Tag: parks-and-recreation

  • ‘The Garfield Movie’ Interview: Chris Pratt

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    Opening in theaters on May 24th is the new animated film ‘The Garfield Movie,’ which centers around Jim Davis’ famous cartoon cat.

    Directed by Mark Dindal (‘Chicken Little’), the movie stars Chris Pratt (‘Guardians of the Galaxy’) as the voice of Garfield as well as Samuel L. Jackson (‘Secret Invasion’), Hannah Waddingham (‘The Fall Guy’), Ving Rhames (‘Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning’), Nicholas Hoult (‘X-Men: First Class’), and Harvey Guillén (‘What We Do in the Shadows‘) as Odie.

    Chris Pratt stars in 'The Garfield Movie'.
    Chris Pratt stars in ‘The Garfield Movie’.

    Related Article: Director James Gunn and Chris Pratt Talk ‘Guardians of the Galaxy Volume 3’

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Chris Pratt about his work on ‘The Garfield Movie’, what fans can expect from the film, his approach to voicing the iconic cat, and telling Garfield’s origin story.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch the interview.

    Chris Pratt as the voice of Garfield in 'The Garfield Movie'.
    Chris Pratt as the voice of Garfield in ‘The Garfield Movie’. Photo By Trae Patton. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Moviefone: To begin with, what would you say to audience members sitting down in a theater to prepare them for the theatrical experience they are about to have?

    Chris Pratt: Oh, they’re already in the theater? I’d say turn your phones off, get your popcorn, sit back and relax. You thought you knew Garfield? You didn’t know nothing yet. That’s what I would say, something like that. But to those who are thinking of going to the movies, I would say get your tickets now, because they’re going to sell out. May 24th don’t miss it!

    Chris Pratt is the voice of Garfield in 'The Garfield Movie'.
    Chris Pratt is the voice of Garfield in ‘The Garfield Movie’. Copyright: © 2023 Project G Productions, LLC. Photo: DNEG Animation.

    MF: You are following in the footsteps of Lorenzo Music and Bill Murray, who have both voiced this role. What does it mean to you personally to get a chance to put your own spin on an iconic character like Garfield?

    CP: Man, I’m grateful. This is an entire collaborative effort by a great production team and a wonderful director who had been working on this for years before I jumped on board. So really, I was just honored and blessed that they thought the voice of the guy from ‘Parks and Rec’ was the voice of this cat. That’s what they told me. He said, “I’ve been working on this for years. I keep hearing your voice coming out of this cat in my head. That’s what I want. You’ve got a natural, lazy, sarcastic tone to your voice. I want that voice.” I was like, “Well, that’s cool. Because I know the guy who has that voice, and he could do it for you. I’ve been working on this voice for my whole life, apparently.” So, it was nice. In a way it kind of took the pressure off because I knew what they wanted, and only I could give it to them. It was just something organic and natural, my own breath, my own voice, my own spirit for this character. I feel blessed.

    Chris Pratt as the voice of Garfield in 'The Garfield Movie'.
    Chris Pratt as the voice of Garfield in ‘The Garfield Movie’. Photo By Trae Patton. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    MF: Can you talk about your approach to the character? Did you relate to him right away?

    CP: Yeah, early on. There are elements in my life that make me feel like Garfield now. I’m very pampered. I’m a Hollywood guy. There was a certain affectation in the voice which was kind of closer to what a person sounds like when they’re about to yawn, and I just thought that was kind of something to work in. That’s where I was feeling like a lot of times the voice would come from, and just trusting the director and knowing that we had a great script. Once the action took over, it was about a character that was on an adventure. So, it’s like the sleepiness and the laziness that really works for the character who’s being pampered and who’s living a lazy life. But when you’re on the run and you’re in a heist movie, you must shift gears and become a character on an action adventure. Because suddenly, this cat that’s typically sarcastic and a little bit of a biting, comedic laziness, can’t be sarcastic and lazy, he must be on the road. Once you get clipping along, that’s what the movie becomes.

    Odie, Vic and Garfield in 'The Garfield Movie'.
    (L to R) Odie, Vic and Garfield in ‘The Garfield Movie’. Photo: DNEG Animation. Copyright: © 2023 Project G Productions, LLC.

    MF: Finally, we got to see Garfield’s origin story in this movie, and meet his father, Vic. Can you talk a little bit about that and Garfield’s relationship with Vic?

    CP: It’s a great relationship. Samuel L. Jackson voices Vic beautifully. Vic is this streetwise, scruffy, outdoor cat, and he’s kind of on the run. Garfield is your world-famous lasagna-loving, Monday-hating, sarcastic, indoor-pampered pet. Vic takes him on this epic outdoor adventure along with Odie, and they basically are enlisted in this really high-stakes and super-funny heist scenario. So that’s the movie. That’s the relationship. The relationship is one of a father who his son believed abandoned him in an alley one day, and you see that from the trailer. You see that in the opening scene of the movie that he’s got an issue with this guy Vic who claims to be his dad, because his dad left him in an alley. So, healing that relationship and seeing the father try to teach this cat some valuable tricks of the trade, some hard knocks lessons on how to be an outdoor cat, is some of the fun in the movie.

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    What is the Plot of ‘The Garfield Movie’?

    Garfield (voiced by Chris Pratt), the world-famous, Monday-hating, lasagna-loving indoor cat, is about to have a wild outdoor adventure! After an unexpected reunion with his long-lost father – scruffy street cat Vic (voiced by Samuel L. Jackson) – Garfield and his canine friend Odie (voiced by Harvey Guillén) are forced from their perfectly pampered life into joining Vic in a hilarious, high-stakes heist.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Garfield Movie?

    Chris Pratt is the voice of Garfield in 'The Garfield Movie'.
    Chris Pratt is the voice of Garfield in ‘The Garfield Movie’. Copyright: © 2023 Project G Productions, LLC. Photo: DNEG Animation.

    Other Garfield Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Tickets: ‘The Garfield Movie’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy ‘Garfield‘ Movies On Amazon

  • Aubrey Plaza and Theo Rossi Talk ‘Emily the Criminal’

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    Opening in theaters on August 12th is the new crime drama ‘Emily the Criminal,’ from writer/director John Patton Ford.

    The new movie stars Aubrey Plaza (‘Safety Not Guaranteed’) as Emily, who saddled with debt, gets involved in a credit card scam that pulls her into the criminal underworld of Los Angeles.

    In addition to Plaza, the film also stars Theo Rossi (‘Sons of Anarchy‘), Megalyn Echikunwoke (‘24’), and Gina Gershon (‘Bound’).

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Aubrey Plaza and Theo Rossi about their work on ‘Emily the Criminal,’ reading the script for the first time, their characters and their relationship to each other.

    Aubrey Plaza and Theo Rossi for 'Emily the Criminal.'
    (L to R) Aubrey Plaza and Theo Rossi for ‘Emily the Criminal.’

    You can read our full interview below or click on the video played above to watch our interviews with Plaza, Rossi, and writer/director John Patton Ford.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Aubrey, what was your first reaction when you read the screenplay, and what were some of the aspects of Emily’s personality that you were excited to explore in this movie?

    Aubrey Plaza: My first reaction was, “Wow, that was an amazing script.” I could not put it down. It flew by. I was like, “Who is this guy? Who is John Patton Ford?” I loved it. It reminded me of a 90s erotic thriller in some ways. There was just something about it that felt like movies that I came up loving and that made me want to be in movies.

    Then the character, I just found her so relatable in so many ways. I just loved the idea of playing that type of person and drawing upon those kinds of experiences of just being a fish out of water, and just trying to make it in a world that makes it so hard.

    MF: Theo, how would you describe Youcef in your own words, and what did you want to bring to the character as an actor?

    Theo Rossi: I think that what I love about Youcef is that we’re all just trying to figure out who we are, no matter how old we are, no matter where we’re getting, we’re just discovering ourselves every day. Sometimes people come in that make you find something else about yourself that you didn’t know.

    I think that we’re also sometimes doing things that we might not necessarily want to be doing, but we’re thrust into it. Youcef just happens to be in a, for lack of a better word, family business, but he has bigger dreams. It isn’t until the interruption in a way, or the chance meeting of someone like Emily, that reveals who he truly is.

    Theo Rossi and Aubrey Plaza in 'Emily the Criminal.'
    (L to R) Theo Rossi and Aubrey Plaza in ‘Emily the Criminal.’

    I just love that because it’s so similar to life, right? We don’t know, we meet people, we work with people, we hang around people and it reveals something else about us. We start to see the stuff with his mom and who he really is. I just loved the humanization of him, because you think he’s one person in the beginning and then he’s someone else.

    That to me is why I go to the movies. I want to see characters grow. I want to see the journey that they take me on, and the ride that they go on. I think it’s amazing to see Emily and her story play out. It’s incredible.

    That’s why we’re all doing this because we want to go on these journeys. We want to go on these fast paced, incredible stories that make us think and talk like we are now. So, I’m just happy to be a part of it.

    MF: Finally, Aubrey, Emily is really torn between two worlds. There is the world of legitimate society that she wants to be a part of, but also the criminal underworld, which she is drawn to.

    At a certain point, she has to make a clear decision which world she is going to be a part of. Can you talk about the predicament she finds herself in and how she comes to make that decision?

    AP: There’s a very clear moment in the script and the movie where she is kind of confronted with this fork in the road and she has a decision to make. I think it’s obvious to her when it happens. The system is broken and she’s just not willing to play that game anymore. Nowadays, I think a lot of people can relate to that. It’s a catch-22. It’s just a broken system.

    What’s so interesting about that point in the movie is that she has kind of come into herself. She finds herself being a boss in a way, but just not in the way that she thought she would be, or that is kind of expected or traditional in an office with a suit on. But she is a boss. She gets her power, but she just uses it in a different way than most people decide to use it.

    Aubrey Plaza in 'Emily the Criminal.'
    Aubrey Plaza in ‘Emily the Criminal.’
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  • Ms. Moviefone’s Top Five Can’t-Miss SDCC Activities

    Ms. Moviefone’s Top Five Can’t-Miss SDCC Activities

    This year marks the 50th time in history that the pleasant, beachy hamlet of San Diego explodes with magic and enthusiasm for all things nerdy, overstuffing every available space in a three mile radius in the Gaslamp Quarter. For anyone who’s had the pleasure of attending San Diego Comic Con and willingly dehydrated themselves at the mere suggestion of catching a glimpse of Patrick Warburton, you know that SDCC turns  the “fun” dial to 11 and breaks the knob off. This year is no exception, so the following serves as a road map of the top five shiniest things that I will be seeing and doing while slathering on sunscreen and adjusting my wig.

    “Terminator: Dark Fate” Panel

    Paramount

    When: Thursday, July 18 at 11 a.m.

    Where: Hall H (of course!

    What: Paramount Pictures brings a “Terminator: Dark Fate” panel discussion and footage presentation with talent and filmmakers. There’s not much I can reveal about this one, except that I’ll be hosting, and I have already practiced my T-1000 run and have confirmed I definitely cannot do it. 

    Amazon Offsite

    Amazon

    When: Thursday, July 18 through Sunday, July 21 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

    Where: MLK Promenade & First Ave

    What: The important number to note here is 60,000, which officially refers to the square footage of Amazon’s ginormous activation. Unofficially, it refers to how many minutes I’m willing to spend in line because this thing looks amazing. That’s plenty of room for attendees to enjoy video and live promos for “The Boys,” “Carnival Row,” and “The Expanse” on a 40-foot tall tower that we can only assume will later be used as some kind of ghost conduit, a’la “Ghostbusters.”  Inside, attendees will receive gold and silver coins and thwart kidnappings, tour a spaceship, and lounge in a neo-Victorian fairy tale venue. Sounds like a high-capacity event that will be a great way to escape the heat and get some good future-binging ideas (and some killer Instagram pics).

    “His Dark Materials” Panel

    HBO/BBC

    When: Thursday, July 18 at 4:45 p.m.

    WhereHall H

    What: If you’re like me, you’ve spent entirely too many minutes either grumbling about how dark the “Battle of Winterfell” was or reading and re-reading episode recaps of all of season two of “Westworld” — so even though HBO is bringing “Game of Thrones” and “Westworld” panels to the con, SDCC is about discovering the next hot thing. That points me directly to “His Dark Materials,” an adaptation of a trilogy of novels by Philip Pullman (unsuccessfully adapted, once, as a Nicole Kidman/Daniel Craig movie with talking polar bears).  At the heart of the story is Lyra, a young woman who is searching for a missing friend in a very magical landscape. Panel attendees will include Dafne Keen, Lin-Manuel Miranda, James McAvoy, and Ruth Wilson, among others. Talking polar bears TBD.

    “Parks and Recreation” 10th Anniversary Panel

    NBC Universal

    When: Friday, July 19 at 4:30 p.m.

    WhereHorton Grand Theater

    What: It’s been a decade since our beloved “Parks and Recreation” was on television, but in that time, Amy Poehler’s Leslie Knope has become even more important to our upside-down world. She’s the epicenter of hope in her town, and is always bringing out the best in the rich, vibrant characters who surround her. This panel is being kept under wraps for the most part, but I’ll be in line to get my ticket early Friday morning. I’m assuming it will be hosted by Perd Hapley, and will feature appearances from Brandi Maxx, the Red-Faced Man, someone from Eagleton to boo, and Duke Silver. I hope I’m right.

    “Batwoman” Pilot Screening

    The CW/DC

    When: Saturday, July 20 at 10:30 a.m.

    WhereBallroom 20

    What: Kate Kane protecting the streets of Gotham makes me feel spiritually safer in my real city.  The CW has a knack for bringing DC Comics to life in engaging ways, and with Ruby Rose starring as a highly-trained street fighter and out lesbian, I’ve already set my DVR. This panel will feature the pilot and a Q&A after. 

    **BONUS CHOICE**

    MOVIEFONE PANEL

    Fox

    When: Saturday, July 20 from 8 to 9 p.m.

    Where: Room 28DE

    What: Shameless plug: There’s nothing worse than a great movie that blows it at the end. Moderator Grae Drake (Ms. Moviefone) asks you to pitch your alternate (not necessarily happy) endings for otherwise-great films to a panel of judges made up of movie critics, filmmakers, actors, comedians, and other opinionated movie-lovers. You know, like a live version of that Change.org petition you signed that one time! Each idea is ranked on its merits by the judges and audience, and at the end of the panel the winner will be declared and a team of improv performers will bring the new improved scenario to life in front of your very eyes. Does anybody have a therapy dog?

     

  • 21 Great TV Christmas Episodes to Watch This Year (and Where to Watch Them)

    21 Great TV Christmas Episodes to Watch This Year (and Where to Watch Them)

  • Ben Schwartz to Voice ‘Sonic the Hedgehog’ in Movie, and He Had the Best Reaction

    Ben Schwartz to Voice ‘Sonic the Hedgehog’ in Movie, and He Had the Best Reaction

    Parks and Rec, Parks and Recreation
    NBC

    Ben Schwartz was the wooooooorst (but really the best) as Jean-Ralphio on “Parks and Recreation,” and he’s going to make the perfect Sonic.

    The 36-year-old actor/comedian was announced to be voicing the character in the upcoming “Sonic the Hedgehog” movie. He’s pretty pumped about it:

    https://twitter.com/raereine/status/1027352196151738368

    Now we need Joe Keery to show up as Sonic’s long-lost father.

    Schwartz will be joined by Jim Carrey as Dr. Robotnik, a mad scientist and Sonic’s archenemy. James Marsden and Tika Sumpter also star in the film, which will mix live-action and CGI.

    Schwartz already has a lot of voice work experience, as Dewey in “DuckTales,” Leonardo in “Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles,” and various “Robot Chicken” voices. His voice was also used in the creation of BB-8 in “Star Wars: The Force Awakens.”

    “Sonic the Hedgehog” is scheduled for release November 15, 2019.

    [Via: Variety]

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  • ‘Parks and Recreation’ Stars Blast NRA for Using a Leslie Knope GIF

    Even Ron Swanson thinks this is the woooooooorst.

    “Parks and Recreation” co-creator Michael Schur and stars Amy Poehler, Adam Scott, and Nick Offerman were not happy that the National Rifle Association used a GIF from their NBC show to thank an NRA spokesperson.

    Here’s the GIF the NRA used, showing Poehler’s character Leslie Knope:

    That was sent as thanks to Dana Loesch, who represented the NRA in a CNN town hall with Parkland, Florida residents, a week after the mass shooting that killed 17 people.

    For the NRA to use a GIF of left wing idealist Leslie Knope of all people didn’t sit right with show co-creator Schur, who tweeted a message from himself, and from Poehler:

    “Hi, please take this down. I would prefer you not use a GIF from a show I worked on to promote your pro-slaughter agenda.

    Also, Amy isn’t on twitter, but she texted me a message: “Can you tweet the NRA for me and tell them I said f*ck off?”

    Nick Offerman played the very conservative Ron Swanson, a more likely character to have anything to do with the NRA. The actor himself is very different, and he shared his own message:

    Adam Scott, who played Leslie’s husband Ben, tweeted his own foul-mouthed response:

    “Hey @nra please stay the f*ck away from Leslie Knope.”

    The NRA isn’t taking the GIF down. But if you’re a “Parks and Rec” fan, you can treat yo self to the debate raging in the tweet replies.

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  • Jason Mantzoukas on ‘The House,’ Adapting ‘Battling Boy,’ and Playing Pimento

    Premiere Of Warner Bros. Pictures' 'The House' - ArrivalsJason Mantzoukas knows that audience members who spot him in his seemingly ceaseless and always wildly comedic appearances on scores of TV and film projects are more than likely to say, “Oh — that guy!” rather than recognize his name in the screen credits, And he’s totally okay with that.

    A self-described “comedy character actor” and veteran of the revered improv troupe Upright Citizens Brigade, Mantzoukas’s profile has been continuously on the rise for the better part of the past decade-and-a-half thanks to his status as a strategic weapon deployed in all manner of comedies, from TV series like “Parks and Recreation,” “Brooklyn Nine-Nine,” “The League,” “Modern Family,” “Broad City,” “Childrens Hospital,” and “Transparent” to films including “The Dictator,” “Baby Mama,” and “Neighbors.” He also wrote the screenplay for buddy comedy “Ride Along” and frequently appears as his comically well-informed and cinematically erudite self as a host and guest on a number of popular podcasts.

    Now, Mantzoukas has what’s easily his highest profile turn yet, playing a central role opposite his longtime UCB cohort Amy Poehler and Will Ferrell in “The House” — as the couple’s friend who’s reeling in denial over his impending divorce, he offers up his home to be transformed into an underground casino to help raise money for their daughter’s non-existent college fund. Yet, as Mantzoukas reveals to Moviefone, comedy superstardom isn’t at the top of his agenda — making audiences laugh is.

    Moviefone: With this role, you might as well be right up there on the posters with Amy and Will. This is one of the biggest things we’ve seen you in. What did it mean to you to get the opportunity?

    Jason Mantzoukas: It was pretty exciting, and not lost on me. This was an enormous opportunity and certainly a much bigger opportunity than I’d ever been given before. I was so psyched to get it, but also so happy that I got to do it with people that I had worked with before, or have known for a long time, and felt really comfortable and easy. So the minute we started to shoot, it was just easy to kind of flip into the dynamics that we three already have. So it’s pretty terrific.

    You have been a go-to comedic actor for characters that are right on the razor’s edge. Frank in “The House” has a few more dimensions to him. Tell me what’s fun about delving into those characters, and especially with this one, having the opportunity to make him a little more well-rounded.

    The characters that I’ve played, like you’re describing, the guys that kind of pop in and out of TV or movies, your Dennis Feinsteins [on “Parks and Recreation”], your Rafis [on “The League”], your Adrian Pimentos [on “Brooklyn Nine Nine”], these are all characters that bear no emotional responsibility to the stories being told, really. There’s never an episode of “The League” where Rafi is responsible for the plot. In a way, it’s really fun to be freed from that, because you can just, in my case on that show, or in others, you’re really just there to serve as jokes, or to serve as something funny, which is, is there anything funnier? Not really.

    It’s a blast to play those kind of characters. But then there’s something really rewarding in this case with this movie, to kind of trek in a more emotional through line. What I really liked in this movie was, this wasn’t just some kind of maniac character, or some sort of disposable comedy character. This is a guy who was heartbroken, and all of his bad decisions are coming from a place of real pain and loss, and it’s channeled into funny stuff.

    It was really cool to kind of track his emotional growth, and have that relationship with Michaela Watkins’s character be so meaningful to him, and have that really weigh on my character, and try and figure out what that would be like. We’ve all been through the catastrophic breakups in our lives, and we all deal with our heartache and our heartbreak in different ways. It was really fun to channel that kind of heartbreak and heartache into terrible character life decisions. It was really fun and exciting, actually, to have more to do and more … I guess more responsibility is what it ends up being.

    What’s the fun of mining comedy out of aggression and confrontation, and some of those edgier, in-your-face qualities? What do you enjoy about that brand of funny?

    It’s interesting. I don’t necessarily think about it like that. I more think about a lot of my characters as just having different limits than other people. That they are more, I guess they are more aggressive. You’re not wrong. There is something funny about characters who are, I find — I find it very fun to play characters who really are filterless characters who don’t have checks and balances on their emotions or what’s going on with them.

    So for me, that’s what a lot of these people share. A lot of these characters share a certain kind of emotional abandon, or a chaotic nature, that makes them make decisions that are sometimes aggressive, sometimes confrontational, but also, what’s great to me about whether it’s Rafi, or Dennis — maybe less Dennis, but Adrian Pimento, these are people who are really emotionally available.

    So Rafi isn’t just like an aggressive monster, although at times he is, he’s also convinced that all the guys in “The League” are his best friends and is heartbroken when it looks like they might be breaking up or fighting. He’s in equal measure an emotional kind of love friendship aggressive person, as he is an aggressive murder person. All of his emotions are kind of, he’s experiencing them all. Again, he’s like without any kind of ability to stop himself from engaging fully in any emotional feeling that comes his way, which I love.

    As an actor, you’ve really been in a sweet spot. I feel like producers and showrunners see you as a comedy closer. If not a household name, you are definitely recognized by audiences all over. What do you like about that space that you’re occupying right now?

    I’m very lucky to get to work on like some of the best stuff that’s going. I like that people use me on their shows, whether those shows are “Brooklyn,” or whether it’s “Transparent,” or whether it’s any of these kind of — I get a real kick out of doing to do shows that I myself love. Like that’s really exciting to me. It’s a very cool thing.

    And truth be told, I would like a career where I get to work on lots of stuff, and I get to have those people, those directors, those show creators, those producers, whoever, that they want to use me in their stuff. I care about that a lot more than, kind of like you said, being a household name, for example. I think the more and more you become a household name, the less and less you are able to be in a whole bunch of stuff.

    I like kind of getting to be a comedy character actor, and I do think a lot of people get very excited to be like, “Oh, there’s that guy again!” I think most of those people are like, “Oh, there’s that guy again,” more people say that than say, “Oh look, there’s Jason Mantzoukas again.”

    What is, as far as your writing projects, what’s sort of front and center for you right now?

    Right now, front and center, is a movie I’m writing for Paramount called “Battling Boy,” which is an adaptation of a Paul Pope graphic novel. That’s really the primary thing I’m doing right now.

    I’ve read the graphic novel, and always love Paul Pope’s work. What’s got you excited about it?

    I love that book, and the kind of ancillary Aurora West book. I’m a huge Paul Pope fan. What I love about this specifically was that, I love coming-of-age stories. This is, like, really a story that exists in kind of superhero archetype universe, but the stars of it, the leads of it — it’s kind of a Batman/Superman type story, but the Batman character is a 17-year-old girl, and the Superman character’s like a 12-year-old boy.

    That’s, to me, really cool. You’ve got these kids who are, for each of them, it’s a kind of coming-of-age story. He’s on his kind of walkabout year of becoming a man from his culture, and she has just lost her father, and is grappling with kind of becoming an adult, and being forced into adulthood, and what that means. Both of them kind of pushing those two people together is pretty cool and exciting.

    And then, obviously, it’s otherwise a big story with kids fighting monsters, and all that stuff, and has the kind of fairy tale element. So it’s just a lot of stuff that I like all kind of in one place. It’s exciting.

    What character of yours are you excited to play again? You create these memorable characters on all these different shows. Is there one you’re really eager to get another crack at?

    That’s a good question. I have, like, real genuine fondness for a lot of my characters … I’m excited to jump back into “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” next year. I love playing Pimento. I love playing Pimento, but I also love, frankly, I love playing Pimento with that ensemble of actors. I love doing Adrian Pimento scenes with Andre Braugher, or with people who you’re like, “This is a funny juxtaposition of energy. Mostly I get excited to just work with those people again.

    I love Dr. Steve on “Transparent.” Again, it’s such a fun character, but what I love about it is getting to play with all those actors.

    “The House” is in theaters now.

  • Nick Offerman Goes Mustache to Mustache with Sam Elliott Again in ‘The Hero’

    Premiere Of The Orchard's 'The Hero' - ArrivalsTwo of Hollywood’s greatest masters of facial hair are together again, and Nick Offerman couldn’t be happier.

    The mightily mustached Offerman first got the opportunity to act opposite the even more famously hirsute screen icon Parks and Recreation,” and as a result of their behind-the-scenes bonding Elliott invited Offerman to join him on the big screen in “The Hero.”

    In the film, Elliott gives a tour de force performance as an aging, too frequently pigeonholed actor reassessing his life in the wake of concerning health news who receives both support and a regular flow of marijuana from his longtime friend and former co-star Jeremy, played with laid-back relish by Offerman.

    The role offers another intriguing and unexpected turn from Offerman, who since the end of “Parks and Rec” has, by his own admission, dodged offers to play Ron Swanson knockoffs and made a series of considered choices to expand the scope of his range, including his turn as fast food pioneer Richard McDonald in “Fargo.”

    And Offerman’s got another left-field project in the pipeline: “The Handmade Project,” an unscripted reality competition series focused on handcrafted artistry, reunited with his “Parks and Rec” co-star Amy Poehler to co-host and executive produce. And as he reveals to Moviefone, it’s just one of the ways he stretching himself following his sitcom success after years of contentedly laboring in bit parts.

    Moviefone: Tell me about what was fun about the first time that you played opposite Sam, and then doing it from a totally different direction this time.

    Nick Offerman: It’s been a fascinating trip, because Mike Schur, who created “Parks and Rec,” our main writer, came to me and said, “So we’ve come up with this role who’s kind of a doppelgänger for Ron Swanson.” My mind starts racing. And he said, “And we want to try and get Sam Elliott.” And I was so embarrassed, because I just felt immediately so unworthy. I was like, that’s like if you said, “Your basketball doppelgänger is LeBron James,” I’d be like, “I’m not sure if I quite deserve that.”

    But Sam agreed to do it. I really have always looked up to Sam. To anybody who ever wants to play anything in the realm of what he’s done, he’s the greatest. He’s truly like a Mount Rushmore figure in our business. So I was pretty nervous the first day he was in the hair and makeup trailer, and I walked up into the trailer, and he immediately got up and gave me a hug. He started gushing at me that he was a fan of me. I was like, “Whoa, whoa, whoa -– please stop. Shut up! That’s not how this works!” But to the point, he immediately established himself as an absolute sweetheart, and we just hit it off.

    And it was funny because, despite his vast experience, he had never really done comedy. He never really worked on comedy and he was a fan of our show, and so he knew that not only was it well-written comedy, but there was also a very loose style. We have a great script, but then we play with it. We’re just very loose. We can make up whatever we want.

    Instead of giving him a sense of freedom, he was very anxious about -– because he’s an old school film actor, where you don’t screw up because that costs film. You’re burning film. So when we first started working, if he would drop a line or something, he’d get really upset, and say, “Goddamn it, I’m so sorry, you guys.” We’d say, “No, Sam, guess what: We’re still rolling. It doesn’t matter. This is totally kindergarten playtime.”

    Once he came around to that, then he really caught to it and became very comfortable. So we became very good friends.

    I’d love to see the two of you in a Western together.

    It’s certainly been mentioned. Unfortunately, the timing is not great for Westerns in general, but it’s certainly on my mind, and something I’m constantly strategizing. It’s going to take some clever meta take on Western to say, “Okay, this is a worthwhile idea.”

    I feel like as an actor, you’re in a very special kind of sweet spot where you’re getting to do films like this, films like “The Founder,” you get to pop in and do guest spots on TV, like the turn you did on “Fargo.”. There’s great variety in what you’re able to do. What are you enjoying about this kind of phase of your career?

    It’s pretty crazy. When I was “Mr. Megan Mullally” — nine, ten years ago — and I was working steadily as an unremarkable character actor journeyman, I thought I had made it. I was amazed at my good fortune. Things had turned out even better than I could have dreamed.

    Then “Parks and Rec” happened, and I said, “Oh, shit. This is crazy!” Megan and I both come from Chicago theater, and we don’t have great aspirations to win an Oscar or do any specific goal, so much as we just love to get to work on great writing. So that’s what I’m loving about the permission that I’ve been given, I guess by the audience, to sort of exist across the spectrum from something as absurd as “Childrens Hospital” — which is, I think, the most wonderful, idiotic comedy I’ve gotten to work on -– all the way over to dramatic films like this or “The Founder.”

    I always feel like a freshman -– or maybe I’ve made it to sophomore year. When I watch my work in these things, I always see what my next study of improvement is going to be. It doesn’t really matter what the genre or medium is. I don’t have offers beating down my door. Studio movies generally steer clear of me, because I’m prone to take my trousers off. But I do get a lot of really good writing that comes my way.

    “Fargo” for example, when “Parks and Rec” ended, I got some offers of TV shows that would have been lucrative and would have been pretty derivative. They’re all characters inspired by Ron Swanson: football coaches and ex-Marines and what have you. I said, “Oh boy, if I was trying to get rich, then I would jump right into one of these shows, but I’m not. I’m trying to give good work. So I think I’m just going to avoid TV series for at least a few years, because nothing can ever compare to this experience I just had.” Then Noah Hawley called.

    I had seen the first season of “Fargo,” and I said, “Boy, this guy does real nice work for actors, even small roles.” I love creative people who make sure, even if you have one scene as a waitress, that you get a good piece of dialogue to chew on. So he called, and we had a meeting, and talked about the role on “Fargo.” I said, “I have to say yes to this, because it sounds like it’s really great writing.” And it was.

    The thing I’m enjoying is the autonomy that I’m being afforded. It makes my life very stress-free. I don’t have to worry about staying cute. That’s my favorite thing about it.

    And you have “The Handmade Project,” the competition show that you’re doing with Amy Poehler, that you’re both producing. Give me a tease on what we can expect from that.

    I think it’s going to be the comfort food of television shows. I love to encourage everyone to make something with their hands. For me, making things in my wood shop with my hands is such an amazing medicine that keeps me from consuming all that 24-hour news cycle… So we’re making this TV show that’s super-fun. It’s very positive. It’s not the kind of show where we slap people if they make a mistake. Instead, we get creative geniuses to show us what they do, that will then inspire us all to say, “Oh, maybe I should try and make some cowboy boots for my family,” instead of order them off the internet.

    I’m really looking forward to it. It’s going to be something we haven’t really seen in American primetime television. So I’m also fascinated to see how it goes. It’s kind of a new frontier. Getting to be a smartass on a show with Amy is pretty much a no-brainer in my household!

  • Chris Pratt: ‘Parks and Rec’ FBI Agent Burt Macklin Is Ready to Replace Comey

    Crisis averted, everyone. Burt Macklin is here to save the day.

    “Parks and Recreation” character’s alter ego as a replacement for FBI Director James Comey, who was just fired by President Trump.

    CALL HIM TODAY.

    FBI Special Agent Burt Tyrannosaurus Macklin was one of Andy Dwyer’s various alter egos — including Johnny Karate, who would make a great Secretary of Defense — and Andy broke out Macklin whenever a particular set of law enforcement skills were required.

    Pratt’s fans are fully on board with Macklin jumping into the mix, offering more pop culture solutions to our modern woes:


    Sigh. We miss “Parks and Recreation” so much. Pratt is currently starring in “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2” but we would not say no to any number of “Parks and Rec” spinoffs, starring Pratt or really anyone.

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  • Best TV Shows to Watch That Never Won an Award

    the wireIn this golden age of television, the sheer amount of quality programming makes it impossible for the Emmys to recognize every show worthy of awards, which is both wonderful and incredibly frustrating. The following five shows are perfect examples of the how the Emmys failed to recognize brilliance.

    ‘The Wire’ (2002 – 2008)

    It’s often at the top of the critics’ charts when it comes to the greatest television shows of all time … so how exactly did “The Wire” only manage to garner two Emmy nominations for writing over the course of five seasons? It’s one of television’s greatest mysteries. While the gritty drama about the drug scene in Baltimore may have been too intense and dark to gain traction with voters, “The Wire” certainly paved the way for a show like meth-fueled “Breaking Bad” to win multiple Emmys.

    ‘Parks and Recreation’ (2009 – 2015)

    On the comedy side, NBC’s “Parks and Recreation” definitely takes the crown when it comes to the best shows that never won at the Emmys. While it started as a poor imitation of “The Office,” “Parks” became a unicorn among the more cynical sitcoms. Amy Poehler was a perennial Best Actress nominee for her iconic portrayal of Leslie Knope, but she only took home one Golden Globe over the course of the seven-season run. The ensemble was one of the strongest on television with Chris Pratt, Aubrey Plaza, Adam Scott, and Rob Lowe representing the wacky citizens of Pawnee. But the biggest injustice is the fact that Nick Offerman never got a single nomination for his work as Ron Swanson, the gruff government-hating boss with a heart of gold. To quote Ron, “Awards are stupid. But they’d be less stupid if they went to the right people.”

    ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ (1997 – 2003)

    “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” never really had a chance with Emmy voters, given that it was a show about vampires airing on the WB. If voters had looked closer at Joss Whedon‘s masterpiece, they would have seen that it wasn’t just about killing vampires. “Buffy” was never afraid to tackle subjects like school violence, substance abuse, and teens coming to terms with their sexuality, and it did so unflinchingly. Sarah Michelle Gellar‘s Buffy gave girls a heroine to look up to, as she proved that the blonde cheerleader was also capable of kicking demon ass.

    ‘Community’ (2009 – 2015)

    Fiercely beloved by the few who watched it, Community” is a gem that the Emmys never paid much attention to. While the episode titled “Abed’s Uncontrollable Christmas” did win an Creative Arts Emmy for animation, “Community” was mostly ignored when it came to the Primetime Emmys. It netted only one nomination in writing — for the brilliant “Remedial Chaos Theory” — over the course of its six seasons. “Community” was the perfect show for pop culture nerds, as it played all sorts of television tropes, from homages to “Law & Order” to spoofing clip shows and spaghetti Westerns.

    ‘Penny Dreadful’ (2014 – 2016)

    The show just aired its last season, but there is still hope that awards bodies will catch on to Showtime’s Gothic thriller “Penny Dreadful.” Just wrapping up its third season, “Penny Dreadful” imagines a Victorian London where Dorian Gray, Victor Frankenstein, and Henry Jekyll team up with original characters to battle vampires, witches, and the devil himself. In a just world, Doctor Who” alum Billie Piper as a vengeful Bride of Frankenstein with a feminist agenda and ’90s hunk Josh Hartnett as Ethan Chandler, a sharpshooter with a terrible secret. It is genuinely terrifying every week, and Emmy voters should absolutely pay attention.

    Sources