Tag: the-accountant

  • ‘The Accountant 2’s Cynthia Addai-Robinson and Daniella Pineda

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    Opening in theaters on April 25th is ‘The Accountant 2’, which is a sequel to 2016’s ‘The Accountant’ and is once again directed by Gavin O’Connor (‘Miracle’).

    The returning cast includes Ben Affleck (‘Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice’) as Christian Wolf, Jon Bernthal (‘Daredevil: Born Again’) as Christian’s brother Braxton, Cynthia Addai-Robinson (‘The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power’) as Treasury agent Marybeth Medina, and J.K. Simmons (‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’) as director of the Treasury Department Raymond King, as well as new recruit Daniella Pineda (‘Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom’).

    Related Article: 10 Things We Learned at Amazon MGM’s ‘The Accountant 2’ Press Conference

    (L to R) Daniella Pineda and Cynthia Addai-Robinson star in 'The Accountant 2'.
    (L to R) Daniella Pineda and Cynthia Addai-Robinson star in ‘The Accountant 2’.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Cynthia Addai-Robinson and Daniella Pineda about their work on ‘The Accountant 2’, Addai-Robinson’s reaction to the screenplay, how her character has changed since the first film, if she knew there would be a sequel when she shot the original, working opposite Affleck and Bernthal this time around, and if she’s ready for ‘The Accountant 3’, while Pineda discussed joining the franchise, her love for the original, shooting her fight scenes, acting opposite Oscar winner J.K. Simmons, and working with director Gavin O’Connor.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Addai-Robinson and Pineda, as well as Ben Affleck, Jon Bernthal and director Gavin O’Connor.

    Cynthia Addai-Robinson attends the Amazon MGM Studios 'The Accountant 2' World Premiere at SXSW on Saturday March 8, 2025 in Austin, Texas.
    Cynthia Addai-Robinson attends the Amazon MGM Studios ‘The Accountant 2’ World Premiere at SXSW on Saturday March 8, 2025 in Austin, Texas.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Cynthia, Ben Affleck has said that he thinks your character is the real protagonist of this film and that he is more like a “character actor”. Do you agree with that and what was your first reaction to the sequel taking that approach?

    Cynthia Addai-Robinson: It’s interesting, if you think about the character of Marybeth Medina, I feel like she’s very much the audience’s eyes and ears in this story. You’re following along with her as she must essentially solve this puzzle, solve this mystery that really in his final moments, she’s enlisted again by J.K. Simmons, his character Ray King. I think even for Ray King, he understands that “There are two people I can entrust that I think are going to be able to figure this out. Marybeth is one of them, and of course the accountant is the other.” Really her recruiting and pulling him in to help, it’s very much initially a reluctant partnership. Then once he brings his brother Brax along, Jon Bernthal, it’s like, “Now I’m having to navigate this with these two people that I don’t really know what to expect once I bring them on.” It is true that she essentially is the through line and you’re following her journey as she tries to understand the particulars of this case.

    MF: Daniella, what was it like for you to join this franchise and work with this cast?

    Daniella Pineda: I think the coolest part about it was if you get to sign onto a project that you yourself sought out as a fan, I saw the first one in theaters in 2016 and I loved it, and I was like, “Oh man, I hope they would come out with a second one.” That was weird to be a fan of something and then you’re like, “I’m going to be in it. This is awesome.” They left it largely a mystery once I was cast. I was not aware that the film centered around this character. I just thought it was more of a supporting role and you’re in and out. I was so surprised when I read how much she’s a part of the story.

    Daniella Pineda attends the Amazon MGM Studios 'The Accountant 2' World Premiere at SXSW on Saturday March 8, 2025 in Austin, Texas.
    Daniella Pineda attends the Amazon MGM Studios ‘The Accountant 2’ World Premiere at SXSW on Saturday March 8, 2025 in Austin, Texas.

    MF: Cynthia, did you have a sense making the first movie that a sequel was possible?

    CAR: You’re always hopeful. I think certainly the intention from the creatives at the top was, “If this works, it would be great to continue telling this story.” I think when you’re an actor brought on board, unless you’re directly involved as say Ben obviously is a more hands-on with this, you’re just hoping and never assuming. Obviously, it took a lot longer I think than anybody would’ve ideally liked with eight years passing from when we finished the first movie to now bring this. But it always felt like there’s more story to tell. The way the first movie ends, you feel like you want to see what happens to these characters. Where do they go from here? What does life look like for them? We’ve taken the same time jump, eight years in real life and nine years in the story. It’s nice because we get to not only progress the characters, but tonally the movie is completely different from the first one. The first one’s an origin story. It’s a little bit more serious and grounded in tone. This one we just get to have fun with it and change up the genre a bit.

    MF: Daniella, can you talk about shooting the fight sequences?

    DP: We were lucky, Cynthia and I were both lucky in that most of our fight sequences happened at the end of production. We had the duration of the movie to build up and train for that. We took Muay Thai classes outside of rehearsal, which was interesting. Cynthia has a mean kick. It was a surprise to me. But I have a movie kick that’s pretty good. It was trying and it was exhausting at times, but I love the way it turned out. Muay Thai was very different for me. I messed my foot up during a rehearsal toward the end, and I got so scared, like, “Oh my God, I broke my foot right before the fight.” But thankfully it worked out. I think it took us two days to shoot that fight sequence, two or three days, and it was so much fun.

    Marybeth Medina (Cynthia Addai-Robinson) in 'The Accountant 2'. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    Marybeth Medina (Cynthia Addai-Robinson) in ‘The Accountant 2’. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    MF: Cynthia, how has Medina changed since the first film?

    CAR: She’s a grownup. I think there was in the first movie, both for Marybeth and for myself, a bit of a like, “Let me just keep my head down, do my job, don’t mess up, and don’t draw attention.” I think for Marybeth, there wasn’t necessarily a level of say, career ambition, it was just about doing a good job and serving justice. I think she’s very much led by her moral compass in putting away the bad guys, so to speak. Now here she is in a more elevated position, she’s deputy director and she’s essentially like the new Ray King. Again, J.K. Simmons character has passed the baton to her. That sense of this secret that she carries, which is she gets a leg up, she gets this information, she gets these tips, and would she have gotten there without it? Would she be able to get to that same position if she was just working hard? I love that there is that sense of a bit of imposter syndrome. You see her in the beginning of the movie literally sitting in the boss’s chair, and who she is in the beginning of the film and who she’s at the end I think there’s a beautiful arc and a real change, I think for her.

    MF: Daniella, can you talk about your character’s relationship with Raymond King and what it was like working with J.K. Simmons?

    DP: I was delighted to get a sit-down scene with Oscar winner J.K. Simmons. This is not a shocker. He is a very, very, very good actor. I am of the belief that I think that other actors make you a better actor, not necessarily directors. When it comes time to who you’re looking at and performing and bringing it, he’s one of those actors that like, “I really have to come correct today.” We meet them in a mysterious way. We don’t know why he’s so deeply intrigued by her or why he’s calling her out or how he even got a hold of her. But he seems so desperate to speak to her like he’s been fishing, and he finally has the catch. It’s a little bit under mysterious circumstances and sad ones, unfortunately for J.K.

    (L to R) Anais (Daniella Pineda) and Ray King (J.K. Simmons) in 'The Accountant 2'. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Anais (Daniella Pineda) and Ray King (J.K. Simmons) in ‘The Accountant 2’. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    MF: Cynthia, you didn’t have any scenes with Ben or Jon in the first movie, what was it like getting to act opposite them this time around?

    CAR: It was like this lovely meeting of the minds both for the reality of, “Great, I get to work with these actors that I have not worked with before, even though we were in the same movie.” For those characters and seeing, “What exactly is going to happen? What happens when you put these three very different characters who are all very strong in their individuality and in their way of doing things and their perception of things, what happens?” I think what I love about this movie, and I’ve been hearing from a lot of people is there’s so much comedy to be mined from that uncomfortable situation. Uncomfortable for the characters, not uncomfortable for me or for us, but again, there is that sense of, “These characters are all circling each other, trying to make heads or tails of things.” For Marybeth especially, it’s like, “These guys are dragging me down into the gutter. This is not my way of doing things.” We had a lot of fun with it. I think when you see on the page that there’s something humorous and funny without overplaying it, I think you want to play to the truth of the situation, but you know that there’s a chuckle to be had and you can keep it loose and you can try for things. Gavin O’Connor, our director, was great at allowing for that, creating that environment where it’s like Jon’s throwing out some improvised lines, and Ben’s reacting in real time. I’m just watching the ping pong match. We just had fun with it. I think that sense of fun and play translates to what the audience experiences. Again, there’s a lot of laughs to be had on this sequel.

    MF: Daniella, what was it like working with director Gavin O’Connor?

    DP: It takes a very talented director to be able to pull off what is being hailed as arguably a better sequel. The first movie is great, but the second one, a lot of people are saying, “The second one’s better.” That takes a very talented director to be able to pull that off. I think he established the world in the first film, and then he was able to, in a very skillful way, bring out the humor and all these goodies all along. But I feel like he’s always in front of the monitor and he’s like, “I don’t know. Do I believe this? Is this believable?” Everything must be believable and must convince him. As an actor, it was so lovely to be able to work with a director who put so much trust in me and I took some liberties. I asked for her to be blonde, and Gavin was like, “Yeah, sure, okay.” I thought he was really going to fight me on that. It’s so funny the things that he graced and the other things where he knew what he wanted, but it was a wonderful balance. I loved working with him.

    (L to R) Ben Affleck (Christian Wolff), Cynthia Addai-Robinson (Marybeth Medina), Director Gavin O'Connor, and Jon Bernthal (Brax) in 'The Accountant 2'. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Ben Affleck (Christian Wolff), Cynthia Addai-Robinson (Marybeth Medina), Director Gavin O’Connor, and Jon Bernthal (Brax) in ‘The Accountant 2’. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    MF: Finally, Cynthia, are you open to making ‘The Accountant 3’ if the opportunity comes your way?

    CAR: Yes, I’m very open to that. We’re getting asked that all the time. I feel like I’ve heard Gavin say as much that a trilogy to really tell the story and with each version of the movie again, give a different experience for the audience, if the audience wants it, I think it’s very much there. When this movie ends, same thing, you’re like, “What happens to these characters? Where do they go from here after everything that happens, after everything unfolds, where do they go from here?” If you still want to know that, if you still care about the fate of these characters, then, I think a third one, let’s go. Let’s do it.

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    What is the plot of ‘The Accountant 2’?

    When someone close to her is killed by unknown assassins, Treasury Agent Marybeth Medina (Cynthia Addai-Robinson) is forced to contact Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) to solve the murder. With the help of his estranged but highly lethal brother Brax (Jon Bernthal), Chris applies his brilliant mind and less-than-legal methods to piece together the unsolved puzzle. As they get closer to the truth, the trio draw the attention of some of the most ruthless killers alive — all intent on putting a stop to their search.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Accountant 2’?

    (L to R) Allison Robertson, Ben Affleck, Cynthia Addai-Robinson, Lynette Howell Taylor, Gavin O'Connor, Daniella Pineda and Jon Berthal attend the Amazon MGM Studios 'The Accountant 2' World Premiere at SXSW on Saturday March 8, 2025 in Austin, Texas.
    (L to R) Allison Robertson, Ben Affleck, Cynthia Addai-Robinson, Lynette Howell Taylor, Gavin O’Connor, Daniella Pineda and Jon Berthal attend the Amazon MGM Studios ‘The Accountant 2’ World Premiere at SXSW on Saturday March 8, 2025 in Austin, Texas.

    List of Gavin O’Connor Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘The Accountant 2’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Ben Affleck Movies On Amazon

     

  • Movie Review: ‘The Accountant 2’

    (L to R) Jon Bernthal and Ben Affleck in 'The Accountant 2'. Photo: Amazon MGM Studios.
    (L to R) Jon Bernthal and Ben Affleck in ‘The Accountant 2’. Photo: Amazon MGM Studios.

    ‘The Accountant 2’ receives 6 out of 10 stars.

    Opening in theaters April 25th is ‘The Accountant 2,’ directed by Gavin O’Connor and starring Ben Affleck, Jon Bernthal, Cynthia Addai-Robinson, Daniella Pineda, Allison Robertson, and J.K. Simmons.

    Related Article: 10 Things We Learned at Amazon MGM’s ‘The Accountant 2’ Press Conference

    Initial Thoughts

    Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) in 'The Accountant 2'. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) in ‘The Accountant 2’. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    2016’s ‘The Accountant’ was an offbeat thriller about an autistic man named Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck), whose brilliance with numbers has led him to become a forensic accountant for criminal organizations looking to find theft in their ranks, while he fronts as a legitimate public accountant and acts as an undercover mole for the U.S. Treasury. Featuring a strong central performance from Affleck, a terrific supporting cast, and a quirky blend of action, drama, and humor, ‘The Accountant’ scored well enough with audiences to put a sequel in motion.

    Some nine years later, ‘The Accountant 2’ has arrived, with Affleck, co-stars Jon Bernthal and Cynthia Addai-Robinson, director Gavin O’Connor, and writer Bill Dubuque all returning. The results are a mixed bag, with the movie intermittently capturing some of the original’s charm by building on the chemistry between Affleck and, as his brother, Bernthal.

    But a ridiculously convoluted plot, the addition of a new character almost reminiscent of a Marvel-type villain, and – speaking of Marvel – the expansion of Christian’s support system into something resembling Xavier’s School for Gifted Youngsters, make it clear that the creatives here want to – perhaps unwisely — build this into a superhero franchise of their own.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Ben Affleck (Christian Wolff), Cynthia Addai-Robinson (Marybeth Medina), Director Gavin O'Connor, and Jon Bernthal (Brax) in 'The Accountant 2'. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Ben Affleck (Christian Wolff), Cynthia Addai-Robinson (Marybeth Medina), Director Gavin O’Connor, and Jon Bernthal (Brax) in ‘The Accountant 2’. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Eight years after the events of ‘The Accountant,’ Ray King (J.K. Simmons), retired director of the U.S. Treasury financial crimes bureau, is shot dead outside a bar by assassins (don’t holler, it’s right there in the trailer) after a meeting with an unknown woman who only goes by the name Anais (Daniella Pineda). King’s death and the circumstances behind are naturally investigated by his one-time assistant, Deputy Director Marybeth Medina (Cynthia Addai-Robinson), whose last message from King was to call in Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) – accountant to criminal organizations and FBI mole – to help her figure what shady business their friend was wrapped up in.

    The only lead is a photo of an undocumented family of immigrants, who disappeared some years back. Christian, who now lives an itinerant life out of his tricked-out Airstream RV, in turn calls his brother, security expert and professional killer Brax (Jon Bernthal), to help, despite the two not being in touch again for years. As Christian, Brax, and Marybeth delve deeper into what Ray was involved with, they discover he was on the trail of human traffickers – and the woman he was meeting the night he died has her own agenda and bizarre history as well.

    What set ‘The Accountant’ apart from most other crime thrillers was the way Christian went about solving problems – as puzzles in math and logic – and the relationship between him and the corporate accountant played in the first film by Anna Kendrick, who’s sorely missed here. That’s replaced by essentially a bromance between the two siblings, and indeed the best parts of ‘The Accountant 2’ are the scenes of simple back-and-forth between the preternaturally calm Christian and the frequently hot-headed Brax.

    (L to R) Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) and Brax (Jon Bernthal) in 'The Accountant 2'. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) and Brax (Jon Bernthal) in ‘The Accountant 2’. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    The scene in which the two share beers atop Christian’s Airstream, talking about their dad, the effect he had on them, and their own fractured relationship – Brax looking for a sign of affection, Christian not able to give it due to his condition – is the best in the film. The second best comes right after that, when Christian and Brax head out to a country bar where Christian abruptly starts line dancing with a woman who’s interested in him, much to Brax’s delight. Although it stops the plot and the film literally in their tracks for 10 minutes, it at least features some of the idiosyncratic vibe of its predecessor.

    The brotherly comedy in the movie – which is ramped up here – clashes awkwardly with the grim human trafficking plot at the center of the film, a confusing vortex of plot points that could snarl even a human computer like Christian. There are also increasingly outlandish and indirect nods to superhero cinema, with Christian’s helper at Harbor Neuroscience now a team of a dozen kids, all on the spectrum, who sit at their laptops and can do everything from hack into mobile phones to switch off blocks of traffic lights (where are their teachers?). With backup like that, the Wolff brothers are all but indestructible, even against a kind of super soldier who adds another layer of comic-book mayhem to the proceedings. By the time we get to the standard, improbable (and generic) climactic shootout with the two brothers against an army of thugs, it’s truly difficult to remember how they got there and what the endgame is.

    It’s the clash of tones – family melodrama, buddy cop movie, brutal thriller, and Marvel-lite knockoff – that doesn’t add up in the end, making ‘The Accountant 2’ literally less than the sum of its parts. By piling on more, the filmmakers end up with less.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Brax (Jon Bernthal) and Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) in 'The Accountant 2'. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Brax (Jon Bernthal) and Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) in ‘The Accountant 2’. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    We’re not able to comment directly on the neurobiological accuracy of Ben Affleck’s work – which got a split response from the autism community in the first film – but he and the movie seem somewhat at odds: the literal-minded Christian is used more as the butt of jokes this time out (almost like Dave Bautista’s Drax, to wring another Marvel comparison out of this), while the humor was more organic the first time around. Affleck still acquits himself well enough, though, especially in the scenes between him and Bernthal. His best moments come when we see Christian attempting to push himself past his neurological barriers and not always getting there.

    Bernthal is probably the film’s MVP, in the sense that we learn more about him this time out while Affleck’s Christian is already established. One of current cinema’s best tough guys, Bernthal gets the chance to peel away some of the top layers of Brax’s heavily armored personality and reveal the wounded younger sibling underneath. He plays Brax’s need for approval – denied by the boys’ father, he now turns to his older brother for it – beautifully, along with the hurt he feels when he doesn’t get what he yearns for, creating an intense, internal tug of war with his fierce sense of loyalty and brotherly love.

    Marybeth Medina (Cynthia Addai-Robinson) in 'The Accountant 2'. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    Marybeth Medina (Cynthia Addai-Robinson) in ‘The Accountant 2’. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Cynthia Addai-Robinson is once again sort of the audience avatar, meant to smooth over the vagaries of the plot by asking helpful questions of the brothers, but while she does get one brutal fight scene, she’s largely out of the picture by the third act. As for Daniella Pineda, we’ll leave her role spoiler-free except to say that a choice made by the filmmakers late in the game doesn’t make much sense to us. The rest of the cast — villains and thugs – are unremarkable and unmemorable.

    Final Thoughts

    Brax (Jon Bernthal) in 'The Accountant 2'. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    Brax (Jon Bernthal) in ‘The Accountant 2’. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    We went into ‘The Accountant 2’ with decent expectations, especially because the first movie grew on us and there was a lot of potential in the relationship between the two brothers. And while they do provide the best moments in the movie, the bigger scope pushes this into more generic action/crime territory and loses some of what made the first one distinct.

    Sadly, making Christian, Brax, and their confederates into a crimefighting force in all but name means that the franchise will have to go even more blockbuster for ‘The Accountant 3,’ if that film comes to pass. But we kind of wish that the series would find its way back to logic puzzles, corporate shenanigans, and a modest murder mystery – the elements that boosted the good will for ‘The Accountant’ in the first place.

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    What is the plot of ‘The Accountant 2’?

    When someone close to her is killed by unknown assassins, Treasury Agent Marybeth Medina (Cynthia Addai-Robinson) is forced to contact Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) to solve the murder. With the help of his estranged but highly lethal brother Brax (Jon Bernthal), Chris applies his brilliant mind and less-than-legal methods to piece together the unsolved puzzle. As they get closer to the truth, the trio draw the attention of some of the most ruthless killers alive — all intent on putting a stop to their search.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Accountant 2’?

    • Ben Affleck as Christian Wolff / The Accountant
    • Jon Bernthal as Braxton
    • Cynthia Addai-Robinson as Marybeth Medina
    • Daniella Pineda as Anaïs
    • Allison Robertson as Justine
    • J. K. Simmons as Raymond King
    • Robert Morgan as Burke
    • Grant Harvey as Cobb
    • Andrew Howard as Batu
    Gavin O'Connor attends the Amazon MGM Studios 'The Accountant 2' World Premiere at SXSW on Saturday March 8, 2025 in Austin, Texas.
    Gavin O’Connor attends the Amazon MGM Studios ‘The Accountant 2’ World Premiere at SXSW on Saturday March 8, 2025 in Austin, Texas.

    List of Gavin O’Connor Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘The Accountant 2’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Ben Affleck Movies On Amazon

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  • ‘The Accountant 2’ Press Conference with Stars and Director

    (L to R) Allison Robertson, Ben Affleck, Cynthia Addai-Robinson, Lynette Howell Taylor, Gavin O'Connor, Daniella Pineda and Jon Berthal attend the Amazon MGM Studios 'The Accountant 2' World Premiere at SXSW on Saturday March 8, 2025 in Austin, Texas.
    (L to R) Allison Robertson, Ben Affleck, Cynthia Addai-Robinson, Lynette Howell Taylor, Gavin O’Connor, Daniella Pineda and Jon Berthal attend the Amazon MGM Studios ‘The Accountant 2’ World Premiere at SXSW on Saturday March 8, 2025 in Austin, Texas.

    Coming out in 2016, ‘The Accountant’ was the very definition of a sleeper hit. Directed by Gavin O’Connor (‘Warrior’), the film starred Ben Affleck as Christian Wolff, an autistic man with a genius for numbers who acts as a financial adviser and forensic accountant for criminal organizations.

    Tasked with examining the books for an allegedly legit but corrupt firm, Christian is pursued by Treasury agents Ray King (J.K. Simmons) and Marybeth Medina (Cynthia Addai-Robinson), while also learning that a hitman on his trail turns out to be his long-estranged brother Braxton (Jon Bernthal).

    ‘The Accountant’ was a surprise success at the box office, grossing $155 million worldwide off a reasonable $44 million budget, but the movie also had a vibrant afterlife on streaming and home video, which ultimately led to the development of ‘The Accountant 2.’

    (L to R) Jon Bernthal and Ben Affleck in 'The Accountant 2'. Photo: Amazon MGM Studios.
    (L to R) Jon Bernthal and Ben Affleck in ‘The Accountant 2’. Photo: Amazon MGM Studios.

    The sequel brings back O’Connor, Affleck, Bernthal, and Addai-Robinson, with the latter three reuniting to investigate the mysterious death of Ray King. Operating on the fringes of the law and the criminal underworld, the trio find themselves dealing with both a human trafficking ring and a lethal new assassin (Danielle Pineda).

    With ‘The Accountant 2’ arriving in theaters on April 25th, members of the cast and crew – including Affleck, Bernthal, Pineda, Addai-Robinson, and O’Connor — participated in a virtual press conference that Moviefone had the opportunity to attend, along with other members of the press,  and crunch the numbers on ‘The Accountant 2.’

    Related Article: Ben Affleck and Jon Bernthal Return in First Pictures from ‘The Accountant 2’

    1) Why Ben Affleck Made A Rare Sequel

    Ben Affleck attends the Amazon MGM Studios 'The Accountant 2' World Premiere at SXSW on Saturday March 8, 2025 in Austin, Texas.
    Ben Affleck attends the Amazon MGM Studios ‘The Accountant 2’ World Premiere at SXSW on Saturday March 8, 2025 in Austin, Texas.

    With the exception of his two-movie stint (plus cameos) as Batman in the now-defunct DC Snyderverse, and brief appearances as Daredevil in the director’s cut of ‘Elektra’ and his ‘Chasing Amy’ character in Kevin Smith’s ViewAskewniverse, Ben Affleck has never played the same character twice until taking on the role of Christian Wolff.

    Ben Affleck: The first one – which was successful and I was really proud of — had a longer life in terms of the real-life feedback that I get from people and what movies they mention when they come up to me. So I definitely was aware, “Oh, wow, that movie seems to still be watched.” I think it’s also a function of the fact that streaming really started to take off after this movie. Also, I love this character. I really enjoyed playing it. Gavin and I both very much were drawn to the idea of bringing Jon back and expanding on that because we both were like, “This guy’s fabulous,” and we both felt like there was a lot more to do. Bill (Dubuque, screenwriter) and Gavin spent a lot of time in the intervening years developing and putting together — in a meticulous, detail-oriented, character-driven way that’s quite typical of Gavin — what it could be, because both were quite mindful of not wanting to repeat [the first one]. So everything about it was appealing to me.

    2) Gavin O’Connor Didn’t Want To Make The Same Movie Twice

    (L to R) Ben Affleck (Christian Wolff), Cynthia Addai-Robinson (Marybeth Medina), Director Gavin O'Connor, and Jon Bernthal (Brax) in 'The Accountant 2'. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Ben Affleck (Christian Wolff), Cynthia Addai-Robinson (Marybeth Medina), Director Gavin O’Connor, and Jon Bernthal (Brax) in ‘The Accountant 2’. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Director Gavin O’Connor says he was very concerned – as Ben Affleck states above – with not just rehashing the first ‘Accountant.’

    Gavin O’Connor: There was certain DNA that was important to preserve, and then after that, it was a lot of left turns and just try to refill the tank in a very different way. I in no way wanted to recycle the same thing that we did in the first film, so it was just a matter of how do we just start recreating the character in a way that is putting him on a different journey, integrating Brax, and bringing Cynthia back. We knew the key in the ignition was to kill Ray because I wanted it to be personal for both [Christian and Marybeth]. Most importantly, I just wanted to make a movie that was fun and entertaining and put people in the seats, where they can walk out of the theater and go, “Man, that was a f**king ball. That was a great time at the movies.” That’s really what we were going for.

    3) Jon Bernthal Enjoyed Having A New Dynamic With Ben Affleck

    (L to R) Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) and Brax (Jon Bernthal) in 'The Accountant 2'. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) and Brax (Jon Bernthal) in ‘The Accountant 2’. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Christian and Braxton spend a lot more time together in ‘The Accountant 2,’ and the film not only delves deeper into their backstory but also plays up both the friction and the humor between the two brothers, which Jon Bernthal cites as a major factor in his return.

    Jon Bernthal: It was a real thrill for me to get back, and I think with Ben, it just kind of happened that way. I mean, it’s there, but it was very much supported by Gavin to sort of let moments linger and let it exist naturally and play the moments in between the beats. [Ben is] unbelievably funny and, it sounds corny, but he’s just mastered this character in such a way that there’s just so many little moments of truth that are going on that you love, but can also drive you crazy from the right point of view. I feel like I was really let off the leash to have a real opinion about that.

    4) They Didn’t Set Out To Make The Sequel Funnier

    Gavin O'Connor attends the Amazon MGM Studios 'The Accountant 2' World Premiere at SXSW on Saturday March 8, 2025 in Austin, Texas.
    Gavin O’Connor attends the Amazon MGM Studios ‘The Accountant 2’ World Premiere at SXSW on Saturday March 8, 2025 in Austin, Texas.

    While there is a lot more humor in ‘The Accountant 2,’ Jon Bernthal notes that Gavin O’Connor “never told us to be funny.” O’Connor says that it wasn’t done on purpose – it just happened that way.

    Gavin O’Connor: I don’t think we ever said, “Oh, it has to be funny.” When I say I wanted the movie to be fun and entertaining, I mean, Jon and I had so many sit-downs where we would just dissect the character and the intention in the scene, but once you just put these guys together, both of these guys, their characters are slightly bonkers in certain ways, so if you just let them do their thing, it was such a fertile kind of environment. The reason I think it works is because they weren’t trying to be funny. They were just so ingrained in their characters.

    5) Cynthia Addai-Robinson Says She And Her Character Evolved At The Same Time

    Cynthia Addai-Robinson attends the Amazon MGM Studios 'The Accountant 2' World Premiere at SXSW on Saturday March 8, 2025 in Austin, Texas.
    Cynthia Addai-Robinson attends the Amazon MGM Studios ‘The Accountant 2’ World Premiere at SXSW on Saturday March 8, 2025 in Austin, Texas.

    Coming back to play Treasury agent Marybeth Medina, who is pushed to her limits both legally and physically by her collaboration with Christian and Braxton, Cynthia Addai-Robinson said that she and the character had a similar kind of growth from the first movie to the second.

    Cynthia Addai-Robinson: I think I always viewed Marybeth as sort of the entry point for the audience because she’s observing and seeing all these things unfold around her and reacting in kind. And myself as an actor, same thing. I think back to working on the first movie. I was nervous. I was kind of out of my depth in a way, but just trying to present as if I wasn’t, which I think was a similar type of situation for Marybeth. Here we are eight years later, and Marybeth has evolved, she’s grown, she’s in this sort of elevated position within the Treasury Department, and for myself as a person and an actor, I felt like I had also grown, and it was like, “All right, I’m going to be returning to a situation that’s familiar. I feel a little bit more comfortable, a little bit more confident.” So that was really nice for me to kind of feel like, “Okay, I’m feeling like I can handle what I’m now getting thrown at me,” which is this dynamic with Ben and Jon’s characters and just, again, being that point of entry for the audience. I get to bear witness to all of their shenanigans and be like, “All right, these guys are kind of crazy and they’re also kind of challenging my view of how to serve justice really.”

    6) Christian Wolff Is Not The Movie’s Protagonist, Says Ben Affleck

    Marybeth Medina (Cynthia Addai-Robinson) in 'The Accountant 2'. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    Marybeth Medina (Cynthia Addai-Robinson) in ‘The Accountant 2’. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Although his role is right there in the title, Ben Affleck has a theory that somebody else is actually the movie’s main character.

    Ben Affleck: The secret of this movie is that Cynthia is the protagonist really. She’s the lead in the movie. She is the entree for the audience, which means we get to play character parts, and there is a kind of relief from not having to carry a certain — there are a whole bunch of expectations and stuff that go with being the lead in the movie because, as Cynthia says, the audience is really projecting themselves onto you. So [Jon and I] are like a dual aggravant in some ways to her, and if you look at the math of the story, it’s about her being brought into this, seeing this person be killed, trying to find out what it was and what she has to go through to get there and the resolution of her story. That’s something that I find very artful and interesting, where this person is the lead of the movie and you have these dual character actors in there. That affords Jon and I the luxury of doing the sort of ‘Odd Couple‘ thing.

    7) Daniella Pineda Says This Was Her Most Physically Demanding Role Yet

    Daniella Pineda attends the Amazon MGM Studios 'The Accountant 2' World Premiere at SXSW on Saturday March 8, 2025 in Austin, Texas.
    Daniella Pineda attends the Amazon MGM Studios ‘The Accountant 2’ World Premiere at SXSW on Saturday March 8, 2025 in Austin, Texas.

    Daniella Pineda’s first big break came via a major role in ‘The Vampire Diaries’ TV spinoff ‘The Originals,’ and more recently she has appeared in action-oriented movies like ‘Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom’ and ‘Plane.’ But she says the role of Anais – a ruthless killer with an enigmatic and ultimately bizarre backstory – was her most challenging yet.

    Daniella Pineda: I would say it was definitely next level. I mean, it’s not necessarily a character you see all the time. There is something really compelling about watching a predator do their thing, but at the same time, I felt like there’s more to her. There are more layers there. So she’s not just a stone-cold killer, and it’s the type of role that I would like to see more women get to play. They’re certainly here in the real world. I love to beat the s**t out of Cynthia (laughs). But we were hugging in between takes and it was nice. I got really lucky. I had a good partner.

    8) All The Action Was Character-Driven

    (L to R) Brax (Jon Bernthal) and Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) in 'The Accountant 2'. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Brax (Jon Bernthal) and Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) in ‘The Accountant 2’. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Gavin O’Connor says the reason the action – which can be quite violent — works in ‘The Accountant 2’ is because the movie spends the time getting the viewer invested in the characters.

    Gavin O’Connor: We can cite action movies that are great, but it just feels like the action is in front of the characters. For us, and the same with the girls, we were always coming from characters. What we were always tracking when we got to the third act was, “How are [Jon and Ben] working together? How are they now united?” We knew the stakes, we knew what they wanted, so inside the action and choreography, it was really about the emotional line between the two brothers and how are they going to try to accomplish this together. That was really what the conversations were about. Action isn’t emotional, and no one cares about disposable violence, so it was really evoking emotion because you care about the characters.

    9) We Find Out A Lot More About Jon Bernthal’s Brax

    Brax (Jon Bernthal) in 'The Accountant 2'. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    Brax (Jon Bernthal) in ‘The Accountant 2’. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    While Jon Bernthal’s character, Brax, is a relatively late arrival in the first ‘Accountant,’ he’s in much more of the sequel and we get to discover more about Christian’s tough and fiercely loyal brother.

    Jon Bernthal: Brax is really sort of shrouded in mystery in the first one. You really don’t know too much about him, but you have these amazing flashbacks to see how these two boys were raised and what their relationship was with their dad. It really is the crux of what is bothering both of them and what’s really bothering Brax, the roles that we’ve always filled for each other, getting each other’s back, having to be there for each other, and the lack of being there for each other. So it doesn’t culminate just in a gunfight, it culminates in, “Hey, I’m there for you. I’m getting your back, you’re getting mine. We’re joined forever,” and it’s a way, for lack of a better word, of showing how much you love somebody.

    10) Ben Affleck Line Dances Onscreen For The First Time

    (L to R) Ben Affleck and Jon Berthal attend the Amazon MGM Studios 'The Accountant 2' World Premiere at SXSW on Saturday March 8, 2025 in Austin, Texas.
    (L to R) Ben Affleck and Jon Berthal attend the Amazon MGM Studios ‘The Accountant 2’ World Premiere at SXSW on Saturday March 8, 2025 in Austin, Texas.

    In one unexpected scene, Christian and Brax take a night off and head to a bar – where the introverted Christian shockingly gets up and begins to line dance with a woman on the crowded floor. Affleck jokes about the scene, “America wasn’t asking for it, but they’re going to get it.”

    Ben Affleck: That was one of the fun things about this, the idea that here’s a guy who wants to have a relationship with a woman, and he’s trying to figure out how to do that, how to put yourself out there. He’s not comfortable extending himself, he doesn’t really know how to flirt exactly, like so many of us. It’s not easy for anyone figuring out relationships, particularly the very early part where you’re trying to gauge, “What does this signal mean? Is this person looking at me? Do they like me? Am I going to humiliate myself if I go over there?” What he does is kind of a lovely thing: he uses something that he’s comfortable with, which in that case is the ability to recognize and identify the pattern of line dancing — because it is so structured and patterned — to participate in this. It’s the perfect way that he’s comfortable with standing next to this woman who he’s attracted to and wants to connect with, because it’s kind of like parallel play with little kids. You don’t have to look at somebody and engage them, but you get to be with them and do something next to them, and he finds a way that he’s comfortable doing that. I probably am not going to get a lot more demands for my line dancing work, but it was really fun. I think what’s charming about it, at least I hope, is that it’s somebody putting themselves out there to do something that they’re not necessarily great at, but they’re trying. I mean really, at the end of the day, that’s all any of us can do.

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    What is the plot of ‘The Accountant 2’?

    When someone close to her is killed by unknown assassins, Treasury Agent Marybeth Medina (Cynthia Addai-Robinson) is forced to contact Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) to solve the murder. With the help of his estranged but highly lethal brother Brax (Jon Bernthal), Chris applies his brilliant mind and less-than-legal methods to piece together the unsolved puzzle. As they get closer to the truth, the trio draw the attention of some of the most ruthless killers alive — all intent on putting a stop to their search.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Accountant 2’?

    Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) in 'The Accountant 2'. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) in ‘The Accountant 2’. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    List of Gavin O’Connor Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘The Accountant 2’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Ben Affleck Movies On Amazon

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  • First Images of Ben Affleck in ‘The Accountant 2’

    (L to R) Brax (Jon Bernthal) and Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) in 'The Accountant 2'. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Brax (Jon Bernthal) and Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) in ‘The Accountant 2’. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Preview:

    • The first images of ‘The Accountant 2’ are online.
    • Ben Affleck, Jon Bernthal and J.K. Simmons are among the stars.
    • Gavin O’Connor returned to direct this one.

    Back in 2016, Ben Affleck starred in action crime drama ‘The Accountant,’ which saw him as Christian Wolff, a math savant with more affinity for numbers than people.

    Behind the cover of a small-town CPA office, he worked as a freelance accountant for some of the world’s most dangerous criminal organizations.

    But when the Treasury Department’s Crime Enforcement Division, run by Ray King (J.K. Simmons), starts to close in, Christian takes on a legitimate client: a state-of-the-art robotics company where an accounting clerk (Anna Kendrick) has discovered a discrepancy involving millions of dollars. But as Christian uncooks the books and gets closer to the truth, it is the body count that starts to rise…

    Directed by Gavin O’Connor from a script by Bill Dubuque, it was a hit, generating more than $155 million from a $44 million budget.

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    It’s perhaps a little surprising then, that it has taken this long for ‘The Accountant 2‘ to arrive, though there are numerous factors at play, including the decline in such mid-budget (at least for Hollywood) movies over the years, the star and director’s busy schedules and the fact that Warner Bros. isn’t as involved this time (though the studio is still listed as a production company and is distributing the film outside the States).

    Here’s what O’Connor had to say to Vanity Fair about his eight years trying to get the sequel made:

    “It was brutal. It just felt like this flower that was ready to bloom, and then it would stop again and start again. It was so frustrating. It was very important to me to make an exuberant, entertaining movie. I wanted to make an emotional film and also not just an action movie, which I would find wildly boring and uninteresting. An action movie that dealt with human connection and love was something that I really wanted to explore.”

    Yet arrive it has –– or will in a couple of months following a world premiere debut at this year’s SXSW Film Festival –– and to prove it, the first images of Affleck and the rest of the cast are now online.

    What’s the story of ‘The Accountant 2’?

    Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) in 'The Accountant 2'. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) in ‘The Accountant 2’. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    When an old acquaintance is murdered, leaving behind a cryptic message to “find the accountant,” Wolff is compelled to solve the case.

    Realizing more extreme measures are necessary, Wolff recruits his estranged and highly lethal brother, Brax (Jon Bernthal), to help. In partnership with U.S. Treasury Deputy Director Marybeth Medina (Cynthia Addai-Robinson), they uncover a deadly conspiracy, becoming targets of a ruthless network of killers who will stop at nothing to keep their secrets buried…

    Who else is in ‘The Accountant 2’?

    Brax (Jon Bernthal) in 'The Accountant 2'. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    Brax (Jon Bernthal) in ‘The Accountant 2’. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    The cast for the new movie includes the returning likes of Addai-Robinson, Simmons and Bernthal plus new recruits including ‘Jurassic World Fallen Kingdom’s Daniella Pineda, as well as Allison Robertson.

    Related Article: ‘The Account 2’: Ben Affleck, Jon Bernthal and More All Returning

    ‘The Accountant 2’: The Cast Speak

    (L to R) Anais (Daniella Pineda) and Ray King (J.K. Simmons) in 'The Accountant 2'. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Anais (Daniella Pineda) and Ray King (J.K. Simmons) in ‘The Accountant 2’. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Here’s Affleck on the enduring appeal of the original film:

    “It was a movie that I found that I would hear about from people. It was a movie that stuck around, that people would talk about and say, ‘Oh, hey, I like ‘The Accountant.’ And there seemed to be a lot of goodwill towards it.”

    In regard to his character, Christian Wolff, Affleck had this to say:

    “This is a guy who wants to have a relationship. He wants to have friends. He’s good at some things and good at others. And I thought that the kind of vulnerability and honesty of that was kind of an interesting risk to take.”

    And this is what Bernthal thinks of his character, Brax:

    “Underneath it all, I think especially with Braxton, is just this unbelievable yearning to have his brother in his life and this unbelievable loneliness that he’s been trying to fill with all these very empty ways.”

    Finally, here’s Addai-Robinson on her return as Marybeth:

    “I was always hopeful that I would get to revisit this story and see how Marybeth was doing these days. I was very excited to finally get the call that we were getting the band back together.”

    Could there be a third movie?

    (L to R) Ben Affleck (Christian Wolff), Cynthia Addai-Robinson (Marybeth Medina), Director Gavin O'Connor, and Jon Bernthal (Brax) in 'The Accountant 2'. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Ben Affleck (Christian Wolff), Cynthia Addai-Robinson (Marybeth Medina), Director Gavin O’Connor, and Jon Bernthal (Brax) in ‘The Accountant 2’. Photo Credit: Warrick Page/Prime © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    While all involved certainly want to reunite, we’ll likely have to wait and see how this one performs first.

    Here’s O’Connor:

    “I have a lot of thoughts about what to do with the third. I’ve been thinking about it for a lot of years.”

    While Affleck strikes a more cautionary note:

    “I’m keenly aware of the fact that you kind of have to earn another movie. The worst pitfall is to store a bunch of your good ideas for the next installment. If you don’t create an interest demand the first time out there, you’re just going to be playing that to an empty house.”

    When will ‘The Accountant 2’ be in theaters?

    The ‘Accountant’ sequel is currently targeting an April 25th release in cinemas, something of a rarity for Amazon MGM studios projects.

    (L to R) Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) and Brax (Jon Bernthal) in 'The Accountant 2'. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) and Brax (Jon Bernthal) in ‘The Accountant 2’. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    List of Gavin O’Connor Movies:

    Buy Ben Affleck Movies On Amazon

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  • ‘You Can’t Run Forever’ Exclusive Interview: J. K. Simmons

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    Opening in theaters on May 17th is the new thriller ‘You Can’t Run Forever’, which stars Oscar-winner J.K. Simmons (‘Whiplash’) and was co-written and directed by his wife, Michelle Schumacher (‘I’m Not Here’).

    The cast also includes Fernanda Urrejola (‘Blue Miracle’), Isabelle Anaya (‘Donny’s Bar Mitzvah’), Graham Patrick Martin (‘Major Crimes’), and Simmons and Schumacher’s daughter, Olivia Simmons (‘Junk Food’).

    J.K. Simmons in 'You Can't Run Forever'.
    J.K. Simmons in ‘You Can’t Run Forever’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    Related Article: Actor and Screenwriter Scott Caan Talks New Movie ‘One Day as a Lion’

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with J.K. Simmons about his work on ‘You Can’t Run Forever’, his first reaction to the screenplay, his approach to the character, collaborating on set with his wife, acting opposite his daughter, and working with Isabelle Anya, as well as looking back at shooting ‘The Accountant’ with Ben Affleck and teasing the upcoming sequel, ‘The Accountant 2’.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Simmons and director Michelle Schumacher.

    J.K. Simmons in 'You Can't Run Forever'.
    J.K. Simmons in ‘You Can’t Run Forever’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    Moviefone: To begin with, at what point did you get involved with this project and what was your first reaction to Michelle and Carolyn Carpenter’s screenplay?

    J.K. Simmons: Well, with everything Michelle’s done, including things she’s working on now, I always prefer not to have too many conversations about the story as it’s developing and wait for a somewhat finished first draft to wrap my head around. We did talk about some of the developmental things of this story, specifically about my character and if we would ever know anything about his motivation or what drove him to what we see him doing or is he just a complete psychopath and always has been. Once she and Carolyn Carpenter, her writing partner made the decision to delve into a bit of that psychology, I found that the way that they examine where this guy is coming from to be smart, clever, surprising, interesting and revealing about him and about us as humanity on this planet. Which at the end of the day is what this movie is about, to me, is the human condition and Fernanda Urrejola’s character as the mom, how the power of her love is paramount.

    J.K. Simmons in 'You Can't Run Forever'.
    J.K. Simmons in ‘You Can’t Run Forever’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    MF: Can you talk about how the character’s backstory helped you understand Wade’s motivations?

    Simmons: Yeah, and it’s always, for me, with somebody like this or other truly evil characters that I’ve played in the past, it’s necessary for me to understand. You can’t justify, but you can begin to wrap your brain around the psychology of what makes someone do such terrible things. This was very clear to me, and that’s something that I look for in any project, whether it’s a more lighthearted thing or something intense like this is just, can I believe and begin to understand where this guy is coming from?

    J.K. Simmons in 'You Can't Run Forever'.
    J.K. Simmons in ‘You Can’t Run Forever’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    MF: Can you talk about your approach to playing a character as evil and despicable as Wade?

    Simmons: Well, being despicable is great. But I mean that’s such a big part of the joy and the variety of what we get to do as actors is to not be pigeonholed and not do the same thing repeatedly. I feel like most character actors, like you want to be able to exercise or exorcise, in this case, some demons. You want to be able to emphasize different aspects of who you are and who we are as a species.

    Allen Leech and J.K. Simmons in 'You Can't Run Forever'.
    (L to R) Allen Leech and J.K. Simmons in ‘You Can’t Run Forever’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    MF: Can you talk about your working relationship with Michelle on set?

    Simmons: It’s beyond a kind of shorthand. I mean, I’ve had the opportunity to collaborate multiple times with a lot of wonderful directors, and you do develop a mutual trust and a shorthand. In the case of Michelle, we already had the mutual trust and the mutual shorthand. Because I’m a fly on the wall every day when she’s writing for hours and we’re decompressing at night, I have a little extra awareness of the project itself. Then when you add the collaboration with our kids to the mix and with Michelle’s brother being the producer, it felt like this, especially for me, it felt like a family vacation in a way, which for Olivia and me, it was because we’re just acting and then we get to relax after that. For the producer and the director there’s never a moment’s rest, so it was a little more like a marathon for them.

    'You Can't Run Forever' filmmaker Michelle Schumacher.
    ‘You Can’t Run Forever’ filmmaker Michelle Schumacher. Photo: Lionsgate.

    MF: Is there something specific that you are looking for from a director on set?

    Simmons: It varies depending on the character, depending on the sort of vibe of the movie, comedy, drama, period piece or whatever it might be. But it all comes off the page to me, if it’s not on the page, even if it’s one of those scripts where you’re going to be improvising a lot, it needs to be there on the page, at least the framework. I have learned, not that I always make the best choices, but I’ve learned not to get involved in anything that I don’t believe and understand on the page who this guy is. Then there are often conversations before production and on the day and in between takes and at lunch about specifics, little specifics of why, where, when, and how with whatever the character is. But it all starts with, in this case, Michelle and Carolyn Carpenter, what they put down on the page.

    Isabelle Anaya in 'You Can't Run Forever'.
    Isabelle Anaya in ‘You Can’t Run Forever’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    MF: Can you talk about working with actress Isabelle Anaya and were you involved in casting?

    Simmons: That was Michelle, Randall (Schumacher) and the casting directors. I know that she saw a long list of young actresses, teenage actresses to play that character. She met with Isabelle twice, and I think a third time because she knew she was seeing something there that was what she wanted. If I’m remembering correctly, I think Isabel was cast before Fernanda was cast, Fernanda Urrejola who plays the mother. That ended up being a beautiful synchronicity, the casting of them, and obviously the rest of the movie too. Now my brain is already going to the casting of Olivia Simmons, our daughter in the movie, not to take away from Isabelle. She was a great find by Michelle, and she does such a wonderful job of finding the shadings of this teenage girl who’s suffering from anxiety and has endured horrible trauma in her life before this, and now this psychopath is terrorizing her on this overnight roller coaster ride of a movie. But in the case of our daughter, as they were writing that character, they were thinking it’s going to be a tiny little scene or two and had our daughter in mind. Then as the role organically became bigger, Michelle was like, “I don’t know if our sophomore in college acting student daughter, if we’re going to have to make her audition for the casting director for this.” But Olivia did the self-tape and the casting director put her at the top of the list of recommendations without attaching the name Simmons to being the director’s daughter, the director being Schumacher. She literally didn’t know that connection and said, “There’s a lot of good actors for this part, but would be my first choice, Olivia Simmons.” So, it took a lot of the onus off mom and dad in that casting.

    Olivia Simmons in 'You Can't Run Forever'.
    Olivia Simmons in ‘You Can’t Run Forever’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    MF: What was it like for you personally to have this opportunity to make a movie with your family?

    Simmons: It was unbelievable. I get goosebumps talking about it. It’s one of those things and then to have our son (Joe Simmons) who was still in college at the time do the full score for the film. We knew he had the chops to do that. He had contributed to Michelle’s earlier film (‘I’m Not Here’) a little bit with some additional music and sound design, and now he’s a fully formed film composer who was able to do everything. I’ve said before, Randall, her brother was the only producer. He was doing about 11 people’s jobs. Michelle was doing four- or five-people’s jobs at least, and Joe was doing a few people’s jobs being the entire music department. Then Olivia and I were merely one person’s job each portraying somebody else. It felt like a family vacation in a way, especially because we were shooting in Missoula, Montana, which is where my last stop growing up was and where my parents retired and lived out their days. So, there’s a lot of fond memories there.

    Ben Affleck as Christian Wolff in 'The Accountant.'
    Ben Affleck as Christian Wolff in ‘The Accountant.’ Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    MF: Finally, I’m a big fan of ‘The Accountant,’ and my favorite scene was when Ben Affleck’s character had a gun to your head, and your character is begging for his life and says, “I’ve been a good dad. I’m a lousy agent, and I’ve been a weak man. But that, I didn’t screw up. That I got right.” Can you talk about shooting that scene, if you were pleased with how the first movie turned out, and what fans can expect from the upcoming sequel, ‘The Accountant 2’?

    Simmons: Yeah, absolutely. That scene, that’s another one I get goosebumps about because Ben and I are both dads. Gavin O’Connor, the director is a dad. That scene, we shot so many different little shades of that scene. There were some (takes) where I was emotional, but I think in the final cut that we see in the movie, I was just blubbering about because a guy’s got a gun to my head, and this might be the end. What you’re thinking about is your kids, of course. That is such a beautiful theme in Bill Dubuque’s script and in Gavin’s and in the sequel, it’s very much so the same. There was one take in that where Chris has the gun to my head and says, “Do you have kids?” During one take Ben just said, “What are their names?” I said my kids’ names, and they were not going to keep that in the movie, but it fueled the next several takes in providing that emotion. I loved that film, love the sequel and the way that it continues in a very different way, examining the brothers, the relationship of brothers, with is fathers and brothers being the primary relationships in both of those movies. Ben and Jon (Bernthal) are so great. I can’t wait to see the second one.

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    What is the plot of ‘You Can’t Run Forever’?

    A teenage girl (Isabelle Anaya) suffering from anxiety due to a tragic event from her past finds herself hunted through the woods by a sociopath (J. K. Simmons) on a murderous rampage.

    Who is in the cast of ‘’You Can’t Run Forever’?

    • J. K. Simmons as Wade
    • Allen Leech as Eddie
    • Fernanda Urrejola as Jenny
    • Isabelle Anaya as Miranda
    • Olivia Simmons as Emily
    • Graham Patrick Martin as Deputy Dwyer
    • Max Garfin as Ben
    • Nathan Vincenti as Davis
    J.K. Simmons in 'You Can't Run Forever'.
    J.K. Simmons in ‘You Can’t Run Forever’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    Other J.K. Simmons Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy J.K. Simmons Movies on Amazon

  • Ben Affleck and More Back for ‘The Accountant 2’

    Ben Affleck as Christian Wolff in 'The Accountant.'
    Ben Affleck as Christian Wolff in ‘The Accountant.’ Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    Preview:

    • Ben Affleck and more are returning for ‘The Accountant 2’.
    • The sequel has director Gavin O’Connor working on it again.
    • This time, Amazon MGM Studios is producing the movie.

    It might not have sounded like the formula for an exciting action thriller, the title ‘The Accountant’ cueing visions of someone painstakingly going through ledgers or stacked boxes of documents while tapping away on a calculator.

    But the movie turned out to be a successful, gunplay-happy movie starring Ben Affleck back in 2016.

    Though it has been in development since at least 2017, things have fairly been quiet on the sequel front. Now, though, it’s in full swing, albeit switching studio homes from Warner Bros. (which released the original) to Amazon MGM Studios, where Affleck most recently made ‘Air’.

    And, via a report from Deadline, Affleck, alongside co-stars Jon Bernthal, J.K. Simmons and Cynthia Addai-Robinson are all now back to appear in the follow-up, with director Gavin O’Connor calling the shots (and the sums) once more.

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    What was the story of ‘The Accountant’?

    Ben Affleck as Christian Wolff in 'The Accountant.'
    Ben Affleck as Christian Wolff in ‘The Accountant.’ Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    In case you didn’t see it, the 2016 movie had Affleck as Christian Wolff, a highly skilled CPA with autism who leads a double life as a forensic accountant for criminal organizations. When he uncovers discrepancies in a legitimate robotics company, he must navigate a dangerous web of deceit while staying one step ahead of both the law and his unlawful clients.

    Bernthal played Christian’s security company operator brother Brax, with Simmons as Ray King, the Director of the Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network. Addai-Robinson had the role of Marybeth Medina, an up-and-coming Treasury agent tasked with unearthing The Accountant’s real identity.

    Where does ‘The Accountant 2’ take the narrative?

    Ben Affleck as Christian Wolff in 'The Accountant.'
    Ben Affleck as Christian Wolff in ‘The Accountant.’ Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    The new movie’s plot reportedly kicks off when Medina’s former boss is killed by unknown assassins, and she’s forced to contact Christian to solve the murder.

    With the help of his estranged but highly lethal brother Brax, Chris applies his brilliant mind and less-than-legal methods to piece together the unsolved puzzle. As they get closer to the truth, the trio draw the attention of some of the most ruthless killers alive — all intent on putting a stop to their search…

    Related Article: 10 Things We Learned at the ’Air’ Press Conference with Cast and Crew

    Who is making ‘The Accountant 2’?

    Ben Affleck as Christian Wolff in 'The Accountant.'
    Ben Affleck as Christian Wolff in ‘The Accountant.’ Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    Alongside O’Connor (who since the first film also directed Affleck in sports drama ‘The Way Back’), Bill Dubuque has returned to write the script.

    And if the director has his way, there could be another movie in the series on the way before too long.

    Here’s what O’Connor had to say about the potential for more back in 2021 to CinemaBlend:

    “I’ve always wanted to do three because we’re going to integrate his brother into the story. So there’ll be more screen time for Bernthal in the second one. And then the third movie’s going to be, I call it, ‘Rain Man’ on steroids.’ The third movie is going to be the two brothers, this odd couple. The third one is going be a buddy picture.”

    When will ‘The Accountant 2’ be on screens?

    With shooting gearing up shortly, there’s no release date on the books just yet.

    Anna Kendrick and Ben Affleck in 'The Accountant.' Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.
    (L to R) Anna Kendrick and Ben Affleck in ‘The Accountant.’ Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘The Accountant 2′:

    Buy Ben Affleck Movies On Amazon

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  • Best Anna Kendrick Movies

    Anna Kendrick in 'Alice, Darling.'
    Lionsgate

    Anna Kendrick is one of the most popular and talented actress working today.

    She first gained attention for her supporting role in the ‘Twilight’ franchise and was quickly nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her work opposite George Clooney in ‘Up in the Air,’ and has since appeared in such popular movies as ‘Scott Pilgrim vs. the World,’ ‘End of Watch,’ ‘Cake,’ ‘The Accountant,’ ‘Trolls’ and the ‘Pitch Perfect’ franchise. Her latest project, ‘Alice, Darling’ opens exclusively in AMC Theaters on January 20th.

    In honor of the release of her new film, Moviefone is counting down the 20 best movies of Anna Kendrick’s career, including ‘Alice, Darling.’

    Let’s begin!


    20. ‘The Twilight Saga: Eclipse‘ (2010)

    Bella (Kristen Stewart) once again finds herself surrounded by danger as Seattle is ravaged by a string of mysterious killings and a malicious vampire continues her quest for revenge. In the midst of it all, she is forced to choose between her love for Edward (Robert Pattinson) and her friendship with Jacob (Taylor Lautner), knowing that her decision has the potential to ignite the ageless struggle between vampire and werewolf. With her graduation quickly approaching, Bella is confronted with the most important decision of her life.

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    19. ‘Mike and Dave Need Wedding Dates‘ (2016)

    20th Century Fox
    20th Century Fox

    Mike (Adam DeVine) and Dave (Zac Efron) are young, adventurous, fun-loving brothers who tend to get out of control at family gatherings. When their sister Jeanie (Sugar Lyn Beard) reveals her Hawaiian wedding plans, the rest of the Stangles insist that the brothers bring respectable dates. After placing an ad on Craigslist, the siblings decide to pick Tatiana (Aubrey Plaza) and Alice (Kendrick), two charming and seemingly normal women. Once they arrive on the island, however, Mike and Dave realize that their companions are ready to get wild and party.

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    18. ‘Drinking Buddies‘ (2013)

    Weekend trips, office parties, late night conversations, drinking on the job, marriage pressure, biological clocks, holding eye contact a second too long… you know what makes the line between “friends” and “more than friends” really blurry? Beer. Starring Kendrick, Olivia Wild, Jake Johnson, and Ron Livingston.

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    17. ‘Pitch Perfect 3‘ (2017)

    After the highs of winning the world championships, the Bellas find themselves split apart and discovering there aren’t job prospects for making music with your mouth. But when they get the chance to reunite for an overseas USO tour, this group of awesome nerds will come together to make some music, and some questionable decisions, one last time.

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    16. ‘50/50‘ (2011)

    Summit Entertainment
    Summit Entertainment

    Inspired by a true story, a comedy centered on a 27-year-old guy (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) who learns of his cancer diagnosis and his subsequent struggle to beat the disease.

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    15. ‘The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1‘ (2011)

    The new found married bliss of Bella Swan (Kristen Stewart) and vampire Edward Cullen (Robert Pattinson) is cut short when a series of betrayals and misfortunes threatens to destroy their world.

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    14. ‘Cake‘ (2014)

    After having visions of a member of her support group who killed herself (Kendrick), a woman (Jennifer Aniston) who also suffers with chronic pain seeks out the widower of the suicide.

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    13. ‘Twilight‘ (2008)

    Summit Entertainment
    Summit Entertainment

    When Bella Swan (Kristen Stewart) moves to a small town in the Pacific Northwest, she falls in love with Edward Cullen (Robert Pattinson), a mysterious classmate who reveals himself to be a 108-year-old vampire. Despite Edward’s repeated cautions, Bella can’t stay away from him, a fatal move that endangers her own life.

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    12. ‘The Company You Keep‘ (2013)

    A former Weather Underground activist (Robert Redford) goes on the run from a journalist (Shia LaBeouf) who discovers his identity.

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    11. ‘Pitch Perfect 2‘ (2015)

    The Bellas are back, and they are better than ever. After being humiliated in front of none other than the President of the United States of America, the Bellas are taken out of the Aca-Circuit. In order to clear their name, and regain their status, the Bellas take on a seemingly impossible task: winning an international competition no American team has ever won. In order to accomplish this monumental task, they need to strengthen the bonds of friendship and sisterhood and blow away the competition with their amazing aca-magic! With all new friends and old rivals tagging along for the trip, the Bellas can hopefully accomplish their dreams.

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    10. ‘A Simple Favor‘ (2018)

    Anna Kendrick and Blake Lively
    Lionsgate

    Stephanie (Kendrick), a dedicated mother and popular vlogger, befriends Emily (Blake Lively), a mysterious upper-class woman whose son Nicky attends the same school as Miles, Stephanie’s son. When Emily asks her to pick Nicky up from school and then disappears, Stephanie undertakes an investigation that will dive deep into Emily’s cloudy past.

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    9. ‘Trolls‘ (2016)

    Lovable and friendly, the trolls love to play around. But one day, a mysterious giant shows up to end the party. Poppy (Kendrick), the optimistic leader of the Trolls, and her polar opposite, Branch (Justin Timberlake), must embark on an adventure that takes them far beyond the only world they’ve ever known.

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    8. ‘Into the Woods‘ (2014)

    In a woods filled with magic and fairy tale characters, a baker (James Corden) and his wife (Emily Blunt) set out to end the curse put on them by their neighbor, a spiteful witch.

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    7. ‘Alice, Darling‘ (2023)

    Wunmi Mosaku, Anna Kendrick, and Kaniehtiio Horn in 'Alice, Darling.'
    Lionsgate

    Anna Kendrick stars as Alice, a woman pushed to the breaking point by her psychologically abusive boyfriend, Simon (Charlie Carrick). While on vacation with two close girlfriends (Kaniehtiio Horn and Wunmi Mosaku), Alice rediscovers the essence of herself and gains some much-needed perspective. Slowly, she starts to fray the cords of codependency that bind her. But Simon’s vengeance is as inevitable as it is shattering – and, once unleashed, it tests Alice’s strength, her courage, and the bonds of her deep-rooted friendships.

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    6. ‘Mr. Right‘ (2016)

    A girl (Kendrick) falls for the “perfect” guy (Sam Rockwell), who happens to have a very fatal flaw: he’s a hitman on the run from the crime cartels who employ him.

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    5. ‘End of Watch‘ (2012)

    Two young officers (Jake Gyllenhaal and Michael Peña) are marked for death after confiscating a small cache of money and firearms from the members of a notorious cartel during a routine traffic stop.

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    4. ‘The Accountant‘ (2016)

    Warner Bros. Pictures
    Warner Bros. Pictures

    As a math savant (Ben Affleck) uncooks the books for a new client, the Treasury Department closes in on his activities and the body count starts to rise.

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    3. ‘Up in the Air‘ (2009)

    Corporate downsizing expert Ryan Bingham (George Clooney) spends his life in planes, airports, and hotels, but just as he’s about to reach a milestone of ten million frequent flyer miles, he meets a woman (Vera Farmiga) who causes him to rethink his transient life.

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    2. ‘Scott Pilgrim vs. the World‘ (2010)

    As bass guitarist for a garage-rock band, Scott Pilgrim (Michael Cera) has never had trouble getting a girlfriend; usually, the problem is getting rid of them. But when Ramona Flowers (Mary Elizabeth Winstead) skates into his heart, he finds she has the most troublesome baggage of all: an army of ex-boyfriends (Chris Evans, Brandon Routh, and Jason Schwartzman) who will stop at nothing to eliminate him from her list of suitors.

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    1. ‘Pitch Perfect‘ (2012)

    Universal Pictures
    Universal Pictures

    College student Beca (Kendrick) knows she does not want to be part of a clique, but that’s exactly where she finds herself after arriving at her new school. Thrust in among mean gals, nice gals and just plain weird gals, Beca finds that the only thing they have in common is how well they sing together. She takes the women of the group out of their comfort zone of traditional arrangements and into a world of amazing harmonic combinations in a fight to the top of college music competitions.

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  • John Mayer Explains Theory That ‘The Accountant’ Is a Batman Origin Story

    He might be onto something. Stay with him here.

    John Mayer is not the first person to tie the 2016 movie “The Accountant” to the DCEU’s Batman movies. The first would probably be Ben Affleck, since he stars in both sets of Warner Bros. films. But there are deeper levels, and the singer decided to go down that rabbit hole after Christmas.

    Before getting into John Mayer’s theory, a SPOILER ALERT is due if you haven’t seen “The Accountant”:

    What do you think? Is he Bat-sh*t crazy? Fans don’t think so…


    Seth Lee, who plays the younger version of Ben Affleck’s character in “The Accountant,” added his two cents:

    Nice. The debate may continue — on both “The Accountant” as a Batman movie and “Die Hard” as a Christmas movie — but at least fans have been given some points to ponder into 2018. And since a sequel to “The Accountant” is reportedly in the works, we can cross our fingers for some kind of Bat signal linking the two universes.

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  • ‘The Accountant 2’ Is Happening & Fans Have Some Groan-Worthy Subtitle Suggestions

    Ben Affleck is in talks to return as “The Accountant,” and excited fans have been so busy adding title suggestions, the sequel is already in the red from pun overages.

    According to Deadline, Warner Bros. is now putting together “The Accountant 2,” with star Affleck, director Gavin O’Connor, screenwriter Bill Dubuque, and producers Lynette Howell Taylor and Mark Williams in talks to return. It’s not clear yet if Jon Bernthal will also return, but Deadline thinks it’s “likely,” once they “work out the beats of the story.”

    The 2016 action drama — which also starred Anna Kendrick, J.K. Simmons, Jeffrey Tambor, Cynthia Addai-Robinson, John Lithgow, and Jean Smart — got mostly positive reviews and made about $155 million worldwide off a reported $44 million budget.

    “The Accountant” is not the most obvious candidate for a sequel, although the story certainly left room for one. Fans seemed pleasantly surprised by the news, on the whole, and went straight to work offering punny reactions:

    Terrible! All of you should be proud ashamed of how perfect awful those are.

    LaineyGossip offered these options as well:

    “The Accountant 2: Red Ledger
    The Accountant 2: Trial Balance
    The Accountant 2: Payable Payback
    Math-Man Returns

    If this movie doesn’t have a ludicrous subtitle, I will be SO disappointed.”

    We’ll have to wait and see what they do decide to go with, assuming things add up well between the script and the actors and the schedules and everything else.

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  • 5 Reasons Why ‘The Accountant’ Shattered Box Office Expectations

    Ben Affleck‘s success aside, it wasn’t a good weekend for the accountants.

    Early projections had Affleck’s new thriller “The Accountant” opening around $15 million, giving it only a slight edge over Kevin Hart‘s latest comedy concert film, “Kevin Hart: What Now?“, predicted to open around $14 million.

    But once the beans were counted, it wasn’t even close. “Accountant” enjoyed a windfall opening estimated at $24.7 million, while “What Now” underperformed with an estimated debut just $16,000 shy of $12 million. (In fact, weekend estimates had it less than $10,000 ahead of last weekend’s winner, “The Girl on the Train,” so it’s possible that final figures released on Monday could push “What Now” into third place, below “Girl.”)

    At least both new films did much better than this weekend’s other wide release debut, “Max Steel,” which couldn’t crack the top 10. The toy-turned-superhero saga, which sat on the shelf for years, debuted in 11th place with an estimated $2.2 million, less than half the already modest $5 million pundits had predicted.

    Still, not even Affleck’s new movie could help the fact that this was the second worst box office weekend of 2016 so far, with total sales failing to crack $95 million. So it’s worth looking at how “Accountant” drove up its numbers in the midst of the current slump. Here, then, are five lessons from this weekend’s box office.

    1. Reviews Matter — to a Point
    Like “Girl,” “Accountant” succeeded despite weak reviews — scoring just 51 percent “Fresh” at Rotten Tomatoes. While both movies are thrillers that cater to adults — who still supposedly care what critics have to say — “Girl” and “Accountant” also suggest that grown-ups will ignore reviews if the movie fills a niche that’s otherwise lacking. “Girl” was a rare psychological thriller centered on a female lead, while “Accountant” is an old-school, shoot-em-up, action-fest. Critics found both films predictable, but their familiar storytelling devices were selling points to escapism-minded viewers.

    If anything, these movies suggest that, even for grown-up audiences, word-of-mouth still matters more than reviews. After all, once paying customers actually saw “Girl,” they gave it a weak B- at CinemaScore, and the movie fell 51 percent in its second weekend. But “Accountant” earned a very good A grade at CinemaScore, and that word-of-mouth helps explain why the movie outdistanced predictions.

    2. Star Power Matters
    Affleck does well in these sort of action thrillers. They’re what audiences expect from him, when he’s not wearing a superhero costume. “The Accountant” bested the “The Town” ($23.8 million) and “Argo” ($19.5 million), while “Gone Girl” opened at $37.5 million. Given how much Affleck is playing to his box office strengths, it’s hard to see why, minus reviews, that predictions for “Accountant” were so low.

    3. Concert Movies Aren’t Box Office Gold
    Hart is also playing to his strengths. The top-earning comedian in America, according to Forbes, Hart is also the only one currently scoring in theaters with the kind of concert specials usually relegated to cable. Even after one weekend, “What Now” has already joined Hart’s first two concert films among the top nine highest-grossing live stand-up films of all time.

    Still, that’s not such a high bar. Hart’s first concert movie, “Kevin Hart: Laugh at My Pain,” grossed just $7.7 million in theaters five years ago. His 2013 movie “Kevin Hart: Let Me Explain,” opened with $10.0 million in 2013, on the way to a $32.2 million total. “What Now” premiered on 2,567 screens, about three times as many as “Let Me Explain,” yet no one expected it to open three times as big. That it opened less than 20 percent higher suggests that there’s a ceiling to how much these concert films can earn. Hart supposedly wanted to challenge Eddie Murphy‘s “Raw,” the highest-grossing comedy concert film ever, which earned $50.5 million way back in 1987.

    As successful as Hart is in selling out arenas, he does a better job selling out the multiplex as a standard leading-man comic actor. His live-action movies routinely open around $30 to $35 million, a range that’s about how much “What Now” is likely to earn over its entire run.

    4. Know Your Audience
    Both “Accountant” and “What Now” are R-rated movies that skewed heavily toward adults. “What Now” is certainly not suitable for kids who enjoyed Hart’s voice role as Snowball in this summer’s smash “The Secret Life of Pets,” and “Accountant” drew an audience that was mostly 25 or older. Nothing wrong with that, especially during the fall season, when kids are in school and studios release prestige movies hoping for Oscar glory.

    Nonetheless, it should be clear from this post-summer slump that marketing to adults alone isn’t going to bring in the bucks. For one thing, the market gets oversaturated, as it is now, with “Accountant” and “What Now” competing for mature viewers against “Girl,” “Deepwater Horizon,” “The Magnificent Seven,” “Sully” — all still jostling for elbow room in the top ten. Not that the current handful of family films (including “Storks” and “Middle School: The Worst Years of My Life“) are doing much better. Tim Burton‘s “Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children,” marketed in part toward’s Burton’s adult fanbase, is succeeding somewhat with family audiences. But there’s nothing in theaters right now with teen appeal.

    5. If You Build it, They Will Come
    This has been one of the most dismal fall seasons in recent memory, largely because there’s been no big hit like “The Martian” or “Gone Girl” to raise the tide for all the other movies currently at the multiplex.

    The thrillers and action movies targeted to adults haven’t been that satisfying, and even the awards hopefuls (most notably, “Birth of a Nation”) haven’t lived up to the hype. Given the choice between some just-okay movies at the theater and baseball playoffs at home, it’s no wonder Hollywood hasn’t been able to lure adults out of their armchairs. It seems like an obvious truism that if the studios would just make movies people wanted to see, they’d go see them. But so far this fall, the distributors simply haven’t done that.

    We may be well into November, with movies like “Doctor Strange,” “Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk,” and “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them,” before there’s enough excitement at the multiplex to end this slump.
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