Tag: the-instigators

  • Doug Liman Is Directing ‘The Stand,’ But Is He The Right Fit?

    (Left) Director Doug Liman attends Apple Original Films’ world premiere of 'The Instigators' at the Jazz at Lincoln Center. 'The Instigators' opens in select theaters on Friday, August 2, 2024, before streaming globally on Apple TV+ on Friday, August 9, 2024. (Right) 1994's 'The Stand'. Photo: ABC Television.
    (Left) Director Doug Liman attends Apple Original Films’ world premiere of ‘The Instigators’ at the Jazz at Lincoln Center. ‘The Instigators’ opens in select theaters on Friday, August 2, 2024, before streaming globally on Apple TV+ on Friday, August 9, 2024. (Right) 1994’s ‘The Stand’. Photo: ABC Television.

    Preview:

    • A new version of Stephen King’s ‘The Stand’ is in development as a feature film, with Doug Liman on board to direct.
    • Liman has directed hits like ‘Mr. and Mrs. Smith’ and flops such as ‘Chaos Walking.’
    • ‘The Stand’ has already been adapted twice as limited series, and it’s not clear how the massive book could be boiled down to a single feature film.

    Stephen King’s massive post-apocalyptic novel ‘The Stand,’ first published in 1978, chronicles an epic battle between the forces of good and evil in an America where most of the population has been wiped out by a deadly virus known as Captain Trips. It remains one of the author’s most popular books; he published an uncut version in 1990 that restores some 300 pages to the text, bringing its length from 823 pages in its original publication to a hefty 1,152.

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    The book has been adapted twice for television, first in 1994 as a four-part, eight-hour (with commercials) miniseries for ABC-TV, and then as a nine-part, nine-hour limited series in 2020 for CBS All Access, the forerunner of the current Paramount+ service. And now director Doug Liman is reportedly teaming with Paramount Pictures to bring ‘The Stand’ to the big screen.

    Although other filmmakers have tried squeezing the novel into a theatrical film (or films), no one has been able to pull it off. And frankly, Liman shouldn’t bother trying either. He’s the wrong director for this and — from what we understand — he’s got the wrong take on the material.

    Related Article: Doug Liman to Bring Stephen King Classic ‘The Stand’ to Movie Theaters

    ‘The Stand’ cannot fit into a feature film format

    (L to R) Jovan Adepo and James Marsden in the CBS All Access series 'The Stand.' Photo: Robert Falconer/CBS ©2020 CBS Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Jovan Adepo and James Marsden in the CBS All Access series ‘The Stand.’ Photo: Robert Falconer/CBS ©2020 CBS Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    ‘The Stand’ is one of Stephen King’s most revered works, not to mention one of the most influential post-apocalyptic novels of the last five decades. King’s book is wide-ranging and complex, full of intersecting narrative threads and dozens of characters, and its sheer size has made it a daunting prospect for a film version from the start. Directors like John Boorman (‘Excalibur’) and George A. Romero (‘Creepshow’) couldn’t pin it to the mat in the 1970s, while the 2010s saw David Yates (the ‘Harry Potter’ franchise), Ben Affleck (‘The Town’), Scott Cooper (‘Black Mass’), and Josh Boone (‘The New Mutants’) all take a crack at it.

    The first adaptation of ‘The Stand,’ the 1994 miniseries starring Gary Sinise, Molly Ringwald, Ruby Dee, Rob Lowe, and others, was a tremendous ratings success for the network. Directed by Mick Garris and adapted by King himself (who also executive produced), the project cost $28 million – a fortune back then for a TV miniseries – and, while hampered in some ways by the format and budget, is considered largely faithful in both tone and narrative to the book.

    The second limited series, produced in 2020, was an outgrowth of Josh Boone’s proposal to adapt the novel as four films. The 2020 series, developed by Boone and Benjamin Cavell (‘The Institute’), also had a good cast – including James Marsden, Amber Heard, Alexander Skarsgård, and Whoopi Goldberg – but was fatally injured by the inexplicable decision to tell the story out of order, ruining the flow of King’s narrative and making the series nearly incomprehensible. ‘The Stand’ is structured like a modern version of an epic quest – joining the quest halfway through and then flashing back to the beginning was a catastrophic mistake.

    Even after the mixed results of the two TV series, one thing seems clear: it’s not possible to boil ‘The Stand’ down to a single film. Scripts for even a three-hour feature – a risky, costly bet to begin with, especially for a movie that would almost certainly be rated R – have existed since the 1970s, and none have been workable. But Doug Liman is going to try, even though he shouldn’t.

    Doug Liman’s ‘The Stand’ is wrong for all kinds of reasons

    Casey Affleck, director Doug Liman and Matt Damon on the set of 'The Instigators'.
    (L to R) Casey Affleck, director Doug Liman and Matt Damon on the set of ‘The Instigators’. Photo: Apple TV+.

    Doug Liman allegedly has “a particular take” on ‘The Stand’ that doesn’t involve making multiple films but would somehow fit into a “one-off” movie. But there is no way that the book, whether it’s 800 pages or 1,100 pages, can be shrunk down into a two-to-three-hour movie without losing a great deal of its essence and texture. Whatever Liman’s “take” is, we fear it would render ‘The Stand’ almost unrecognizable (see the dismal 2017 movie version of King’s other epic, ‘The Dark Tower,’ for proof of that).

    The other aspect of all this is that Liman, who started out directing quirky, crackling indie films like ‘Swingers’ and ‘Go,’ has garnered a very mixed track record with bigger Hollywood productions. While he’s helmed successes like ‘The Bourne Identity’ and ‘Mr. and Mrs. Smith,’ he’s also shepherded debacles like ‘Jumper’ and ‘Chaos Walking’ to the screen. And most of the bigger movies he’s completed – even the well-regarded ones like ‘Bourne’ and the 2014 Tom Cruise action/sci-fi thriller ‘Edge of Tomorrow’ – have been marred by reports of extensive reshoots and reworking in post-production.

    Owen Teague as Harold Lauder in the CBS All Access series 'The Stand.' Photo Cr: Robert Falconer/CBS ©2020 CBS Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    Owen Teague as Harold Lauder in the CBS All Access series ‘The Stand.’ Photo Cr: Robert Falconer/CBS ©2020 CBS Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    The larger the production, the more involved the VFX, the action, and the world-building, Liman seems to lose control of the project, often needing to find the movie he wants to make either through reshoots, re-editing, or both. It’s an expensive, wasteful way to work, and it’s another reason why a complex narrative like ‘The Stand’ might collapse under his supervision.

    Liman is far from untalented – he’s made some fine movies, his methods notwithstanding – but his improvisatory style seems ill-suited to this. And that’s even before the challenge of trying to squeeze it into one film – imagine if Peter Jackson had tried that with ‘The Lord of the Rings.’

    Our hope? That ‘The Stand’ joins films like ‘Gambit’ and ‘Justice League Dark’ as Doug Liman projects that never saw the light of day. If anything, Liman needs to go back to the smaller, spunkier films of his early days where his style of directing works best. In the meantime, let ‘The Stand’ rest. It’s only been five years since the last attempt, and there are plenty of other books out there – by Stephen King and countless others – to adapt.

    (L to R) Whoopi Goldberg in the CBS All Access series 'The Stand.' Photo: Robert Falconer/CBS ©2020 CBS Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Whoopi Goldberg in the CBS All Access series ‘The Stand.’ Photo: Robert Falconer/CBS ©2020 CBS Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Other Stephen King Movies:

    Buy Stephen King Movies On Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘Slingshot’

    (L to R) Casey Affleck and Laurence Fishburne in Bleecker Street's 'Slingshot'. Credit: Bleecker Street.
    (L to R) Casey Affleck and Laurence Fishburne in Bleecker Street’s ‘Slingshot’. Credit: Bleecker Street.

    Opening in theaters on August 30th, ‘Slingshot’ is the latest contender in the already overstuffed genre of science-fiction psycho-thrillers. Largely a three-hander between Casey Affleck, Laurence Fishburne and ‘The BoysTomer Capone, it looks to mess with your head almost as much as it does its protagonist’s.

    Yet while it certainly builds atmosphere, the feeling here is very much that it’s following in the footsteps of other, better movies.

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    Does ‘Slingshot’ get up to speed?

    In space, the old saying goes, no-one can hear you scream. Yet you may find yourself screaming with frustration at ‘Slingshot’, which takes some bold swings in the psycho-thriller genre but ultimately comes up short when compared with classics such as ‘2001’ (admittedly, the new movie doesn’t have quite as such lofty themes on its mind) and is more likely to end up annoying than fascinating.

    A slow-burn start is fairly standard for this sort of movie, dropping hints about the main character’s mental state and background, and filling you in on the backstory before putting the actual mystery into play.

    ‘Slingshot’: Script and Direction

    (L to R) Laurence Fishburne, Casey Affleck, and Tomer Capone in Bleecker Street's 'Slingshot'. Credit: Bleecker Street.
    (L to R) Laurence Fishburne, Casey Affleck, and Tomer Capone in Bleecker Street’s ‘Slingshot’. Credit: Bleecker Street.

    The script for this new movie comes from an interesting duo –– R. Scott Adams (who gets the “written by” credit) has just one other film to his name, 2011 horror ‘Donner Pass’. Nathan Parker, meanwhile (“screenplay by”) has a more expansive resume, including ‘Equals’, TV’s ‘The Underground Railroad’ and perhaps more germane to a space thriller, ‘Moon’.

    But even with plenty of experience, ‘Slingshot’ ultimately comes across as reheated leftovers from other movies –– though it flirts with chewing over big themes such as isolation, the chain of command, paranoia and long-distance relationships –– it doesn’t really do all that much of interest with any of them.

    Neither does it give the cast a lot of interesting beats to play; each moment feeling a little stale and familiar as the situation starts to ratchet up the stress levels for their characters.

    Director Mikael Håfström, meanwhile, also has some solid work in his past; thrillers such as ‘The Rite’, ‘1408’, ‘Outside the Wire’ and ‘Vendetta’ to name just a few. Here, though, while he certainly manages to evoke some paranoia, a lot of what is presented is less than thrilling, from the normal concerns of humans suffering hibernation sickness and the talk of past problems between commanders and officers.

    Related Article: First look at Matt Damon and Casey Affleck in ‘The Instigators’ Pictures

    ‘Slingshot’: Performances

    There are three main performances anchoring this one, though a fourth plays almost as important a part. The cast certainly gives their all, but the characters aren’t always worth the effort.

    Casey Affleck as John

    Casey Affleck in Bleecker Street's 'Slingshot'. Credit: Bleecker Street.
    Casey Affleck in Bleecker Street’s ‘Slingshot’. Credit: Bleecker Street.

    Our focal point for the story is Affleck’s astronaut, and he brings his typical low-key energy to the role. John is a conflicted man, missing the woman he loves even though he’s finally on his lifelong dream to be on a space mission. As the situation and dynamics between the three main crewmembers begins to change, he’s the one person we follow through it all.

    Affleck is sometimes on autopilot here, going through the motions, and if you key into his particular weary charisma, the movie may work better for you.

    Laurence as Captain Franks

    (L to R) Laurence Fishburne and Casey Affleck in Bleecker Street's 'Slingshot'. Credit: Bleecker Street.
    (L to R) Laurence Fishburne and Casey Affleck in Bleecker Street’s ‘Slingshot’. Credit: Bleecker Street.

    Like Affleck, you pretty much know what you’re getting when you hire Fishburne, though he obviously has a much longer cinematic history and has put in some truly great performances. Here, he’s not asked to do too much more than bring his usual charisma to a slightly underwritten, cliched role, the positive commander who is hiding something.

    There’s plenty to enjoy in his work here still.

    Toper Capone as Nash

    Tomer Capone in Bleecker Street's 'Slingshot'. Credit: Bleecker Street.
    Tomer Capone in Bleecker Street’s ‘Slingshot’. Credit: Bleecker Street.

    Capone, who is probably best known for his role as Frenchie on Prime Video’s ‘The Boys’, has the chance to be something more surprising since he’s not quite the well-established performer like his co-stars.

    As Nash, he’s the nervier crew member, convinced that something is going badly wrong with the spaceship and is concerned that they shouldn’t attempt the titular “slingshot” maneuver that will see them using Jupiter’s gravity to speed them on their way to Titan, the moon of Saturn.

    Emily Beecham as Zoe

    (L to R) Emily Beecham and Casey Affleck in Bleecker Street's 'Slingshot'. Credit: Bleecker Street.
    (L to R) Emily Beecham and Casey Affleck in Bleecker Street’s ‘Slingshot’. Credit: Bleecker Street.

    The fourth key member of the cast, Beecham plays the lead of the engineering team that designed the Odyssey-1 ship at the heart of the story. Her tentative, yet passionate relationship with John is also part of the movie’s emotional core, told partly in flashback. She’s perfectly fine in the role, though it mostly subjugates her to being the distant girlfriend.

    Supporting cast

    There are one or two other people who make noticeable impact in the movie –– David Morrissey is the head of the program, who is seen in flashback and also is in contact with the trio via video screens (albeit on delay given the great distance involved). He’s solid in the role, which again is mostly a supporting part.

    Finally, worth mentioning is Nikolett Barabas as the disembodied voice of the ship’s computer, a vocal performance that carries more weight as the film moves on. She adds some gravitas to what is effectively a computerized voice initially making basic announcements.

    ‘Slingshot’: Final Thoughts

    Casey Affleck in Bleecker Street's 'Slingshot'. Credit: Bleecker Street.
    Casey Affleck in Bleecker Street’s ‘Slingshot’. Credit: Bleecker Street.

    Looking to play with perceptions and keep you guessing as to what’s really going on can be tricky, and ‘Slingshot’ –– no spoilers here –– doesn’t always pull off the trick as successfully as it thinks.

    Still, it has enough tense energy to keep it moving until the final act descends into predictable chaos.

    ‘Slingshot’ receives 6.5 out of 10 stars.

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    What is the plot of ‘Slingshot’?

    An astronaut (Casey Affleck) on a possibly fatally endangered mission to Saturn’s moon Titan struggles to keep his grip on reality.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Slingshot’?

    • Casey Affleck as John
    • Laurence Fishburne as Captain Franks
    • Emily Beecham as Zoe
    • Tomer Capone as Nash
    Casey Affleck in Bleecker Street's 'Slingshot'. Credit: Bleecker Street.
    Casey Affleck in Bleecker Street’s ‘Slingshot’. Credit: Bleecker Street.

    List of Laurence Fishburne Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Laurence Fishburne Movies on Amazon

     

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

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

    Preview:

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

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

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

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

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

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

    What’s the story of ‘Wolfs’?

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

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

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

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

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

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

    What about other movies from Apple?

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

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

    So, when will ‘Wolfs’ be on screen?

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

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

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

    Other George Clooney and Brad Pitt Movies:

    Buy George Clooney Movies on Amazon

    Buy Brad Pitt Movies on Amazon

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  • Matt Damon Says He’s Pushing for a ‘Rounders’ Sequel

    Matt Damon in 'Rounders'.
    Matt Damon in ‘Rounders’. Photo: Miramax Films.

    Preview:

    • Matt Damon says the ‘Rounders’ team want to make a sequel to the 1998 cult classic.
    • He mentions having discussed it recently with co-star Edward Norton.
    • Rob Lowe, meanwhile, reports there’s new smoke where a St. Elmo’s Fire sequel might be.

    Matt Damon will be back on our screens next week in ‘The Instigators’, a new Apple TV+ movie about two unlikely partners in a heist.

    But he’s also been thinking about his movie past, and which of them he might re-visit. Turns out, the 1998 cult classic poker drama ‘Rounders’ is ever on his mind. And, if he and the rest of the team behind the movie –– especially writers David Levien and Brian Koppelman –– have their way, we could actually see one.

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    What was the story of ‘Rounders’?

    Matt Damon and Edward Norton in 'Rounders'.
    (L to R) Matt Damon and Edward Norton in ‘Rounders’. Photo: Miramax Films.

    The original movie, which starred Damon, Edward Norton and John Malkovich, explores the underground world of high-stakes poker.

    It follows two friends who need to win at high-stakes poker to quickly pay off a large debt –– and for those who don’t know their poker terminology, a rounder is a person seeking high-stakes card games.

    Matt Damon on the chances of a ‘Rounders’ sequel

    Matt Damon in 'Rounders'.
    Matt Damon in ‘Rounders’. Photo: Miramax Films.

    This is what Damon told the Rich Eisen Show about his hopes for a new movie:

    “The one we’ve been talking about for years, and we’re trying to, and I just saw Edward Norton a few weeks ago, like all of us want to do it is a second ‘Rounders’ movie. So much has happened in the poker world in the last 25 years, it would be fun to catch up with those guys. They had a whole movie ready to go then, but now there’s been a whole another change in the poker world since then, so I haven’t talked to them about what it would be, but I know what they had 10 years ago was fantastic, and I’m sure they could augment and roll with the times and update it to where we are today and make something great.”

    No official word yet, of course, so don’t bet on anything happening immediately, or you hopes could fold.

    Related Article: 40 Best Underrated Movies Worth Another Watch!

    Rob Lowe on a potential ‘St. Elmo’s Fire’ sequel

    Ally Sheedy, Judd Nelson, Emilio Estevez, Demi Moore, Rob Lowe, Mare Winningham and Andrew McCarthy in 'St. Elmo's Fire'.
    (L to R) Ally Sheedy, Judd Nelson, Emilio Estevez, Demi Moore, Rob Lowe, Mare Winningham and Andrew McCarthy in ‘St. Elmo’s Fire’. Photo: Columbia Pictures.

    While we’re all in a sequel state of mind, there is some news –– albeit very tentative at this point as he admits –– from Rob Lowe about a potential sequel to 1985’s ‘St. Elmo’s Fire‘.

    The original film, co-written and directed by Joel Schumacher, also starred Emilio Estevez, Andrew McCarthy, Demi Moore, Judd Nelson, Ally Sheedy, Andie MacDowell and Mare Winningham in the story of recent graduates from Washington, D.C.’s Georgetown University and how they adjusted to adulthood.

    It was one of the classic “Brat Pack” films, and while there have been attempts by Sony in the past to re-visit the story on TV, interest has spiked with the release of McCarthy’s Hulu documentary ‘Brats’ about the titular pack. Sony has reportedly been more actively developing a cinematic return for the characters.

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    Here’s what Lowe told Entertainment Tonight in an interview:

    “We’ve met with the studio, and I have been talking about doing it for about four months. “But it’s very, very, very, very, very early stages. So we will see.”

    So, yes… there is development, but don’t break out the suit jackets, knit sweaters and saxophone just yet.

    Andrew McCarthy, Mare Winningham, Rob Lowe, Judd Nelson, Ally Sheedy, Demi Moore and Emilio Estevez in 'St. Elmo's Fire'.
    (L to R) Andrew McCarthy, Mare Winningham, Rob Lowe, Judd Nelson, Ally Sheedy, Demi Moore and Emilio Estevez in ‘St. Elmo’s Fire’. Photo: Columbia Pictures.

    List of “Brat Pack” Movies:

    Buy ‘St. Elmo’s Fire’ Movie On Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘The Instigators’

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

    In theaters now and streaming on Apple TV+ on August 9 is ‘The Instigators,’ directed by Doug Liman and starring Matt Damon, Casey Affleck, Hong Chau, Michael Stuhlbarg, Alfred Molina, Ving Rhames, Paul Walter Hauser, Toby Jones, and Ron Perlman.

    Related Article: First look at Matt Damon and Casey Affleck in ‘The Instigators’ Pictures

    Initial Thoughts

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

    Doug Liman hasn’t had a good time with his chosen profession in recent years. The director’s last three efforts, ‘Chaos Walking,’ ‘Locked Down,’ and ‘Road House,’ have all ranged somewhere between mediocre and unwatchable, a steep fall for the filmmaker who once brought us ‘Edge of Tomorrow’ and ‘The Bourne Identity.’ His latest outing, the crime caper comedy ‘The Instigators,’ isn’t a great piece of work, but it’s considerably more entertaining that his previous few films even if it runs into its own problems.

    Much of the entertainment value comes from stars Matt Damon and Casey Affleck (the latter of whom also co-wrote the screenplay with fellow Bostonian Chuck Maclean), whose longtime real-life friendship translates easily into an onscreen chemistry even as their characters are mostly at odds with each other. The two leads are backed up by a generously stacked cast, including the likes of Hong Chau, Ron Perlman, Alfred Molina, Michael Stuhlbarg, and others, all of whom are terrific to watch even if some of them get short-changed by the shaggy script. Like Affleck’s character, a cynical ex-con who’s smarter and has a bigger mouth than everyone else in the room, ‘The Instigators’ is fun until it becomes irritating.

    Story and Direction

    Casey Affleck, director Doug Liman and Matt Damon on the set of 'The Instigators'.
    (L to R) Casey Affleck, director Doug Liman and Matt Damon on the set of ‘The Instigators’. Photo: Apple TV+.

    Damon plays Rory, a divorced ex-Marine who has fallen on hard times and is hinting enough at suicide to alarm his therapist, Dr. Rivera (Chau). But before Rory can “cash in his ticket,” as he says, he has one thing left to do: he wants to see his son, but in order to make that happen he needs to settle exactly $32,480 in child support and other payments. And the only way for him to do that is to participate in a heist being orchestrated by lower-tier mob boss Mr. Besegai (Stuhlbarg) and his right-hand man Richie (Molina), who operate out of a local bakery.

    Besegai’s plan is for a small group of thieves to infiltrate the election headquarters of the corrupt Mayor Miccelli (Perlman), whose re-election is all but reassured and who collects a staggering amount of cash “gifts” every election night from stakeholders who want to curry favor with him. The idea is to go in after the election night party is over and stick the place up, grabbing the cash from the mayor and escaping by boat behind the building. In addition to Rory, the crew will consist of Cobby (Affleck) and Scalvo (Jack Harlow), the latter a hot-headed hood who Mr. Besegai puts in charge of the operation.

    Aside from Scalvo being trigger-happy and Rory being utterly inexperienced at crime (plus depressed and none-too-bright), a series of other variables – such as Miccelli losing the election in an upset – turns the plan completely upside-down. This is the best part of ‘The Instigators’: normally a film like this leads up to the big heist in the third act, and even if things go wrong, the crew improvises their way through it. Here the caper goes sideways in the first half-hour, with every carefully laid-out aspect of the plan going completely in the opposite direction.

    Matt Damon, Casey Affleck, Hong Chau and director Doug Liman from Apple Original Films’ “The Instigators” make an appearance at View Boston.
    (L to R) Matt Damon, Casey Affleck, Hong Chau and director Doug Liman from Apple Original Films’ “The Instigators” make an appearance at View Boston. Photo: Marion Curtis / Starpix for Apple Original Films.

    That leaves Rory and an injured Cobby as unlikely partners and fugitives, fleeing the scene with little cash but with a piece of personal property that’s extremely valuable to the bellowing mayor. After its offbeat first third, ‘The Instigators’ becomes more episodic and unbelievable as Rory and Cobby go on the run, evading hitmen and corrupt cops (including one menacing Special Ops officer played by Ving Rhames) through a series of chases, explosions, and narrow escapes — with Dr. Rivera somehow hitching along as a fake hostage.

    The contrivances necessary to get Rivera into and out of the situation, then back in it again later, also lead to some of the most tonally off moments in the movie. One extended, destructive chase sequence finds Rivera dispensing cliched therapeutic bromides to Rory (“Think about the person you want to be,” she offers improbably) as they careen through the streets of Beantown with a dozen police cars in pursuit. Because this is essentially a comedy, the stakes never feel as real as they could – even with compromised cops, seedy lowlife thugs, and political corruption rampant throughout the story, the script and Liman’s freewheeling direction keep this light and all on a surface level, leading to a somewhat tiresome finale.

    The Cast

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

    Even as the air starts to seep out of the script, ‘The Instigators’ (an odd title, since Rory and Cobby don’t instigate anything, but merely react to their changing circumstances) is kept buoyant through its ensemble of sturdy, always reliable players. As mentioned earlier, Damon and Affleck provide most of the appeal here: the way that Damon’s morose straight man and Affleck’s jaded, seen-it-all crook bounce off each other provides most of the movie’s fun. Damon’s Rory has a wounded working-class decency, a guy who’s been pushed to the edge both by his own mistakes and things not in his control who only gradually retakes command of his own destiny as best he can.

    Affleck’s Cobby is the source of most of the movie’s humor, as his disaffected demeanor, rogue-ish charm, and constant barrage of jokes, pokes, and non-sequiturs hide a street-level, quick-on-his-feet intelligence that gets him and Rory both into and out of every scrape. He becomes irritating not just to his targets but to us as well, and we’re kind of onboard when some of those targets tell him to shut the f**k up.

    Hong Chau is always superb even though she has the least plausible material to work with and a character who verges in the edge of “therapist stereotype.” The rest, especially Stuhlbarg, Molina, Toby Jones (as Miccelli’s mild-mannered accountant), and Perlman as his Trumpy, self-serving boss, are all a pleasure to watch even if their characters are paper-thin.

    Final Thoughts

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

    “Paper-thin” is a good way to describe ‘The Instigators’: it all operates on a surface level, never resonating emotionally too much and not quite settling on the right balance of comedy, action, and crime thriller. It will make you laugh – or perhaps chuckle quietly – without building to a real comic crescendo.

    Yet Liman keeps it all moving (only the extended finale drags out a bit), gets us in and out of the story in 90 minutes, and provides ample opportunity to watch Damon and Affleck have some fun. There are far worse ways to spend an hour-and-a-half – including a few that Doug Liman has provided before this.

    ‘The Instigators’ receives 6.5 out of 10 stars.

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    What is the plot of ‘The Instigators’?

    A desperate, depressed dad (Matt Damon) and a cynical, wisecracking ex-con (Casey Affleck) find themselves roped into a brazen robbery that quickly goes sideways, with the unlikely duo soon hunted by hitmen, the police, the corrupt mayor of Boston, and the dad’s very concerned therapist (Hong Chau).

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Instigators’?

    • Matt Damon as Rory
    • Casey Affleck as Cobby
    • Hong Chau as Dr. Donna Rivera
    • Paul Walter Hauser as Booch
    • Michael Stuhlbarg as Mr. Besegai
    • Ving Rhames as Frank Toomey
    • Alfred Molina as Richie Dechico
    • Toby Jones as Alan Flynn
    • Jack Harlow as Scalvo
    • Ron Perlman as Mayor Miccelli
    Matt Damon and Casey Affleck in 'The Instigators'.
    (L to R) Matt Damon and Casey Affleck in ‘The Instigators’. Photo: Apple TV+.

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  • Doug Liman Updates on a Potential ‘Edge of Tomorrow’ Sequel

    Tom Cruise in 'Edge of Tomorrow'.
    Tom Cruise in ‘Edge of Tomorrow’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    Preview:

    • Doug Liman says he and Tom Cruise still discuss an ‘Edge of Tomorrow’ sequel.
    • The 2014 original saw Cruise stuck in a time loop.
    • There has been chatter about a sequel in the past.

    It has been 10 years since director Doug Liman sent Tom Cruise and Emily Blunt up against invading alien forces in time-looping sci-fi thriller ‘Edge of Tomorrow’.

    In the years since the movie arrived to underwhelming box office, it has risen in popularity, and talk of a sequel has popped up from time to time, usually driven by one of the filmmakers.

    And, in an interview with Empire for his new movie ‘The Instigators’, he dropped word that he and Cruise are not giving up hope on a follow-up.

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    What was the story of ‘Edge of Tomorrow’?

    Emily Blunt and Tom Cruise in 'Edge of Tomorrow'.
    (L to R) Emily Blunt and Tom Cruise in ‘Edge of Tomorrow’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    When Earth falls under attack from invincible aliens, no military unit in the world is able to beat them. Major. William Cage (Cruise), a cowardly propaganda officer who has never seen combat, is assigned to a suicide mission.

    Killed within moments, Cage finds himself thrown into a time loop, in which he relives the same brutal fight –– and his death –– over and over again. However, Cage’s fighting skills improve with each encore, bringing him and experienced soldier Rita (Blunt) ever closer to defeating the aliens.

    Related Article: Movie Review: ‘Road House’ 

    Doug Liman on an ‘Edge of Tomorrow’ sequel

    Tom Cruise in 'Edge of Tomorrow'.
    Tom Cruise in ‘Edge of Tomorrow’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    Here’s what Liman said about the potential follow-up:

    “We keep talking about it. We love that world. I don’t know how long Cameron took his Terminators, but at the time if felt like a long time.”

    And according to him, he hopes the movie finds a second life, like some of his other work.

    “Tom and I just actually rewatched it about two months ago, because I hadn’t seen it in 10 years. I was like, ‘Wow, that is a really good movie.’ I haven’t necessarily always had the good fortune of having movies that have huge opening weekends. ‘Bourne Identity’ lost to ‘Scooby-Doo’ on its opening weekend. And ‘Swingers’ came and went from the theaters. What I’ve come to understand is, I’m making movies for the long term. I’m an ego-driven guy, I’d like to get accolades now. But I also recognize that, if I was given the choice, I’ll choose making films that people 50 years from now are still watching.”

    Is an ‘Edge of Tomorrow’ sequel likely?

    Tom Cruise in 'Edge of Tomorrow'.
    Tom Cruise in ‘Edge of Tomorrow’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    Given that the movie did decent if not stellar box office, ($370 million from a $178 million budget), it hasn’t exactly been a priority for Warner Bros.

    Still, according to Christopher McQuarrie, who helped get the script into shooting shape (and who regularly works with Cruise, most notably on the ‘Mission: Impossible’ franchise), an idea exists for the new possible movie.

    This is what McQuarrie told Comicbook.com about that:

    “We had such a cool idea for a sequel. I would have loved to see that come together. It’s just that so many stars have to align. It’s a really tricky one.”

    Emily Blunt in 'Edge of Tomorrow'.
    Emily Blunt in ‘Edge of Tomorrow’. Photo: Warner Bros.

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  • Ben Affleck and Matt Damon Starring in Crime Thriller ‘RIP’

    Ben Affleck and Matt Damon at the 81st Annual Golden Globe Awards, airing live from the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, California on Sunday, January 7, 2024, at 8 PM ET/5 PM PT, on CBS and streaming on Paramount+.
    (L to R) Ben Affleck and Matt Damon at the 81st Annual Golden Globe Awards, airing live from the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, California on Sunday, January 7, 2024, at 8 PM ET/5 PM PT, on CBS and streaming on Paramount+. Photo: Sonja Flemming/CBS ©2024 CBS Broadcasting, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Preview:

    • Matt Damon and Ben Affleck are aboard a new crime thriller.
    • Joe Carnahan will direct the movie, titled ‘RIP’.
    • The project is seeking a distributor.

    It’s not quite such an event these days for Ben Affleck and Matt Damon to work together; after all, their most recent shared effort, ‘Air’ (starring Damon, which Affleck directed and co-starred in), was only released last year.

    And in that time their company, Artists Equity, has produced the likes of documentary ‘The Greatest Love Story Never Told’ for Amazon MGM and historical drama ‘Small Things Like These’, which opened this year’s Berlin Film Festival.

    They had been considering working together again –– on kidnap thriller ‘Animals’, which we reported on here –– but schedules couldn’t be worked out following shooting changes for Affleck on the ‘Accountant’ sequel.

    Now, however, they have found their next joint gig, a crime thriller called ‘RIP’.

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    What’s the story of ‘RIP’?

    Ben Affleck and Matt Damon on HBO's 'Project Greenlight.'
    (L to R) Ben Affleck and Matt Damon on HBO’s ‘Project Greenlight.’

    According to Deadline, the plot details beyond that basic genre description, are being kept quiet.

    The title doesn’t exactly promise sunshine and kittens, and we do know that the movie’s concept was dreamt up by director Joe Carnahan along with Mike McGrale, and Carnahan is looking to start calling the shots in the fall.

    Affleck and Damon’s Artists Equity will produce. Carnahan, of course, has a solid history with crime films, having made the likes of ‘Narc’ and ‘Smokin’ Aces’ (in which Affleck had a role).

    ‘RIP’ is currently without a distributor, but given the star power and director, we’d expect this one to be snapped up quickly. Netflix may pivot from working on ‘Animals’, or Amazon MGM may well step up.

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

    What’s next for Ben Affleck and Matt Damon?

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

    As mentioned earlier, Affleck has reprised the character of Christian Wolff for a sequel to Gavin O’Connor’s 2016 action thriller ‘The Accountant’, which is in post-production now.

    Damon has Apple’s ‘The Instigators’ on the way (which he’s starring in, and producing alongside Affleck), and that will land on Apple TV+ on August 9th, with Doug Liman in the director’s chair.

    He’s also a producer (without Artists Equity this time) on Netflix comedy series ‘Green Beret’s Guide to Surviving the Apocalypse’.

    Beyond those upcoming acting/producing gigs, the pair’s company is also backing projects such as an updated ‘Kiss of the Spider Woman’ and sports drama ‘Unstoppable’.

    Ben Affleck and Matt Damon win Best Original Screenplay for 'Good Will Hunting' during the 70th Academy Awards at the Shrine Auditorium. Photo: Timothy A. Clary/AFP/Getty Images.
    (L to R) Ben Affleck and Matt Damon win Best Original Screenplay for ‘Good Will Hunting’ during the 70th Academy Awards at the Shrine Auditorium. Photo: Timothy A. Clary/AFP/Getty Images.

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  • Matt Damon and Casey Affleck in First ‘The Instigators’ Images

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

    Preview:

    • Matt Damon and Casey Affleck are thieves in the first images from ‘The Instigators’.
    • Doug Liam directed the crime thriller.
    • The movie will land on Apple TV+ on August 9th.

    We might most famously think of ‘Good Will Hunting’ in terms of Matt Damon and Casey Affleck sharing the screen (then alongside the latter’s brother Ben), but they were also both in ‘Oppenheimer’ last year.

    But later in 2024, we’ll see them in meatier roles for a new crime thriller called ‘The Instigators’, in which they play two thieves pulling off a desperate robbery.

    Apple TV+ was quick to snap this one up and has the first images from the movie online.

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    What’s the story of ‘The Instigators’?

    Rory (Damon) and Cobby (Affleck) are reluctant partners: a desperate father and an ex-con thrown together to pull off a robbery of the ill-gained earnings of a corrupt politician. But when the heist goes wrong, the two find themselves engulfed in a whirlwind of chaos, pursued not only by police, but also backwards bureaucrats and vengeful crime bosses.

    Completely out of their depth, they convince Rory’s therapist (Hong Chau) to join their riotous getaway through the city, where they must put aside their differences and work together to evade capture –– or worse.

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

    Who is making ‘The Instigators’?

    Casey Affleck, director Doug Liman and Matt Damon on the set of 'The Instigators'.
    (L to R) Casey Affleck, director Doug Liman and Matt Damon on the set of ‘The Instigators’. Photo: Apple TV+.

    Affleck co-wrote the script with Chuck MacLean, and Doug Liman is in the director’s chair.

    Here’s what Affleck told Entertainment Weekly about his inspirations:

    “The inspiration for this was definitely ‘Midnight Run’ and ‘Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid’. I’ve always wanted to do a buddy action comedy.”

    And for Damon, this was a chance to reunite with his ‘Bourne Identity’ director. This is what he said:

    “I absolutely love working with Doug. I can’t believe it took us 20 years to find something else to do together. Doug is one of the most creatively tenacious people I’ve ever met. He just won’t stop until the movie is as good as it can be, and that is the best possible thing you can feel from a director. I trust him completely.”

    Who else is in ‘The Instigators’?

    The movie also stars Michael Stuhlbarg, Paul Walter Hauser, Ving Rhames, Alfred Molina, Toby Jones, Jack Harlow and Ron Perlman.

    Here’s Affleck on how some of the cast fit in:

    “‘The Instigators’ is about two strangers who are hired for a heist. They become frenemies and then become friends while Jack Harlow yells at us, Paul Walter Hauser insults us, Ving Rhames hunts us, and Hong Chau keeps us alive.”

    When will ‘The Instigators’ land on Apple TV+

    Apple TV+ will start streaming the new movie on August 9th. Hopefully Liman is already aware it’ll be going directly there; we don’t need another ‘Road House’ protest.

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

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