Tag: nicholas-hoult

  • Kristen Stewart & Nicholas Hoult on ‘Equals’ and Abandonment

    EQUALS stars Kristen Stewart and Nicholas HoultThere’s just so much content on television these days. And most actors see that as a very good thing — but occasionally some, like Kristen Stewart, offer a dissenting opinion.

    Take her new film, “Equals,” for example. Directed by rising auteur Drake Doremus (“Like Crazy“) from his own original story, it’s the kind of measured, insightful, quirky film the major studios aren’t taking many chances on these days: a thought-provoking science-fiction film that relies on a different style of effects rather than eye-popping, digitally-created spectacle. Human emotion is the star, as delivered by Stewart and her co-star Nicholas Hoult, who, coincidentally, both have experience with blockbuster fare like the “Twilight” and “X-Men” films.

    “Equals” debuts in theaters in limited release on July 15th, but it’s been available to view on home screens via DirecTV Cinema since May 26th. And, as Hoult points out, any chance to tell a slightly different story in a slightly narrowed scale to an audience of any size, via subscription services or otherwise, is a bonus. “With everyone kind of wanting to get so much content, it’s exciting, because there’s a lot more out there, and a lot more opportunities to tell the smaller stories. But there’s also a flood of stuff.”

    But Stewart, who says she’s still surprised at how rapidly the movie market has and continues to shift, admits that the content flood Hoult references concerns her, especially when she’s working on a film with the kind of quality she feels “Equals” — the story of a futuristic, post-catastrophic society essentially purged of emotion — delivers.

    “You get inundated with material — it’s just sort of like, over-stimulus doesn’t equal valuable material,” she says of the significantly deep libraries of content now available at all times. “I’m actually torn on that, because I’m very old school, and selfish: ideally this movie should be seen in a theater. I hate that people have seen this f*cking movie on DirecTV before, do you know what I mean?”

    “If you cared enough — because there are fanbases for movies, for certain people, for filmmakers, for genres — anyone who is into Drake or Nick or me or this genre probably watched this movie on DirecTV when it came out,” she says. “But those people would have gone to buy a ticket in a theater — f*ck the payback. I’m truly not even talking about that. But just those guys who actually care, they saw it on DirecTV, they probably won’t make it to the theater. To me, that’s a little sad because the work, the f*cking photography, is so beautiful. It should be looked at! It pisses me off.”

    And, in fact, along with being a poignant and emotionally moving sci-fi film, with a romantically spun “Twilight Zone” kind of feel, “Equals” is a thing of beauty to look at, delivering a convincing and fully realized environment without requiring legions of digital artists at ILM or Weta. And because they do indeed want the film to find an audience, whatever screen it plays on, Stewart and Hoult sat down with Moviefone to reflect on their experience making the movie.

    Moviefone: We’ve got a great science fiction story, yet the special effects are your emotions. What did it mean to you to be able to tell a story in this kind of context, but not be relying on visual effects — just telling it through yourselves?

    Kristen Stewart: I think, with any good science fiction movie, all of the elements of fantasy function as relevant metaphor. They all are there to service what it feels like in the center of it. So it never feels like you’re doing something not real, even though it’s not the world we’re used to. It’s still a world that’s whole enough to get used to. Drake’s really good at that. He creates an environment that’s so whole.

    Movies that allow emotion to highlight CGI, they just fall flat and look fake and are blockbusters that don’t interest me. But the ones that balance that right; I love big, sort of epic, suspended-reality movies.

    Nicholas Hoult: The nice thing about this is everything you were interacting with was actually there in the room. It’s more about the emotion with the people as opposed to a lot of time doing those types of films, when you end up looking at tennis balls around the studio and someone on a microphone telling you when to look and what’s happening. Then you have no idea. You have a concept of it, and an imagination running wild with it, but also until you see the film, oh, that’s what was going to be there.

    That could be, at times, a little bit frustrating because there’s nothing physical there that you can feel. You’re not receiving anything back. A big part of this is not actually about what you were doing or thinking about what you were acting, it was about observing another person and picking up on what they were doing and then reading them, which is kind of the most important thing because that’s what you’re doing when you’re living.

    I was reading about the very focused-on-each-other acting exercises that you did to prepare for this, which were sort of unconventional but ultimately really effective in connecting the two of you. What was that like, to get that sort of emotional honesty with each other in preparation for playing roles in a world where they essentially are each other’s only connection?

    Stewart: If you imagine the time that Nia and Silas spend around each other without knowing anything about each other, the groundwork before they’ve even asked their first question is a spiritual thing. They have said “hello” to each other 365 times, but they haven’t delved any deeper. Yet, there’s a commonality. You can see into someone if they let you in, and that doesn’t mean that you need to know anything about them.

    So, in sitting in front of each other — and just for an hour just staring and looking — and then trying to transmit something and trying to receive it, and then projecting and wondering what this little flick of an eye meant. By the end of that hour, you kind of know the person. So he was just trying to emulate what Nia and Silas start out with when they actually begin interacting with each other.

    Did that make it almost, in a weird way, harder to play those emotionally stunted scenes by being so close? Or did it inform that in a way?

    Hoult: We were lucky where we kind of, as much as possible, shot it in sequence. So the first time when you see us in the bathroom untouched for the first time, that was in order. Up to that point, we hadn’t done anything previous to that in the story. So those sorts of things, that really helped when you’re making anything, as much as you can do that, because then everything you’ve done so far informs that.

    Stewart: Because you don’t have to play any guessing game. “That is what it is, I did that, then I did this, then I did this…” You don’t have to wonder what it’s going to be like in order to play something after it.

    Hoult: Yeah, and there’s a build to that moment as well. So then there’s a release and it all kind of feels more natural as opposed to trying to imagine what’s happened up until that point, and then pretend what would be happening.

    Like all great science fiction, there’s tremendous allegory in the story. What resonated for you guys?

    Hoult: It’s always that question, for me: the feelings of whether you want to feel everything, the bad and the good, and what that means. Also, whether if you take away the bad, if that destroys the good as well, and you can’t then feel those things.

    Stewart: I love the idea that you have a group of people that are seemingly obsessed with taking care of one another, but if they don’t have emotions to feel for one another, why would they care? It’s just a generalized desire to progress a society, like some egotistical, narcissistic sort of continuation of our race. I don’t think that that’s what drives people to do anything.

    This hypothetical is suspended in a bullsh*t reality, and I think that what the movie says is that, the only reason we do good or bad is for each other. We’re connected. There’s no reason to do anything if we’re completely alone. There are tests. You isolate animals, they just stop living. This is true. So I think the first few awakenings that you have in life, and then those first few falls hit me so hard. You think that they’re not going to keep doing that, but they do.

    So I think this is examining the ebb and flow of feeling for someone, and sustaining that and the rewards you get from that, and whether or not it’s worth it. Should we just isolate ourselves and not try? Or should we have faith that a feeling that once affected us so positively that doesn’t anymore might come back? Everything that goes into why we want to try for each other, to put ourselves out or be uncomfortable or be scared. It’s all for each other. It’s not totally selfish.

    As actors, do you feel uniquely attuned to your emotions, in contrast to people going about their everyday lives? Do you feel like you put more thought and exercise more control over it? Or do you feel that the emotions run even stronger over you?

    Stewart: Not because we’re actors, but I think some people do feel more than others.

    Hoult: Yeah, and there’s occasionally a time when, sometimes, hopefully, it makes you more observant to other people’s emotions or reactions and things, where you watch something and you go, that’s interesting, and try and figure that out. And then, sometimes, if you’re in a really weird mood, then you can turn that upon yourself, but that then becomes very strange, because then you’re feeling it but then trying to analyze it…

    Stewart: And then trying to analyze it!

    Hoult: … and think about it, and then you sit there and you think about it, and then you’re like, “Oh boy …”

    Stewart: “Oh, I’m such a freak. Why am I thinking about this? I’m trying to just be a real human being.”

    Hoult: [Shouts] “I’ve got to be free! I’ve got to be me!” [Laughs]

    Stewart: There are times when I’m freaking out about something! Like, so emotional! And then I’m like, “Wow. If I were playing this, I would never play this this hard.” You know what I mean? I’m always like, “No. It would be smaller. That couldn’t possibly be real. Then I have moments in life where I’m doing something so much. And I’m like, “No, see, you actually do do this.” Life is not so subtle all the time. Subtlety rings true in film, but subtlety is not how life like actually is.

    Did you have a certain kind of separation anxiety once the movie was over because you had gotten so directly connected?

    Hoult: I have separation anxiety at the end of every job. More so on this for sure. Yeah, it’s always a thing at the end where you kind of, for months you’ve had every moment of your day planned out. What you’re going to eat, when you’re going to eat, and what you’re going to wear.

    Stewart: It’s so regimented.

    Hoult: Like, your whole life…

    Stewart: And you’re just, like, dropped.

    Hoult: And then suddenly you come out the other end of a job and they’re like, “Okay, see you later.” And you sit at home and you’re like…

    Stewart: “I can just do whatever I want now?”

    Hoult: And I spend, like, two days all by myself sitting on the sofa. Then you slowly get a routine and habits back and all that sort of stuff. But first it’s the strangest thing. I remember being very sad.

    Stewart: It’s almost like going through a breakup.

    Hoult: Like, at the Singapore airport on my way back from this, I remember sitting there and everyone had left and I was leaving, and I was sitting there and I was like, “Wow. This is horrible.”

    Stewart: Empty. Yeah.

    Hoult: It’s weird. Lots of people have it in their jobs, in terms of, like, military people or whoever it might be, and they come out the other end of it and they’ve experienced such highs, or adrenaline rushes and everything. Then you’re kind of left with this empty feeling and being like, “Wow.” But then you get a nice reunion on the press tour.

    Stewart: You have to reacquaint yourself with actual life, because our lives and our work, they meld so much, yet at the same time, once a movie’s over, it’s over. So it’s affected you and you can take some of that and bring it into your life, and you can take your life and bring it into your work. But once the job’s over, you’re like, “Oh God. I have to contend with my current reality.”'Equals' (2016) Trailer 2

  • Watch the ‘X-Men: Apocalypse’ Cast Go ‘Beast Mode’ in Dubsmash Video

    "X-Men Apocalypse" - Global Fan Screening - Red Carpet ArrivalsAt the very least, “X-Men: Apocalypse” should have some great bonus material for the Blu-ray/DVD. The movie comes out May 27, and the cast and director are now busy promoting the release. Singer shared Instagram clips throughout filming, and he’s not done.

    The director just shared a throwback to a dubsmash video the cast made on set, led by in full “Beast Mode,” along with Sophie Turner, Alexandra Shipp, Jennifer Lawrence, James McAvoy, Evan Peters, Tye Sheridan, and Kodi Smit-McPhee:


    Wake yo ass u ’cause it’s time to go beastmode!

    You know, in this post-Deadpool world of self-referential fourth-wall breaking, that might’ve been a good scene to put in the movie. Marvel stars do loooooove their dubsmash videos, and it seems like only a matter of time before one or more ends up in a movie.

    Speaking of things that should at least make the Blu-ray, did you read about that crotch punch Jennifer Lawrence gave Sophie Turner? They need to do audio commentary for the home release, sharing more stories like that.

    Want more stuff like this? Like us on Facebook.

    %Slideshow-384490%

  • Love Is Illegal for Kristen Stewart and Nicholas Hoult in Dystopian ‘Equals’ Trailer

    The first official trailer for “Equals” is here, and with it are the inevitable comments that was the perfect choice to play a character with no emotion. Give Bella a break already!

    Displays of feeling, like love, are not allowed in the world of “Equals,” which makes life tough for the characters played by Stewart and .

    The two-minute trailer is set in a futuristic world of pure white austerity. Any emotions are supposed to be reported, but someone apparently committed suicide (“our first jumper in a while”), which certainly hints to strong feelings on their part. Hoult and Stewart begin to gaze longingly at each other and almost touch hands, leading to more (and more dangerous) physical contact.


    Yes, you can find versions of this story in past films like “THX 1138,” “The Island,” “Equilibrium,” “The Giver,” and maybe even “Gattaca,” but this one has its own take, and its own attractive young leads.

    Back in January 2014, Stewart described this movie as “a love story of epic, epic, epic proportion,” adding, “In ‘Equals,’ things go wrong because you can’t deny the humanity in everyone… It’s the most devastating story.”

    “Equals,” directed by opens in theaters July 15, but you can watch it now on DirecTV Cinema.

    Want more stuff like this? Like us on Facebook.

    %Slideshow-378522%

  • Nicholas Hoult Stars as J.D. Salinger in ‘Rebel in the Rye’ Biopic

    Nicholas Hoult
    Nicholas Hoult

    “Mad Max: Fury Road” star Nicholas Hoult will play the reclusive author J.D. Salinger in the biopic “Rebel in the Rye,” it was announced Monday.

    Danny Strong, who penned the screenplays for parts one and two of “The Hunger Games: Mockingjay” and co-created “Empire,” will direct the movie off of his own screenplay, adapted from the Kenneth Slawenski biography “J.D. Salinger: A Life.”

    “Rebel in the Rye” will follow Salinger’s rebellious youth, his experiences fighting in World War II, his struggles to get published in the New Yorker, his notoriety as the writer of “The Catcher in the Rye,” and his rejection of the public eye.

    “’The Catcher in the Rye’ is a classic coming of age story which continues to make a significant impression six generations later,” says Bloom Media chief Alex Walton. “The world has long been fascinated with J.D. Salinger, who the talented Nicholas Hoult will bring to life, in this enigmatic role.”

    rGGX2qA9tLz3iGewtwuo96
  • Why ‘Dark Places’ Author Gillian Flynn Doesn’t Need ‘Likeable’ Female Characters

    What’s not to like in Gillian Flynn’s worlds?

    In “Gone Girl” and now “Dark Places,” it turns out to be quite a lot when it comes to some of the women.

    “It’s funny to me, that idea that female characters have to be likeable,” the bestselling author tells Made in Hollywood. “To me, that should never be the question.”

    In the latest movie adaptation of a Flynn book, “Dark Places” has Charlize Theron playing Libby Day, a woman who uncovers secrets behind her family’s brutal murder 25 years ago.

    “The question is, are they interesting?” Flynn says of female roles. “And are they somewhat relatable in some sort of way? Are they a human being you can feel for?”

    Nicholas Hoult and Chloe Grace Mortez are also part of the film, which hits theaters on Friday. — Written by Dahvi Shira

    10128881
  • See Jennifer Lawrence, Nicholas Hoult on ‘X-Men: Apocalypse’ Set

    Director Bryan Singer continues to score points with his behind-the-scenes photos from “X-Men Apocalypse,” which is now filming for a May 2016 release. He recently shared James McAvoy’s transformation into bald Professor Charles Xavier, and he just posted this casual hangout shot with returning stars Nicholas Hoult (Beast) and Jennifer Lawrence (Mystique):

    Back with the #thekidsinthehall #jenniferlawrence #mystique #nicholashoult #beast #Xmen #XMenApocalypse

    A photo posted by Bryan Singer (@bryanjaysinger) on


    As fans, we’re pumped to see any images from the movie set. And as never-say-die shippers, we’re loving any photos with exes JLaw and Nicholas. (Get back together!) (#Sorrynotsorry!)

    In case you want more new “Apocalypse” photos — and in case you can shed light on what this might mean — Singer also shared this image last week:

    The past catches up. #Xmen #XMenApocalypse

    A photo posted by Bryan Singer (@bryanjaysinger) on


    The past catches up… Not a whole lot is known about “Apocalypse” at this point, but new cast additions will include Oscar Isaac as Apocalypse, Sophie Turner as Jean Grey, and Kodi Smit-McPhee as the new Nightcrawler.

    “X-Men: Apocalypse ” is scheduled for a May 27, 2016 release.

    Want more stuff like this? Like us on Facebook.

    %Slideshow-289858%

  • Charlize Theron Investigates in Gillian Flynn’s ‘Dark Places’ (VIDEO)

    Dark Places
    A new international (and somewhat NSFW) trailer for “Dark Places,” based on the book by “Gone Girl” author and screenwriter Gillian Flynn, shares its predecessor’s penchant for ominous twists and turns — and appears equally goosebump-inducing.

    The film follows Libby (Charlize Theron), a now-grown woman whose mother and sisters were murdered when she was 8. Libby implicated her brother, Ben, in the crime, and he’s currently in prison — but a group of people dubbed the Kill Club believe he may be innocent.

    Libby agrees to track down old witnesses in an effort to uncover the truth, though when she awakens the past, she finds there’s more to be afraid of than ever before.

    “Dark Places,” directed by French helmer Gilles Paquet-Brenner, also stars Nicholas Hoult, Chloe Grace Moretz, Christina Hendricks, Tye Sheridan, Corey Stoll, and Drea de Matteo. It’s due in theaters this spring.

    Photo credit: YouTube

    %Slideshow-228357%

  • Sansa Stark Is the Latest Addition to ‘X-Men: Apocalypse’


    Well, there are going to be some new mutants on the block when “X-Men: Apocalypse” opens next summer. And by new mutants we mean new version of old mutants (this is getting confusing). Last night on Twitter, “X-Men: Apocalypse” director Bryan Singer announced that Alexandra Shipp will be playing Storm, Sophie Turner will be Jean Grey, and Tye Sheridan will be Cyclops. The movie will open on May 27th, 2016.

    All three actors are up-and-coming stars, with Shipp having recently starred in the Lifetime “Aaliyah” movie (and since “X-Men: Apocalypse” is set in the ’80s, we hope that she rocks that awesome mohawk), while Sheridan has starred in “The Tree of Life,” “Mud,” “Joe,” and has a role in the upcoming “Scouts vs. Zombies.” Turner, of course, stars as Sansa Stark on “Game of Thrones” and has a number of buzz-worthy projects opening in the next year, including the action thriller “Barely Lethal,” with Samuel L. Jackson and Hailee Steinfeld.

    These new actors will join previously established mutants Nicholas Hoult (Beast), Jennifer Lawrence (Mystique), James McAvoy (Professor X), Michael Fassbender (Magneto), Evan Peters (Quicksilver) and newcomer Oscar Isaac, who will play the titular baddie. Filming begins this spring. Hopefully your mutant power is patience.

    %Slideshow-158886%