Tag: roald-dahl

  • Movie Review: ‘The Twits’

    (L to R): Margo Martindale as Mrs. Twit, Johnny Vegas as Mr. Twit, in 'The Twits.' Photo: Courtesy of Netflix © 2025.
    (L to R): Margo Martindale as Mrs. Twit, Johnny Vegas as Mr. Twit, in ‘The Twits.’
    Photo: Courtesy of Netflix © 2025.

    On Netflix on October 17 is ‘The Twits,’ the latest project based on Roald Dahl’s 1980 children’s novel about a loathsome couple of troublemakers.

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    Directed by Phil Johnston (‘Ralph Breaks the Internet’), the movie features the voices of Johnny Vegas (‘Bleak House’), Margo Martindale (‘August: Osage County’), Emilia Clarke (‘Game of Thrones’), Alan Tudyk (‘Superman’), Natalie Portman (‘Black Swan’) and Maitreyi Ramakrishnan (‘Freakier Friday’).

    Related Article: Next on Netflix Animation Preview Announces Upcoming Movies and TV Shows

    Initial Thoughts

    (L to R): Ryan Lopez as Bubsy, Maitreyi Ramakrishnan as Beesha, in 'The Twits.' Photo: Courtesy of Netflix © 2025.
    (L to R): Ryan Lopez as Bubsy, Maitreyi Ramakrishnan as Beesha, in ‘The Twits.’ Photo: Courtesy of Netflix © 2025.

    Roald Dahl is one of those authors whose controversial views nevertheless don’t stop companies looking to adapt his work. We’ve already had two cinematic versions of ‘Charlie and the Chocolate Factory’ and Wes Anderson had brought several books and short stories to screens.

    ‘The Twits’ could perhaps be considered second-tier Dahl compared to the likes of Willy Wonka and co., but it nevertheless has enough of the writer’s trademark oddness blended with moral lessons that animation feels like the best medium for it.

    Script and Direction

    (L to R): Margo Martindale as Mrs. Twit, Johnny Vegas as Mr. Twit, in 'The Twits.'
    (L to R): Margo Martindale as Mrs. Twit, Johnny Vegas as Mr. Twit, in ‘The Twits.’

    Writing with Meg Favreau (‘Barbie: It Takes Two’), main director Phil Johnston clearly seems to be enjoying freedom from the restraints of working on bigger-budget Disney releases. Here, he truly lets his freak flag fly, building a decent if rarely needed narration and making enough changes to have the story work at feature length without sacrificing what fans of the books might expect.

    The inclusion of orphan heroes, however, does feel somewhat off-the-peg for this sort of movie, even in the characters are engaging enough.

    As director, Johnston (working alongside co-directors Todd Kunjan Demong (‘The Addams Family’) and Katie Shanahan (‘Wild Kratts’) and their animation team, brings the characters to life in fresh fashion, the various personalities looking like a blend of stop-motion and CG, and giving the madness of the story its own visual flare.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R): Maitreyi Ramakrishnan as Beesha, Timothy Simons as Marty Muggle-Wump, in 'The Twits.' Photo: Courtesy of Netflix © 2025.
    (L to R): Maitreyi Ramakrishnan as Beesha, Timothy Simons as Marty Muggle-Wump, in ‘The Twits.’ Photo: Courtesy of Netflix © 2025.

    Johnny Vegas and Margo Martindale are the standouts, voicing the main characters, but there are also good performances from the likes of Maitreyi Ramakrishnan (who voices one of the orphans) and Jason Mantzoukas (as local official Mayor Wayne John John-John).

    Final Thoughts

    Emilia Clarke as Pippa, in 'The Twits.' Photo: Courtesy of Netflix © 2025.
    Emilia Clarke as Pippa, in ‘The Twits.’ Photo: Courtesy of Netflix © 2025.

    Dahl books are tricky to get right, and especially to translate to US audiences given their very British sensibilities.

    ‘The Twits’ is mostly successful, even if it doesn’t ever really reach much further than that.

    ‘The Twits’ receives 70 out of 100.

    Ryan Lopez as Bubsy, in 'The Twits.' Photo: Courtesy of Netflix © 2025.
    Ryan Lopez as Bubsy, in ‘The Twits.’ Photo: Courtesy of Netflix © 2025.

    What’s the story of ‘The Twits’?

    The Twits tells the story of Mr. and Mrs. Twit, the meanest, smelliest, nastiest people on the face of the earth, and their epic battle against a family of magical Muggle-Wumps and two brave children who refuse to let the Twits’ cruelty win.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Twits’?

    • Margo Martindale as Mrs. Credenza S. Twit
    • Johnny Vegas as Mr. James T. Twit
    • Natalie Portman as Mary Muggle-Wump
    • Emilia Clarke as Pippa
    • Maitreyi Ramakrishnan as Beesha
    • Jason Mantzoukas as Mayor Wayne John John-John
    • Timothy Simons as Marty Muggle-Wump
    • Alan Tudyk as Sweet Toed Toad
    Phil Johnston as Mr. Napkin, in 'The Twits.' Photo: Courtesy of Netflix © 2025.
    Phil Johnston as Mr. Napkin, in ‘The Twits.’ Photo: Courtesy of Netflix © 2025.

    Other Movies Adapted from Roald Dahl Stories:

    Buy Roald Dahl Movies and TV on Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘Wonka’

    Timothée Chalamet as Willy Wonka in 'Wonka.'
    Timothée Chalamet as Willy Wonka in ‘Wonka.’ Photo by Eric Charbonneau.

    In theaters on December 15th, ‘Wonka’ is the latest look at a character at a younger age, aiming to explain how Willy Wonka ended up running his wondrous candy factory, as seen in 1971’s ‘Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory’ and 2005’s ‘Charlie and the Chocolate Factory’, both adapted from the work of British writer Roald Dahl.

    Under director Paul King, it’s a musical origin story, featuring one of the most popular young actors and a cast loaded with comedy and dramatic talent.

    Is ‘Wonka’ a sweet treat?

    Timothee Chalamet at the London World Premiere of 'Wonka.'
    Timothee Chalamet at the London World Premiere of ‘Wonka.’ Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2023 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Prequels can be a dicey proposition at the best of times. You’re often filling in details that no one really needed about characters whose backstories deserved to stay mysterious –– looking at you, ‘Solo: A Star Wars Story’.

    But in the hands of someone like Paul King, there is relief to be found in the fact that the movie justifies its existence through sheer ebullience and joy. Even if you’re still not convinced you needed to know how Willy became Wonka, you’ll at least have fun accompanying him on his journey.

    Well, to be specific, he’s at the end of a journey when we first meet him here, coming off a years-long voyage where he gathered ingredients and perfected skills to achieve his dream to become a master chocolatier.

    You know that it works out for him, but King and his cast ensure that you’ll still be invested in his early days.

    ‘Wonka’: script and direction

    Director Paul King at the London World Premiere of 'Wonka.'
    Director Paul King at the London World Premiere of ‘Wonka.’ Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2023 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    It’s been something of a banner year for adaptations of Roald Dahl’s work, between the Wes Anderson short films for Netflix (before it, the ‘Matilda’ musical movie) and now this wonderful effort.

    King wrote the script for the new movie with Simon Farnaby (who has a small, typically funny role in the film), and he’s very much employing the imagination and sheer sense of warmth he brought to both ‘Paddington’ films and his earlier effort, ‘Bunny and the Bull’.

    This is a smartly crafted story that, while it obviously touches on themes and ideas we’ve seen tackled before, does so in a way that doesn’t feel tired. Wonka has life lessons to share, a group of friends he recruits to help him and some scheming business enemies, but they all bear King and Farnaby’s funny, clever stamp. If not every role is as rounded as the title character, many of them have grace notes and quirks that work.

    Taken from the page, ‘Wonka’ soars thanks to the careful attention to detail that King and his team apply to the movie’s world. Utilizing a mixture of sets and select locations in the UK such as the city of Bath and Oxford university to bring Wonka’s unspecified Euro mash-up setting to life, he evokes the feel of the 1971 ‘Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory’ –– more than the 2005 Tim Burton ‘Charlie and the Chocolate Factory’ –– and also calls back to the Rube Goldberg feel of ‘Paddington’ in its level of invention (there’s a scene featuring a particularly useful invention that has echoes of the Geographers’ Guild in the world of ‘Paddington’).

    ‘Wonka’ is a great looking –– and sounding –– movie, its musical aspect helping move the characters’ stories along rather than pausing them. If you wondered what King could do beyond the musical number that wraps up ‘Paddington 2’, then you’re in for a treat, and working with The Divine Comedy pop group founder Neil Hannon has led to some catchy tunes.

    Related Article: ‘Wonka’ Trailer

    ‘Wonka’: performances

    Timothee Chalamet as Willy Wonka and Hugh Grant as an Oompa Loompa in Warner Bros. Pictures and Village Roadshow Pictures’ 'Wonka,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release.
    (L to R) Timothee Chalamet as Willy Wonka and Hugh Grant as an Oompa Loompa in Warner Bros. Pictures and Village Roadshow Pictures’ ‘Wonka,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2023 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Naturally, Timothée Chalamet is the focus here, breathing amusing, sweet life into eternal optimist Wonka, who nevertheless has his own emotional baggage (it probably won’t surprise you to learn it’s a driving force that Disney and Harry Potter have both utilized). But in the hands of the rising young star, who smiles more here than in a handful of the movies he’s been in recently), Willy Wonka is an engaging character to spend time with rather than being cloying.

    There’s a definite hint of Gene Wilder’s Wonka here, and not just because of the use of classic song ‘Pure Imagination’ within both the score and in the movie itself (we won’t spoil how exactly). Chalamet’s take on the character has a similar blend of darkness and light, weighed here more towards the latter) and if you dial into his vibe, you’ll have a good time with him.

    King has built a fine ensemble of actors, all offering either the winsome and the wacky, Calah Lane’s Noodle providing the former (cut with a healthy side of snark so she never becomes too cloying), and the majority of the cast of comedy heavyweights bringing the latter.

    Calah Lane as Noodle and Timothee Chalamet as Willy Wonka in Warner Bros. Pictures and Village Roadshow Pictures’ 'Wonka,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release.
    (L to R) Calah Lane as Noodle and Timothee Chalamet as Willy Wonka in Warner Bros. Pictures and Village Roadshow Pictures’ ‘Wonka,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2023 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Olivia Colman does a lot with a relatively small role as manipulative boarding house/laundry owner Mrs. Scrubbit, ably assisted by Tom Davis as Mr. Bleacher, her hulking would-be paramour.

    On the friendlier front, we have the likes of Jim Carter, Natasha Rothwell, Rich Fulcher and Rakhee Thakrar as the unwitting victims of Mrs. Scrubbit’s calculating ways, while back on the villainous side, we have Paterson Joseph, Matt Lucas and Mathew Baynton have a blast as Wonka’s chocolate-making competition.

    Keegan-Michael Key meanwhile generates plenty of laughs as the corrupt local police chief with a seriously sweet tooth. Finally, there’s Hugh Grant, knocking the role of a Grumpy Oompa Loompa out of the park and stealing any scene he’s in.

    ‘Wonka’: final thoughts

    Timothée Chalamet as Willy Wonka in Warner Bros. Pictures and Village Roadshow Pictures’ 'Wonka,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release.
    Timothée Chalamet as Willy Wonka in Warner Bros. Pictures and Village Roadshow Pictures’ ‘Wonka,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Jaap Buittendijk. Copyright: © 2023 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Does ‘Wonka’ outstrip ‘Paddington’ for charm and appeal? No, not really. But then, the weapons-grade level of positivity pouring from the Peruvian bear is hard to top.

    Still, Paul King delivers a sweet, funny musical confection here that will enthrall families and leave audiences with a level of fulfillment you rarely get outside of a satisfying candy bar.

    ‘Wonka’ receives 8.5 out of 10 stars.

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    What’s the story of ‘Wonka’?

    ‘Wonka’ tells the story of how the world’s greatest inventor, magician and chocolate-maker became the beloved Willy Wonka we know today.

    The movie will introduce audiences to a young Willy Wonka (Timothée Chalamet), chock-full of ideas and determined to change the world one delectable bite at a time — proving that the best things in life begin with a dream, and if you’re lucky enough to meet Willy Wonka, anything is possible…

    Who else is in ‘Wonka’?

    Alongside Chalamet, the cast includes Calah Lane, Keegan-Michael Key, Paterson Joseph, Matt Lucas, Mathew Baynton, Sally Hawkins, Rowan Atkinson, Jim Carter, Olivia Colman and Hugh Grant.

    'Wonka' opens in theaters on December 15th.
    ‘Wonka’ opens in theaters on December 15th.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Wonka’:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Wonka’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy ‘Willy Wonka’ Movies On Amazon

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  • Anne Hathaway to Star in Roald Dahl ‘The Witches’ Adaptation

    Anne Hathaway to Star in Roald Dahl ‘The Witches’ Adaptation

    Warner Bros.

    Anne Hathaway is one bad witch.

    The actress is set to star in Robert Zemeckis’ adaptation of Roald Dahl’s 1973 novel “The Witches.” She’ll play the vicious and powerful Grand High Witch.

    Zemeckis, an Oscar winner for “Forrest Gump,” takes over directing duties on the adaptation from Guillermo del Toro (an Oscar winner for “Shape of Water”), who will still serve as a producer alongside Alfonso Cuaron (an Oscar winner for “Gravity”).

    “The Witches” has been adapted into a feature film before, in 1990 with Anjelica Huston as the Grand High Witch. The story follows a young boy who stumbles upon a child-hating coven of witches and learns of the Grand High Witch’s diabolical plans. He must team up with his elderly grandmother, a former witch hunter, to stop them — even after he’s turned into a mouse.

    Deadline reports Viola Davis is also circling the project.

    Hathaway next appears in “Serenity” opposite her “Interstellar” co-star Matthew McConaughey.

  • ‘Charlie and the Chocolate Factory’ and Other Roald Dahl Classics Headed to Netflix as Animated Series

    ‘Charlie and the Chocolate Factory’ and Other Roald Dahl Classics Headed to Netflix as Animated Series

    Johnny Depp in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
    Warner Bros. Pictures

    Attention, Roald Dahl fans: Netflix has a surprise for you.

    The streaming service has partnered with the Roald Dahl Story Company to bring some of the beloved author’s classics to screen. Of course, plenty of Dahl’s works have already been adapted for screen — “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” (2005), “Matilda” (1996), and “Fantastic Mr. Fox” (2009), to name a few — but these will be animated event series, as Deadline reports. They’ll “remain faithful to the quintessential spirit and tone of Dahl,” per Netflix, and also potentially grow into a larger story universe.

    While we don’t know all the specifics of Netflix’s plan, the streamer did reveal some of the books that will be adapted. The ones it featured include “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory,” “The BFG,” “Matilda,” and “The Twits.” Apparently, we can also expect “many more.”

    Other titles in the agreement include “Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator,” “George’s Marvellous Medicine,” “Boy – Tales of Childhood,” “Going Solo,” “The Enormous Crocodile,” “The Giraffe and the Pelly and Me,” “Henry Sugar,” “Billy and the Minpins,” “The Magic Finger,” “Esio Trot,” “Dirty Beasts,” and “Rhyme Stew.”

    The late author would be “thrilled,” said his wife, Felicity Dahl. She shared in a statement that the Roald Dahl Story Company’s mission is to spread “the unique magic and positive message” of his work to children around the world and that this deal does that.

    “This partnership with Netflix marks a significant move toward making that possible,” she said.

    The first of Netflix’s Roald Dahl animated series will begin production in 2019.

    [via: Deadline]

  • Ugh, Another ‘Willy Wonka’ Reboot Is in the Works

    Willy WonkaHollywood rebooting classic movies is old news, so we shouldn’t be shocked that Warner Bros. is rebooting “Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory.” Still, do we really need another reboot of this beloved tale?

    Variety reports that Warner Bros. has acquired the rights to the story from the Roald Dahl estate and is working with producer David Heyman (“Harry Potter,” “Gravity”) on a reboot. It would not be a reboot of the original 1971 movie starring the late Gene Wilder as the zany titular character. Dahl’s tale has been rebooted before, in 2005’s “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” starring Johnny Depp as Wonka.

    Instead, this new project would focus on his “early adventures.” It won’t be an origin story, however, and it’s possible that other characters from Dahl’s books, like Charlie Bucket, could appear in future franchise installments. The status of Oompa Loompas is unclear.

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  • Steven Spielberg Reveals the Magic Behind Disney’s ‘The BFG’

    A new journey into the whimsical world of Roald Dahl makes its way to the giant screen this week with Disney’s “The BFG.”

    Director Steven Spielberg returns to his child-at-heart roots in his first collaboration with Disney, and, during the movie’s press tour, Spielberg shared what attracted him to the adaptation of the classic children’s book about a Big Friendly Giant who takes a young girl along with him on an adventure to a land full of dreams.

    Joined by leads Ruby Barnhill (Sophie) and Mark Rylance (The BFG), we discovered the magic behind the making of a Spielberg film … straight from the man himself.What made “The BFG” appealing to you … to come back to the kind of story where a child meets a being, like in “E.T.”?

    Steven Spielberg: What appealed to me was the protagonist was a girl, not a boy. And a very strong girl. The protagonist was going to allow us, at a certain point, to believe that 4 feet tall can completely outrank 25 feet tall. I got very excited that this was going to be a little girl’s story. Her courage and her values were going to, in a way, turn the cowardly lion into the brave hero at the end.

    Do you feel like you still learn something on every movie?

    Spielberg: I learned something, I guess, I learned before working with child actors. That it has to be fun. All the movies I’ve made about history, it’s not really fun because you’re trying to get it right and you’ve got history telling you how it was. My imagination tells me how you’d wish and I wish it had been but I can’t go there so I have to kind of censor myself, thinking about kind of stopping myself from creating history that never occurred. This movie for me was a tremendous release. Where all I needed was my imagination and my respect for Roald Dahl’s writing to be able to say that this is going to be the most fun I’ve had in a while and it was.

    The screenplay is really wonderful, because it’s a special effects-driven movie, but it’s so conversational and it doesn’t follow those same kinds of traits that can be prevalent in film right now. Can you talk about whether that provided for a challenge, or was it more freeing?

    Spielberg: I was complaining about it a little bit to Melissa [Mathison, screenwriter]. I said, “It’s gotta go faster. It’s gotta go faster.” And Melissa, she kept saying, “Now, Steve, you know that this isn’t one of your Indiana Jones movies. You should just relax because this is going to be a story where pauses are going to be as important as the words I’ve written and words Dahl’s written. The pauses, the spaces, the patience of the story telling, don’t rush it, because it doesn’t work rushed. It only works unfolding the way it’s unfolding.” And that was the best advice she could give me, and she was absolutely right. Film has its own biorhythm, and you can’t push it. You just can’t.With finding those pauses in the story — can you talk about how Ruby and Mark were the perfect sort of companions to express that, to voice those discoveries for you?

    Spielberg: They hit if off immediately. What was that like when you met him?

    Ruby Barnhill: I actually thought to myself, Whoever gets to work with him is going to be so lucky. He’s such a nice and gentle guy and that was good. He, like Steven, made me feel really comfortable because I was also really nervous meeting him.

    Spielberg: They teased each other all through production. There was a whole life that was occurring while their characters were having their own lives. It wasn’t that different — the characters from the players. They spent a lot of time together when we’d be setting things up. They’d be playing table tennis, they’d be playing basketball.

    Mark, can you talk a little bit about working with Ruby?

    Mark Rylance: I find kids inspiring, because, for me, the work is to be spontaneous, you know, to appear to — that nothing’s ever written — nothing’s been written down, no one knows what’s gonna happen next. That’s the job. And she’s just a natural. She’s just gifted at that. So she’s not a trained actress, but she just really brought herself. And so I — I don’t know what, how to explain it, but she just — she just keeps reminding you of how simple it is, really, and how natural it can be.

    It was also fascinating because, the relationship between Steven and her was much more important, really, than my relationship with her. The person she really needed on the set was Steven. Every morning she would run and jump into his arms, and he was the one who had cast her, and was helping her with the emotional scenes, and with the different things. I was just her tennis batting partner, in a way. I was just the person she was hitting the ball to. But Steven, I mean of all directors working with children, he must be the most fascinating one to watch. So I got a very close-up, you know, I was the close-up witness of how he works with children; how much he truly adores the imagination of a child, of a young person.Mark, can you talk a bit about the use of practical methods to get you and Ruby working together despite shooting for scale separately? How important was it to be able to work off her as much as possible?

    Rylance: Ruby would be kneeling behind a table so I could actually have eye contact with her. So we’d film something like that, and actually, it was very sensitive. Initially they were worried that Ruby would get tired. And they had another wonderful, young actress doing the off camera work for me. But when I acted with Ruby, I said to Steven, “This girl’s great in the morning, but Ruby’s unique, and she makes me laugh, and moves me in a totally different way. So if the film is about a kind of friendship between these two, I think we should always be together.” And he did that. So, from then on, we always worked together — very much in the same space. And then Steven would be looking at his screen that had a composite, a very rough composite of my performance from the morning here; with the actual image through that of Sophie, and trying to get our eyesight, our eye lines together, and also our performance matching. So that was the kind of nature.

    Ruby, can you talk about meeting Mr. Spielberg for the first time?

    Barnhill: At the time, I didn’t really know how famous Steven was, because I was like, sat on the plane, and obviously my dad knew. And he was like, “I know. It’s so exciting.” But I’d only seen, like, the Indiana Jones films, and “E.T.,” and so that — they were kind of like my main ones that I’d seen, and I hadn’t really, like, experienced any others at the time. But I was still really excited to meet someone like that. And then, at first, when I met his wife, Kate, I recognized her from “Indiana Jones.” When I met Steven, the great thing was that he made me feel so comfortable, and so relaxed, because I’m sure most of you know, like, when you’re feeling nervous, it’s really nice to have someone there to calm you down and help you stop feeling nervous. When I met him, it kind of felt like I had known him a long time, which was quite nice.

    Disney’s “The BFG” is in theaters now.

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  • 8 Things You Should Know Before You See Disney’s ‘The BFG’

    In “The BFG,” a young orphan named Sophie (Ruby Barnhill) spends a sleepless night wandering (as she does quite a bit) and catches a glimpse of a big friendly giant (Mark Rylance) roaming the town. Terrified, Ruby runs to her bed and pretends to go back to sleep, but the giant — knowing that she’s seen him — takes her away to giant country for fear that his kind would be discovered by humans. Together, the pair form an unlikely friendship and a giant adventure ensues.

    Curious yet?

    Well, in anticipation of Steven Spielberg and Disney‘s adaptation of Roald Dahl’s “The BFG,” we’ve collected a few details about the movie and how the beloved story was brought to big-screen life.1. ‘The BFG’ Is Steven Spielberg’s First Disney Film

    This is the first time audiences will be seeing the Disney Castle logo alongside another iconic production house, Spielberg’s Amblin Entertainment. The director has always been drawn to working with Disney as a fan of Walt himself. “It was very brave of him to introduce that combination of darkness and light, which was so much Walt Disney‘s original signature in a lot of his earlier works like “Dumbo,’ “Fantasia,” “Snow White,” and “Cinderella.” Being able to be scary and redemptive at the same time, and teach a lesson, an enduring lesson, to everyone,” Spielberg said of his inspiration, which stemmed from the first time he saw “Snow White.”

    2. There’s a Magical 1982 Connection
    While “The BFG” is released alongside the celebration of Roald Dahl’s 100th birthday, the author shares another very important year with director Steven Spielberg. The same year “The BFG” was published, Spielberg released his own tale of transformative friendship, “E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial.” Melissa Mathison, who passed away during production, penned the scripts for both “E.T.” and “The BFG.” “Melissa was the first and only writer we thought of,” said “BFG” producer Kathleen Kennedy. “Her gifts as a writer and her particular sensibility were essential to bringing Dahl’s visionary tale to life.”

    3. It’s All About Family
    As Kennedy put it: “Steven has always gravitated towards stories about families, which is one of the reasons his films have resonated with so many people.” This is key to how writer Mathison and Spielberg connected on their work. “Melissa took Dahl’s book and did the most extraordinary but faithful translation, with a magic only Melissa possesses,” Spielberg asserted, on reuniting with his friend. Before her death, Mathison shared her inspiration behind the heart of the film: “It is a very sweet relationship,” she said of the BFG and the little girl, “but they actually start off a little combative and are suspicious of one another and even have their own little power struggles. But from the moment they have a plan and move forward as partners, there’s just so much love between them. It’s a wonderful little love story.”4. The BFG Was Meant to Be

    Playing the Big Friendly Giant is Spielberg’s recent collaborator Mark Rylance (“Bridge of Spies,” “Ready Player One“). Spielberg was confident in his choice, “Mark would go into complete character transformation when the camera was rolling,” he said, “and while he is one of the greatest stage actors ever, it was the Mark in-between takes that really touched my heart. It was then that I knew he could do anything.” This includes bringing the warmth and heart of the kindest giant. Not to mention the smallest. His brothers and the film’s antagonists range in size from 39 to 52 feet tall. “The BFG is a vegetable-eating, peaceful giant,” said Mathison. “Even though he detests Snozzcumber (Veggies, ew!), he eats it, almost as if contrition for the fact that his fellow giants eat children.”

    5. The Search for Sophie Was Intense
    The search for the film’s lead took six months. The production team looked at thousands of girls, but it was Ruby Barnhill, a school girl from Knutsford in Cheshire, England, who captured Spielberg’s attention. “She is one of the strongest female characters I think I have ever had in one of my films,” Spielberg said about working with Barnhill to bring Sophie to life.

    The young actress also formed a deep bond with Rylance. “Ruby is a very imaginative young woman and just a complete natural actress,” the actor said. “I learned from her really, as you do from all the young people. Her ability to take very complicated technical notes from Steven and make them natural is just miraculous, just remarkable.”6. Combining Fantastical Worlds With the Real One Was the Real Magic
    “I could have made ‘The BFG’ with actors on oversized sets using a digital blend, but I wanted the giants to look beyond human,” Spielberg revealed while talking about using the Simulcam. “The only way I could capture magic with the giants was to animate them based on the performances of the actors I was casting and have the animation be super-photorealistic.” To do this, he enlisted the help of Weta Digital’s Joe Letteri to create a new process that could bring them as close to live-action shooting as possible. Combining live-action, performance capture, and real-life sets with Simulcam allowed them to use real actors working alongside each other in both a natural and digital landscape.

    7. It’s All About Eye Contact
    To root the relationships in truth, Spielberg took painstaking lengths to ensure his performers could maintain eye contact during each performance. While working with Barnhill on a two-story scaffold, Rylance would stand with a performance capture camera in front of his face so that he was actually in the moment with his young costar. The same was true of the performance capture work with the BFG and his bullying brothers, played by Jemaine Clement (“What We Do In the Shadows”) and Bill Hader (“Inside Out”).

    8. Dahl’s Language Was Very Important
    In order to keep the whimsy of Dahl’s work intact, writer Melissa Mathison researched the author to get his voice right in the film’s narrative, including his language of the giants: Gobblefunk. Created to give the BFG a unique voice, Dahl mashed the ordinary with the silly. After hearing Rylance take to the language quickly, the production realized how essential to the BFG the language truly was. “He wasn’t just pulling things out of his hat,” said Rylance. “The BFG has words that he uses for certain things and he repeats them in his life.” Listen for gems like chidlers (children), frobscottle (carbonated soft drink where bubbles float downwards rather than upwards) and phizzwizards (happy dreams that are the BFG’s favorite to collect and share with children). Aw.

    Disney’s “The BFG” opens July 1st.

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  • Girl Power: 5 Popular Kids’ Movies Where Girls Rule

    Girl Power: 5 Popular Kid Movies Where Girls RuleIn 1977, Luke Skywalker blew up the Death Star; in 2015, Daisy Ridley‘s Rey kicked Kylo Ren’s butt so hard, it rocked the galaxy. In a world where girl power is enough to awaken the Force, pink dresses and bubblegum Barbie worlds just aren’t cutting it anymore — our girls want lightsabers, bows and arrows, superpowers, and estrogen-powered role models with both brains and muscles. And why shouldn’t they?

    So let your girls rule flag fly high with five movies that are happy to oblige, and happy to empower.

    1. ‘Frozen’ (2013)

    You probably saw this one coming. “Frozen” packs crazily striking visuals and catchy-stuck-in-your-head melodies that helped win it the Oscar for Best Animated Feature in 2014, but it’s the movie’s emotional themes – not just its musical ones – that make it award-worthy for girls of all ages. Anna (Kristen Bell) absolutely refuses to give up on her sister Elsa (Idina Menzel), and as the girls face everything from trolls to snowstorms, they learn to stay true to themselves, appreciate their inner gifts, and love each other unconditionally. And there’s absolutely nothing cold about that.

    2. ‘Kiki’s Delivery Service’ (1989)

    Princesses and super-heroines are par for the girl-power course, but the preteen witch in “Kiki’s Delivery Service” (voiced by Kirsten Dunst in the American dub) teaches us that you can’t judge a book by its magical, broomstick-loving cover.

    In this modern Hayao Miyazaki classic, Kiki doesn’t just fly on a literal level, her personality absolutely soars — she’s an imminently generous, insistently helpful, and always passionate role model who sticks to her guns despite very human insecurities (in this case, she’s worried about magical powers, but you get the idea). Spoiler alert: Her persistence and selflessness eventually enable her to overcome those insecurities and confidently save her friends.

    Also, this all happened way before Harry Potter was cool, so Kiki is basically like the hipster of witches.

    3. ‘Matilda’ (1996)

    As an actor, you know Danny DeVito for his down-to-earth grit and quirky humor. And in a way, that strange earthiness makes the perfect match for Roald Dahl’s text in this 1996 movie adaptation of “Matilda.”

    Though its bizarre and sort of surreal tone might be a bit much for young kids, bright girls in the eight-and-up range can relate to its sincere sense of imagination. Once you separate Matilda’s fantastic powers from reality, you can appreciate a brilliant young female lead (Mara Wilson) who exudes positivity, wit, candor, and independence. Bonus points: Matilda’s a famously avid reader, which totally doesn’t hurt either.

    4. ‘Brave’ (2012)

    No one character shows how awesome girls are than Merida — the blazingly red-headed girl from Pixar’s 2012 hit “Brave.” This rugged Scottish fairy tale delves into the very real issue of strained mother-daughter relations wrapped up in a fantasy shell, and trumpets the possibility of mending things by working together and learning from one another. And though strength of will plays a huge role in Merida’s journey, you can’t deny just how much butt she kicks with a bow.

    5. ‘Akeelah and the Bee’ (2006)

    In a reality where bullying is an everyday issue and kids feel pressured to win constantly, “Akeelah and the Bee” is a smart, defiant breath of fresh air for tween viewers. As an 11-year-old Angeleno girl and spelling bee prodigy who brings her talents to the national level, Akeelah, played by Keke Palmer, learns to take pride in her intelligence and talent — despite true-to-reality bullying — and eventually chooses generosity and empathy over a shallow victory. This drama hits the feels a lot harder than other movies, but the emotional gravity only heightens Akeelah’s character strength, and makes it easier for parents to invest in the story alongside their kids.

    And whether you’re a young girl, the rad aunt, the coolest grandpa that ever lived, or anyone in-between, powerhouse performances from Laurence Fishburne and Angela Bassett most definitely don’t hurt the watchability factor.

    Sources

  • Steven Spielberg Teases ‘The BFG,’ Reveals All-Time Favorite Disney Movie

    Disney's The BFGBelieve it or not, in his long, storied career, director Steven Spielberg had never made a movie for Disney. Until now.

    His new film, “The BFG,” based on Roald Dahl‘s classic children’s book about a Big Friendly Giant, will be released July 1st. The legendary director is featured in the summer issue of “Disney twenty-three” magazine, the quarterly publication of Disney’s D23 fan club, and we’ve got an exclusive sneak peek. In an interview with the magazine, Spielberg shares details on making “The BFG,” working with the brilliant composer John Williams, his favorite Disney movie, and his excitement at finally collaborating with the Mouse House.

    “I have directed films at every studio except [The] Walt Disney [Studios],” Spielberg said, in an exclusive excerpt. “This was the first time that I got to make a picture that has Sleeping Beauty’s castle — and has Disney embossed on the beginning and the end of the picture — and I’m really proud of that.”

    Like a lot of us, Spielberg’s connection to Disney started in childhood, and never went away. “‘Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs‘ has always been my favorite Disney movie,” he says of the 1937 classic. “I saw it in a movie theater during its ninth revival, when I was only probably 7 or 8 years old. And it stuck with me. And it’s with me today, remembering it as vividly now and being so frightened and terrified as I was when I was a little kid, and at the same time so filled with the feeling of satisfaction at that amazing ending and pride in ‘Snow White.’”

    Spielberg now has grown children of his own, and because of them he was familiar with Dahl’s 1982 book. “I’ve spent all my years as a father reading great children’s books to my kids and ‘The BFG’ was one of them.”

    The main character, besides a young girl named Sophie (), is the Big Friendly Giant, played by Mark Rylance, who just won an Oscar for Spielberg’s “Bridge of Spies.” To bring the world of giants to life, Spielberg used motion capture technology. As he explains in the magazine, “Motion capture allowed us to plan scene by scene and then have the visual effects team bring them to life as living, breathing characters. Hopefully, you’re going to forget that there’s any special effects in ‘The BFG,’ because it’s invisible. You will just believe they exist in the same world.”

    In terms of the movie’s music, it’s no surprise that Spielberg would turn to his longtime collaborator John Williams, a five-time Oscar winner who has scored most of Spielberg’s films since 1974. “I will tell John my story by showing him my cut and he goes away and eight weeks later, he tells a story musically,” Spielberg explains. “He has done this brilliantly with ‘The BFG.’ Every moment is accompanied by a little bit of a musical reminder that there is another layer of story being told.”

    Fans can watch the story as it unfolds this July, and read more from Spielberg in the summer edition of “Disney twenty-three.”

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  • The New ‘BFG’ Trailer Takes the Kid in All of Us to Giant Country

    The BFGAll of us, at some point in our childhoods, hid under the covers and imagined monsters lurking outside. In the new trailer for Steven Spielberg’s “The BFG,” one such monster scoops little Sophie out of her bed — but it turns out he’s the good kind of monster.

    The full-length trailer gives us a better look at the adaptation of Roald Dahl’s fantastical story. A 10-year-old Sophie (Ruby Barnhill) is whisked away by a big, friendly giant (voice of Oscar winner Mark Rylance) to Giant Country. Why her? “Because I hears your lonely heart,” he rumbles.
    Unfortunately, not all giants are so friendly and kind and well-meaning. Some like to feast on people, and it’s up to Sophie and her BFG to save her kind from them.

    Spielberg is a master of these kinda scary, coming-of-age kid stories (“E.T.” anyone?), and posted a special message about the movie on Facebook:

    Steven Spielberg is live from Amblin Entertainment and he has a very special announcement! #GiantsAreComing

    Posted by Walt Disney Studios on Tuesday, April 5, 2016

    “The BFG” opens in theaters on July 1.

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