of surprised me because at first, when they first take off on this journey down to Florida, he seemed like a different person than he ended up being in the end.

    Domingo: What do you mean? Did he seem like a very loving, warm and generous… (laughing)

    MF: I felt more that Stephanie was in charge, and he was…

    Domingo: He was a little bit of a Machiavellian in a way. I did a lot of research about pimp culture and about mind control. And how do you manipulate people? How do you get people? How do you always have the upper hand? And I think that that was exactly what he was showing from the very beginning. I think those who may know people like this will understand it immediately. You know what I mean? But I think what I love is what Janicza did with this film, it shows you how you can get caught up in something like that.

    So it’s not just people being stupid, but people aren’t thinking, and they’re not seeing the clues. They’ve already laid out. People tell you who they are when they first show you, but you don’t, if you don’t hear it, you’re not listening, and you just go blindly. And the next thing you know, you’re caught up in something. So I think that was hopefully the intention, you don’t know who he is immediately, but if you’re actually really listening, listen to his first line, he says to Zola, ‘Hey big Zola’, he calls you this? He doesn’t know you. So he’s telling you how he’s going to play with you and demean you and immediately in the first night.

    Zola’ is now in theaters.

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  • HBO Renews ‘Succession’ for Season 3

    HBO Renews ‘Succession’ for Season 3

    HBO

    It didn’t take long for HBO realize it had a hit on its hands, with the premium cable outlet renewing family drama “Succession” for a third season only two episodes into its second.

    According to The Hollywood Reporter, the show has built an impressive audience of loyal viewers, averaging 4.3 million viewers per episode across all platforms in season one, which premiered in 2018. Season two, which debuted on August 11, has already notched more than 1 million viewers each for its first two installments — and counting.

    In a statement announcing the renewal, Francesca Orsi, executive vice president of HBO drama programming, specifically cited the show’s ability to connect with viewers as a key to its, uh, success.

    “We are elated that ‘Succession’ and its exploration of wealth, power and family has resonated so powerfully with audiences,” Orsi’s statement said. “We cannot wait to see how the complex characters that Jesse Armstrong has created continue to navigate this captivating, ruthless world of the uber-rich. In today’s world where the intersection of politics and media is increasingly prevalent, ‘Succession’ presents an especially piercing look behind the curtain of this elite, influential, and cutthroat community.”

    “Succession” follows the wealthy Roy family (a not-so-thinly-veiled fictional version of the Murdochs), whose dysfunctional members are vying to take control of its vast media empire. Brian Cox stars as family patriarch Logan Roy, and the series also features Jeremy Strong, Hiam Abbass, Sarah Snook, Kieran Culkin, Alan Ruck, Nicholas Braun, Matthew Macfadyen, and J. Smith-Cameron.

    Season two is currently airing on HBO on Sundays, and will run for 10 episodes. Season three is expected to debut sometime in 2020.

    [via: The Hollywood Reporter]