Tag: noah jupe

  • John Krasinski Officially Directing ‘A Quiet Place Part III’

    (L to R) John Krasinski as Lee Abbott, and Noah Jupe as Marcus Abbott in 'A Quiet Place.'
    (L to R) John Krasinski as Lee Abbott, and Noah Jupe as Marcus Abbott in ‘A Quiet Place.’

    Preview:

    • John Krasinski will write, direct and produce ‘A Quiet Place: Part III’
    • The story is being kept quiet for now.
    • Paramount will release the movie in 2027.

    While John Krasinski has already previously announced development on the third instalment of the post-apocalyptic alien invasion ‘A Quiet Place’ movies, we had still been waiting for confirmation of whether he’d be back after handing the reins of spin-off ‘A Quiet Place: Day One’ to ‘Pig’ filmmaker Michael Sarnoski.

    But Krasinski has now hit Instagram to announce he’s officially writing, directing and producing ‘A Quiet Place Part III’.

     

    View this post on Instagram

     

    A post shared by John Krasinski (@johnkrasinski)

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    Beyond that, we don’t know much (see below for wild speculation), but at least we do now have some forward movement on the movies, with presumably some delay happening while backers Paramount figured out their merger with Skydance (which is set to be sealed this week).

    Related Article: Movie Review: ‘A Quiet Place: Day One’

    What’s the ‘A Quiet Place’ story so far?

    Emily Blunt as Evelyn Abbott in 'A Quiet Place.'
    Emily Blunt as Evelyn Abbott in ‘A Quiet Place.’

    Originally conceived and scripted by Bryan Woods and Scott Beck (with Krasinski working on the script when he agreed to direct and star), the first ‘A Quiet Place’ follows a family (Krasinski, real-life wife Emily Blunt and two kids) surviving in the aftermath of an alien invasion by blind aliens with incredibly powerful hearing who hunt and kill humans.

    That movie enjoyed $50.2 million opening weekend, and a near $153M domestic and $341M global take, and received an Oscar nomination for Sound Editing.

    Blunt, alongside young co-stars Noah Jupe and Millicent Simmonds returned for the sequel, ‘A Quiet Place Part II’, written and directed by Krasinski.

    It saw its release pushed due to Covid, but brought the box office back alive during Memorial Day weekend 2021 with a $57M four-day start, ending with a $160M domestic and $297.3M global haul.

    Last summer, ‘A Quiet Place: Day One,’ the aforementioned prequel spin-off set in an apocalyptic New York City ravaged by the aliens during the initial invasion, starred Oscar winner Lupita Nyong’o and Joseph Quinn, debuted to $52.2M and ended up with $139M domestic and $262M global.

    What will happen in the new ‘A Quiet Place’ movie?

    (L to R) Millicent Simmonds as Regan Abbott, Noah Jupe as MArcus Abbott, Emily Blunt as Evelyn Abbott in 'A Quiet Place Part II.'
    (L to R) Millicent Simmonds as Regan Abbott, Noah Jupe as MArcus Abbott, Emily Blunt as Evelyn Abbott in ‘A Quiet Place Part II.’

    With Krasinski back, we’d be shocked if it didn’t continue the story of Blunt, Jupe and Simmonds’ characters (Krasinski’s unlikely to return unless through flashbacks because –– spoiler alert! –– he died in the first movie).

    Quite what they might get up to is anyone’s guess at this point (though hopefully Krasinski has some more solid info, since he’s scripting and directing!) The second film left the main characters on an island having discovered a way to hurt and potentially kill the creatures with sound frequencies, so that may well factor in.

    And could it completely pivot to a different story? The world of ‘A Quiet Place’ is a big one so… maybe? But we’re guessing for now Krasinski’s focus will be on the characters he helped bring to screens.

    When will ‘A Quiet Place Part III’ be on screens?

    Per Krasinski’s post, the third outing for the main ‘A Quiet Place’ movie series will look to scare us in summer 2027, confirming a July 9th, 2027 release date.

    Lupita Nyong’o as “Samira” in 'A Quiet Place: Day One' from Paramount Pictures.
    Lupita Nyong’o as “Samira” in ‘A Quiet Place: Day One’ from Paramount Pictures.

    Other Movies in the ‘A Quiet Place’ Franchise:

    Buy ‘A Quiet Place’ Movies On Amazon

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  • Bill Skarsgård and Murray Bartlett Join ‘The Death of Robin Hood’

    (Left) Bill Skarsgård in 'Boy Kills World'. Photo: Lionsgate. (Right) Murray Bartlett in 'The Last of Us'. Photo: Liane Hentscher/HBO.
    (Left) Bill Skarsgård in ‘Boy Kills World’. Photo: Lionsgate. (Right) Murray Bartlett in ‘The Last of Us’. Photo: Liane Hentscher/HBO.

    Preview:

    • Bill Skarsgård, Murray Bartlett and Noah Jupe are joining ‘The Death of Robin Hood.’
    • Hugh Jackman and Jodie Comer will star.
    • ‘A Quiet Place: Day One’s director Michael Sarnoski is overseeing the movie.

    Movies and TV just can’t stay away from the British legend of Robin Hood –– the folk hero figure known for stealing from the rich to help the poor –– and you’d think that everything anyone would ever want to say about the character has already been covered.

    That’s never been the case with Hood, though, with the most recent being the 2018 version starring Taron Egerton. And now here comes ‘Pig’ and ‘A Quiet Place: Day One’ writer/director Michael Sarnoski, who has come up with his own version, ‘The Death of Robin Hood’.

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    Crafted by Sarnoski before he even got the gig making the ‘Quiet Place’ prequel, the script is moving forward, and the director has already recruited Hugh Jackman and Jodie Comer to star.

    According to Variety, they’ll now be joined by the likes of Bill Skarsgård, Murray Bartlett and Noah Jupe, playing unknown characters.

    Related Article: Hugh Jackman and Jodie Comer to Star in Period Tale ‘The Death of Robin Hood’

    What’s the story of ‘The Death of Robin Hood’?

    Hugh Jackman in 'Logan'.
    Hugh Jackman in ‘Logan’. Photo: 20th Century Fox.

    As has previously been reported, the title nods to a darker reimagining of the classic Robin Hood tale.

    The film will see the title character grappling with his past after a life of crime and murder, a battleworn loner who finds himself gravely injured and in the hands of a mysterious woman who offers him a chance at salvation.

    Jackman, of course, will be Hood (in shades of his battered, older Wolverine in ‘Logan’), while Comer (known for the likes of ‘Killing Eve’ and ‘The Last Duel’) as the mystery woman.

    ‘The Death of Robin Hood’: The filmmakers speak

    Lupita Nyong’o as “Samira” and Director Michael Sarnoski in 'A Quiet Place: Day One' from Paramount Pictures.
    (L to R) Lupita Nyong’o as “Samira” and Director Michael Sarnoski in ‘A Quiet Place: Day One’ from Paramount Pictures.

    Lyrical Media has stumped up the money to make the film, while Aaron Ryder and Andrew Swett will produce under their Ryder Picture Company banner, alongside Alexander Black for Lyrical Media and Jackman. Lyrical’s Jon Rosenberg and Natalie Sellers are executive producers alongside Rama Gottumukkala and Sarnoski.

    Here’s what Sarnoski says about the movie:

    “It has been an incredible opportunity to reinvent and freshly innovate the story we all know of Robin Hood. Securing the perfect cast to transform the script to screen was essential. I could not be more thrilled and trusting in Hugh and Jodie to bring this story to life in a powerful and meaningful way.”

    And here are producers Aaron Ryder and Andrew Swett:

    “This is not the story of Robin Hood we’ve all come to know. Instead, Michael has crafted something far more grounded and visceral. Thanks to Alexander Black and our friends at Lyrical along with Rama and Michael, the world is going to love seeing Hugh and Jodie together in this epic.”

    What have Bill Skarsgård, Murray Bartlett and Noah Jupe been up to?

    Noah Jupe in 'Lady in the Lake,' premiering July 19, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    Noah Jupe in ‘Lady in the Lake,’ premiering July 19, 2024 on Apple TV+.

    Skarsgård will probably be pleased to be playing a character that doesn’t require him to be slathered in prosthetic make-up following his turns as Pennywise the demon clown in the ‘It’ movies and, more recently, the title figure in Robert Eggers’ vampiric horror hit ‘Nosferatu.’

    He is reprising the Pennywise role in the ‘It’ spin-off prequel TV series ‘Welcome to Derry,’ which will be on screens via HBO later this year.

    And he has a few films awaiting release, including horror thriller ‘Locked’ about a thief breaking into a luxury SUV who gets more than he bargained for; historical revenge epic ‘Emperor’ in which he plays King Philip II of Spain and Gus Van Sant’s new crime drama ‘Dead Man’s Wire.’

    The actor is also attached to Andrew Niccol’s ‘Lord of War’ sequel ‘Lords of War,’ which finds Nicolas Cage’s character discovering he has a son.

    Bartlett, who scored an Emmy for his role as Armond the resort manager in Season 1 of ‘The White Lotus,’ has also gone on to acclaim for a memorable episode of ‘The Last of Us’ and based-on-truth TV series ‘Welcome to Chippendales.’

    Coming up, he has roles in new drama ‘Opus’ about an offbeat, long-missing pop star who reappears seemingly leading a cult, musical epic ‘O’Dessa,’ following a young woman’s quest to retrieve a family heirloom, and ‘At the Sea,’ which finds a woman returning to her family home after a stint in rehab.

    He’s also at work on the second season of ‘Nine Perfect Strangers,’ which once again stars Nicole Kidman.

    And finally we have Jupe, who made his name starring in the first two ‘A Quiet Place’ movies (though doesn’t appear in ‘Day One’ since that focuses on different characters.)

    He’s since appeared in the likes of ‘Honey Boy’ and will be part of the cast for the new season of ‘The Night Manager,’ which should arrive this year.

    When will ‘The Death of Robin Hood’ be in theaters?

    Production is kicking off this week in Ireland, which might explain the latest casting announcement.

    A24 nabbed the domestic rights to the movie at last year’s Cannes Film Market, while True Brit Entertainment will be releasing the film in the U.K. and Ireland. There is, as of yet, no announced release date.

    'A Quiet Place: Day One' writer and director Michael Sarnoski.
    ‘A Quiet Place: Day One’ writer and director Michael Sarnoski.

    List of Michael Sarnoski Movies:

    Buy Michael Sarnoski Movies on Amazon

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  • ‘Lady in the Lake’ – Natalie Portman and Moses Ingram

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    Premiering on Apple TV+ beginning July 19th is the new limited series ‘Lady in the Lake,’ which is based on the novel of the same name.

    Written and directed by Alma Har’el (‘Honey Boy’), the series stars Oscar-winner Natalie Portman (‘Black Swan,’ ‘Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith’), Moses Ingram (‘Obi-Wan Kenobi’), Y’llan Noel (‘The First Purge’), Brett Gelman (‘Boy Kills World’), Noah Jupe (‘A Quiet Place’), Byron Bowers (‘Concrete Cowboy’), Josiah Cross (‘King Richard’), Wood Harris (‘Creed’), Angela Robinson (‘Mea Culpa’), Pruitt Taylor Vince (‘Constantine’), and David Corenswet (‘Superman’).

    Related Article: Julianne Moore and Natalie Portman Talk Todd Haynes’ ‘May December’

    Moses Ingram and Natalie Portman star in Apple TV+'s 'Lady in the Lake'.
    (L to R) Moses Ingram and Natalie Portman star in Apple TV+’s ‘Lady in the Lake’.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Natalie Portman and Moses Ingram about their work on ‘Lady in the Lake,’ their approach to their characters, similarities between the two women, and working with director Alma Har’el.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Portman and Ingram, as well as Y’llan Noel, Byron Bowers, Josiah Cross, Noah Jupe and director Alma Har’el.

    Natalie Portman in 'Lady in the Lake,' premiering July 19, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    Natalie Portman in ‘Lady in the Lake,’ premiering July 19, 2024 on Apple TV+.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Natalie, can you talk about your approach to playing Maddie, a character who is really discovering who she is for herself as the series unfolds?

    Natalie Portman: Well, I think that something that’s exciting with Maddie is she’s someone who’s bottled up her personality for so long that it kind of explodes and then she kind of overdoes everything. So, it was exciting to have that kind of exploration. It was very different because I’ve never done a series before, so I’ve never had that amount of space to explore a character. Alma created incredible space for us to improvise, find detail, play, and it was fun. Just with creating the character and with other actors who also had created these very detailed characters, she would leave the end of takes open that we could just keep improvising back and forth. There were some treasures that came out of that, and beautiful moments that she just allowed us to have. You must have some breathing room to find those things.

    Moses Ingram in 'Lady in the Lake,' premiering July 19, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    Moses Ingram in ‘Lady in the Lake,’ premiering July 19, 2024 on Apple TV+.

    MF: Moses, can you talk about your approach to playing Cleo and her motivation to protect her family and give them a better life?

    Moses Ingram: I mean, I don’t have children of my own, but I can see in mothers around me, my own mother, that you always want yours to have better than you did. I think that’s certainly the thing that drives her. When life is hard, people make decisions that other people might not understand. I think that’s kind of the position that Cleo is in. But she does it for her kids, for sure.

    Natalie Portman and Moses Ingram in 'Lady in the Lake,' premiering July 19, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Natalie Portman and Moses Ingram in ‘Lady in the Lake,’ premiering July 19, 2024 on Apple TV+.

    MF: Maddie and Cleo are completely different people, but at the same time are very similar in a lot of ways. Can you talk about that?

    MI: I mean, women in the 60s, they couldn’t even have credit cards without a man attached. Trying to make very simple decisions like getting rid of your car, for example. Things like that make it very hard to get a leg up on your own. I think that’s where these two women meet, and I think that’s where the universality lies between the two of them. Obviously, it’s different because of the intersectionality of it all, but alike and different. I think there’s space for many women to see themselves here.

    Natalie Portman with creator, showrunner, executive producer, writer and director Alma Har’el for 'Lady in the Lake,' premiering July 19, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Natalie Portman with creator, showrunner, executive producer, writer and director Alma Har’el for ‘Lady in the Lake,’ premiering July 19, 2024 on Apple TV+.

    MF: Finally, Natalie, can you talk about working on set with director Alma Har’el and collaborating with her to execute her vision for this project?

    NP: Alma is extraordinary. I mean, I was in awe of her every day. She comes with full energy, full positivity, full creativity, a very precise and beautiful vision that she communicates well, creating space for other people to participate and collaborate, and then managed to do that every day for months and months and months and months. She wrote everything. I mean, she had a team that she wrote with, but she led the writing. She directed every episode. She cut everything. I mean, she’s a boss. I am in awe of her and love her dearly.

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    What is the plot of ‘Lady in the Lake’?

    In 1960s Baltimore, an investigative journalist (Natalie Portman) working on an unsolved murder, clashes with a woman (Angela Robinson) working to advance the agenda of the city’s black community. The protagonist ditches her doting husband (Brett Gelman) and big Pikesville home to pursue a career as a newspaper reporter. She becomes obsessed with unraveling the mystery of two separate killings: eleven-year-old Tessie Fine and a bartender named Cleo Sherwood (Moses Ingram).

    Who is in the cast of ‘Lady in the Lake’?

    • Natalie Portman as Maddie Schwartz
    • Moses Ingram as Cleo Sherwood
    • Y’lan Noel as Ferdie Platt
    • Mikey Madison as Judith Weinstein
    • Sean Ringgold as The Prophet
    • Brett Gelman as Milton
    • Noah Jupe as Seth
    • Byron Bowers as Slappy
    • Selema Masekela as Cedrick
    • Josiah Cross as Reggie Robinson
    • Pruitt Taylor Vince as Bob Bauer
    • Ronnie Gene Blevins as Officer Boško
    • Angela Robinson as Myrtle Summer
    Mikey Madison and Natalie Portman in 'Lady in the Lake,' premiering July 19, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Mikey Madison and Natalie Portman in ‘Lady in the Lake,’ premiering July 19, 2024 on Apple TV+.

    Natalie Portman Movies:

    Buy Natalie Portman Movies on Amazon

     

  • Lupita Nyong’o Starring in ‘A Quiet Place: Day One’

    Lupita Nyong'o attends the 90th Annual Academy Awards at Hollywood & Highland Center on March 4, 2018 in Hollywood, California.
    Lupita Nyong’o attends the 90th Annual Academy Awards at Hollywood & Highland Center on March 4, 2018 in Hollywood, California. Photo by Neilson Barnard/Getty Images.

    She’s been part of the ‘Star Wars’ sequels. Starred in more than one Marvel movie. And thanks to both ‘Queen of Katwe’ and Jon Favreau’s ‘The Jungle Book’, Lupita Nyong’o can claim full Disney move status to boot.

    So are there any more franchise worlds for her to conquer? Plenty, as it turns out – and she’s starting with Paramount’s ‘A Quiet Place’.

    More specifically, the actor has been cast in the spin-off from the John Krasinski-overseen series of sci-fi movies called ‘A Quiet Place: Day One’.

    You’ll recall that the movies started life with ‘A Quiet Place’ in 2018, after writers Bryan Woods and Scott Beck cooked up the idea of an invading alien species that arrives from the stars. The ravenous creatures are blind, but blessed with incredibly heightened hearing, and driven to attack any human making sounds.

    Krasinski did a pass on the script and then agreed to direct, co-starring with wife Emily Blunt and young actors Millicent Simmonds and Noah Jupe, playing a family dealing with the aftermath of the invasion and the imminent arrival of a newborn.

    The movie was a big success and was followed by ‘A Quiet Place: Part II’ in 2020, which focused on Blunt, Simmonds and Jupe’s characters in the tragic wake of the first movie. Krasinski returned to write and direct and appears as (spoiler alert) an ill-fated character in a prologue set during day one of the aliens’ arrival.

    And that has spurred the creation of this spin-off movie, which will be set in the same world but follow different characters.

    Noah Jupe and John Krasinski
    (L-R) Noah Jupe and director John Krasinski and on the set of Paramount Pictures’ “A Quiet Place Part II.”

    Since Krasinski is busy with other projects (he’s currently directing a fantasy film called ‘Imaginary Friends’, in which he appears alongside Ryan Reynolds and Steve Carell), the job of directing ‘A Quiet Place: Day One’ has gone to another director.

    Originally, that was to be ‘Midnight Special’ and ‘Mud’s Jeff Nichols, but one of his own movies drew him away from the spin-off.

    A replacement was found in ‘Pig’ director Michael Sarnoski, working from a script by Krasinski and Nichols.

    Little is known about the new movie beyond its setting and the idea that it’ll chronicle people attempting to survive this post-apocalyptic new world beyond the original family. It seems unlikely that Blunt’s Evelyn Abbott will appear.

    But we can look forward to her return in a third main ‘A Quiet Place’ film, which isn’t expected until 2025 (not surprising given Krasinski’s schedule). Paramount is hoping to keep building on the movies, with more spin-offs likely if ‘Day One’ is a success.

    Nyong’o will be back on our screens as Nakia in Marvel sequel ‘Black Panther: Wakanda Forever’, which will be out on Friday, November 11th.

    ‘A Quiet Place: Day One’, meanwhile, is scheduled to arrive in theaters on March 8th, 2024.

    John Krasinski as Lee Abbott, and Noah Jupe as Marcus Abbott in 'A Quiet Place.'
    (L to R) John Krasinski as Lee Abbott, and Noah Jupe as Marcus Abbott in ‘A Quiet Place.’
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  • Don Cheadle, Jon Hamm, more stars talk ‘No Sudden Move’

    Don Cheadle, Jon Hamm, more stars talk ‘No Sudden Move’

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    No Sudden Move,’ Steven Soderbergh‘s new crime thriller, is set in Detroit in 1954, and the film boasts a very impressive cast. Don Cheadle, Benecio Del Toro, and Kieran Culkin play a trio of hoods, Brendan Fraser plays the man that put the trio together, and David Harbour, Amy Seimetz, and Noah Jupe play the family that the hoods take hostage. Bill Duke and Ray Liotta play crime lords, and Jon Hamm plays the detective trying to get to the bottom of it all. The cast of the movie took some time to tell us about their characters and the movie’s twists and turns.

    Don Cheadle and Benecio Del Toro talk about working with director Steven Soderbergh.


    Moviefone: Don, did you see the tension in the film when you signed on?


    Don Cheadle:
    Yeah, I really enjoyed the script that Ed Solomon wrote. I thought it was really good. And when I knew Benicio was in, it was a no-brainer to say yes, and we had a lot of fun. It was pretty intense working under those conditions. We were one of the first projects to come back with the COVID protocols and Steven wrote the protocols for the DGA. So we felt like we were in good hands with him, but it was, yeah, the whole thing was an experience and shooting in Detroit and these locations that are still there, this great architecture in these cars and then the costumes. It was just great.

    MF: Benecio, how do you describe these two characters, these two guys, and what they do and who they are?

    Benicio Del Toro: Well, I think they are two criminals that come together and they just go on this journey to, led by greed, or so we think, and then we go on this roller coaster of all kinds of situations that happens to them, and the betrayals that happen and all that stuff. I think this movie’s a lot of fun that way.

    Cheadle: No doubt.

    MF: I just talked to Ray Liotta and he summed it up by saying, “Everybody is scummy,” and I thought that was kind of perfect. What I really love too, Don, is I feel like as an audience member, I was finding out things and discovering things along with the characters.

    Cheadle: Yeah. That’s some of the fun of this, I think, is that you don’t really get ahead of it. You don’t know what’s going to happen and things keep being revealed along the way. People’s motivations are shifting and allegiances that you think are one way go the other way. And I think between David and Benicio’s and my character, we’re all on these separate journeys that somehow come together, which is really a testament to the script and Steven.

    Del Toro: Yeah. Yeah.

    MF: Benicio, what is it about Steven Soderbergh, or a Soderbergh production?

    Del Toro: I tell you what, he gets you home early while you’re shooting on the movie. We finish about 10 days early. I think he knows exactly what he wants.

    Cheadle: Yeah.

    Del Toro: He knows that story back and forth better than anyone on the set. And he’s just a 100% there while you’re shooting. He’s like a machine. And the minute I knew that Don Cheadle and Steven Soderbergh were attached to the project, Steven called me up and I said, “I’m in. I don’t have to read it.” It was that simple for me. So I’m just happy that the movie also is working.

    MF: It worked so well, and I was thinking about the name of the movie, No Sudden Move, because as I was watching it, when any of you guys made a move, I was like, “Oh, well, that’s not good. That door opening, that’s not good.”

    Cheadle: Right.

    MF: It’s literally someone turned their head and I was like, “Oh, what’s about to happen next?” I mean, it was a fun little ride.

    Cheadle: Yeah. The movie was renamed during production because the other name that it had that we won’t even bring up was used by another movie. So Steven just kind of came up with “No Sudden Move.” And he said before he even kind of told us that he was on the set and the guy drove by in a car and said, “What’s this movie?” And he said, “It’s called No Sudden Move.” And the guy said, “Sounds like a thriller.” And he went, “Okay, that title works.”

    MF: Thank you to that guy for driving by and saying that.

    Del Toro: Yeah. That’s right.

    MF: I also liked the idea in your work that you guys do, you really have to trust your director and editors and all that, but the world that these guys live in the characters, there’s no trust.

    Cheadle: No trust. Yeah. Nobody trusts anybody. Everybody’s waiting for the person next to them to cut their legs out from under him, which is great. I mean, it’s cool for the audience, I think, to try to figure out who’s scummier than the last, and who’s going to come out on top.

    Del Toro: Right.

    Cheadle: And I think the film holds that tension for the whole time.


    Bill Duke and Brendan Fraser discuss how the movie keeps the audience guessing.

    MF: I can’t remember the last time I cussed this much watching a movie because every time something happened, because it was really a ride. Did you guys have that kind of same experience being in the movie, Bill?

    Bill Duke: Well, working with the actors that we worked with, was a wonderful experience. And following the script, it’s like, it’s one thing to memorize your lines, but when you’re in a scene with Don Cheadles of the world and the Matt Damons et cetera, and all the actors, it was like a very, very, very insightful, wonderful experience. Put it that way.

    MF: Brendan, and the same for you, kind of just riding the moment?

    Brendan Fraser: I knew it would be exciting. It’s a multi-layered screenplay with plenty of twists and turns. It’ll keep you guessing. It’s a story of redemption in many ways. Although we see these anti-heroes that populate the screen and everyone gets what they deserve by stories. And I felt great knowing that this is a genre that Steven Soderbergh absolutely excels with. And I guess the excitement just came mostly from seeing the film in its entirety and going, wow, that’s the product that you get when you work with the best that there is in the business. It was exciting.

    MF: I really enjoyed, as a member of the audience, that I felt like I was finding out stuff, as you guys were founding out, or the characters, like we were all in it together.

    Duke: And that’s not easy to do, because the thing is, as I said before, he has the ability to stay ahead of the audience, because once the audience catches up, you’re done. Right? And he doesn’t do it in a corny way. I mean, he just hooks you and just takes you through his journey until the end. And sometimes there’s not an end-to-end, but it’s the end of the movie, but there’re other things that’s why this movie didn’t have an end-end. Don walks off, right? But what is he walking off into? Nobody knows. He doesn’t even know really.

    Fraser: And he entered the world of this film with a walk too. So it really completes his journey. And as the credits roll, we learned that the overriding theme of what we’ve seen and how exciting it is, and it is. Prior to that, there’s some truth to what really happened in those days, with regard to what the prize is in this film that everyone’s chasing up. And they’re all chasing something different. Exactly. And that’s really the technology behind the catalytic converter, which is, was suppressed by the car companies for some 25 years, until it was mandated by law, that this technology is put into cars so that we can all breathe cleaner air. And it leaves you wondering, why couldn’t we have done this sooner? Well, there’s some very powerful forces of greed at work in our world. And hopefully we can move on from there. I don’t know. That’s the answer. That’s the takeaway I get from it.

    MF: Quickly tell me like who your characters are. Brendan, who is Jones?

    Fraser: Doug Jones likely fought in the war. He survived it. I don’t think he participated in a way that… I just think he probably got up to no good during that time. Came back to America and didn’t get with society and the program and decided that a life of crime was his. He’s working his way up the management chain of organized crime. I found it helpful to understand the character as being rotten to the core by wearing false teeth that were really nasty. He gets his, just like everybody else. So I’m not telling tales out of school.

    MF: And Bill for you is, is your character just a bad-ass boss?

    Duke: No, he is part of a tradition. I think his family, his father was an O.G. and I think his father’s father, maybe it was what they taught him was about power. In power, you don’t talk power. You be power. As I said before, if I know where your kids go to school and where you asleep, I’m going to ask you a question. And I just expect an honest answer, because you’ll know if you lie to me, there’ll be consequences.


    Amy Seimetz and Frankie Shaw share their experiences making the movie.

    Moviefone: Frankie, let’s talk about life on the set. What is life on a Steven Soderbergh set like? What was that experience?

    Frankie Shaw: So he’s super collaborative. He makes you feel like you’re a genius and he knows exactly what he wants, and has the whole movie in his head already. And there’s no fat on it, so he just shoots what he needs, because he’s going to edit later that day. And yeah, it’s like a really fun vibe. He’s serious and he’s jokey. And he’s just like maybe the smartest person we’ve probably ever met.

    MF: Well, that’s a nice review of a guy. I was talking about this movie, how, what you guys do, you trust your director, you trust your sound people and your editors, but this world that we’re living in, there’s no trust for anyone in any of these characters. I didn’t trust anyone from the very beginning, and that helped me throughout the entire movie.

    Amy Seimetz: I think that’s part of the fun and part of, with the twists and turns, it’s like, you’re never, in the way that he’s shooting it, even just watching it again and also being on set and seeing how he framed everything. Everything’s like a little off-kilter, so you never feel completely grounded. And that goes for with the characters too. You can’t trust, you’re never on firm grounding with any of the characters.

    MF: Yeah, Frankie, I thought the name of the movie was perfect because as a viewer, as an audience member, anytime anyone in the film made a sudden move, or any kind of move, I was like, well, that’s a bad sign. Like if a door opened, I was like, that’s a bad sign. Someone looked to the left. I was like, what’s he looking at?

    Shaw: Yeah, there wasn’t a lot of reason for these characters to trust. So then they became untrustworthy, I felt like. But if you really go, and all the actors were so incredible. And I feel like did such a good job bringing in the history, their history to the current moment of where they were at. And so, I don’t know, even through their deep untrustworthiness, you really felt for them.

    Jon Hamm and Noah Jupe talk about the complex plot.

    Moviefone: Jon, my gift and curse in life is that I can usually tell where a movie is going. I’m like, I see what’s happening here. This movie proved me wrong time and time again in the best way possible. Did you see that when you guys first signed on?

    Jon Hamm: It’s baked into the script, for sure. The complexity is there on purpose and Ed Solomon is a phenomenal writer and set out to write a very twisty and turny heist movie, essentially about the catalytic converter, which on its face sounds like a ridiculous idea, but is actually, especially because it’s based on true events and reality, it’s an ambitious story to tell, and it’s a very compelling story. Cause it wraps up so much about American history and racial politics and how the car culture basically ruined neighborhoods in inner cities that were low income and majority minority neighborhoods. And this is all part of history that kind of got literally bulldozed, but it should not be forgotten.

    MF: Noah, your character is one of the few people I trusted in this movie. How did you find him? What did you make of Matthew?

    Noah Jupe: I really liked Matthew. I thought he was really interesting. I connected with him a lot. I feel like in that situation, I had actually hoped I would also do the same thing as he did. I thought it was very strong. He knew he could read a person very well. I felt like he knew exactly who to trust and when to trust them, and who he couldn’t quite get a handle on. And for example, his relationship with Don’s character is very interesting. Because I think by the end of the meeting, I think they always do trust each other a little bit. And so it’s very interesting to explore that in the scenes and yeah. Honestly, I just love playing Matthew.

    MF: Jon, what was life like on a Steven Soderbergh set? What is that experience?

    Hamm: You feel very taken care of. I will say that, especially given the fact that we were shooting this in October-November of last year, so pretty deep into the pandemic situation in Michigan, but you definitely feel there was a very strong hand on the tiller, so you know that there’s a plan for the day, there’s a plan in case something goes wrong, everything is planned out, and you get your work done, and then you go home. And we were all staying in the same hotel. We were in a bubble, so to speak. So, we all got to go home early and have dinner like adults. And it was very much a professionally run set. And then to be able to be a part of something that’s so creatively ambitious and beautifully crafted was kind of a bonus.


    Lastly, Ray Liotta and Julia Fox discuss their married character’s relationship.

    Moviefone: I don’t know if this is a direct reflection of the movie, but I no longer trust either one of you. That’s kind of the world we’re living in. Ray, what was it about this whole concept that made you want to sign on?

    Ray Liotta: Well, basically I liked the script, and to work with Steven. I’d worked with Don before, not Benicio, which I wanted to do. So, the combination of things made me… Yeah, I was just in and out really quick, but I just wanted to do it.

    MF: Julia, this whole concept of we can’t trust one person. You literally can’t trust the next guy. Did you see that in the script originally when you first read it, or did it kind of open itself up as you guys shot the film?

    Julia Fox: It definitely opened itself up, I think. I did not see what I did coming at all. But I totally understood it, and I sympathized with her, and I think being a woman in the forties must’ve been really tough, and she wanted to level the playing field. So, I loved her and when I read her. I said, “this is me, I can do this, I have to do this, I was born to do this,” and I did.

    MF: Let’s talk about their relationship, then. This is a couple, you two play a couple? But it’s complicated, is it not?

    Liotta: Yeah. No question. I think we probably got married young, and I was doing the stuff that I do, and she ends up cheating on me. And so, it was just interesting.

    Fox: You deserved it, though. (Laughing)

    MF: Julia, how did you find the relationship? What did you make of it?

    Fox: Yeah, it just seemed like what Ray said, that back in those days, a woman’s worth was dictated by who she’s married to. And if you’re not married, you’re worthless. And if you… You know what I mean? And, I think it was that same thing. It was kind of out of opportunity, out of convenience. I’m sure maybe there was love or lust there at some point, but eventually love is not enough. Money comes then, and that’s the overpowering force, I think.

    And the theme of the root of this whole movie, is just the greed and desire for more, and it’s not enough. Keep pushing more, and more, and more, and never satisfied. And then eventually the house of cards falls.

    MF: I just watched the movie last night, Ray, and I’m still in knots. Did you get a sense of that when you guys were shooting? That this was going to be so tension filled?

    Liotta: Well, you don’t really know how they’re going to put it together, but each scene has, for lack of better words, a rhythm within itself in the way that it’s written. Yeah, but the stakes are intense, and I know Benicio, and I don’t know he’s fooling around with my wife. No, I do eventually figure it out, because I confront him.

    So, you never know how they’re going to put it together. It’s more Steven and the editors, with the music, and the way it’s cut that makes it move along.

    MF: I bet that’s interesting, though, because you do have to trust your director. You have to trust everyone on the crew. You have to trust your editors. And then this world that the movie encompasses is a world where no one trusts anyone else, there’s no trust at all.

    Liotta: Yeah. Not at all. Everyone’s kind of scummy.

    ‘No Sudden Move’ is now streaming on HBO Max.

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  • Djimon Hounsou Replaces Brian Tyree Henry as ‘A Quiet Place 2’ Star

    Djimon Hounsou Replaces Brian Tyree Henry as ‘A Quiet Place 2’ Star

    Aviron Pictures

    The upcoming sequel to 2018 horror hit “A Quiet Place” is making some significant changes, with one leading star bowing out of the project, and another coming in to take his place.

    Deadline has the scoop that Brian Tyree Henry has had to drop out of “A Quiet Place Part II,” reportedly due to “scheduling problems.” The role was to have been “a big one,” according to the trade, though no details about the character — or the film’s overall plot — had been revealed yet.

    The good news is that it doesn’t appear that there will be too much delay caused by Henry’s exit, since his replacement has already been found: Oscar nominee Djimon Hounsou will be taking on the actor’s part. The film also stars returning “A Quiet Place” cast members Emily Blunt, Millicent Simmonds, and Noah Jupe, as well as series newcomer Cillian Murphy.

    Writer-director John Krasinski — who also co-wrote and helmed the first flick — revealed last month that production had begun on the sequel. It’s unclear how much, if any, of the film will need to be reworked now that Hounsou has stepped in for Henry, though filmmakers have some wiggle room before the film’s release to figure things out.

    “A Quiet Place Part II” is currently slated to hit theaters on March 20, 2020.

    [via: Deadline]

  • ‘Honey Boy’ Trailer Chronicles Shia LaBeouf’s Fictionalized Childhood

    ‘Honey Boy’ Trailer Chronicles Shia LaBeouf’s Fictionalized Childhood

    Amazon Studios

    Shia LaBeouf is exorcising some childhood demons with “Honey Boy.”

    LaBeouf wrote the script for the Sundance darling, which is a thinly-veiled autobiography of his own troubled childhood and stormy relationship with his father.

    Amazon Studios dropped a new trailer for the film today. Noah Jupe stars as a child actor on an unnamed TV show (but is totally “Even Stevens”), with LaBeouf playing his manipulative and toxic father, Otis Lort, who is an ex-rodeo clown and felon.

    Lucas Hedges play the adult version of Otis, who is now a major movie star but also gets into drunken car accidents. The parallels to LaBeouf during his “Transformers” phase are unmistakeable.

    The deeply personal story is handled with grace by director Alma Har’el. The film received rave reviews at Sundance earlier this year and won the U.S. Dramatic Special Jury Prize for Vision and Craft.

    “Honey Boy” opens in theaters November 8.