Tag: sarah-silverman

  • Movie Review: ‘Maestro’

    Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein (Director/Writer/Producer) in 'Maestro.'
    Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein (Director/Writer/Producer) in ‘Maestro.’ Photo: Jason McDonald/Netflix © 2023.

    In theaters on November 22nd and premiering on Netflix on December 20th is ‘Maestro,’ starring Bradley Cooper, Carey Mulligan, Sarah Silverman, Maya Hawke, and Matt Bomer.

    Initial Thoughts

    There is no way that a single movie could encompass the musical influence and accomplishments of Leonard Bernstein, one of the 20th century’s most important composers and conductors. And director-star Bradley Cooper doesn’t try, focusing instead on Bernstein’s loving if complicated relationship with his wife Felicia (Carey Mulligan) and the toll his many dalliances with men took on it. But while their performances are enjoyable and there are moments of greatness throughout, ‘Maestro’ bounces from one era to the next without giving us time to truly savor Bernstein’s story.

    Story and Direction

    Carey Mulligan as Felicia Montealegre and Bradley Cooper (Director/Writer) as Leonard Bernstein in 'Maestro.'
    (L to R) Carey Mulligan as Felicia Montealegre and Bradley Cooper (Director/Writer) as Leonard Bernstein in ‘Maestro.’ Photo: Jason McDonald/Netflix © 2023.

    After a brief opening showing Leonard Bernstein being interviewed at home in his later years, ‘Maestro’ begins in earnest in 1943. Bernstein is living above Carnegie Hall with his lover, David Oppenheim (Matt Bomer), and achieves his first success when he is suddenly called upon to conduct the New York Philharmonic. A short while later he meets Costa Rican actress Felicia Montealegre (Mulligan), and the two begin a whirlwind courtship that results in marriage and three children – even as Bernstein continues to sleep with men throughout the years and Felicia pragmatically tolerates it.

    The tension inherent in the Bernsteins’ marriage — between their seemingly genuine affection for each other and the toll taken by Leonard’s closeted life and many affairs – is at the core of ‘Maestro’ as it rolls in sometimes disorienting fashion through the decades. In his second feature behind the camera (as well as in front of it) following ‘A Star is Born,’ Bradley Cooper displays confidence in his choices, even if they’re not always the right ones.

    The opening scenes of ‘Maestro,’ set primarily in the 1940s, are filmed in a 1:33:1 ratio and shot in black and white, befitting the way most filmed entertainment was viewed at the time. As the film progresses through the ensuing decades, color comes into the picture and the frame expands to modern widescreen dimensions. It’s a kind of visual shorthand, but it doesn’t help us get involved or even understand the rush of events onscreen.

    Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein (Director/Writer/Producer) in 'Maestro.'
    Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein (Director/Writer/Producer) in ‘Maestro.’ Photo: Jason McDonald/Netflix © 2023.

    That may be the biggest problem with ‘Maestro’: the story could be too big for a movie that runs slightly over two hours. Cooper may know every detail of Bernstein’s life (as evidenced by his performance), but the rest of us have to play catch-up. And in many cases, the things the composer was best known for – ‘West Side Story’ in particular – are left almost completely offscreen or mentioned in passing, with much more time spent on Bernstein’s personal travails.

    Mulligan and Cooper keep us interested, however, especially during a lot of poorly paced or fragmentary scenes in the film’s first half, and the director finally seems to find the magic formula in the third act. That’s when Felicia and Leonard’s marriage is nearly destroyed for good by his personal problems, only for him to redeem himself with his truly thrilling, transcendent conducting of Mahler’s 2nd Symphony at Ely Cathedral – which Cooper films and performs in one astounding 6 ½ minute take of sheer musical joy. Things take a tragic turn after that, enough to make the homestretch of ‘Maestro’ moving even if the rest of the film isn’t nearly as satisfying.

    Lenny and Felicia

    Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein (Director/Writer/Producer) and Carey Mulligan as Felicia Montealegre in 'Maestro.'
    (L to R) Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein (Director/Writer/Producer) and Carey Mulligan as Felicia Montealegre in ‘Maestro.’ Photo: Jason McDonald/Netflix © 2023.

    Even with its issues, ‘Maestro’ is anchored by the two performances at the center of the film: Carey Mulligan as Felicia and Bradley Cooper as Leonard. While he’s terrific, Cooper’s work in a way is the showier, more “look at me, I’m acting” performance: from the subtle prosthetics on his face (more on that later) to his uncanny vocalizations, Cooper is utilizing some surface tricks, even as he is talented enough to inhabit the character of Leonard Bernstein without them.

    Mulligan is operating on a different, higher plane. While she too recreates Felicia’s voice, her work comes from a more interior place, and as a result is the more emotionally affecting and deeply felt performance (we suspect that Cooper knows this as well, which is why Felicia is in many ways the heart and soul of the story). There is no doubt that the two have tremendous chemistry, which shines through brightly as Lenny and Felicia still manage to share extended moments of fun and love even as they ride the turbulent waters of their marriage.

    Production design and music

    Soloists Isabel Leonard and Rosa Feola with Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein (Director/Writer/Producer) in 'Maestro.'
    (L to R) Soloists Isabel Leonard and Rosa Feola with Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein (Director/Writer/Producer) in ‘Maestro.’ Photo: Jason McDonald/Netflix © 2023.

    Before ‘Maestro’ came out, there was controversy over the use of prosthetic makeup to give Bradley Cooper the same large nose as Leonard Bernstein – which led to accusations of Cooper wearing an antisemitic prosthetic for the role and questions of why he didn’t hire a Jewish actor to begin with. The latter is silly: actors inhabit many roles with which they have little in common. That’s why they’re actors. As for the makeup by Kazo Hiro, it’s subtle and tasteful, and pictures comparing Cooper to the real Bernstein will attest to its accuracy.

    That’s a short way of saying that ‘Maestro’ and its director pay loving, careful attention to detail through the film. Cooper, costume designer Mark Bridges, production designer Kevin Thompson, and many others do a superb job of carrying this story through decades of changes in fashion, interior design, and more, and that immersive visual quality of ‘Maestro’ is one of its strongest assets.

    The same goes for the music. While we don’t get to hear enough of it, what we do hear of Bernstein’s music is recorded, mixed, and produced in such a way to bring it grand, powerfully emotional life. There is no better example of this than the scene in which he conducts Mahler’s ‘Resurrection’ Symphony with the London Symphony Orchestra at England’s Ely Cathedral, in which the viewer feels the force of the music in a way that perhaps Bernstein himself felt it that night.

    Can ‘Maestro’ Bring Home Oscar Gold?

    Carey Mulligan as Felicia Montealegre and Bradley Cooper (Director/Writer) as Leonard Bernstein in Maestro.
    (L to R) Carey Mulligan as Felicia Montealegre and Bradley Cooper (Director/Writer) as Leonard Bernstein in Maestro. Photo: Jason McDonald/Netflix © 2023.

    ‘Maestro’ is going to solidly be in the Oscar mix this year. Nominations for Best Picture, Best Actor, Best Actress, Best Production Design, Best Sound, Best Editing, Best Cinematography, and Best Makeup and Hairstyling are all pretty much in the bag for this one, with a win fairly certain in that latter category and perhaps Best Sound (ironically, ‘Maestro’ cannot be nominated for its music since it’s all pre-existing).

    The Academy loves portrayals of real people, and Bradley Cooper really does an incredible job of transforming himself into Bernstein, so there’s a good chance he can take home the Best Actor trophy (which will also ease the sting of being skipped over for Best Director). And perhaps in any other year, Carey Mulligan would walk away with Best Actress for her luminous performance as Felicia. But this isn’t any other year: she faces tough competition from the likes of Emma Stone (‘Poor Things’), Lily Gladstone (‘Killers of the Flower Moon’) and Sandra Huller (‘Anatomy of a Fall’).

    Final Thoughts

    Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein (Director/Writer/Producer) in 'Maestro.'
    Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein (Director/Writer/Producer) in ‘Maestro.’ Photo: Jason McDonald/Netflix © 2023.

    There seems to be an abundance of biopics out there at the moment, and they all seem to offer up the same positives and negatives: a great, even masterful central performance or two and wonderful style in a story that can be hard to follow or get fully immersed in.

    ‘Maestro,’ thanks to the extraordinary work of Carey Mulligan in particular and – just slightly less so – Bradley Cooper, does manage to involve us in their epic if troubled love story, and does feature moments in which Bernstein’s rapturous relationship with music comes soaring through. But its hopscotch approach to the man’s life and times keeps us at a distance until the film’s third act, which keeps ‘Maestro’ from achieving the greatness of the iconic figure at its heart.

    ‘Maestro’ receives 7 out of 10 stars.

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    What is the plot of ‘Maestro’?

    This fearless love story chronicles the complicated lifelong relationship between music legend Leonard Bernstein (Bradley Cooper) and Felicia Montealegre Cohn Bernstein (Carey Mulligan).

    Who is in the cast of ‘Maestro’?

    • Carey Mulligan (‘Drive‘) as Felicia Montealegre
    • Bradley Cooper (‘The A-Team‘) as Leonard Bernstein
    • Matt Bomer (‘Magic Mike‘) as David Oppenheim
    • Maya Hawke (‘Asteroid City‘) as Jamie Bernstein
    • Sarah Silverman (‘Wreck-It-Ralph‘) as Shirley Bernstein
    Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein (Director/Writer/Producer) in 'Maestro.'
    Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein (Director/Writer/Producer) in ‘Maestro.’ Photo: Jason McDonald/Netflix © 2023.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Maestro’:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Maestro’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Bradley Cooper Movies On Amazon

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  • ‘Maestro’ Press Conferences with Bradley Cooper and More

    Bradley Cooper (Director/Writer/Producer) and Carey Mulligan at the 'Maestro' press conference.
    (L to R) Bradley Cooper (Director/Writer/Producer) and Carey Mulligan at the ‘Maestro’ press conference. Photo: Netflix © 2023.

    Maestro’ is director, star, and co-writer Bradley Cooper’s chronicle of the life and times of Leonard Bernstein, the great American composer and conductor who was one of the most important musical figures of the 20th century. Co-starring with Cooper is Carey Mulligan (‘Promising Young Woman’) as Bernstein’s wife, actress Felicia Montealegre, along with Maya Hawke, Matt Bomer, Sarah Silverman, and Miriam Shor.

    Although Bernstein was known for operas, symphonies, film scores (‘On the Waterfront’) and several iconic musicals (‘West Side Story’), as well as being a teacher and ceaseless advocate for music education, Cooper’s film – just his second as a director after 2018’s acclaimed ‘A Star is Born’ – focuses primarily on the relationship between Bernstein and Felicia. The couple had three children and shared a lifelong love for each other, despite Bernstein’s many dalliances with men and his abuse of drugs and alcohol.

    Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein (Director/Writer/Producer) and Carey Mulligan as Felicia Montealegre in 'Maestro.'
    (L to R) Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein (Director/Writer/Producer) and Carey Mulligan as Felicia Montealegre in ‘Maestro.’ Photo: Jason McDonald/Netflix © 2023.

    ‘Maestro’ probes into the peaks and valleys of their longstanding romance, while also providing an overview of Bernstein’s colorful life and career, and the sheer joy and passion he had for making music.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of attending both a live and virtual press conference for ‘Maestro.’ Taking part in the first were Bradley Cooper and Carey Mulligan, while Mulligan returned for the second with Jamie Bernstein, daughter of Leonard Bernstein.

    Here are 10 things we learned from the ‘Maestro’ press conferences, edited for clarity and length.

    1) Leonard Who?

    Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein (Director/Writer/Producer) in 'Maestro.'
    Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein (Director/Writer/Producer) in ‘Maestro.’ Photo: Jason McDonald/Netflix © 2023.

    Bradley Cooper did not actually know a whole lot about Leonard Bernstein when he first came aboard the project. He was more interested in the art of conducting music.

    Bradley Cooper: I did not know about Leonard Bernstein. I had an absolute obsession with fake conducting [laugh] when I was a kid. But I was obsessed with it. Like oddly obsessed with it. I spent hundreds of hours conducting. So I always felt this calling, quite honestly. Then when there was a project about a conductor…I asked Steven Spielberg, who was in control of the property at the time, if I could maybe take that on. That’s how it began. Then I started to research trying to figure out what was the script that I could write, what’s the story that I felt that I could tell. It was these two wonderful characters, Felicia and Lenny, and their relationship.

    2) Sleep Was Not an Option

    Carey Mulligan at the 'Maestro' press conference.
    Carey Mulligan at the ‘Maestro’ press conference. Photo: Netflix © 2023.

    Even though Bradley Cooper was directing the movie and in almost every scene, Carey Mulligan says that there was one thing about him which she never noticed.

    Carey Mulligan: I couldn’t tell you a day I saw him be tired. He must have been, because he was getting to work at two in the morning to be there to do the prosthetics and fully become Lenny five hours before anyone else got there. But I didn’t see tired, ever. Sarah Silverman was talking about this — the joy in the way that Bradley made the film. Every day. Just so delighted to be doing it, and to be making it, and to be able to tell this story. That was so infectious. So that part of it, it was only ever energizing to be around him.

    3) Getting Leonard Bernstein’s Voice Right

    Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein (Director/Writer/Producer) in 'Maestro.'
    Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein (Director/Writer/Producer) in ‘Maestro.’ Photo: Jason McDonald/Netflix © 2023.

    One of the most distinctive characteristics of Leonard Bernstein — well-documented in interviews and recordings — was his voice. Cooper started working on it six years ago.

    Bradley Cooper: Six years ago it was terrifying, and just became a little bit easier. There’d be like five steps back at certain points when I was, “I’m never going to get the voice.” I mean I don’t know what I sounded like, but it certainly didn’t sound like a human. But I just worked so hard for years. I mean, I really had the benefit of years. Six years of prep. I started working on Lenny’s voice before ‘A Star is Born’ even came out. Then Tim Monich, this incredible dialect coach that I started working with on ‘American Sniper‘ — and then we did ‘A Star is Born’ and ‘Nightmare Alley,’ and we have a wonderful way of working together — he moved basically into my house in New York. We worked five days a week for four and a half years until it was an organic thing where I could just inhabit the voice.

    4) Bradley Cooper Cast Personal Friends in the Film

    Bradley Cooper (Director/Writer/Producer) at the 'Maestro' press conference.
    Bradley Cooper (Director/Writer/Producer) at the ‘Maestro’ press conference. Photo: Netflix © 2023.

    For a number of supporting roles in the film, Bradley Cooper cast people — mostly longtime friends — from his own private life.

    Bradley Cooper: Aaron Copeland is [played by] my best friend since I’m 10 years old, Brian Klugman. They were best friends, Leonard and Aaron, and I thought, well, we don’t have to act. I just try to do anything I can not to act. The doctor in the film is actually my doctor. That’s Bernard Kruger, who was my doctor for years. Four and a half years ago, I was like, “Bernard, there’s going to be a scene. Will you play a doctor?” Actually, the first day of shooting, the first scene that we shot was the scene where older Lenny teaches William conducting. It was such a terrifying day just because it was the first time I was really being Lenny in front of a crew and having to direct. So I asked one of my best friends, Gabe Fazio, who I went to grad school with, to play Lenny’s assistant who arrives with him in the Jaguar. Just knowing Gabe was there, I thought I was going to be okay.

    5) The Most Terrifying Scene in the Movie

    Soloists Isabel Leonard and Rosa Feola with Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein (Director/Writer/Producer) in 'Maestro.'
    (L to R) Soloists Isabel Leonard and Rosa Feola with Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein (Director/Writer/Producer) in ‘Maestro.’ Photo: Jason McDonald/Netflix © 2023.

    Bradley Cooper revealed that the scene recreating Leonard Bernstein’s legendary 1973 conducting of the London Symphony Orchestra at Ely Cathedral — in which Bernstein seems almost transcendently possessed by the music as he conducts Mahler’s 2nd Symphony — was the scene he was most afraid of.

    Bradley Cooper: If I mess that up, the whole movie doesn’t work…That’s me conducting the London Symphony Orchestra, and that’s six minutes and 21 or 23 seconds of music that luckily, I had Gustavo Dudamel and Yannick Nézet-Séguin (music directors of the Los Angeles Philharmonic and Philadelphia Orchestra, respectively) who were kind enough for years to teach it to me. I had the video of him conducting that orchestra in the ’70s in that space. But even with all that, conducting is impossible. So the first day I messed up, I kept getting behind tempo. I was forgetting where the time change happened. It was that moment where you’re like, “I can’t believe actually I’m messing it up in front of one of the top three orchestras in the world.” I went to bed, texted Steve Morrow, the sound mixer. “Do we have it?” He wrote back like, “I think we have it.” I knew we didn’t…I asked everybody back in, I actually said a prayer in front of everybody to Lenny, thanking him, and we did it one more time. That’s what’s in the movie. I did conduct them and it was crazy.

    Related Article: Christian Bale and Bradley Cooper to Play Spies in ‘Best of Enemies’

    6) Having the Bernstein Children Around Was Invaluable

    Carey Mulligan as Felicia Montealegre in 'Maestro.'
    Carey Mulligan as Felicia Montealegre in ‘Maestro.’ Photo: Jason McDonald/Netflix © 2023.

    It can be a nerve-wracking experience for actors to meet the real person they’re portraying, or in the case of Carey Mulligan, the children of the woman she plays in ‘Maestro,’ Felicia Montealegre Bernstein. But Mulligan’s experience with the Bernstein kids was incredibly helpful to her.

    Carey Mulligan: I think it just helped, honestly, having the family. Once I’d met them and they were so sweet, and once we did our first couple of Zooms where they were just full of the most amazing anecdotes and stories about Felicia, I suddenly just felt like all I had from them was blessing and encouragement, so I didn’t feel like they were waiting for me to not get her right. I just felt like they were like, “Here’s more about her. Here’s why we loved her. Here’s more things that you should know about her,” and all of that stuff was just like gold.

    Carey Mulligan as Felicia Montealegre in 'Maestro.'
    Carey Mulligan as Felicia Montealegre in ‘Maestro.’ Photo: Jason McDonald/Netflix © 2023.

    Jamie Bernstein: One of the elements that we anticipated would make it difficult to portray our mother is that she had this weird combination of confidence and fragility, and that was what Carey was so good at conveying, this very tricky combination. It’s like a tightrope walk, really. Somehow both of those elements were very palpable in her performance.

    7) Bradley Cooper Is a Lot Like Leonard Bernstein

    Bradley Cooper (Director/Writer/Producer) at the 'Maestro' press conference.
    Bradley Cooper (Director/Writer/Producer) at the ‘Maestro’ press conference. Photo: Netflix © 2023.

    Jamie Bernstein says that her dad was a multifaceted, complicated man, and that Bradley Cooper nailed the performance because he operates on much of the same wavelength.

    Jamie Bernstein: Bradley’s portrayal is incredibly multifaceted, which made it very authentic to the way my father actually was. He himself was incredibly multifaceted, and it was a complicated business to have him for a father. He was, in many ways, a fantastic dad, and he loved having us around. I never felt, and neither did my brother and sister, unwelcome in his presence. He loved having us around. He took us with him on the road and loved taking trips with us and hanging out in the swimming pool with us and playing tennis and word games, so there was this conviviality that was really there. But he was also a larger-than-life public figure with an ego to go along with that, and he was very competitive, so that made things complicated as well. It turns out that Bradley actually is quite a lot like our dad, principally in his open-heartedness and his emotionality. We didn’t see that in the beginning. We didn’t grasp it until the whole process was underway. Then the more time went by, the more we realized that everything he did came from this essential emotional core. That was so like our own dad, because that was the way he worked with everyone, all his colleagues, and his process with orchestras and collaborators always came from this incredibly open-hearted emotional place.

    8) Carey Mulligan Shared Similar Feelings About Acting with Felicia

    Carey Mulligan as Felicia Montealegre in 'Maestro.'
    Carey Mulligan as Felicia Montealegre in ‘Maestro.’ Photo: Jason McDonald/Netflix © 2023.

    Before she married Leonard Bernstein, Felicia Montealegre was a screen star with her own career — although she was ambivalent about the craft of acting herself. Carey Mulligan says she and Felicia were alike in that way.

    Carey Mulligan: She talks about how she went to the Actor’s Studio as a young actress, and she was sort of forced to go, because she didn’t want to go, and she found the whole thing really embarrassing. It was all actors pretending to be animals or fried eggs and writhing around on the floor and crying a lot. She said it just seemed sort of psychotic, and she was sort of really dismissive of it. I remember thinking that sounds exactly like the way I felt as an untrained actor. I didn’t go to drama school. My first job was when I was 18, and then I went into theater and I felt like these people are all crazy and I have no idea what they’re doing. For years and years, I would keep work at somewhat of a distance, like, “Well, I’m not going to stay in the accent all time, and I’m not going to do this. I’m not going to do that,” all the things that make you a proper actor, like, “That’s not for me,” and for some reason was just always really afraid of it — until this job. I really felt like ‘Maestro’ was the first job where I felt like I gave my craft everything, and it was the most amazing experience because of it, but it was terrifying to do it.

    9) The Movie Became About Both Leonard and Felicia

    Carey Mulligan as Felicia Montealegre and Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein (Director/Writer/Producer) in 'Maestro.'
    (L to R) Carey Mulligan as Felicia Montealegre and Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein (Director/Writer/Producer) in ‘Maestro.’ Photo: Courtesy of Netflix © 2023.

    As he and screenwriter Josh Singer dove into their research for the film, Bradley Cooper realized that it wasn’t just about Leonard Bernstein, but about Felicia Montealegre as well.

    Bradley Cooper: I would come away from a day of research just sort of filled with their energy. I mean, they really were very powerful people. They were always spoken about as “Lenny and Felicia.” They never said “Lenny and his wife.” It was always clear that both had made an impact on people. That’s what seemed very fascinating: this unorthodox, mysterious, also very open, wistful, haunting, funny relationship that I thought, wow, if we can really explore this truthfully, it’s, number one, cinematic because it will be [set] to his music…and then if we could really be truthful to them, we have a shot at making something [where you say], “I wouldn’t think I would have anything in common with Leonard, this iconic, sort of mythological figure.” But hopefully with this movie, you do.

    10) The Journey From ‘A Star is Born’ to ‘Maestro.’

    Bradley Cooper and Lady Gaga in 2018's 'A Star Is Born.'
    (L to R) Bradley Cooper and Lady Gaga in 2018’s ‘A Star Is Born.’

    Bradley Cooper’s only other directorial effort before ‘Maestro’ was ‘A Star is Born,’ and he says that he took lessons from that film — and other movies on which he was solely an actor — and applied them to ‘Maestro.’

    Bradley Cooper: I learned so much in making that film, and then also shooting ‘Nightmare Alley’ after that with Guillermo Del Toro and then ‘Licorice Pizza‘ with Paul Thomas Anderson. He was kind enough to let me be a part of his prep. I spent three weeks with him just looking at lenses and watching camera tests and just soaking up everything I could…each project I’ve ever been involved with, I’ve just soaked up everything I can and I think hopefully I just keep evolving as a filmmaker. With ‘A Star is Born,’ more than anything, I found something that felt like this is exactly what I’m supposed to do. My major takeaway from ‘A Star is Born’ was, “Oh, wow, I finally have found my center as an artist.”

    ‘Maestro’ will be in theaters in limited release on November 22nd before it premieres on Netflix December 20th. 

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    What is the plot of ‘Maestro’?

    This fearless love story chronicles the complicated lifelong relationship between music legend Leonard Bernstein (Bradley Cooper) and Felicia Montealegre Cohn Bernstein (Carey Mulligan).

    Who is in the cast of ‘Maestro’?

    • Carey Mulligan (‘Drive‘) as Felicia Montealegre
    • Bradley Cooper (‘The A-Team‘) as Leonard Bernstein
    • Matt Bomer (‘Magic Mike‘) as David Oppenheim
    • Maya Hawke (‘Asteroid City‘) as Jamie Bernstein
    • Sarah Silverman (‘Wreck-It-Ralph‘) as Shirley Bernstein
    Bradley Cooper (Director/Writer/Producer) and Carey Mulligan at the 'Maestro' press conference.
    (L to R) Bradley Cooper (Director/Writer/Producer) and Carey Mulligan at the ‘Maestro’ press conference. Photo: Netflix © 2023.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Maestro’:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Maestro’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Bradley Cooper Movies On Amazon

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  • Sarah Silverman Admits Blackface Scene Got Her Fired From Movie

    Sarah Silverman Admits Blackface Scene Got Her Fired From Movie

    Hulu

    Sarah Silverman is known for her edgy, out-there comedy, but in one instance, she crossed the line — and got fired for it.

    The comedian/actress confirmed on an episode of “The Bill Simmons Podcast” that she was recently fired off a movie for appearing in blackface in an episode of her  Comedy Central series, “The Sarah Silverman Program.”

    The show ran for three seasons between 2007 and 2010. Silverman donned blackface in the third episode of Season 2, titled “Face Wars.” In the scene, Silverman puts on the blackface in order to prove that being Jewish is harder than being black.

    And though that episode aired years ago, it came back to bite her.

    “I recently was going to do a movie, a sweet part, then at 11 p.m. the night before, they fired me because they saw a picture of me in blackface from that episode,” she admitted. “I didn’t fight it.”

    Though Silverman understood the decision, she added, “It was so disheartening. It just made me real real sad, because I really kind of devoted my life to making it right.”

    She also discussed “canceled culture” with Simmons and how it has led to comedy becoming a “dangerous place” for comedians who have made mistakes in the past.

    “It’s like, if you’re not on board, if you say the wrong thing, if you had a tweet once … everyone is, like, throwing the first stone,” Silverman noted.

    She also admitted to remaining friends with Louis C.K. and Aziz Ansari, who both fell out of favor after allegations of sexual misconduct.

    “It’s OK to go, ‘Wow, look at this back then. That was so f—ed up looking at it in the light of today of what we know,’ but to hold that person accountable if they’ve changed with the times, like for me .. I held myself accountable,” Silverman explained.

    “I can’t erase that I did that, but I can only be changed forever and do what I can to make it right for the rest of my life,”

  • ‘Ralph Breaks the Internet’ Directors Phil Johnston on Rich Moore About How the Film Once Opened with a Funeral

    ‘Ralph Breaks the Internet’ Directors Phil Johnston on Rich Moore About How the Film Once Opened with a Funeral

    Disney

    Ralph Breaks the Internet” was one of the most delightful surprises of last year. The follow-up to 2014’s “Wreck-It Ralph” saw Ralph (John C. Reilly) and Vanellope (Sarah Silverman) transported to the Internet, where their friendship was tested and they met a bunch of Disney Princesses. It’s a hoot. We were able to sit down with directors Phil Johnston and Rich Moore and producer Clark Spencer about the movie’s deeper themes, the upcoming “Zootopia” land, and how at one point the movie (an Academy Award nominee for Best Animated Feature) once began on a very, very different note. 

    So at one point the movie used to open like the classic Disney storybook, right?

    Johnston: Yeah.

    Moore: For about 30 seconds.

    Johnston: It could have worked, actually.

    Moore: Ralph had written his own book about their friendship. It was his book about Ralph and Vanellope. It was kind of a recap of what happened in the first movie but through Ralph’s point of view. It was a little skewed.

    Johnston: Yeah, it was arrogant. It’s as if he were the white night. I was so convinced that was going to work. I think it could have. I’m trying to remember why we took it out.

    Moore: Well, it skewed the story. He kind of looked like a jerk. It was so full of himself in that version. And it was a little confusing to people who hadn’t seen the first movie. Because it wasn’t the right story. So they would say, “Is that what happened in the first one?” No!

    It also started with a funeral at one point, right?

    Moore: Yeah. Tapper was unplugged and they were having a memorial. And Ralph and Vanellope were making the eulogy all about themselves. Then Gene got mad and started booing the eulogy.

    Johnston: That also worked!

    Disney

    Also, in the Oh My Disney scene with the princesses, there was a moment when Vanellope jumped on Dumbo’s back and got into a dogfight with some TIE fighters right?

    Johnston: She had a clickbait pop-up sign and was flying on Dumbo and bopping people on the head to force them to click on it.

    Moore: It was a little too long.

    Johnston: It made the scene too big.

    Moore: It turned more into her getting clicks. It was too much story.

    Spencer: And it was an issue of – how do we enjoy the website before she meets the princesses? But the princesses are really the scene. So we would always be balancing that. Like people wanting to see more of the website before the princesses and then we’d spend more time in it and make a big scene. And then they’d say, “Well what is this scene about?”

    Disney

    There’s a lot of great, brave subtext in “Ralph Breaks the Internet,” just like there was in “Zootopia.” This time it’s about toxic masculinity and online bullying. How important is that stuff to why you made the movie?

    Johnston: The first idea was always going to be about their friendship and that they would go to the Internet and the Internet would test their friendship in some way. Once we landed on the story of it being Vanellope falling in love with this pace on the Internet and wanting to stay there for the rest of her life, that idea of Ralph’s insecurity becoming a force of antagonism sort of fed naturally into toxic masculinity. Because so many of the traits he shows on the negative side of his personality are textbook. In the same way we didn’t want “Zootopia” to be a message movie, this is a feminist story about Vanellope finding her voice as a woman and relying on other strong women to help her along the way. Without ever going, “We must make this message movie about toxic masculinity and feminism,” that’s definitely baked into the subtext.

    Moore: While we loved the relationship and feel like this is a relationship worth fighting for, we wanted to portray it as it was broken. They had fallen into a codependent friendship that they weren’t even aware of. It was going to the Internet that exposed how weak their friendship was at that point and that they were both feeding into negative aspects of it. But it was going to the Internet that sped up bow broken this was and that if not cared to was just going to fall apart.

    Clark was this ever anything you had to fight for?

    Spencer: Well I think the great thing is that these guys push hard on their ideas and stories and how they can go further. That’s what’s nice about having a story trust that pushes on us. So there’s always a discussion of, “Have we gone as far as we can go?” And “What else can we dive into?” But I think, to their point, we felt that if we were going to go into The Internet, we have a responsibility to show the good and the bad side of it and delve into these tougher topics. I think “Zootopia” is a great example of a film that was willing to tackle racism. So I think it gave us the belief that we could do that also.

    Disney

    Speaking of “Zootopia,” Tiny Lister has been out there talking about subsequent sequels.

    Moore: I’m not sure where Tiny is getting this information from.

    Johnston: I’m going to announce right now: there is a “Zootopia 5” in the works. Not “2,” “3,” or “4.” Just jump to “5.” Kind of like “Big Hero 6.” It’s going to be huge.

    Moore: Finnick is the star. Tiny plays all the characters. It’s going to have a $3 trillion budget.

    Johnston: It’s like “My Dinner with Andre.”

    Moore: I like how Tiny Lester was throwing out numbers and everything. Where is this coming from Tiny?

    Well something that is slightly more concrete – literally — is the “Zootopia”-themed land coming to Shanghai. How excited are you for people to enter the world of “Zootopia?”

    Moore: I’m excited for me to enter the world of “Zootopia.”

    Spencer: The cool thing is that we make these movies and if we create characters the audience falls in love with, then hopefully they live on in the parks. Sometimes that’s walk-around characters, sometimes that might be an attraction.

    Moore: Or a special funnel cake!

    Spencer: But this is a land, which is amazing. I think they’ve outlined what they want to do with the land and it’ll be up to these guys to help with the characters and everything else.

    “Ralph Breaks the Internet” is out now on digital HD Blu-ray!   

  • 9 Movies You Should See Over Thanksgiving Break

    9 Movies You Should See Over Thanksgiving Break

    In terms of the winter movie cycle, Thanksgiving is a great time to get caught up.

    You have a couple of days off, are probably stuffed with, er, stuffing, and want to be prepared for the Christmas movie onslaught that is just around the corner, when both Mary Poppins and Spider-Man will be vying for your attention (amongst many, many others). So we’ve prepared a handy viewing guide for the Thanksgiving break, for when you want to escape to the theater with your loved ones, or leave them behind while they digest their turkey and watch whatever football game is on. And don’t worry, if you want to watch Netflix instead, we’ve got that covered, too.

    Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald

    Warner Bros/Wizarding World

    Remember “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them,” 2016’s ambitious but somewhat confusing fantasy romp that was supposed to serve as an extension of the lucrative Warner Bros. franchise but instead was kind of just huh? Well, they made another one! And this one is much better.

    With Newt Scamander (Eddie Redmayne, again) dispatched to Paris to track down the powerful Credence (Ezra Miller) and foil the plot of villainous wizard Gellert Grindelwald (Johnny Depp), the movie adds some international intrigue, a more admissibly knotty plot and, thanks to an appearance by sexy young Albus Dumbledore (Jude Law), some concrete connections between the various strands of this franchise. Just be warned — before you pile the family into the station wagon, it might be a good idea to re-watch the first movie. Consider that your magic spell for understanding “Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald.”

    Widows

    Fox

    Given the pedigree, it’s very clear that “Widows” isn’t your run-of-the-mill thriller. Based on a British prime time series from 1983, it concerns a group of women (among them: Viola Davis, Michelle Rodriguez, Elizabeth Debicki and Cynthia Erivo) who are forced into a sticky situation when their criminal husbands are killed in a heist-gone-wrong.

    Directed by Academy Award-winner Steve McQueen and co-written by Gillian Flynn (who wrote “Gone Girl” and “Sharp Objects”), this is a movie that thrills on both an intellectual and visceral level. “Ocean’s 8” it is not.

    The Favourite

    Fox

    This is the time of year when the studios unleash their stuffy period movies and, yes, there are even a few of those this year. But “The Favourite” is not one of them.

    Rambunctious, sexy, and unpredictable, it’s the antithesis of every boring costume drama that they throw Oscars at with willful abandon. This is electrically alive in a way few films, period or otherwise, ever are, anchored by a trio of brilliant female performers (Olivia Colman, Emma Stone and Rachel Weisz) and some of the finest direction this year (courtesy of Greek genius Yorgos Lanthimos). Set during the reign of Queen Anne (Colman) in the early part of the 18th century, it features palace intrigue, love triangles, and people getting pushed into muddy ditches. What more do you want?

    Ralph Breaks the Internet

    Disney

    In the sequel to the hit 2012 animated film, Ralph (John C. Reilly) and Vanellope (Sarah Silverman) head to the Internet, where they fall in with online auctions, meme-creation, and a particularly violent “Grand Theft Auto”-style game called “Slaughter Race” that is lorded over by a bad-ass, leather-clad ringleader named Shank (Gal Gadot). Also, the Disney Princesses show up. As you can imagine, it’s a lot of fun.

    Ralph Breaks the Internet” is one of those rare family sequels that won’t leave you with a toothache from it being so sweet, there’s actual pathos and emotionality but nothing feels syrupy or forced and it’s honestly one of the most visually ravishing animated features you’re ever likely to see.

    Green Book

    Universal

    Up until this point, Peter Farrelly has directed as one-half of the Farrelly Brothers — serving as the tag-team provocateurs behind gross-out extravaganzas like “Dumb and Dumber,” “There’s Something About Mary,” and the underrated classic “Kingpin.” So it’s interesting to see Farrelly emerge as something of an Oscar frontrunner for his work directing “Green Book,” a based-on-a-true-story racial drama starring Mahershala Ali and Viggo Mortensen.

    In the film. Ali plays Don Shirley, a classical pianist, who hires New York tough guy Tony Vallelonga (Mortensen) to escort him on a tour of the South. This could be the feel-good movie of the fall, which makes it a perfect after-Thanksgiving family outing.

    Creed II

    MGM

    Finally. The follow-up to 2015’s brilliant “Rocky” refresh “Creed” is now upon us. Let us give thanks.

    In “Creed II,” Michael B. Jordan returns as Adonis Creed, the son of Apollo Creed, who this time turns to going toe-to-doe with Viktor Drago (Florian Munteanu), the son of Ivan Drago (Dolph Lundgren), who famously killed Apollo in the ring (in 1985’s Cold War classic “Rocky IV“). Oh, and Rocky (Sylvester Stallone) is still around! So there’s that. Hopefully the sequel builds on the intensity and excitement of the first film, while supplying some new wrinkles as well. We can already feel ourselves getting inspired.

    Roma

    Netflix

    Yes, “Roma” is a Netflix movie. But in a rare move, the streaming service is debuting the movie in theaters first, before it hits the platform in mid-December. And, really, you should do everything in your power to see it on the big screen. In fact, try and see it on the biggest screen possible. Because this movie is absolutely jaw dropping.

    An epic on a miniature scale, the highly autobiographical film from “Gravity” filmmaker Alfonso Cuaron follows a middle-class family in Mexico City in the early 1970s dealing with heartache, political upheaval, and the day-to-day domestic drama that every family deals with. What makes this story even more captivating is that it’s told through the eyes of the family’s housekeeper Cleo (Yalitza Aparicio, giving one of the year’s best performances even though she’s not a professional actor). You have to see this with an audience in a theater. It just won’t be the same on your iPad.

    Overlord

    Paramount

    If your family is really annoying you over Thanksgiving, it might be time to watch a little more muscular movie at the multiplex. Perhaps something like “Overlord,” a high-concept World War II romp that features thrills, chills, and the cathartic experience of watching sweaty hunks brutally murder Nazis.

    Conceived by mystery box magnate J.J. Abrams, “Overlord” is a hard-core horror movie mixed with an equally hardcore war movie, wherein a group of Allied soldiers (among them Jovan Adepo and Wyatt Russell) parachute into France to take down a radio tower on the eve of D-Day and wind up finding a gnarly zombie conspiracy. You know, that old story. But there are some definite grindhouse pleasures to be had as Nazis get shot, blown-up, and lit on fire and then come back from the dead to do it all again.

    Bohemian Rhapsody

    Fox

    Because who doesn’t love Queen?

  • ‘Ralph Breaks The Internet’ Review: Disney’s Much-Anticipated Sequel Is a Wild, Unpredictable Ride

    ‘Ralph Breaks The Internet’ Review: Disney’s Much-Anticipated Sequel Is a Wild, Unpredictable Ride

    Disney

    The long-awaited sequel to “Wreck-It Ralph” is titled “Ralph Breaks the Internet,” but it’s probably more accurate to say that the internet breaks him.

    After years of gameplay in the 8-bit world of “Fix-It Felix Jr.,” the character’s first foray into the weird, wild world of the Web is as cacophonous and overwhelming as you might expect. But of the many goods and services provided at the click of a button, the most dangerous for Ralph — and the most needed — is a mirror for his own behavior. John C. Reilly and Sarah Silverman return as the anchors of this delightful digital journey, but for such a vivid and energetic look inside the internet, directors Rich Moore and Phil Johnston offer a shrewd and surprisingly unsentimental look at the dangers of focusing on just one thing in a world full of endless opportunities to connect.

    Six years after the events of the first film, Ralph (Reilly) and Vanellope (Silverman) have settled into a familiar routine — “working” in their games by day, boozing it up at Tapper’s at night. But when the Sugar Rush game breaks in the real world, Mr. Litwak (Ed O’Neill) shuts it down, forcing Vanellope and her fellow drivers to seek shelter elsewhere in the arcade. Ralph, determined to help his best friend, infiltrates Litwak’s newly acquired internet connection and the two venture into its new and overwhelming landscape in search of replacement parts. What they soon learn, however, is that even digital characters need money, and after inadvertently driving up the price of the part, they need lots of it.

    Crossing paths with J.P. Spamly (Bill Hader), who promises opportunities to score quick cash playing video games, Ralph and Vanellope start doing what they do best in other worlds — including Slaughter Race, a brutal Mad Max-like racing game where Vanellope meets her match, and possible new BFF, in Shank (Gal Gadot), its head driver. But when Ralph becomes threatened by Vanellope’s burgeoning curiosity about a world outside not just their respective games but the friendship he holds most dear, he begins to discover just how fickle the internet can be. Soon, he is forced to consider whether his insulated life of routine is protecting him from the rest of the world, or keeping him from exploring it.

    If you’ve seen a single pixel of footage from the movie in advertisements, then you know that the Disney princesses make an appearance — a sly and hilarious display of corporate synergy that sends up not only the internet’s bottomless reservoir of time-wasting crossovers, but also many of the bygone conventions applied to the studio’s animated heroines. Moore and Johnston don’t quite always fall on the right side of when to include a “real world” company like Google or Ebay and when to make one up, but the movie is most successful when it’s skewering not just the companies and properties that comprise our great electronic unifier but the method and rhythms of our interactions with it. Ralph’s efforts to generate “hearts” in exchange for cash is hysterical and sort of wonderfully depressing in its pandering desperation — he will literally do anything, no matter how shameless — but it connects the movie to some real and unflattering truths about the web, and via the title character, some of the folks who spend the most time on it.

    Specifically, Ralph has built himself a comfortable existence as Vanellope’s best friend, and just as he feels complete satisfaction from that dynamic, he expects her to feel the same way — and when she doesn’t is when the whole internet comes crashing down. The movie explicitly articulates some simple, important truths — “never read the comments” — but the more oblique ones are probably the most essential to heed, especially as Ralph’s determination to “protect” and “help” Vanellope manifests itself in increasingly unhealthy ways. Such lessons are of course relevant in electronic space where cruelty and kindness can be dished out carelessly and be dismissed (especially by the perpetrator) as intangible. They feel particularly necessary, however, and astute, in a real world where “finding one’s tribe” can lead easily to a sense of isolation — and marginalization.

    That this culminates in a literal 800-foot Ralph, constructed from a swirling mass of smaller Ralphs, chasing Vanellope unfortunately threatens to overshadow such messages. Few animated movies in recent memory, much less from the likes of Disney, seem to wholeheartedly embrace the outlandish and fully bizarre visual opportunities that premises like this one introduce, but indulging them also makes for a wild and unpredictable ride. But then again, that’s sort of the point of the whole film, certainly for Vanellope — if you knew what you were getting into, or you’d already gotten into it, why take the ride again? And of course, per Ralph, there’s also something to be said about the security, and the reassuring familiarity, of experiencing something that’s at least somewhat like something you’ve done before.

    But ultimately, that’s why as discordant and unconventional as it sometimes is, “Ralph Breaks the Internet” resonates powerfully — because in addition to having a healthy perspective about both the pluses and minuses of the web, it takes some significant virtual epiphanies and applies them to characters who feel truly human.

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  • Exclusive: Leave Your Legacy With This ‘Book of Henry’ Clip

    In this exclusive clip from “Jurassic World” director Colin Trevorrow’sThe Book of Henry” (out everywhere on June 16th), the title character (played by Jaeden Lieberher from “Midnight Special“) describes what he wishes his legacy to be. It’s a touching sequence, off kilter and affecting like the rest of the movie, and much like the movie’s marketing materials so far, purposefully mysterious. In order to get to the bottom of the clip (and the movie), we spoke to Lieberher. Get ready to open “The Book of Henry” with Henry himself.


    When I asked Lieberher to describe the movie (which also stars Naomi Watts, Sarah Silverman, Lee Pace, and Dean Norris), since it is a film that pretty much defies classification, he gave a great response. “It’s a family movie about a mom and her two sons. One of her sons, Henry, is a genius who takes care of his family and wants to protect them,” Lieberher explained. “And he sees that next door some dark things are happening. Nobody really sees it except for Henry. So he tries to do the right thing and save her.” (Having seen the movie, I can confirm that this is a very good encapsulation.)

    As for the exclusive clip, I asked if this was a good example of who Henry is as a character. “It is,” Lieberher said. “It’s the first time you see how he views the world and how he views other people. And it also shows the great qualities in Henry and how much of a good person he is.” Lieberher went on: “Right there and then, clearly he is a genius but during that speech he’s a normal boy. So he’s easier to get into. He’s just around the other students and telling it like it is.”

    When I brought up the fact that between “The Book of Henry” and the highly underrated “Midnight Special,” he’s cornered the market on characters that have a little something extra going on, Lieberher said it was a fun aspect to play. “It’s pretty cool playing someone that is not exactly normal,” Lieberher said. “It’s pretty fun playing those types of characters, you get to play around with their personalities and develop who they are.”

    And while Lieberher might be a young actor, working so closely with a trained actress like Watts, he didn’t feel the need to pepper her with annoying questions (which is probably what I would have done) but instead chose to observe her. “I paid attention to how she worked and how she acted, because when you’re working with someone like that it’s easy to learn a lot,” Lieberher said. When I asked what the biggest takeaway was, he said, “She doesn’t just use her words when she’s acting, she uses her whole body. I think I learned a lot from her.”

    “The Book of Henry” is a smaller, quieter movie that is obviously being released in the middle of summer, a time usually reserved for superhero movies, plus-sized sequels, and animated epics. I asked Lieberher to explain why people should take a chance on something as esoteric and emotional as “The Book of Henry.”

    “Well I think you see big movies like those, there are only a few feelings you get from it. Maybe you’re excited by the action. But this movie brings a lot to the table and makes you feel so many emotions and feelings,” Lieberher said, sounding like the preternaturally gifted character he plays in the movie. He continued: “It’ll make you feel for the family, it’ll make you excited, it’ll keep you on the edge of your seat, and maybe you’ll cry or laugh. That’s what makes this movie really great and interesting.”

    “The Book of Henry” opens on June 16.

  • 5 Best Comedy Roasts of All Time

    Comedy Central Roast Of Donald Trump - ShowIf Betty White has taught us anything, it’s that being old doesn’t mean you’re not hilarious. It also doesn’t mean you’re not really, really vulgar when the battlefield of comedy needs you to drop some serious F-bombs.

    By entertainment standards, the roast — a concept originated by the Friar’s Club fraternity way back in 1907 — is an absolute dinosaur. But it’s like a T. rex that assaults you with politically incorrect character assassination and ridiculous celebrity humiliation instead of killer jaws and tiny arms — old as it is, the roast walks the razor’s edge of “too funny” and “too far.” Here are five times the comics got that balance exactly right.

    1. Charlie Sheen (2011)

    “I respect Charlie Sheen, I do … not his body of work … it’s all been very Christian Slater-ish … he sucks, but he’s good, but he sucks at the same time.” And so it was that the late Patrice O’Neal immortalized Charlie Sheen at his own 2011 Comedy Central roast. The whole night was lightning in a weird bottle, mixed with tiger’s blood and Twitter meltdowns, and shaken till it foamed over. “How do you roast a meltdown?,” asked Jeff Ross. You do it just like this: A madman who set his own world afire giggles along as the sharpest comics in the industry point and laugh at the blaze.

    As a bonus, this one helped put the brilliant Amy Schumer on the map. We’ll take that.

    2. Joan Rivers (2009)

    The late, legendary Joan Rivers was made to be roasted on Comedy Central. She had the perfect combo of comedic icon status paired with plenty of ammo for her roasters, from her famously numerous plastic surgeries to her cringe-worthy red carpet interviews.

    “Joan, I loved you in The Wrestler.” With that intro, Whitney Cummings summed up what made Joan’s roast the perfect dish — the veteran comedienne’s night in the chair not only cemented her well-earned relevance, it shined the world’s spotlight on new talent. Even though most of that spotlight was focused on jokes about Joan’s vagina.

    3. Hugh Hefner (2001)

    Hef’s New York Friar’s Club roast could’ve been a disaster. The nation was still reeling from 9/11, and the minefield of cliched old-man jokes just seemed too obvious. But thanks to the power of comics like Drew Carey and Sarah Silverman, it turned out to be the cream of the roast crop. Carey started out with a cathartic string of mega-profanity aimed at none other than Osama bin Laden, priming the audience for a combo of airhead-Playboy Bunny gags and old-age digs that moved at a clip and somehow managed to avoid any semblance of cliche. Silverman solidified the one-two punch with a short set centered on — wait for it — butthole waxing that was so left-field, it was clear she’d be a comedy queen by the time the roast ended.

    4. William Shatner (2006)

    Sometimes, it’s the truth behind the jokes that makes a roast truly great. And it’s that dose of reality that made Star Trek” co-stars like George Takei and Nichelle Nichols certainly had enough USS Enterprise drama to load their comedic cannons, completely apart from the former Captain’s bizarre forays into spoken word albums and TV commercials. When Takei looks right at Bill and straight-up says, “Fuck you and the horse you rode in on” in that outrageous baritone of his, we laugh, because we know it comes from a place of truth. Feels good to let it all out, doesn’t it, Mr. Sulu?

    5. Donald Trump (2011)

    We’ll admit it. The thing that makes Donald Trump’s Comedy Central roast so great is that it’s a catharsis for the audience — in 2011, we loved seeing the uber-rich, business tycoon get his just deserts, and in 2016, we love seeing it even more.

    But it wasn’t just seeing Trump get towered that made the night a standout — it was the evening’s completely unexpected roasters. A Marlee Matlin / Gilbert Gottfried double-team isn’t something we knew we wanted till we got it, and Snoop Lion (aka Snoop Dogg) once again proved his comedic prowess with razor-sharp jabs like, “Donald says he wants to run for president and move on into the White House. Why not? It wouldn’t be the first time he pushed a black family out of their home.”

    Enough said, Snoop. Enough said.

    Sources

  • Comedy Roasts That Took It Too Far

    Saying the words “Friar’s Club” without scaring away millennials who only speak in memes. Making the celeb in the chair feel honored, but just humbled enough to not jump out a window. Showcasing TV-friendly material that has enough foul language to make Quentin Tarantino blush: The comedic roast walks a whole lot of fine lines — it’s just part of the delicate mix of sick burns, underhanded compliments, and unthinkable vocabulary that makes up the cocktail. But sometimes when you shake that cocktail, it explodes right in your face. Pause to remember five roasts that did just that, and had viewers wincing between the laughs all the way.

    Justin Bieber: Too Fast, Too Furious, Too Soon

    The 2015 Comedy Central roast of Justin Bieber should’ve been a momentous occasion — yeah, it’s weird that the Biebs got roasted in the first place, but at least we can all laugh at the teen pop star turned way-too-smug 20-something.

    Unfortunately, everyone from Jeff Ross to Pete Davidson cast a cloud over the evening with jokes about the then-recent death of “The Fast and the Furious” series star Paul Walker. The tragic running theme was in such poor taste that even Ludacris complained, and when you’ve offended the man who wrote heartfelt ballads like “Hoes in My Room” and “Move Bitch,” you know you’ve crossed a line.

    Roseanne Flips the Script

    Comedy Central’s 2012 roast of Roseanne Barr is pretty middle-of-the-road — you could say that Roseanne jokes are the gift that keeps on giving, but they were never really a gift in the first place. As her roasters waded through all the expected fat jokes, Roseanne turned the tables and put her infamous ex, Tom Arnold, right in the sniper sights. The result is something that felt way too personal for comfort, full of poison-tipped quips like, “I’m glad you have a good wife, Tom; I’m glad she isn’t with you just for your money — I mean, my money.”

    Ouch. Smells like someone burned the roast.

    Lisa Lampanelli Hassles the Hoff

    Gilbert Gottfried stood right on the “too far” line at the 2010 Comedy Central roast of David Hasselhoff, but Lisa Lampanelli sprinted on over it. At the time, the Hoff was vulnerable — fresh off a tabloid streak when a video of him eating a hamburger while his kids implored him to stop drinking made the online rounds. The whole thing made the night feel a little pathetic, but Lisa took no prisoners. “The Queen of Mean” earned her title as she somehow managed to fit jabs about the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, race, Haiti, Roger Ebert’s fatal cancer, and the Holocaust into less than five minutes of stage time. That’s got to be some sort of record that should’ve never been set.

    Chevy Chase Gets Weird

    Being mean is a natural part of the roast’s recipe. But something about the New York Friar’s Club roast of Saturday Night Live” posse didn’t show up, Chase sat through the whole torpid affair behind a pair of shades and an uncomfortably humorless scowl, somehow managing to make the audience feel like he was both a terrible sport and yet undeserving of the onslaught that came his way. This one just amped up the mean factor on far too many levels.

    James Franco Plays Softball

    In 2013, James Franco invited a bunch of his Judd Apatow-alumni buds to a fancy dinner, and they lightly ribbed him in what felt like an extended press junket rather than an envelope-pushing night of comedy. This Comedy Central-aired “roast,” to use the term loosely, went way too far in the other direction — it was a too-nice, undercooked dish with no bite and some very unfunny bark.

    Just let Sarah Silverman leave this right here for you: “I can’t tell if this is a dais or the line to suck Judd Apatow’s balls.”

    Sources

  • Best of Late Night TV: Bradley Cooper’s Adventures in NYC and Sarah Silverman’s Too-High Stepmom


    Jimmy Kimmel Live,” and immediately started musing on ye olden days in New York City. Tragically, it appears as though he spent most of his childhood completely lost in The Village. Bless him.

    Meanwhile, The View.” Turns out she wants to cover this year’s political election because she’s concerned about Donald Trump. Aren’t we all, Joy Behar. Aren’t we all. Oh, also she talked about her crush on Bernie Sanders. No comment on that one.

    Finally, Conan” and chatted about the time she got her stepmom high. Turns out the poor thing thought she could “smell colors” — which isn’t quite as dramatic as the time her dad got stoned and thought he could fly. Yikes, Sarah Silverman’s parents. Yikes.
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