Tag: olivia-munn

  • TV Review: ‘Your Friends & Neighbors’

    Jon Hamm as Andrew "Coop" Cooper in 'Your Friends & Neighbors.' Photo: Apple TV+.
    Jon Hamm as Andrew “Coop” Cooper in ‘Your Friends & Neighbors.’ Photo: Apple TV+.

    ‘Your Friends & Neighbors receives 6.5 out of 10 stars.

    Arriving on Apple TV+ with its first two episodes on April 11th followed by one weekly, ‘Your Friends & Neighbors’ sees Jon Hamm blending comedy and drama for a series about a hedge fund manager whose life has taken a real downward swing, and who turns to breaking into his rich neighbors’ mansions in order to maintain his lifestyle.

    The new show also stars Amanda Peet, Olivia Munn, Hoon Lee, Mark Tallman, Lena Hall, Aimee Carrero and Eunice Bae.

    Related Article: Jon Hamm Says “I Hope I Get a Chance” to Appear in a Marvel Movie

    Initial Thoughts

    Amanda Peet as Mel Cooper in 'Your Friends & Neighbors.' Photo: Apple TV+.
    Amanda Peet as Mel Cooper in ‘Your Friends & Neighbors.’ Photo: Apple TV+.

    There have been many shows about the dark underbellies of wealthy neighborhoods, where despite the well-manicured lawns and seemingly perfect mansions, the locale is a hotbed of affairs, crimes and gossip.

    Trouble is, to stand out from the crowd, ‘Your Friends & Neighbors’ really needed to find a truly fun new angle from which to explore it, and on the evidence of the first season, it’s not totally clear that it succeeded.

    Given that Hamm made his name playing another less-than-satisfied symbol of affluent machismo with an edge in ‘Mad Men’s Don Draper, it’s not hard to see why he might be attracted to the different shades of Andrew “Coop” Cooper here.

    Script and Direction

    (L to R) Amanda Peet as Mel Cooper and Olivia Munn as Samantha Leavitt in 'Your Friends & Neighbors.' Photo: Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Amanda Peet as Mel Cooper and Olivia Munn as Samantha Leavitt in ‘Your Friends & Neighbors.’ Photo: Apple TV+.

    Jonathan Tropper, who made his name as a novelist and has been forging quite the cinematic career through work alongside Shawn Levy in particular (he adapted his own novel into ‘This is Where I Leave You’ that the director made in 2014 and wrote ‘The Adam Project,’ the filmmaker’s second successful collaboration with star Ryan Reynolds), and also previously created ‘Banshee’ and ‘Warrior’ for Cinemax.

    Here, his back in original TV territory, even if the story of how a wealthy, entitled and slightly smug individual sees some real push back in his life doesn’t really strike you as the most innovative of concepts.

    Still, with a well-used format such as this, it’s the execution that counts, and Tropper, along with his writing team, has fashioned something that mostly manages to stick the landing, at least in terms of its main character. Coop is a complicated man, far more than he first appears, and the showrunner has found a more than able talent in Jon Hamm to bring him to life.

    Around him, the other characters are a little less fulfilling, but several of them work, including his troubled younger sibling Allison ‘Ali’ Cooper (Lena Hall), and Olivia Munn, doing stalwart work as Samantha Levitt, the unsatisfied housewife in the midst of a difficult divorce to whom Coop has turned for sex and fun since his own marriage collapsed.

    The largely smart scripting is sometimes let down by an early over-reliance on voice-over, which despite Hamm’s ability to deliver it smoothly does dip into cliché territory from time to time. How many lectures do we really need, for example, on the shady background to status symbols such as diamonds?

    On the directorial front, Tropper has found some experienced collaborators including Craig Gillespie (who is a fellow showrunner here), Greg Yaitanes and Stephanie Laing, who along with Tropper (who handles one episode himself), bring the requisite style and zip to the show, while letting the more emotional sides sit.

    Pacing can sometimes be an issue, but the show in general works on a creative level, even if the balance of satire and mystery doesn’t always sit smoothly on the scale.

    Cast and Performances

    Lena Hall as Allison 'Ali' Cooper in 'Your Friends & Neighbors.' Photo: Apple TV+.
    Lena Hall as Allison ‘Ali’ Cooper in ‘Your Friends & Neighbors.’ Photo: Apple TV+.

    Jon Hamm has long proved he can handle both drama and comedy, and here he has the chance to blend them. For the most part, he runs with the opportunity, bringing both a brio and world-weariness to the main character of Coop.

    He’s our way into this story, a man who is facing the slings and arrows of misfortune after his wealthy lifestyle and marriage crumbles around him, giving him a new viewpoint on life. And a yen for breaking and entering. Coop’s a fine character to follow, one with depth and perception about those around him, and while he’s not always the most likeable person, Hamm’s natural charisma still peeks through.

    As his ex-wife Mel, Amanda Peet is somewhat saddled with the sassy-yet-sympathetic role of the former spouse who has moved on, but still has some affection for her former partner (and shares kids with him). Peet has had better roles, yet Mel’s effective in her own way.

    Olivia Munn has more of an active role as Samantha, with whom Coop has been having an affair for a while. She brings a spiky, darkly funny energy to the role.

    Elsewhere, Lena Hall brings nuance to Coop’s sister Ali, whose mental health struggles bring her back into her life, but also enjoys her own plotline instead of simply being another aspect of his. And there’s a memorable turn from Aimee Carrero as Elena Benavides, a housekeeper who becomes Coop’s partner in crime.

    Final Thoughts

    Aimee Carrero as Elena Benavides in 'Your Friends & Neighbors.' Photo: Apple TV+.
    Aimee Carrero as Elena Benavides in ‘Your Friends & Neighbors.’ Photo: Apple TV+.

    It doesn’t always overcome the strictures of its genre, and it does sometimes attempt to coast on Hamm’s natural talent, but ‘Your Friends & Neighbors’ makes for a decent enough entry into the Wealthy Suburban Dark Secrets genre.

    Apple clearly has enough confidence in it to order a second season before the first has finished putting out episodes (in fact, the order came before it launched), so we can expect this one to hang around the TV neighborhood for a while.

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    What’s the plot of ‘Your Friends & Neighbors’?

    After being fired in disgrace, Andrew “Coop” Cooper (Jon Hamm), a hedge fund manager still grappling with his recent divorce, resorts to stealing from his neighbors’ homes in the exceedingly affluent Westmont Village.

    But as he finds some treasures among their possessions, Coop also discovers that the secrets and affairs hidden behind those wealthy facades might be more dangerous than he ever imagined.

    Who stars in ‘Your Friends & Neighbors’?

    • Jon Hamm
    • Amanda Peet
    • Olivia Munn
    • Hoon Lee
    • Mark Tallman
    • Lena Hall
    • Aimee Carrero
    • Eunice Bae
    • Isabel Gravitt
    Jon Hamm as Andrew "Coop" Cooper in 'Your Friends & Neighbors.' Photo: Apple TV+.
    Jon Hamm as Andrew “Coop” Cooper in ‘Your Friends & Neighbors.’ Photo: Apple TV+.

    Jon Hamm Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Jon Hamm Movies on Amazon

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  • TIFF Interview: Director Justine Bateman on ‘Violet’

    TIFF Interview: Director Justine Bateman on ‘Violet’

    Director Justine Bateman and actor Olivia Munn on the set of 'Violet'
    Director Justine Bateman and actor Olivia Munn on the set of ‘Violet’

    What if you confront that voice inside your head that always tells you that you’re not good enough? That’s the central conceit of ‘Violet’, starring Olivia Munn as a Los Angeles based film executive struggling to keep her internal insecurities at bay. Featuring a fierce performance from Munn, and set over just a few days, the film uses striking visual and aural cinematic techniques to embody Violet’s inner turmoil as she begins to find the courage to change her life drastically.

    Writer-director Justine Bateman sat down with Moviefone after the film’s special presentation at the Toronto International Film Festival to discuss its production.

    Moviefone: What was the initial inspiration for this project?

    Justine Bateman: Years ago, I made enough fear based decisions that at first I didn’t feel like I was me. I would see somebody who was really them, and I was like, oh my god I want that, and I thought I guess they were born that way. That’s not my lot in life. Then I realized I could get there, and I could cross that chasm, I was all in. It meant thinking about these critical thoughts objectively, as if somebody else is saying them. Would I give them as much validity if they were coming out of somebody else’s mouth? If I said to myself don’t wear that shirt to the party or no one will talk to you; saying it to myself, I’m giving it validity. But if I am imagining you were saying it to me instead, wouldn’t I then question it? I wanted to put all these things in the film. For me, it’s a revenge film for me in a way. I feel like those fear based decisions or those critical thoughts stole time from me. So it’s my figuring out there’s other ways to cross that chasm, but I figured out a particular way to do it, and I’m going to take this recipe and tell everybody else how to do it. I wish I had seen this at nineteen because I would have gotten to that point earlier than I did.

    MF: I think this is one of the best films I’ve seen about the need to sometimes cut off toxic family members. How did you develop that aspect?

    Bateman: It’s one of those things in life that are sort of baked into our society. There are other things too, like for some pockets of our society it’s you must get married and have kids, and if you don’t, you’re breaking the rules. Even society – it’s all just an agreement. Stopping at red lights, or saying hello at the beginning of a phone call and goodbye at the end. Those are all just agreements that we have. It’s not that you must do them. You won’t combust if you don’t do them. That’s an example of one of those things. Like, I physically don’t have to go. Like, if I don’t go, what will happen? Will I get struck by lightning? What will happen exactly? Just to ask ourselves those questions is important. What I didn’t get into is that just because you’re related to somebody, doesn’t mean that you don’t have to behave as if you want to get invited back. How would you act with a friend? Family is not a license to just be an asshole to other people?

    MF: I love the location of the John Sowden house on Franklin. How did you come to film in that location?

    Bateman: I originally wanted to use this place that was being used as an office years ago that was also a Frank Lloyd Wright on Doheny, just below Sunset. It’s on a small street corner. But my location manager said it was in West Hollywood, so the permits and shooting would be difficult. But he said he had another Lloyd Wright for me to look at. When I saw it, it was perfect. I wanted Tom Gains (Dennis Boutsikaris) to be the type of person who doesn’t even like architecture or even understand it, but he wants to be in that building because he wants to be able to say to other people, “Come to my office. I’m in the Snowden house. You know, at the Lloyd Wright?” Because he knows that that is important to other people. He’s a sad character to me because he’s always trying to be part of things that other people find important so that he can be valued, because he doesn’t feel valued himself at all.

    MF: Originally Dree Hemingway was attached, how did you eventually cast Olivia Munn? Did that casting change affect the character at all?

    Bateman: Olivia was great, Dree would have been fantastic. Dree was originally cast, and I love Dree and hope to use her in something else, but I knew because of a few things I had to go in a different direction in that particular role. That was a phone call I hope to never have again. I think Dree Hemingway is incredibly underused and terrific, and I hope to use her again someday. Olivia was fantastic. There was a quality to her that I could see in her other projects that I really wanted to tease out and expand in this.

    MF: When you mentioned how if the critical thoughts were said by someone else, you’d question them. Why did you have Violet’s internal monologue be a male voice?

    Bateman: I wanted to make it very different from Olivia. Change the gender, change the tone. Even in the sound editing, we made it come from a different place physically in the theater than the other actors’ voices are coming from. What made a big difference for me was wondering: if these thoughts were coming from someone else, how would I think of them? So I wanted to give that to the viewer by dissociating this voice from her. If you think about it like it’s not you saying things to yourself, if you think about it as if it’s just pretend, it’s somebody saying it to you, it gives this objectivity that I wanted to give to the audience. That’s why the voice is so different. It’s not a comment on men. It’s nothing like that. I needed it to be as different from her as possibly, and part of that was changing the gender.

    MF: I love the two different ways her anxiety is expressed on screen. How did you decide to show it her internal monologue and via the text on screen?

    Bateman: One is the critical thought that she is having and the is like, “oh my god, oh my god, I’ve got to get out of this.” I know people have said there is so much going on, but that’s because yes there is. There is so much going on inside ourselves. We’re accustomed to doing this inside of ourselves, we do it in a split second, and we don’t even think about it. But if you were to split that all out and put it into a film, this is what it’s like, right? These critical thoughts are on us, but at the same time… like in the restaurant scene. The thoughts are saying “You can’t work with them,” but at the same time she’s saying to them inside herself, “Don’t leave, I want this. I want this.” That happens to us all the time, right? Where we’re saying something, but at the same time inside we’re like, “Why am I saying this right now?” Our brains are incredibly complex. It would be impossible to make a film that shows everything that is going on in our brains at the same time. We’re also having memories at the same time as we’re living in the present.

    MF: I’d never seen the frenetic feeling of anxiety done quite like this on screen.

    Bateman: Someone who feels anxious might relate to this film, but it’s really more about the human condition. It’s something that occurs for everyone. For some people, not as much as others, and some people are more in tune with it. It’s really just like the human condition to me.

    MF: When we spoke 3 years ago, you were watching a lot of Michelangelo Antonioni on FilmStruck. Watching this, I felt like the interiority of the film was very similar to his films. Were his films an influence?

    Bateman: When I first started going to films regularly, I was taken to films at the Nuart and there was a theater in Beverly Hills too, that would show double bills of old films all the time. My foundational film taste and influence is based in European films of the 60s and 70s. Godard, Fellini, Antonioni, Éric Rohmer, all of that. There are later films too, like Götz Spielmann’s ‘Revanche.’ We referenced that film a lot in the collection of films my cinematographer and I were looking at. That stillness, that locked off shot in ‘Revanche’ is so outstanding. The way they come in and out of frame, is just like a whole other level. So when they were in the house I would want there to be that stillness, for the viewer, for Violet – so that’s why a lot of those shots are locked off. David Lowery employs a lot of that in ‘A Ghost Story’ also. I love how he does all that time folding in ‘A Ghost Story’.

    MF: When the film is over, how do you hope people feel after they’ve gone through this experience with her?

    Bateman: I hope they feel freer. I hope they went through it themselves and feel freer afterwards than they did before. If they weren’t aware they were having negative thoughts that were causing them to make fear-based decisions, I hope they come out of the theater going, “Oh my god, wait a minute. Those are lies?” Maybe someday doesn’t even imagine that those could be lies, and then to realize that and decide to see if they’re true. If those worse case scenarios are really going to happen. My hope is that everybody becomes freer after they see this film, and even if they don’t think it applies to them right now, maybe in a couple of years something will come up, and they’ll remember the ways that Violet got out of it, just as an experiment even. Just employ some of those and see if it works. If it doesn’t work, just go back to what you were doing. If it does work, hey!

    MF: Can you recommend another film directed by a woman for readers to seek out?

    Bateman: I think Lucrecia Martel is just beyond. There are some films where people go “X film is such a great example of..” this or that, and I’m like okay, but have you seen ‘La Ciénaga’ or have you seen ‘The Headless Woman?’ These are much better representations of what you just said. I don’t know that people know her work, at least in this country, as well as they should. I think she’s fantastic. Also, I grew up watching Jane Campion films and Gillian Armstrong. I can’t tell you how many times I watched ‘Starstruck’ when I was like fifteen. They’re incredible filmmakers. I feel like the delineation is not between male and female, but it’s between good and not so good. That’s the dividing line that I feel like directors fall along. I love those filmmakers I just named not because they’re women, I could care less what gender they are. I thought ‘Shirley’ by Josephine Decker was so good. It killed me that it didn’t have the awards attention. One of the things I love about it was the ambiguity. She nailed it, the ambiguity is so true between those two women and how it kept shifting. That’s so hard to do. I know people like to be told who’s the good guy and who’s the bad guy, but life is not like that. Amy Seimetz is fantastic. That first year of ‘The Girlfriend Experience’ series? Like, get out! A fantastic actress and great director. You know who also is a great actress and director? Mélanie Laurent. ‘Breathe’ killed me. She’s a fantastic musician too. One of her songs is in ‘Violet’. You know, but, one of the best representations of female behavior and interactions I’ve seen is actually directed by a man. It’s a Spanish anthology film by Rodrigo García called ‘Things You Can Tell Just By Looking At Her‘ starring Holly Hunter. He captured so many tiny things about women. To me, it’s just about are you good or not.

    ‘Violet’ was part of the Special Presentation series at the Toronto International Film Festival this year.

  • Olivia Munn to Star in ‘Love, Wedding, Repeat’ and ‘The Gateway’

    Olivia Munn to Star in ‘Love, Wedding, Repeat’ and ‘The Gateway’

    Olivia Munn in The Rook
    Starz

    There are not one but two new movies in the pipeline for Olivia Munn. The actress has been cast in the upcoming rom-com “Love, Wedding, Repeat” as well as the drama “The Gateway,” Deadline reports. She’s set to be the female lead in both.

    “Love, Wedding, Repeat” follows a man named Jack who has an unexpected reunion with an ex, Dina (Munn), while trying to make sure his sister has the wedding of her dreams. A table seating change will apparently drastically alter destiny, to hilarious and disastrous outcomes. The rom-com comes from director Dean Craig.

    “The Gateway,” on the other hand, follows a social worker named Parker Jode, who works with a girl named Ashley and her mother, Dhalia (Munn), while Ashley’s father is in prison. When the dad gets out early, he’ll disrupt all of their lives. The film will be directed by Michele Civetta, with Metalwork Pictures’ Andrew Levitas producing alongside Stephen Israel.

    Munn’s most recent film role was in “The Predator” and she also appears in the upcoming comedy “Dick Move.” On the TV front, Munn stars in the Starz series “The Rook,” which is due out this summer.

    [via: Deadline]

  • Olivia Munn: Fox ‘Chastised’ Me For Telling ‘Predator’ Co-Stars About Sex Offender

    Olivia Munn: Fox ‘Chastised’ Me For Telling ‘Predator’ Co-Stars About Sex Offender

    Predator Olivia Munn
    20th Century Fox

    Olivia Munn seems to be getting a lot of flak for doing the right thing.

    In the promotional tour for “The Predator,” the actress has been opening up about going to Fox with concerns about a registered sex offender’s cameo in the movie. The scene with Steven Wilder Striegel was subsequently cut, but Munn recently said that director Shane Black (a friend of Striegel’s) and her co-stars have been shunning her. 

    On Tuesday’s “The Ellen DeGeneres Show,” Munn told the host she was also criticized by Fox for informing those cast members.

    “When I did call my co-stars, I got chastised the next day by people in the studio for telling them and, why am I not just keeping quiet? It’s all going to be OK, it got deleted, what’s the big deal?”

    After Munn spoke up and the scene was cut, several cast members backed out of promotional appearances (which she said she was contractually obligated to do) at the Toronto International Film Festival. She and 11-year-old Jacob Tremblay were the only ones to show up at a Hollywood Reporter interview. Munn also noted that Black had yet to reach out to her on the subject.

    As Munn told DeGeneres, “My castmembers, nobody said anything to me about it. Nobody talked to me. Nobody reached out that whole day.

    “At first I thought maybe it’s because they just don’t know what to say, they want to stay out of the way. But privately I did feel iced out and I think that’s what’s really important for people to understand is when you see something, you have to say something. However, it’s not going to be easy and there will be people that just get mad at you for not playing the game.”

    Since TIFF, Sterling K. Brown has tweeted his support of Munn and Keegan-Michael Key’s publicist explained his absence at those appearances as due to the Jewish holiday. Boyd Holbrook also issued a statement Monday saying, “I am proud of Olivia for the way that she handled a difficult and alarming situation.”

    And Munn isn’t ready to stop speaking out anytime soon.

    “I think that people expected me to be quiet because it’s my movie, but the truth is I don’t care,” she said. “I don’t care if this movie gave me all the money in the world and all the power. If it cost one person’s life, they can take it. I don’t want this career.”

  • Review: ‘The Predator’ Is Very Bloody, Very Busy

    Review: ‘The Predator’ Is Very Bloody, Very Busy

    Fox

    Is there such a thing as too much Shane Black in a Shane Black movie?

    I wouldn’t have guessed it was possible — even in the late 1980s and ‘90s, when movies like the Black-scripted “The Last Boy Scout” were pilloried for being too brutal, aggressive and vulgar (and that was after “Lethal Weapon” and its sequel, the movies that made him such a hot property, were already considered wildly over the top). But “The Predator,” a combination sequel and soft reboot, feels like a throwback to that earlier, more simplistic era. The film is a hyper-masculine cocktail of breakneck storytelling, graphic violence and mean-spirited humor where the ingredients this time around seem either off or just wildly inconsistent. This is especially disappointing since it follows Black’s remarkable, measured comeback with “Iron Man 3” and “The Nice Guys.”

    Simply bursting with too many ideas for what deliberately aims to be a small and self-contained story, the filmmaker’s latest is a muddled effort that never hits the highs of the (admittedly perfect) original film, though a terrific cast and more than a few clever surprises are sure to keep audiences on their toes (and on the edge of their seats).

    Fox

    Boyd Holbrook (“Logan”) plays Quinn McKenna, an Army sniper who encounters a sport-hunting alien while on a covert mission and absconds from the scene with a helmet and a handful of otherworldly trinkets that he inadvertently sends to his autistic son Rory (Jacob Tremblay, “Room”). Intercepted by Will Traeger (Sterling K. Brown, TV”s “This Is Us”), the head of a top secret organization investigating our extraterrestrial adversaries, McKenna is brought to a military facility and thrown in the stockade with a group of misfit soldiers while scientist Casey Brackett (Olivia Munn, “X-Men: Apocalypse”) studies the recovered materials for clues about where they came from and what they’re after.

    When an alien Traeger has apprehended escapes from their lab and embarks on a killing spree, McKenna and his oddball cohorts escape during the melee to avoid further disciplinary actions — much less death at the hands of a Predator. But after realizing that the creature is heading directly for young Rory, whose behavioral issues have given him an unexpected advantage in activating the equipment, McKenna recruits his fellow prisoners to help kill it, rescue his son, and if possible collect enough evidence to present it to the world and prevent them all from becoming scapegoats for what is rapidly becoming a military mission gone wrong.

    Black’s screenwriting conventions feel like traditional ones on adrenaline  and “The Predator” unfolds with a lethal efficiency that both surpasses his previous efforts and undermines some of the elements that have traditionally made them work so well. There is simply an enormous amount of expository dialogue in the film, to the extent it sometimes feels like there’s nothing else, and as a result the actors feel like delivery systems for character and plot details rather than living, breathing people. Some of these characters work like gangbusters (Brown’s Traeger is cut from the same ice-cold, amoral, ruthlessly charming mold as Craig Bierko in “The Long Kiss Goodnight,” for example) while others, unfortunately including Holbrook’s McKenna, don’t leave an impression.

    Fox

    Holbrook, admittedly, was among the standouts in “Logan,” but teamed up with Trevante Rhodes (“Moonlight”) as a suicidal vet, and Munn as a wonderfully resourceful scientist-turned-Predator hunter, even his familial obligations to Rory don’t strike the deep dramatic impact the movie needs. At 107 minutes, the movie moves like lightning, so there are almost no moments to pause and explore these characters other than in relation to their “function” in the film. Meanwhile, folks like Keegan-Michael Key and Thomas Jane are clearly having a blast but exist on the periphery of the ensemble. They’re clearly enjoying their relative lack of responsibility but their presence only further undermines the cohesiveness of its momentum, and the consistency of its tone.

    As a co-star and ghost writer on John McTiernan’s 1987 classic, Black long since established his firm grasp on the Predator universe, and he really embraces the established mythology of the creature and their technology. And all of those elements are a grisly blast: the body count is higher in this film than probably all of the others combined, including the jungle assault in the first, and the Predators (including the new Super Predator) dispatch their prey/victims with lethal efficiency. Paired with a score by Henry Jackman that liberally recreates Alan Silvestri’s iconic leitmotifs (from the jungle drums to the military-cadence Aaron Copland stuff), the action itself feels muscular and streamlined — a slightly less elegant Cliff’s Notes version of what McTiernan did some 31 years ago. But then again, with two direct and two more indirect sequels between then and now, it seems impossible to retell that story in form or content; the slow introduction of the creature in the first film gave audiences an opportunity to get to know the cast, and now it’s just trying to reinvent a Ten Little Indians scenario with new characters they want you to care about.

    In which case, “The Predator” is a solid follow-up/ update that rights the franchise and diverts it from the “Alien Versus…” spinoff franchise, but it’s surprisingly not materially a much better film than “Predators,” which I probably mean more as a compliment to that underrated sequel than this one. Ultimately, one supposes that it isn’t that Black put too much of himself into this film, or somehow that a franchise stymied his voice; both challenges have paid handsome dividends for the filmmaker in the past. It’s just the proportions that are off. There’s something initially fun and undeniably cool about it (like tiny little Tremblay wearing a full-size Predator mask to go trick or treating) but it almost immediately proves unwieldy, and even bound together by fearless confidence and no small amount of elbow grease, in the end does more harm than good.

  • Olivia Munn Feels Shunned By ‘Predator’ Director, Co-Stars After Calling Out Sex Offender

    Olivia Munn Feels Shunned By ‘Predator’ Director, Co-Stars After Calling Out Sex Offender

    Predator Olivia Munn
    20th Century Fox

    Olivia Munn is not backing down from calling out the inclusion of a sex offender in her new movie, “The Predator” reboot. Now, she’s calling out director Shane Black and cast members for shunning her for speaking out.

    While promoting the movie at the Toronto Film Festival (which she is contractually obligated to do), Munn said she felt abandoned by her co-stars, who did not show up for an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, with the exception of 11-year-old Jacob Tremblay.

    “It’s a very lonely feeling to be sitting here by myself when I should be sitting here with the rest of the cast,” the actress said. “I do feel like I’ve been treated by some people that I’m the one who went to jail or I’m the one that put this guy on set.”

    Last week, news circulated that Munn had successfully lobbied for Fox to cut a scene including Steven Wilder Striegel, a registered sex offender who pleaded guilty in 2010 for trying to lure 14-year-old girl into a sexual relationship online. Striegel is a longtime friend of Black.

    The studio said they had been unaware of Striegel’s background when he was hired. Black issued a statement saying he “was misled by a friend I really wanted to believe was telling me the truth when he described the circumstances of his conviction. I believe strongly in giving people second chances, but sometimes you discover that chance is not as warranted as you may have hoped.”

    Munn also noted that Black hadn’t reached out to her after the scene was deleted.

    “I haven’t heard from Shane. I did see his apology … I would have appreciated it more if it was directed toward me privately before it went public and I had to see it online with everyone else,” she said. “It’s honestly disheartening to have to fight for something so hard that is just so obvious to me.”

    Co-stars Sterling K. Brown and Keegan-Michael Key quickly made public statements to voice their support of Munn and explain their absence from the Hollywood Reporter interview.

    Brown, who is currently filming the third season of NBC’s “This Is Us,” tweeted:

    Meanwhile, Key’s publicist told THR: “His last interview was scheduled after lunch, which he completed. He was always departing TIFF early so he could be home to spend the Jewish holiday with his wife. Furthermore, Keegan reached out to Olivia privately last week to let her know how proud he was of her and echoed that sentiment in many interviews since then.”

  • ‘The Predator’ Pulls Scene at Last Minute Over Registered Sex Offender

    ‘The Predator’ Pulls Scene at Last Minute Over Registered Sex Offender

    The Predator, Olivia Munn
    20th Century Fox

    This twist we did not see coming.

    According to the L.A. Times, just days before “The Predator” was locked and ready to go, the filmmakers were told to go back in and cut the scene featuring Steven Wilder Striegel.

    Striegel is an old friend of director Shane Black. Black cast his buddy in a small part, which is hardly new in Hollywood. But it turns out that Striegel was a registered sex offender — he pleaded guilty in 2010 after being accused of trying to lure a 14-year-old girl (one of his “distant relatives”) into a sexual relationship via the Internet.

    Olivia Munn shared the scene in question with Striegel; he played a jogger who repeatedly hit on her character. She’s the one who found out about his past last month. She told studio 20th Century Fox on August 15, the Times reports, and they decided to cut the scene.

    Fox gave a statement to the L.A. Times, saying they didn’t know about Striegel’s background “due to legal limitations that impede studios from running background checks on actors.”

    Striegel said he’s known Shane Black for 14 years, “and I think it’s worth noting that he was aware of the facts. Shane can speak for himself, but I’m quite certain that if he felt I was a danger in any way to have around, he would not have.”

    Shane Black did speak for himself, in this statement to the Times:

    “I personally chose to help a friend. I can understand others might disapprove, as his conviction was on a sensitive charge and not to be taken lightly.”

    He added that he believed his friend to be “caught up in a bad situation versus something lecherous.”

    (The details in the Times story about the messages Striegel shared with the girl … they suggest something else.)

    Striegel served six months in jail, then landed roles in Shane Black’s “Iron Man 3” and “The Nice Guys.”

    Olivia Munn told the Times she found it “both surprising and unsettling that Shane Black, our director, did not share this information to the cast, crew, or Fox Studios prior to, during, or after production. However, I am relieved that when Fox finally did receive the information, the studio took appropriate action by deleting the scene featuring Wilder prior to release of the film.”

    https://twitter.com/oliviamunn/status/1037587605422915584

    “The Predator” — which also stars Boyd HolbrookTrevante RhodesJacob TremblayKeegan-Michael KeyThomas JaneAlfie Allen, and Augusto Aguilera — is scheduled to open in theaters September 14.

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  • Final ‘Predator’ Trailer Has F-Bombs Galore and Alien Dogs

    Final ‘Predator’ Trailer Has F-Bombs Galore and Alien Dogs

    20th Century Fox

    The f-bombs are flying in the final redband trailer for “The Predator.

    In one scene, Sterling K. Brown (“This is Us”) debates scientist Olivia Munn about what to call the aliens. She suggests they be called “sport hunters,” based on how they track their prey. He responds: “We took a vote. ‘Predator’s cool, right? F*** yeah.”

    True. “The Sport Hunter” is not a movie we’re going to spend our money on.

    The Shane Black-directed sequel features a crew of insubordinate soldiers  — including Keegan-Michael Key and Thomas Jane — as the humans holding the line. And we assume, dying gruesomely one by one.

    Oh, and this time, the aliens brought their dogs.

    Also starring: Boyd Holbrook, Trevante Rhodes, Jacob Tremblay, Alfie Allen, Augusto Aguilera, Jake Busey, and Yvonne Strahovski.

    “The Predator” hits theaters September 14.

  • ‘The Predator’ Releases First Trailer & Character Posters

    Shane Black’s “The Predator” just released its first trailer, and the stars shared their own character posters.

    This is the fourth film in the franchise, set between “Predator 2” and “Predators.” The cast includes Boyd Holbrook, Olivia Munn, Sterling K. Brown, Edward James Olmos, Trevante Rhodes, Keegan-Michael Key, Thomas Jane, Yvonne Strahovski, and Jacob Tremblay.

    Yesterday, the stars previewed the first trailer and showed off their own character photos:


    This morning, 20th Century Fox released the trailer:Here’s the movie synopsis:

    “From the outer reaches of space to the small-town streets of suburbia, the hunt comes home in Shane Black’s explosive reinvention of the Predator series. Now, the universe’s most lethal hunters are stronger, smarter and deadlier than ever before, having genetically upgraded themselves with DNA from other species. When a young boy accidentally triggers their return to Earth, only a ragtag crew of ex-soldiers and a disgruntled science teacher can prevent the end of the human race.”

    In case you’re confused about the beginning of the trailer, with Jacob Tremblay playing with with toys, his character is directly connected to what happens — he accidentally activated the alien ship.

    Here are some details from IndieWire, from after the trailer played at CinemaCon:

    “The footage begins with Tremblay’s young boy on Halloween playing with a toy box that has a toy alien ship inside of it. It turns out the toy is controlling a real alien spaceship, similar to the way Anne Hathaway controlled a monster in ‘Colossal.’ The vessel ends up crash landing on Earth and releasing tons of Predators.”

    Should’ve kept the box shut, kid!

    The trailer, or something similar, got mostly positive reactions when it premiered at CinemaCon. What do you think so far?

    “The Predator” opens in theaters on September 14.

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  • Olivia Munn Responds to New Rumor That She’s Dating Justin Theroux

    Olivia Munn keeps hitting the tabloid dating rumor jackpot.

    Not too long ago, “The Predator” star was linked to Chris Pratt. She reached out to his ex-wife Anna Faris to say the report wasn’t true, and shared their texts with anyone who might’ve read the scoop and believed it.

    Munn just did the same thing for Justin Theroux.

    Premiere Of HBO's 'The Leftovers' Season 3 - Red CarpetMunn addressed a new planned report claiming she and Jennifer Aniston’s ex-husband were “growing close together” and “heading towards a romance.” Munn and Aniston costarred in “Office Christmas Party,” and are reportedly friends.

    Obviously Olivia Munn has become The Rumor Mill’s favorite rebound girlfriend for newly single celebs. That’s not a real problem, by any stretch, but apparently it’s also not true.

    Munn shared a text exchange on her Instagram Story attempting to set the Theroux record straight:

    (Related tabloid call out side note: Teri Hatcher just blasted a tabloid story that said she was broke and homeless and living in her van. Her publicist had told the magazine the story was false — the paparazzi photos they had were from Hatcher shooting scenes for her YouTube series “Van Therapy” — but the magazine ran the story anyway.)

    Justin Theroux is now in the same boat. Another rumor claimed he was hitting on Selena Gomez, trying to hang out with her and blowing up her phone. Gossip Cop knocked down that rumor — and another one claiming Angelina Jolie wanted to date Theroux to get “revenge” on Jen Aniston, which doesn’t even make sense.

    It feels inevitable that a tabloid will next try to pair Olivia Munn with Brad Pitt, unless they really want to insist that he’s dating Jennifer Lawrence.

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