Tag: samuel l. jackson

  • First ‘Glass’ Photos Show Super-Star Trio in Therapy With Sarah Paulson

    First ‘Glass’ Photos Show Super-Star Trio in Therapy With Sarah Paulson

    Glass Samuel L. Jackson, James McAvoy, and Bruce Willis
    Universal Pictures

    Don’t forget you have a date with the first “Glass” trailer next Friday, July 20.

    M. Night Shyamalan and the cast will be at Comic-Con to talk about the hype-worthy sequel to both “Unbreakable” (2000) with Samuel L. Jackson (Elijah Price/Mr. Glass) and Bruce Willis (David Dunn), and “Split” (2016) with James McAvoy (Kevin Wendell Crumb).

    Night shared the perfect poster for “Glass” last week. Entertainment Weekly just shared the first official photos.

    The photos show the trio of superheroes/supervillains in therapy with a psychiatrist played by Sarah Paulson.

    We also see “Split” returnee Anya Taylor-Joy with Kevin. James McAvoy teased to EW that “We get to spend some time with some new people that live inside Kevin” in “Glass.”

    And we also see Mr. Glass wearing a truly amazing suit. (He even has his own “MG” pin. That is next level.)

    Glass
    Universal Pictures
    Glass
    Universal Pictures
    Glass
    Universal Pictures
    Glass Samuel L. Jackson, James McAvoy, and Bruce Willis
    Universal Pictures

    Question: Why is David Dunn in therapy, and — especially — when is he chained? The others aren’t chained. Suspicious.

    Night told EW that Elijah’s mom (Charlayne Woodard) and David’s son (Spencer Treat Clark) will return and “play a big role” in the movie.

    Here’s the synopsis:

    “From ‘Unbreakable,’ Bruce Willis returns as David Dunn as does Samuel L. Jackson as Elijah Price, known also by his pseudonym Mr. Glass. Joining from ‘Split’ are James McAvoy, reprising his role as Kevin Wendell Crumb and the multiple identities who reside within, and Anya Taylor-Joy as Casey Cooke, the only captive to survive an encounter with The Beast.

    Following the conclusion of ‘Split,’ Glass finds Dunn pursuing Crumb’s superhuman figure of The Beast in a series of escalating encounters, while the shadowy presence of Price emerges as an orchestrator who holds secrets critical to both men.

    This riveting culmination of his worldwide blockbusters will be produced by Shyamalan and Jason Blum, who also produced the writer/director’s previous two films for Universal. They produce again with Ashwin Rajan and Marc Bienstock, and Steven Schneider, who will executive produce.”

    “Glass” is scheduled for release in theaters on January 18th, 2019.

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  • Samuel L. Jackson’s New Photos Suggest Nick Fury Is in ‘Spider-Man: Far From Home’

    Samuel L. Jackson’s New Photos Suggest Nick Fury Is in ‘Spider-Man: Far From Home’

    Samuel L JacksonHe’s baaaack. Samuel L. Jackson just had to be de-aged for the 1990s-set “Captain Marvel,” but Nick Fury is back to his one-eyed pirate look for … “Spider-Man: Far From Home“?

    Jackson just shared some fun Nick Fury photos on Instagram, including a perfect S.H.I.E.L.D. business card.

    Everything set in the “current” timeline is a GIANT HONKING SPOILER, thanks to the end of “Avengers: Infinity War.” There’s nothing we can do about that. We last saw Nick Fury in the post-credits scene, sending a call to Captain Marvel before he was dust-busted by Thanos.

    But if Nick Fury is back in action, that’s good news. We’d say it was maybe for the “Avengers 4” reshoots that are happening this summer, but Jackson’s Instagram location was set to “Watford, United Kingdom.” That’s not where the “Avengers 4” reshoots are meant to be held, but it is near where Tom Holland is currently filming his “Spider-Man: Homecoming” sequel.

    So did Sam Jackson just reveal his role in that movie? Or is this for something else? Either way, he’s clearly happy to be “back to the familiar” Nick Fury:

     

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BlFaIxuHW6O/?taken-by=samuelljackson

    https://twitter.com/ComicBookRep/status/1017042293205946368

    It’s possible Sam Jackson is in all three of Marvel Studios’ 2019 movies — “Captain Marvel,” “Avengers 4,” and “Spider-Man: Far From Home.” The more, the merrier.

    The second “Spider-Man” movie in this trilogy arrives in theaters almost exactly one year from now.

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  • Samuel L. Jackson Will Be De-Aged for ‘Captain Marvel’

    Samuel L. Jackson Will Be De-Aged for ‘Captain Marvel’

    Samuel L Jackson
    Marvel

    It’s customary to have Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson) in every Marvel movie, and he’ll have a major role in “Captain Marvel.” But because it’s set in the ’90s, the 69-year-old actor will have to be de-aged by 25 years for the entire film, Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige said.

    In other words, Jackson will look more or less like he did in 1993’s “Jurassic Park.”

    Universal

    “I think having the option is pretty amazing,” Feige told SlashFilm. “And I think having the technology and even without spoiling anything, Sam Jackson is shooting a movie for us right now that takes, where he’s entirely 25 years younger the whole movie.

    He’ll get the same digital airbrushing Kurt Russell got in flashback scenes for “Guardians of the Galaxy, Vol. 2” and Michael Douglas do in “Ant-Man and the Wasp.”

    Clark Gregg (who plays Phil Coulson) will also get the de-aging treatment for “Captain Marvel.”

    Said Feige, “You have all the reference material [for these actors] and they have aged amazingly.  They’ve not aged like normal humans.  It’s like Paul Rudd… he somehow can do that effect in real life.”

    Ahh, Paul Rudd, who’s conquered not just riding ants and quantum space , but aging and time itself!

    “Captain Marvel,” which stars Brie Larson as Carol Danvers, opens March 8, 2019.

    [Via SlashFilm]

     

  • ‘Mean Tweets: Avengers Edition’ Forces ‘Infinity War’ Stars to Face Their Critics

    Yet another installment of Jimmy Kimmel’s “Mean Tweets” series has arrived, this time in honor of the release of “Avengers: Infinity War.” And just like every other edition of the long-running viral hit, the stars featured here have some pretty fabulous reactions to the harsh barbs tossed their way by disgruntled social media users.

    Despite “Infinity War” scoring some insane box office numbers on its opening weekend — including the biggest first weekend ever, both domestically and worldwide — and continuing its dominance into its second week, there are still some people out there who don’t really care for our Marvel heroes. And boy, do they have zero problems airing their very pointed, oddly specific grievances on Twitter.

    Scarlett Johansson, for instance, is compared to celery, while Sebastian Stan apparently looks like a potato. In non-food-related insults, people take cracks at “Black Panther” star Winston Duke’s legs and Elizabeth Olsen’s thumbs, and someone out there really, really has a passionate dislike for “Guardians of the Galaxy” star Dave Bautista.

    But to be fair, the Samuel L. Jackson insult featured in the above photo is weirdly kind of accurate. So at least that’s a small win for Twitter trolls everywhere. (They really lose us, however, at the dig at Paul Rudd. Don’t you dare mess with our Crap Bag.)

  • M. Night Shyamalan, ‘Glass’ Cast Reveal First Footage From ‘Unbreakable,’ ‘Split’ Sequel

    CinemaCon 2018 - Universal Pictures Invites You To A Special Presentation Featuring Footage From Its Upcoming SlateIt’s like something out of a comic book: Bruce Willis, Samuel L. Jackson, James McAvoy, and Sarah Paulson starring in an M. Night Shyamalan movie.

    That movie is called “Glass” and it is a sequel to the director’s movies “Unbreakable” and “Split.” And Shyamalan and the cast appeared together at CinemaCon today to unveil the first footage from the film.

    “Eighteen years ago, I based a movie around a crazy idea: what if comic books were based on reality?” Shyamalan told the audience. “And in ‘Unbreakable,’ I tried to tell the origin story of a superhero that lives in the real world, David Dunn, played by Bruce Willis.”

    With last year’s “Split,” Shyamalan tackled “another crazy question: What if the afflictions, the disorders that society thinks makes a person damaged or broken actually are gifts that make them exceptional?”

    From that came “the origin story for an anarchist that could be good or could be bad,” aka Mr. Glass as played by Jackson.

    The teaser footage showed Paulson’s psychiatrist character, Dr. Ellie Staple, attempting to treat David Dunn (Willis), multiple personalities-holding Kevin (McAvoy), and Elijah Price (Jackson).

    “The three of you have convinced yourselves that you have extraordinary gifts, like something out of a comic book,” she says.

    And when Mr. Glass seeks a partnership with Kevin’s The Beast, well, what could go wrong?

    “Glass” opens in theaters January 18, 2019.

  • Salma Hayek Returns to Action in The Hitman’s Bodyguard: ‘I Still Have It!’

    Salma Hayek and Samuel L. Jackson from The Hitman's Bodyguard
    Salma Hayek and Samuel L. Jackson from The Hitman’s Bodyguard

    In the comic-action movie “The Hitman’s Bodyguard,” Salma Hayek mixes it up with the boys in a bar brawl, and she couldn’t be happier.

    “I started in action,” the actress, who got her big break in “Desperado,” tells Made in Hollywood reporter Kylie Erica Mar. “I’ve always done my own stunts. The things — I didn’t know if I was going to be able to do this time, and I didn’t do too badly. I still have it!”

    And don’t worry: no men were harmed in the making of this motion picture.

    “I was very good, very professional,” she laughs. “I couldn’t move the next day, but there were no injuries, not on my watch.”

    Ryan Reynolds plays a top protection agent called upon to guard the life of his mortal enemy, one of the world’s most notorious hit men, played by Samuel L. Jackson, during a wildly outrageous 24 hours with high-speed car chases, boat escapades and a merciless Eastern European dictator out for blood.

    But in between all the mayhem something clicks between Jackson and Hayek, which is fine by him. “It’s a good boys-and-noise movie,” he says, “but in the middle of it there’s a really cool love story.”

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  • Samuel L. Jackson Returning as Nick Fury in ‘Captain Marvel’

    Nick Fury, meet Carol Danvers.

    Rumors have been swirling that Samuel L. Jackson’s S.H.I.E.L.D. leader and “Avengers” architect would appear in “Captain Marvel,” and now Deadline has confirmed it.

    “Captain Marvel” stars Brie Larson in Marvel’s first female-led superhero movie and is slated for release March 8, 2019.

    Fury appeared in all of the early MCU movies, serving as the connective tissue, but has been mostly sidelined since he was shot and hospitalized in “Captain America: Winter Soldier.” The last he was seen was in 2015’s “Avengers: Age of Ultron.” Fury is expected to appear in “Avengers: Infinity War” and the untitled “Avengers 4.”

    With Carol Danvers being an Air Force pilot, it’s possible that she and Fury cross paths via the military, before she acquires her powers. Perhaps Fury winds up mentoring her.

    Larson and Jackson have worked together before in “Kong: Skull Island.”

  • How Tom Hiddleston Helped Brie Larson with Blockbuster Shock in Kong: Skull Island

    Brief Larson from Kong: Skull Island
    Brief Larson from Kong: Skull Island

    How Tom Hiddleston Helped Brie Larson in Kong: Skull Island

    Brie Larson built her acting resume on TV shows like “Community” before starring in “Room,” a low-budget drama about a mother and son locked away in a room. The powerful film earned her an Academy Award and suddenly made her one of the hottest actresses in Hollywood, signed for the mega-budget “Avengers: Infinity Wars,” “Captain Marvel” and this week’s release “Kong: Skull Island,” as a peace activist photographer coming face to fury face with filmdom’s most famous ape.

    “It’s really exciting. I mean, it’s a part of history,” Larson tells Made in Hollywood reporter Patrick Stinson. “I don’t think I knew really what to expect. I had never done a film of this size before. So every day was sort of magical and surreal and exciting.”

    Brie Larson Says She’s Still Adjusting to Making Big Budget Films Like Kong: Skull Island

    Helping Larson make the leap from TV shows and indie films to big budget fare was “Skull Island” star Tom Hiddleston, who has made a career balancing modest movies like the Hank Williams biopic “I Saw the Light” with the “Thor” tentpoles.

    “Most of my stuff is with him, and I had never done a big movie like this before, and he had done quite a few of them — and well at that,” she says. “So it was just really great that he was there to be so helpful and teach me how to do this, because it’s a completely different art form and not one I’m used to.”

    How Brie Larson Reacted to a Computer-Generated King Kong in Kong: Skull Island

    One of the biggest challenges in acting in a special effects extravaganza was performing with a character who didn’t exist on set — King Kong — who’d be generated later in a computer.

    “I never really met him,” laughs Larson. “I didn’t meet him at all. I just worked with a tape mark. He never showed up. … I guess it wasn’t so bad. I just used my imagination, which is a huge part of what I do anyway, and this was an extension of that.”

    “Skull Island” also gave Larson the opportunity to recreate an iconic cinematic moment: being held in the hand of the giant beast, a scene etched into movie history by Fay Wray in the 1933 original and later by Jessica Lange in the 1976 version.

    “It was a really great day for me, actually, because generally my days consisted of running and jumping and climbing,” Larson says. “And that day I just got to sleep on a little pad. I loved it.”

     

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  • ‘Avengers,’ ‘Fifty Shades’ Stars Among Second Wave of Oscars 2017 Presenters

    'Captain America: The Winter Soldier' Beijing PremiereThe Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has announced the second batch of presenters for this year’s Oscars telecast, and the eclectic group includes stars from blockbuster franchises including “The Avengers” and “Fifty Shades of Grey,” as well as past Academy Award winners and nominees, and one hilarious Ghostbuster for good measure.

    The stars who will be handing out trophies on Oscar Sunday are: Halle Berry (Best Actress winner for “Monster’s Ball”); “Fifty Shades Darker” costars Dakota Johnson and Jamie Dornan; “Avengers” headliners Chris Evans and Scarlett Johansson; Gael García Bernal; Samuel L. Jackson (a Best Supporting Actor nominee for “Pulp Fiction”); Shirley MacLaine (Best Actress winner for “Terms of Endearment”); Kate McKinnon (“SNL” star and shoulda-been nominee for her scene-stealing turn in the “Ghostbusters” reboot); and Hailee Steinfeld (Best Supporting Actress nominee for “True Grit”).

    Those presenters join the previously-announced group of Leonardo DiCaprio, Brie Larson, Mark Rylance, and Alicia Vikander, who all took home the top acting prizes at the 2016 Oscars.

    The 89th annual Oscars will take place on Sunday, February 26, with coverage beginning at 7 p.m. EST (4 p.m. PST) on ABC. Jimmy Kimmel will host the ceremony.

    [via: Oscars.org]

  • Raoul Peck Captures the Powerful Eloquence of James Baldwin in I Am Not Your Negro

    James Baldwin
    James Baldwin

    I Am Not Your Negro Captures the Power and Elegance of James Baldwin

    Samuel L. Jackson may be the narrator of the compelling Oscar-nominated documentary “I Am Not Your Negro,” but every word comes directly from the writings of movie’s subject, James Baldwin.

    A towering literary figure with searing insights about race in America, Baldwin rose to fame in the late 1960s as not only an author but a television personality, one of the few African-American men of letters to appear on television talk shows.

    “I Am Not Your Negro” opens with jarring moment from “The Dick Cavette Show” in 1968 when the host asks, “Why aren’t Negroes more optimistic? It’s getting so much better.”

    “It’s not a question of what happens to the Negro,” a weary Baldwin says. “The real question is what is going to happen to this country?”

    Director Raoul Peck Uses only James Baldwin’s Words in I Am Not Your Negro

    For director Raoul Peck, “I Am Not Your Negro” presents Baldwin to a new generation with a message that has lost none of its relevance. And although the film uses traditional documentary film devices, including television clips, still photos and music, Peck captures the power and elegance of Baldwin’s writing by using only his words.

    “The project was from the start was trying to respond to the question: How do I bring his voice directly to an audience without any person interpreting his words, with no talking heads in the film?” Peck tells Made in Hollywood reporter Rahsan-Rahsan Lindsay. “It was important that the film would also be only his words. I didn’t add up anything. It’s really pure Baldwin.”

    This posed technical challenges. “I had to find a form that would allow me to delve into these words back and forth,” Peck says. “Of course I use certain historic moments for telling the story, but how I tell it, I had to be totally free. … It took a long time before we could come to the right format and the right choice of words.”

    So the film uses not only clips of Baldwin speaking, but Jackson’s narration is all from Baldwin. To accomplish this, Peck benefited from total access to all of Baldwin’s work, which, he notes, “is rare for a filmmaker.”

    “Usually, you go the estate and get access to one book or one chapter of the book, not the whole body of work,” he says. “It was both something important but at the same time it was a huge responsibility.”

    James Baldwin’s Writings Still Resonate, Says Director of I Am Not Your Negro

    In the end, while Peck hopes the film resonates with a wide audience, “I Am Not Your Negro” is a deeply personal movie.

    “The inspiration came 10 years ago but Baldwin had been part of my life, part of my work, part of who I am for many, many years,” he says. “I read him very early when I was a young man and he never left me. He had been always either in the background or in the foreground.”

    And never, he says, has Baldwin’s work seemed so important, with events in Ferguson and Baltimore and the divisions from the presidential election mirroring the troubles from Baldwin’s time (the writer died in 1987 at age 63).

    “The motivation to start this particular project came at a time when I felt we were not addressing the right issues, in particular in this country and elsewhere as well,” says Peck. “We were not hearing the right voices. The voice of a James Baldwin had somehow disappeared. And I could not understand when I was experiencing how important he was that the new generation basically knew nothing about him. I felt it was an important film to do.”

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