Tag: Richard Kind

  • Movie Review: ‘Wolfs’

    Brad Pitt and George Clooney in 'Wolfs'.
    (L to R) Brad Pitt and George Clooney in ‘Wolfs’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Opening in theaters in limited release from September 20th ahead of a September 27th arrival on Apple’s TV+ service, ‘Wolfs’ is the latest attempt by the tech giant to lure in audiences with big names and healthy budgets, though seemingly –– given that one-week run in theaters –– more concerned about buzz (and subscribers) than box office.

    Still, the movie itself offers enough fun to make it a worthwhile effort, even if it seems a little too much in love with the star wattage of its two central famous faces.

    Related Article: Jon Watts’ George Clooney and Brad Pitt Caper ‘Wolfs’ is Spawning a Sequel

    Will ‘Wolfs’ Blow You Away?

    Brad Pitt and George Clooney in 'Wolfs'.
    (L to R) Brad Pitt and George Clooney in ‘Wolfs’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Do you long to see George Clooney and Brad Pitt reunited on screen for the first time since –– no, not the ‘Ocean’s movies but actually the Coen brothers’ ‘Burn After Reading,’ which barely counts since they only occupy the same cinematic space for a very brief time?

    If you’re yearning to have two of the most famous movie stars Hollywood has to offer trading barbs, occasionally letting themselves look vulnerable but generally being just as cool as you expect, then Apple has the answer for you. And the giant tech corporation has kindly agreed to put in theaters for exactly a week before the whole affair shuffles off to its Apple TV+ service.

    That might sound sarcastic or cynical, but it’s hard not to see the ploy in the same light: agree to back ‘Spider-Man’ trilogy director Jon Watts’ new original crime caper, see him secure two giant stars then look for buzz over box office.

    Still, the film that was made does have enough going for it to warrant seeing it on the big screen, even if you must be quick. Just don’t go expecting a completely original tale, as what unspools is largely a fun version of stories we’ve seen before with a tweak here and there.

    Script and Direction

    Director Jon Watts, Brad Pitt and George Clooney on the set of 'Wolfs'.
    (L to R) Director Jon Watts, Brad Pitt and George Clooney on the set of ‘Wolfs’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Watts has been sitting on the ‘Wolfs’ script for years, fully hoping that Clooney and Pitt might agree to star, since the roles very much feel written for them in ‘Ocean’s chatty mode. Of course, Spidey has gotten in the way for the last few years (albeit doing plenty for the filmmaker’s profile and bank balance), but the director has now broken free of Marvel’s grasp to get back to the sort of movie that launched his career, ‘Cop Car.’

    The ‘Wolfs’ script is light on its feet, mostly driven by the banter between Clooney and Pitt, though it does at times twist itself in knots trying to figure out certain situations. And there is also sometimes too much of a reliance on certain repetitive dialogue tricks, such as the duo overlapping each other or one saying a curse word, then the other saying the same thing when they discover what he’s looking at.

    It all adds up to the movie at times feeling exactly that, a movie –– while we don’t go to star-driven films such as this for gritty reality, it does jolt you out of the experience from time to time.

    And Watts knows how to direct both actors and action, New York shot in appealing tones as the characters make their way on their unexpected mission. One moment in particular –– no spoilers, but it involves a car and one of the characters is played in slow-mo for maximum impact.

    Performances

    (L to R) George Clooney and Brad Pitt in 'Wolfs'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    (L to R) George Clooney and Brad Pitt in ‘Wolfs’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Aside from Clooney and Pitt, almost everyone else is a cipher (and one particular actor should feel hard done by –– see below.)

    George Clooney as “Margaret’s Man”

    Neither of the stars’ characters are given names that we learn here; that pretty much comes with the job of mysterious, gruff fixer. Still, Clooney can knock this sort of role out of the park in his sleep and here he’s offered the chance to sideline the twinkly charm for a more circumspect character.

    Brad Pitt as “Pam’s Man”

    Both Pitt and Clooney are channeling their real-life friendship here, albeit, submerging under layers of characters who don’t want to work together. Pitt, like his co-star, is on good form, underplaying it and keeping his cool. There are a few funny grace notes to the pair aging, such as cracking backs or downing Advil, and it all adds to the layers of the two fixers.

    Austin Abrams as “Kid”

    Yes, names really are not a thing in this movie (with a couple of exceptions), but Abrams doesn’t need one to make an impact. He’s a fine pick to play off of the two leads, his nervy, slightly manic energy (since his character is in the midst of a drug trip/comedown during the story) works well against their measured stoicism and he really makes the part work.

    Amy Ryan as Margaret

    Ryan is the first person we meet in the film, and though she only makes a brief appearance as a panicked district attorney who initially summons Clooney’s character for help when she thinks she has a dead body in her room after a hookup gone awry, she does a lot with a little.

    Supporting cast

    A few other roles pop –– ‘Never Have I Ever’s Poorna Jagannathan is dry and funny as June, the doctor to whom the central pair take the kid, while Zlatko Burić dutifully portrays the gangster Dimitri with whom our heroes interact during the movie.

    Still, there is one giant crime in the movie (and we don’t mean murder or drugs), and that’s the utter waste of the brilliant Richard Kind, who while he’s great as always, has maybe a couple of lines of dialogue and a minute or two of screen time.

    Final Thoughts

    Brad Pitt and George Clooney in 'Wolfs'.
    (L to R) Brad Pitt and George Clooney in ‘Wolfs’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    ‘Wolfs’ gets by on star power for good and ill, slowly turning the dial on the central characters, peeling away some layers and adding in some moral questions, which is surely why Clooney and Pitt took the gig beyond the chance to team back up again on screen.

    It doesn’t totally succeed, but it’s better than your average crime caper.

    ‘Wolfs’ receives 7 out of 10 stars.

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    What’s the plot of ‘Wolfs’?

    ‘Wolfs’ sees George Clooney as a professional fixer hired to cover up a high-profile crime. But when a second fixer (Brad Pitt) shows up and the two “lone wolves” are forced to work together, they find their night spiraling out of control in ways that neither one of them expected.

    Who stars in ‘Wolfs’?

    • George Clooney as Jack
    • Brad Pitt as Nick
    • Amy Ryan as Margaret
    • Austin Abrams as Kid
    • Poorna Jagannathan as June
    • Zlatko Burić as Dimitri
    • Richard Kind as Kid’s dad
    (L to R) George Clooney and Brad Pitt in 'Wolfs'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    (L to R) George Clooney and Brad Pitt in ‘Wolfs’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Other George Clooney and Brad Pitt Movies:

    Buy George Clooney Movies on Amazon

    Buy Brad Pitt Movies on Amazon

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  • ‘Wolfs’ Sequel in the Works Starring George Clooney and Brad Pitt

    Brad Pitt and George Clooney in 'Wolfs'.
    (L to R) Brad Pitt and George Clooney in ‘Wolfs’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Preview:

    • George Clooney and Brad Pitt’s ‘Wolfs’ is getting a sequel.
    • It’s the new film from ‘Spider-Man’ recent trilogy director Jon Watts.
    • Yet the movie will also now not be in wide release.

    There is some good news and bad news for the Apple-backed crime caper ‘Wolfs’ that stars George Clooney and Brad Pitt.

    Apple has, via Deadline, decided to start developing a sequel to the Jon Watts movie that will be with us next month. That’s the good news.

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    Here comes the gut punch: instead of a wide release for the original movie, it will now land in theaters just one week before it arrives globally on Apple TV+. Seemingly gone (at least for now) are the days when any movie featuring big stars launches in cinemas and enjoys a healthy run at the box office.

    Still, it’s perhaps not surprising for Apple –– while its big-name releases (such as ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’ and ‘Emancipation’ haven’t been box office behemoths, they’ve enjoyed plenty of buzz and some awards recognition.

    Related Article: Director George Clooney and Joel Edgerton Talk ‘The Boys in the Boat’

    What’s the story of ‘Wolfs’?

    Brad Pitt and George Clooney in 'Wolfs'.
    (L to R) Brad Pitt and George Clooney in ‘Wolfs’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    ‘Wolfs’, which Watts (currently best known for the three most recent ‘Spider-Man’ movies starring Tom Holland) wrote, directed and produced, Clooney plays a professional fixer hired to cover up a high-profile crime.

    But when a second fixer (Pitt) shows up and the two lone wolves are forced to work together, they find their night spiraling out of control in ways neither expected.

    The cast also includes Amy Ryan, Austin Abrams, Poorna Jagannathan, Richard Kind and Zlatko Burić.

    Here’s what Apple Original Films head of features Matt Dentler said to Deadline about the news:

    “‘Wolfs’ is the kind of big event movie that makes Apple TV+ such an exceptional home for the best in entertainment. With George and Brad’s remarkable and engaging chemistry under Jon Watts’ extraordinary direction, ‘Wolfs’ blends all the great elements of comedy, action, and drama into a hugely entertaining movie that will leave audiences ready for what’s next. Releasing the movie to theaters before making it widely available to Apple TV+ customers brings the best of both worlds to audiences, and we’re excited to see fans embrace the movie as we start working with Jon on the sequel.”

    What about other movies from Apple?

    Matt Damon and Casey Affleck in 'The Instigators'.
    (L to R) Matt Damon and Casey Affleck in ‘The Instigators’. Photo: Apple TV+.

    It’s a case of the company judging based on the market. The likes of new crime pic ‘The Instigators’ (which boasts Matt Damon and Casey Affleck as its leads) will be on limited release ahead of its Apple TV+ debut, while the mammoth-budget ‘F1’ that Pitt has been shooting for a while now with Joseph Kosinski directing from a script by Ehren Kruger, is still targeting a wide launch in cinemas next year.

    So, when will ‘Wolfs’ be on screen?

    Brad Pitt and George Clooney in 'Wolfs'.
    (L to R) Brad Pitt and George Clooney in ‘Wolfs’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    The movie will have its world premiere at the Venice Film Festival before a limited run in cinemas on September 20th and then lands on Apple TV+ on September 27th.

    Director Jon Watts, Brad Pitt and George Clooney on the set of 'Wolfs'.
    (L to R) Director Jon Watts, Brad Pitt and George Clooney on the set of ‘Wolfs’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Other George Clooney and Brad Pitt Movies:

    Buy George Clooney Movies on Amazon

    Buy Brad Pitt Movies on Amazon

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  • ‘Beau Is Afraid’ Interview: Parker Posey

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    Opening in theaters on April 21st is the new Black-comedy/Horror film ‘Beau is Afraid’ from ‘Hereditary’ and ‘Midsommar’ director Ari Aster.

    What is the plot of ‘Beau Is Afraid?’

    ‘Beau is Afraid’ follows Beau Wassermann (Joaquin Phoenix), a paranoid man who embarks on an epic odyssey to get home to his mother (Patti LuPone).

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    Who is in the cast of ‘Beau Is Afraid?’

    ‘Beau Is Afraid’ stars Oscar-winner Joaquin Phoenix (‘Joker’) as Beau Wassermann, Patti LuPone (‘Driving Miss Daisy‘) as Mona Wassermann, Zoe Lister-Jones (‘State of Play‘) as young Mona, Amy Ryan (‘Gone Baby Gone‘) as Grace, Nathan Lane (‘The Birdcage‘) as Roger, Parker Posey as (‘Dazed and Confused,’ ‘Best in Show‘) as Elaine Bray, and Richard Kind (‘Argo‘) as Dr. Cohen.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Parker Posey about her work on ‘Beau Is Afraid,’ director Ari Aster’s unique visual style, working with Joaquin Phoenix, and why she needs filmmakers and fellow actors to fight for her to get roles.

    Parker Posey stars in director Ari Aster's 'Beau Is Afraid.'
    Parker Posey stars in director Ari Aster’s ‘Beau Is Afraid.’

    You can read the full interview below or please click on the video player above to watch the interview and clips from the film.

    Moviefone: To begin with, how did director Ari Aster originally pitch this film to you and what was your first reaction to the extremely imaginative screenplay?

    Parker Posey: Well, I heard that he wanted to meet me on Zoom. So we had a Zoom meeting, and I said, “I saw ‘Hereditary’ and there was one thing that I really didn’t like about it.” Then I was like, “That I wasn’t in it.” Because I’m such a fan. I mean, ‘Hereditary’, and this movie too, he’s a real auteur filmmaker, and a visionary filmmaker who create these worlds that are able to elicit feelings that no other filmmaker can make and that are special to the artist. So Ari, with his actors and his direction, his camera work, his storytelling, to me, it felt like when I read it, like it was a movie that he always wanted to make.

    Joaquin Phoenix and director Ari Aster on the set of 'Beau Is Afraid.'
    (L to R) Joaquin Phoenix and director Ari Aster on the set of ‘Beau Is Afraid.’

    MF: When you had your first meeting with Ari did you know immediately that you would work well with him on set?

    PP: So when we met on Zoom, he just said, “I’ve been a fan of yours for so long. I really want you to be in this movie. It’s a small part but Joaquin wants you too.” I was like, “I’m just so thankful.” I don’t get to do roles unless the director really wants me, and the star really wants me. They can fight the financiers or whoever’s in charge that is saying, “No, we want someone younger, or we want someone who was just in a movie last month.” So I was really, really touched to have that support and to feel that support come seemingly out of nowhere and be like, “Oh, this is really sweet. This is how it used to be for me way back 30 years ago. Back in the day, darling.” So it was lovely.

    Joaquin Phoenix in director Ari Aster's 'Beau Is Afraid.'
    Joaquin Phoenix in director Ari Aster’s ‘Beau Is Afraid.’

    Related Article: Director Todd Phillips Posts New Pictures from ‘Joker: Folie à Deux’ as Filming Wraps

    MF: The movie is visually stunning. Can you talk about the unique look of the film and what you thought of the final product?

    PP: It’s a Kafkaesque landscape, and it’s a labyrinth. We don’t know where we are. We don’t know who these people are, we don’t know who they’re working for. So he’s making something culturally relevant today that audience members will want to go to a theater and see. But when I saw the screening, I was like, “This could be at Disney World.” The art behind it, what Beau goes through, it just looks great.

    Joaquin Phoenix in director Ari Aster's 'Beau Is Afraid.'
    Joaquin Phoenix in director Ari Aster’s ‘Beau Is Afraid.’

    MF: Finally, what was it like working with Joaquin Phoenix and watching his process as an actor?

    PP: You’re taken by Joaquin and what he does as an actor in bringing out our empathy. Also, he’s so mysterious as well. He’s got a lot going on. He’s very loose and open, and fluid, as an actor, and also very physical. Ari had a lot of physical theater actors in this. So there’s this gravitas that the performers carry that you don’t see tonally in a lot of movies, which I really love.

    Nathan Lane, Joaquin Phoenix and Amy Ryan in 'Beau Is Afraid.'
    (L to R) Nathan Lane, Joaquin Phoenix and Amy Ryan in ‘Beau Is Afraid.’

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Beau Is Afraid:’

    Buy Tickets: ‘Beau Is Afraid’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Parker Posey Movies On Amazon

    ‘Beau Is Afraid’ is produced by A24, Square Peg, IPR.VC, and Access Industries. It is scheduled to release in theaters on April 21st, 2023.

  • Movie Review: ‘Beau Is Afraid’

    Joaquin Phoenix in director Ari Aster's 'Beau Is Afraid.'
    Joaquin Phoenix in director Ari Aster’s ‘Beau Is Afraid.’

    Beau Is Afraid’ on wide release now, represents filmmaker Ari Aster cashing in the creative credit he’s earned with the buzz and box office of horror movies ‘Hereditary’ and ‘Midsommar’ and taking a gigantic swing for the creative fences that will surely end up in the “love” or “hate” column for most viewers.

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    What is ‘Beau is Afraid’ about?

    Aster’s latest is the story of nervy, milquetoast Beau Wassermann (Joaquin Phoenix), who lives alone in a downtown apartment building where every moment is a waking nightmare. His home is squarely in a city block that might be a war zone for all the chaos that seemingly constantly breaks out on the streets.

    Prone to anxiety and paranoia, he visits his longtime therapist (Stephen McKinley Henderson), who prepares him for his imminent journey to visit his mother Mona (Patti LuPone). But mayhem ensues on the eve of Beau’s departure, spinning his life in a surreal new direction.

    Unable to reach his destination in a world gone insane, traveling on roads that don’t appear on any map, Beau is forced to confront his own life and the lies he’s been told by those closest to him.

    And that’s the most basic description –– there is so much more lurking within here, including weird, grieving suburbanites (played by Nathan Lane and Amy Ryan) who initially help and then effectively adopt Beau, much to the endless frustration of their teen daughter Toni (Kylie Rogers). A forest-dwelling theatre troupe with whom Beau links up end up shattered by tragedy. And when he does finally get to his mother’s house, there is some truly surreal weirdness to follow.

    Wreathed through it all are flashbacks to his time as a teenager (where he’s brought to life by Armen Nahapetian), spending time on a cruise ship and elsewhere with his demanding, highly strung mother (here played by Zoe Lister-Jones). It’s on the cruise that a crucial moment in Beau’s development –– or the arrest of it, at least –– occurs, when he meets and falls for Elaine (Julia Antonelli), only for her to be snatched away by her mother. It really gets to the roots of his problems.

    Nathan Lane, Joaquin Phoenix and Amy Ryan in 'Beau Is Afraid.'
    (L to R) Nathan Lane, Joaquin Phoenix and Amy Ryan in ‘Beau Is Afraid.’

    Cast Performances 

    Beau is such a sniveling, seemingly unlikable protagonist that it’s credit to Aster and Phoenix that he’s actually watchable on his crazy journey. While it often feels like things are more happening to Beau than he’s ever driving the story, he remains a worthwhile anchor for our attention.

    Indeed, it’s credit to the actor that he holds your attention, and he’s joined by some suitably skilled co-stars, including Richard Kind, Hayley Squires, and Parker Posey, who arrives late on as the adult Elaine, and makes an impression with her limited screen time.

    Some of the cast –– especially Kind –– feel like they’re wasted in tiny roles, but you can see why they might want to come and play in Aster’s strange sandbox. Lister-Jones, meanwhile, has more to chew on as Beau’s overbearing “smother” who evolves into the more distant version played by LuPone.

    If you were expecting an easy, entertaining watch or something simple to take a date to, this is not the movie for you –– unless you’re a fan of complicated, weird, and downright standoffish arthouse fare.

    Joaquin Phoenix and director Ari Aster on the set of 'Beau Is Afraid.'
    (L to R) Joaquin Phoenix and director Ari Aster on the set of ‘Beau Is Afraid.’

    Related Article: New Images from ‘Joker: Folie à Deux’ Arrive

    Themes and Direction

    ‘Beau’s driving themes are guilt, fear and the endless, driving chaos of the modern world, reflecting on how we internalize our feelings, and they start to poison us. There are rampaging killers, Freudian images, and stories of how Beau’s father died in the act of conceiving him.

    This is, as we’ve said, not a film that will inspire mild responses. You’re likely to either love or loathe it, depending on whether you get on board. And even then, the abrupt ending (after near three hours of surreal oddity) might jolt you out of that positivity.

    Long tracts of the story are likely to invoke boredom if you’ve no tolerance for whimsy or ideas that appears to be weird for weirdness’ sake. Aster throws every cinematic trick in the book at this one, including animated sequences, and an opening scene that makes Beau’s journey through the birth canal into an unforgiving world appear like a battlefield thanks to a discordant soundtrack. There are grotesques and grime, and even a sequence where Phoenix, naked, wrestles with a man who unexpectedly drops into his bath.

    Given the director’s history, there is also bloody violence, a big dose of satire and some real shocks here and there, though it’s also shot through with a lot more humor than either of his previous works. Through it all, you can feel like Aster has big issues on his mind but isn’t always able to communicate them in a way that makes you want to listen or understand.

    And that’s a big problem at the core of ‘Beau’ –– though it’s good to see a director given free rein to make the movie he truly wants to –– there’s a big question of whether anyone really needed to see it in the first place. Plenty of films have explored child/parent relations, guilt, and emotional crises, and in a way that tries to connect with the audience. Aster seems more interested in the strangeness he can invent to get those concepts across.

    Yet even as large swathes are almost designed to turn you off, there’s something to be said for the tone and the soundscape, which end up trickling into your subconscious and, unless you truly reject everything the movie has to offer, could still have you thinking about the story days after you see it.

    Final Thoughts

    What we have here is a confronting, unique movie, but not always for the good, and with . In all honesty, we’d say watch it if you’re in the mood for something challenging, but don’t say you weren’t warned.

    ‘Beau Is Afraid’ receives 6 out of 10 stars.

    Joaquin Phoenix in director Ari Aster's 'Beau Is Afraid.'
    Joaquin Phoenix in director Ari Aster’s ‘Beau Is Afraid.’

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Beau Is Afraid:’

    Buy Tickets: ‘Beau Is Afraid’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Parker Posey Movies On Amazon

    ‘Beau Is Afraid’ is produced by A24, Square Peg, IPR.VC, and Access Industries. It is scheduled to release in theaters on April 21st, 2023.

  • ‘Reacher’s Willa Fitzgerald Talks Watergate Comedy ’18 ½’

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    Now available on digital and VOD is the new Watergate scandal comedy ’18 ½,’ which was directed by Dan Mirvish (‘Between Us’).

    Set in 1974, the new movie stars Willa Fitzgerald as Connie, a White House transcriber who discovers the missing 18 ½ minutes from President Nixon’s infamous tapes. Scared for her life, and unsure of what to do, Connie turns to Paul (‘The Big Short‘s John Magaro), a local newspaper reporter trying to expose the President.

    In addition to Fitzgerald and Magaro, the cast also includes Richard Kind (‘Argo’), Vondie Curtis-Hall (‘Romeo + Juliet’), and the voices of Jon Cryer (‘Two and a Half Men’), Ted Raimi (‘Evil Dead II’), and Bruce Campbell (‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’).

    Actress Willa Fitzgerald has appeared in such films as ‘Freak Show,’ ‘Blood Money,’ and ‘ The Goldfinch,’ as well as TV shows like ‘Gotham,’ ‘Scream,’ and ‘Billions.’

    But she is probably best known for role as Roscoe Conklin on the first season of Prime Video’s hit series ‘Reacher,’ which stars Alan Ritchson.

    Moviefone recently had the chance to speak with Willa Fitzgerald about making ‘18 ½,’ her knowledge of the Watergate Scandal, and working with John Magaro, as well as her experience on ‘Reacher’ and if she will return to the series in the future.

    Willa Fitzgerald in '18 1/2.'
    (L to R) Willa Fitzgerald in ’18 1/2.’

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Willa Fitzgerald and John Magaro about ’18 ½.’

    Moviefone: To begin with, how did you get involved with this project and what was your first reaction to this Watergate comedy?

    Willa Fitzgerald: I got sent the script quite a long time before I even got the job. I had a meeting with Dan Mirvish a year before we shot it. I feel like as an actor, I’m always drawn to scripts that are contained in the way that ‘18 ½’ is. It’s very few characters, very few locations, and it reads on the page almost like a play.

    I also really loved how it took the constraints of a low budget indie and made them into really interesting choices on the page for how to deal with an extended fight scene, or just a lack of a lot of supporting characters. I always find that to be a really fun challenge.

    MF: How much did you know about the Watergate scandal before you did research for this movie, and in your opinion, what is it about that event that has kept Americans fascinated with it for 50 years now?

    WF: I knew about Watergate, insofar as I knew about the things that I had been taught in school and the little bit extra beyond that. I think there’s just been a renewed cultural interest in Watergate. I think that’s because of the political instability in our country again. I think there’s always an inclination to look to the past to understand the present, and Watergate kind of pales in comparison to a lot of the stuff that we’re hearing about at the January 6th hearing right now. But I think that long before January 6th even happened, we were thinking about Watergate because we were thinking about what it means to have the highest office in the country suddenly under intense scrutiny.

    I think what this movie does really well is that it leaves it up to the audience, what they take away from what the movie’s saying, what we’re saying as artists, and it gives the viewer this almost ‘Alice in Wonderland’ sort of romp through the imagined version of this 18 ½ minute gap. I think that’s a cool way of engaging with something that we’ve seen so much about. I mean, there’s been so many Watergate projects just in the past several years.

    John Magaro and Willa Fitzgerald in '18 1/2.'
    (L to R) John Magaro and Willa Fitzgerald in ’18 1/2.’

    MF: Can you describe Connie, your approach to playing her, and what is she looking to get out of this whole situation?

    WF: I love Connie. I feel like I’ve gotten the opportunity to play a lot of intelligent women, and Connie is certainly an intelligent woman. I was really interested when I was reading the script and thinking about the ways in which, as a woman in the seventies, she was confined to a certain level. She couldn’t ever quite get beyond the level of the transcriber that she was, it was kind of the top of the ladder for her as a woman at the time.

    I think that there’s a lot of interesting stuff in her backstory as someone who once supported the administration, who believed in the administration, who then has this crisis of faith in the administration, reaches her own personal tipping point and then makes a radical decision. All of that backstory was really interesting to me in the actual playing of her as a character.

    MF: Can you talk about Connie and Paul’s relationship and working with John Magaro?

    WF: John Magaro is great. I really had a fantastic time working with John. I think that there’s this interesting constant suspicion, reevaluation, questioning of the other’s intentions in a lot of ways, and it’s just like the beginning of any romantic relationship. But then with the additional stakes of the world that those characters are occupying, it made it really fun to explore those tropes with the heightened background of the character’s worlds.

    I think that one of my favorite scenes is that first scene at the diner, they’re kind of really figuring each other out and getting to know each other. I think it’s such a fun introduction to both of those characters and the ways that their minds work, which are so different.

    John Magaro and Willa Fitzgerald in '18 1/2.'
    (L to R) John Magaro and Willa Fitzgerald in ’18 1/2.’

    MF: There is a fantastic fight scene at the end of the film that is presented as one continuous shot. Can you talk about how you shot that scene?

    WF: I mean, we did do a lot of it in chunks. It’s a very long scene. There are tricks to a continuous shot, and you just find things that you pass over (with the camera) and then you’re suddenly in a different take, but you don’t know it. That’s the trick of stitching that together. We had limited time, we’re a small movie, so it all did move quite quickly.

    I kind of love that scene because it’s so weird and I’ve never seen anything like that in a movie before. I think it’s such an interesting way of having a fight scene, which largely takes place off camera, while you’re listening to this huge delivery of information and climactic moment of what these characters have been trying to find out the whole time.

    MF: What was your experience like working with director Dan Mirvish?

    WF: Dan is a veteran, he has certainly been so deeply enmeshed in the indie film scene. It’s no surprise to me that he is inventive in those ways, because necessity is the mother of invention. When you have a small film that you’re making, it’s just one constraint after the next, whether it’s what days you have availability to shoot or when you can be at a location. There’re just a million things that can go wrong and they often do, and you have to work with all of those constraints.

    MF: Finally, what was the ‘Reacher’ experience like for you, and were you surprised by how many people binged the show during the pandemic?

    WF: It’s a great show. I think it was really what audiences were looking for. I think it’s actually funny. I remember earlier in the pandemic, everyone was like, “No one’s going to make a pandemic show. No one is going to make something really dark.” I feel like of late, actually a lot of the shows that are on television right now are quite dark and apocalyptic. There’s a lot of resonance to our current situation in a lot of the television that’s being put out there, and a lot of the good television that’s being put out there.

    I think ‘Reacher’ was kind of a real break in that stylistic genre choice that was being made. I think that’s probably why people kind of responded to it so positively, it was just like this total departure from what else was available. I mean, it was a great show to be a part of, it’s such a genre piece. At the same time, it spans so many different genres. It was just fun. I loved doing something in the action world. It was great and Alan’s wonderful.

    MF: Will you be returning for season 2 of ‘Reacher?’

    WF: I will not be in the next season. I can tell you that. But you never know what’s going to happen.

    Willa Fitzgerald (Roscoe Conklin), and Alan Ritchson (Jack Reacher) in Prime Video's 'Reacher.'
    (L-R): Willa Fitzgerald (Roscoe Conklin), and Alan Ritchson (Jack Reacher) in Prime Video’s ‘Reacher.’ Photo: Shane Mahood. Copyright: Amazon Studios.
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  • Voice Actors Richard Kind, Phyllis Smith: Heard but Not Seen

    Phyllis Smith
    Phyllis Smith

    “Inside Out” stars Richard Kind, Kyle MacLachlan, Phyllis Smith and Kaitlyn Dias talk about how to work as a voice actor.

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