Tag: tom-hanks

  • Matthew Rhys to Star Opposite Tom Hanks in Mister Rogers Biopic

    FX

    Fresh off his leading role on celebrated drama “The Americans,” actor Matthew Rhys is next set to star in a film about one of the most celebrated real-life Americans of all time: Mister Rogers.

    Variety reports that Rhys has landed the co-lead in “You Are My Friend,” a film chronicling the relationship between beloved children’s entertainer Fred Rogers and journalist Tom Junod. Oscar winner Tom Hanks has already been tapped to play Rogers (talk about perfect casting), and now, Emmy nominee Rhys has been enlisted to portray Junod. The actors previously appeared together in 2017’s “The Post.”

    “You Are My Friend” centers around Junod, a writer for Esquire magazine, who’s assigned to pen a profile on Rogers. The cynical journalist initially balks at the task, but ends up forming a friendship with the entertainer, which changes his perspective on life.

    According to Variety, the film is looking to score big with awards season voters, positioning itself with a release date of October 18, 2019. With both Hanks and Rhys on board — as well as celebrated director Marielle Heller (“Diary of a Teenage Girl”) — we don’t think the flick will have any trouble garnering critical acclaim.

    [via: Variety]

  • 9 Things You Never Knew About Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan’s ‘Sleepless in Seattle’

    Romantic comedies like “Sleepless in Seattle” don’t come around so often. The right mix of heart, humor, and chemistry is hard to master. Nora Ephron’s script and two magnetic actors (who barely share any screen time together, yet you feel like they’re deeply connected anyhow) make it a timeless classic of the genre.

    “Sleepless in Seattle” was released 25 years ago on June 25, 1993. Although you probably think you know the movie inside and out, here are a few facts about the iconic Hanks/Ryan gem that will fill you in even more.

    1. “Sleepless in Seattle” was Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan‘s second film together out of four. “Joe Versus the Volcano” came out in 1990 as the first collaboration, “You’ve Got Mail” was released in 1998, and “Ithaca” debuted in 2015.

    2. Julia Roberts turned down the lead role of Annie.

    “I’d been offered ‘Sleepless in Seattle,’ but couldn’t do it. [Meg Ryan] and Tom Hanks are just such a jewel of a fit in that. I guess what they did for that moment in time is sort of what Richard [Gere] and I were doing across town (in the 1990 film Pretty Woman), you know?” Roberts revealed to InStyle in 2014.

    3. Tom Hanks reportedly declined to play the role of Sam Baldwin initially.

    4. He eventually took the part, but later admitted he was “extremely cranky” while filming.

    “Coming and saying, ‘Why does the kid have so many good lines?’ I had made enough movies to get smoked on a couple of occasions, as well as thinking that I was a big shot and ‘My voice must be heard,’” Hanks confessed in Erin Carlson’s book, “I’ll Have What She’s Having: How Nora Ephron’s Three Iconic Films Saved the Romantic Comedy.”5. Nora Ephron’s voice was used for the radio caller “Disappointed in Denver.’

    6. Rita Wilson (Tom Hanks’ wife) auditioned for Rosie O’Donnell’s part, but as it was already taken, Ephron offered her the small — but impactful — role of Suzy.

    7. The scene where Suzy cries about “An Affair to Remember” was the late Nora Ephron’s favorite moment in the film. “I think probably, in that movie, I like it the most [and it] is also the scene that plays the best,” she explained. Ephron felt the moment didn’t move the plot forward, but she knew it could work if the right actress nailed it.

    8. Tom Hanks and Victor Garber ended up improvising their part of the scene. According to Ephron, they took what was around “two lines of dialogue” and improvised their jokingly weepy discussion about “The Dirty Dozen.”

    9. A musical adaptation of the movie premiered in 2013 at The Pasadena Playhouse. The production is headed to London’s West End.

  • 13 Things You Never Knew About ‘Saving Private Ryan’ on Its 20th Anniversary

    13 Things You Never Knew About ‘Saving Private Ryan’ on Its 20th Anniversary

    DreamWorks

    It’s been 20 years since director Steven Spielberg delivered what may well be the greatest WWII movie in “Saving Private Ryan.” Even after two decades, you won’t find a film that better captures the intensity and emotional cost of warfare. And to celebrate this major anniversary, here are some interesting facts you might not know about Spielberg’s wartime opus.

    1. Writer Robert Rodat first conceived the film in 1994, when he was in Pennsylvania and encountered a monument dedicated to the four sons of Agnes Allison, who were killed during the American Civil War.

    2. Most of the main actors were subjected to an intensive boot camp in order to simulate the impact of being a soldier in the Normandy invasion. The lone exception was Matt Damon, as Spielberg specifically wanted the rest of the cast to feel resentment toward the man their characters were fighting so hard to save.

    DreamWorks

    3. Spielberg was particularly adamant about not toning down the film’s violence, even if it wound up earning an NC-17 rating. As a result, the film wound up being banned in Malaysia and narrowly made the cut in India.

    4. “Saving Private Ryan” became the highest-grossing film of 1998 (domestically) despite its R-rating. It would be another 16 years until another R-rated film (“American Sniper“) managed that same feat.

    DreamWorks

    5. Former Marine captain Dale Dye served as Spielberg’s military adviser, and he also had a small role in the film as the colonel near the beginning of the movie who advises General Marshall against sending a rescue party for Private Ryan.

    6. If Ryan’s story about spying on his brother seemed odd and disjointed, that’s because Matt Damon ad-libbed the monologue. Spielberg felt the long, rambling nature of the story suited the character and his unusual position in the war.

    7. The role of Private Ryan was originally offered to Edward Norton, who turned it down in favor of starring in “American History X.” Norton and Hanks wound up competing against one another at the Oscars the following year.

    DreamWorks

    8. Spielberg significantly toned down the color saturation as part of the film’s distinctive visual style. Unfortunately, this caused problems when “Saving Private Ryan” was first broadcast on cable channels, with numerous angry customers calling in to complain about the picture quality.

    9. The late Robin Williams deserves some credit for Damon being cast in the film, as he introduced Damon to Spielberg on the set of “Good Will Hunting.”

    10. The iconic sequence where Private Jackson shoots the German sniper through his own scope was reportedly inspired by a similar incident during the Vietnam War.

    11. Tom Hanks was inducted into the US Army Ranger’s Hall of Fame in 2006, thanks to his performance in this film.

    12. “Saving Private Ryan” took 59 days to shoot, 25 of which were devoted to the Normandy invasion sequence.

    13. All five of the Oscar nominees for Best Picture that year were period pieces, with “Saving Private Ryan” being one of three nominees set during World War II (the other two being “The Thin Red Line” and “Life Is Beautiful“).

  • 11 Things You Never Knew About Tom Hanks’ ‘Big’

    It’s hard to believe that it’s been 30 years since “Big” came along and showed us what happens when a 12-year-old boy becomes an adult overnight. Spoiler alert: Adulthood isn’t all it’s cracked up to be.

    To celebrate this *big* milestone, here are some fun facts you might not know about this beloved comedy.

    1. Thanks to “Big,” Penny Marshall became thew first woman to direct a movie that grossed more than $100 million.
    2. Writer Anne Spielberg originally wrote the screenplay under the assumption that her brother Steven Spielberg would direct and that Harrison Ford would star.

    3. Disappointed to learn than the actual “walking piano” at FAO Schwartz didn’t have enough keys to play “Heart and Soul,” Marshall turned to creator Remo Saraceni to design a new version that had three times as many keys.
    4. Tom Hanks and Robert Loggia managed to perform the walking piano scene entirely on their own, despite the fact that stunt doubles were hired to assist them.

    5. To help Hanks accurately portray a 12-year-old trapped in an adult’s body, Marshall filmed test scenes with actor David Moscow playing the part of the older Josh so that Hanks could then imitate Moscow’s mannerisms in the real scenes.

    6. Moscow had to wear colored contacts in order to help him more closely resemble Hanks. Hanks, for his part, wore oversized shoes in order to better mimic Moscow’s gait.7. Actress Frances Fisher was cast as Billy’s mother, but her scenes were cut from the theatrical release and never surfaced until the extended edition DVD release.

    8. At first, scheduling conflicts prevented Hanks from taking on the role of adult Josh, resulting in Robert De Niro being offered the role instead. However, De Niro’s salary requirement was too high, and eventually Hanks became available.

    9. John Travolta was also considered for the lead role. While Marshall herself was enthusiastic about the choice, 20th Century Fox apparently felt otherwise, given Travolta’s recent string of box office disappointments.

    10. A Hollywood urban legend claims that Marshall filmed an alternate ending where Elizabeth Perkins‘ character, Susan, uses the Zoltar machine to transform herself into a young girl and reunite with Josh. Despite rumors that this ending surfaced on the VHS release in New Zealand, it doesn’t actually exist.11. “Big” was adapted into a Broadway musical in 1996. While it was nominated for five Tony Awards, the show was deemed too costly and closed by the end of the year after 193 performances.

  • ‘Jumanji’ Stays Strong, Topping ’12 Strong,’ ‘Den of Thieves’ With $20 Million

    LOS ANGELES, Jan 21, (Variety.com) – Sony’s “Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle” has won its third weekend box office title with ease, topping newcomers “12 Strong” and “Den of Thieves,” with $20 million at 3,704 North American locations.

    Afghan war drama “12 Strong” took second with $16.5 million at 3,002 sites for Warner Bros. and STXfilms’ “Den of Thieves” followed with $15.3 million from 2,432 venues. Fox’s “The Post” finished fourth with $12 million at 2,851 venues and its fifth weekend of “The Greatest Showman” remained a solid draw in fifth with $11 million at 2,823 screens.

    “Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle” has shown remarkable staying power, declining only 28% this weekend and lifting its 33-day North American total to $317 million — the 61st highest of all time. It’s Sony’s fifth highest domestic grosser of all time, trailing only the first three Spider-Man titles and last summer’s “Spider-Man: Homecoming.”

    “Jumanji” is also singular in winning the box office in its third, fourth and fifth weekends after finishing second in its first two weekends to “Star Wars: The Last Jedi.” “This is an unprecedented and unusual box office trajectory for a wide release blockbuster,” said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst with comScore.

    The action comedy, starring Dwayne Johnson and Kevin Hart, has also kept overall domestic business healthy with the year-to-date total at $730.1 million through Sunday, up 2.1% from a year ago. The weekend’s total hit about $137 million, down 6% from the same frame in 2017 when “Split” opened with $40 million.

    “Another great performance by the seemingly unstoppable ‘Jumanji’ powers the pre-Oscar nominations weekend while bolstered by a pair of solid debuts from ’12 Strong’ and ‘Den of Thieves,’ but this was not enough to beat a tough weekend over weekend comparison to the year ago stellar performance of M. Night Shyamalan’s ‘Split,’” Dergarabedian said.

    “12 Strong,” starring Chris Hemsworth and Michael Shannon, had been tracking in the $14 million to $17 million range. The movie is based Doug Stanton’s 2009 bestseller “Horse Soldiers,” which centers on CIA paramilitary operations officers and U.S. Special Forces sent to fight the Taliban in Afghanistan immediately after the Sept. 11 attacks. Prospects for ongoing business are solid, given its A Cinemascore.

    Production companies for “12 Strong” are Alcon Entertainment, Black Label Media, and Jerry Bruckheimer Films with Nicolai Fuglsig directing. Bruckheimer began developing the film in 2009 while at Disney.

    The R-rated “Den of Thieves,” starring Gerard Butler, O’Shea Jackson Jr., and Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson, finished well above forecasts, which had been in the $9 million range. The film follows the intersecting lives of an elite unit of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department and a successful bank robbery crew as the outlaws plan a seemingly impossible heist on the Federal Reserve Bank in downtown Los Angeles.

    Christian Gudegast is directing from his original screenplay, based on a story by Gudegast and Paul Scheuring, and is produced by Tucker Tooley and Mark Canton, who spent 15 years developing the film. “Den of Thieves” carries a $30 million budget and generated a B+ Cinemascore.

    “It’s incredibly satisfying to have this in theaters and performing so well after all this time,” Tooley told Variety. “STXfilms has done a great job activating social media on this.”

    “The Post” centers on the 1971 legal battle by the Washington Post and New York Times over the publication of the Pentagon Papers and stars Meryl Streep as WaPo publisher Katharine Graham and Tom Hanks as editor Ben Bradlee. It showed respectable staying power with a 37% decline from its first weekend in wide release and has totaled $45.2 million domestically.

    “The Greatest Showman,” starring Hugh Jackman as P.T. Barnum, remained a powerful draw with a remarkable small decline of 12% in its fifth weekend. The domestic total has hit $113.5 million while the international box office is at $118 million.

    Warner Bros.’ second weekend of family comedy “Paddington 2” finished sixth with $8.2 million at 3,702 sites, followed by Lionsgate’s sophomore session of Liam Neeson‘s “The Commuter” with $6.7 million at 2,892 venues. Both titles have reached $25 million in 10 days.

    Disney-Lucasfilm’s sixth weekend of “Star Wars: The Last Jedi” came in eighth with $6.6 million at 2,456 locations for a 38-day total of $604.3 million. It trails “The Avengers” by less than $20 million for the fifth spot on that list.

  • National Board of Review Names ‘The Post’ Best Film of 2017, Gives Tom Hanks and Meryl Streep Top Acting Honors

    The National Board of Review has announced its annual slate of awards honorees, and leading the pack is “The Post.”

    The film, the latest star-studded historical drama from Steven Spielberg, received NBR’s top honor for 2017, with the organization naming it the best film of the year. “The Post” also received accolades for its Hollywood heavyweight stars, Tom Hanks and Meryl Streep, who took home NBR’s best actor and best actress trophies for their roles as Washington Post editor Ben Bradlee and publisher Katharine Graham, respectively.

    As is customary for NBR, the organization also released a list of its top 10 runner-up flicks of the year, which often includes a more eclectic (read: more audience-friendly) lineup than other award groups. That slate featured the latest excellent, pop culture-friendly flick from Edgar Wright; the headline-making horror satire from Jordan Peele (who also took home best directorial debut), and the record-breaking debut of director Greta Gerwig (who nabbed best director).

    Here’s the NBR top 10, in alphabetical order, for 2017:

    Baby Driver
    Call Me By Your Name
    The Disaster Artist
    Downsizing
    Dunkirk
    The Florida Project
    Get Out
    Lady Bird
    Logan
    Phantom Thread

    The full list of winners is below. The National Board of Review will award its prizes during a ceremony in New York City on January 9.

    Best Film: The Post

    Best Director: Greta Gerwig, Lady Bird

    Best Actor: Tom Hanks, The Post

    Best Actress: Meryl Streep, The Post

    Best Supporting Actor: Willem Dafoe, The Florida Project

    Best Supporting Actress: Laurie Metcalf, Lady Bird

    Best Original Screenplay: Paul Thomas Anderson, Phantom Thread

    Best Adapted Screenplay: Scott Neustadter & Michael H. Weber, The Disaster Artist

    Best Animated Feature: Coco

    Breakthrough Performance: Timothée Chalamet, Call Me By Your Name

    Best Directorial Debut: Jordan Peele, Get Out

    Best Foreign Language Film: Foxtrot

    Best Documentary: Jane

    Best Ensemble: Get Out

    Spotlight Award: Wonder Woman, Patty Jenkins and Gal Gadot

    NBR Freedom of Expression Award: First They Killed My Father

    NBR Freedom of Expression Award: Let It Fall: Los Angeles 1982-1992

    Top 10 Independent Films:
    Beatriz at Dinner
    Brigsby Bear
    A Ghost Story
    Lady Macbeth
    Logan Lucky
    Loving Vincent
    Menashe
    Norman: The Moderate Rise and Tragic Fall of a New York Fixer
    Patti Cake$
    Wind River

    Top 5 Foreign Language Films:
    A Fantastic Woman
    Frantz
    Loveless
    Summer 1993
    The Square

    Top 5 Documentaries:
    Abacus: Small Enough to Jail
    Brimstone & Glory
    Eric Clapton: Life in 12 Bars
    Faces Places
    Hell On Earth: The Fall of Syria and the Rise of ISIS

  • Josh Hutcherson: I Farted on Tom Hanks Making ‘The Polar Express’

    The best part is how Tom Hanks reacted.

    “Future Man,” which forced him to get naked. That experience “humbled” him so much, he finally felt ready to share the story of “the most embarrassing moment of my entire life.”

    The “Hunger Games” alum said he never told the story in public before, but the subject came up during his talk on “The Late Late Show With James Corden.” Corden said, this time of year, “The Polar Express” is often playing on TV. Hutcherson, now 25, talked about his experience making the 2004 family film, which included some ill-timed on-set flatulence:

    “It was crazy. That was my first big movie. I was like 9-years-old, and I was working with Robert Zemeckis and Tom Hanks. It was motion capture so we had these dots on our face and these weird wetsuit things. It’s very, very odd experience. It was cool.”

    Until it wasn’t.

    “I was shooting this scene with Tom Hanks, who’s like the father of the world. And we’re shooting this scene where he’s playing the hobo and he’s on top of the train skiing down and I’m nestled under him like, ‘Whoa this is crazy.’ And I farted. I farted in the scene. It happened. I did it. And instead of playing it cool, Tom Hanks was like, ‘Whoa whoa, Oh my God, this kid! What the heck? Oh my God!’ My first big movie? Tom Hanks, Robert Zemeckis? And I just farted in his face — in his crotch!”

    (Well, that gives new meaning to the toot toot of the train engine…)

    Looking back, it’s funny, Hutcherson said, but in that moment he thought his face would sweat blood. James Corden said that level of shame allowed him to put on the prosthetic penis for “Future Man.” So it was a good learning experience all around.

    Watch Hutcherson tell the story:Watch “Future Man” on Hulu. And if you do watch “The Polar Express” this holiday season, try not to let this fart story completely dominate your thoughts.

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  • Steven Spielberg’s ‘The Post’ Trailer (and Stunning Poster) Arrived at the Perfect Time

    FYI, this is the first trio team-up for Steven Spielberg, Meryl Streep, and Tom Hanks.

    “The Post” just dropped its first trailer, with the film hitting select theaters in December in time for Oscars consideration, with a wide release in January. The film focuses on freedom/overreach of the press, government conspiracies and cover-ups, extreme political divides, and concerns about the first woman in charge. It’s set decades ago — and based on what really happened decades ago — but still feels timely as we enter 2018.

    Here’s the full synopsis from 20th Century Fox:

    “Steven Spielberg directs Meryl Streep and Tom Hanks in The Post, a thrilling drama about the unlikely partnership between The Washington Post’s Katharine Graham (Streep), the first female publisher of a major American newspaper, and editor Ben Bradlee (Hanks), as they race to catch up with The New York Times to expose a massive cover-up of government secrets that spanned three decades and four U.S. Presidents. The two must overcome their differences as they risk their careers – and their very freedom – to help bring long-buried truths to light.

    The Post marks the first time Meryl Streep, Tom Hanks and Steven Spielberg have collaborated on a project. In addition to directing, Spielberg produces along with Amy Pascal and Kristie Macosko Krieger. The script was written by Liz Hannah and Josh Singer, and the film features an acclaimed ensemble cast including Alison Brie, Carrie Coon, David Cross, Bruce Greenwood, Tracy Letts, Bob Odenkirk, Sarah Paulson, Jesse Plemons, Matthew Rhys, Michael Stuhlbarg, Bradley Whitford and Zach Woods.”

    Watch the trailer:

    Check out the poster:

    “The Post” will be released in select theaters on December 22, then go wide on January 12, 2018.

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  • Dwayne Johnson & Tom Hanks in 2020? Fans Back ‘SNL’ Ticket ‘To Equality and Beyond!’

    Yeah, it was just a joke during “Saturday Night Live” monologue, but plenty of fans said they would vote for The Rock as president and Tom Hanks as vice president if they ran in 2020. It’s Scorpio and David S. Pumpkins! How can you go wrong?

    (Actually, you know how they could go wrong? If Morgan Freeman, Martin Sheen, and/or Kiefer Sutherland decide to run, since they have more experience as pop culture presidents.)

    The Rock had Alec Baldwin on stage when he discussed his recent consideration of a presidential run. Johnson revealed his running mate would be a fellow SNL five-timer who was very well liked. Baldwin feigned flattery, then shock, when The Rock said his choice was … Tom Hanks!

    Tom Hanks: “I can… not possibly turn this down! I’ll do it. I’m in! Let’s go!”

    The Rock: “Now, in the past, I would have never considered running for president. I didn’t think I was qualified at all, but now I’m actually worried that I’m too qualified.”

    Hanks: “The truth is, America needs us. No one can seem to agree on anything anymore, except for two things…”

    The Rock: “…Pizza and us.”

    Hanks: “I mean, I have been in two movies where the plane crashes, and people are still excited to see me on their flight. […] Together, we would get one hundred percent of the vote. I would get the senior vote because I fought in World War II… in, like, 10 different movies.”

    The Rock: “And of course, I would get the minority vote, because everyone just assumes that I’m, well, whatever they are.”

    The monologue went on for about 7 minutes, with the two saying they were just joking about running for office … and then deciding, maybe they weren’t joking that much?Fans reacted with support for the idea, filling the comments of SNL’s YouTube video with hope that Johnson and Hanks do decide to run in 2020, and adding more campaign backing on Twitter:


    Here’s more from The Rock after SNL, still touting a Johnson/Hanks 2020 campaign:

    The SNL Season 42 finale also marked the final show for SNL cast members Bobby Moynihan, Vanessa Bayer, and Sasheer Zamata.

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  • ‘The Circle’ Director James Ponsoldt on Casting John Boyega and Then Leaving Him in a Corner

    There are few films as keenly of-the-moment as “The Circle.”

    This nifty little cautionary thriller, based on a book by vaulted author Dave Eggers, follows Mae (Emma Watson), a young woman who gets the chance of the lifetime when she’s given a job at a staggering tech behemoth (run, in part, by Tom Hanks, playing a character as charming as he is potentially dangerous). In “The Circle,” ideas that are in the current conversational bloodstream, provocatively channeling our own fears about transparency, privacy, and surveillance are packaged within compelling character work and a familiar suspense framework. Some of the movie plays like the most edge-of-your-seat TED talk you’ve ever watched, other portions are like “Black Mirror,” but with the more absurd elements toned down considerably.

    And you could feel those modern anxieties at the film’s premiere, as part of the Tribeca Film Festival, in New York. Watson and Hanks were there, as was the film’s director, James Ponsoldt, who I got to sit down with the next day in midtown Manhattan. The filmmaker, who some will know from his previous films “The Spectacular Now” and “The End of the Tour,” makes bold leaps forward with this film, which is playful, colorful, and slick. (Cinematographer Matthew Libatique, a frequent confederate of Darren Aronofsky’s, absolutely kills it.)

    It was a refreshingly wide-ranging conversation that covered everything from working with Eggers on the film’s screenplay to being one of the last filmmakers to direct the late, great Bill Paxton, to what his interest levels are in taking over a big Hollywood franchise. As always, Ponsoldt is engaging and forthcoming. He is, like Mae in the film, totally transparent.

    What was it like adapting Dave Eggers with Dave Eggers?

    It was great. “A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius” came out when I was in college. It made a huge impact on me and pretty much everyone I knew; we were all obsessed with the book. I think I’ve read everything of his since. He feels like a cultural commentator who is speaking not only to my generation, but definitely to my generation. When “The Circle” came out, I was excited to read it was a Dave Eggers novel but it felt really different. It was plagued with genre and was a dark satire and Mae was a character who I felt was compelling and frustrating, and I realize my complicated relationship with the character was because I saw some of myself in the character, for better or worse, probably for worse. And the book really haunted me. That’s what I was bringing to it.

    When I first talked to Dave about it he was just great, in as much as his take was, the book is the book, the movie should be the movie, it shouldn’t be blindly adherent. He thinks the best film adaptations of books take the theme but invent and necessarily have to strip away and invent things for the screen. I think a literal adaptation of that book would have had to be a 10-hour miniseries, and perhaps a great one.

    So Dave said that at the outset, but there was a part of me that was wondering. I would be, if I spent years on a novel, [apprehensive] if someone was diving into it and ripping it apart in some cases. But he was just the best. The first draft of it he read and he sent me back a printed out copy with some penciled in notes but was very supportive. And then it became a constant back-and-forth. He had no ego in it at all. He was the first one to say, “What about this?” and “What about that?” The entire time I found it constantly inspiring. He was a great collaborator.

    Now that Tom Hanks has been in two of his adaptations, is he the Tony Stark of the Dave Eggers Cinematic Universe?

    I don’t know! It’s so funny! It’s pretty cool, that relationship. I was at an amazing fundraiser in San Francisco on Monday night, and Tom was the guest of honor. It was raising money for an organization that Dave is part of. Just watching their rapport was like, Yes, I would listen to one of our most celebrated novelists and one of our most celebrated actors talk all night long. That’s pretty cool.

    Was there any fear that you were going to get to it too late? Because the story is very of-the-moment.

    Yeah, for sure! I think any film in the history of films where technology is any part of it, you have that question, because technology changes. So does the movie become moot? I think that’s always a question. I don’t think so. If you just fetishize the gadgets then, yes, that’s potentially a place where you can get into murky water. But if your real concern is issues of privacy and surveillance and overreach and us and the way we relate to technology and our own ego and our desire for privacy and yet our desire to be known and our love of free and new stuff that might come with fine print that we may or may not read, I don’t see those issues going away.

    A few pages into Dave’s book, he says something to the extent of, “The Circle is a company that has subsumed all of its competitors.” It’s five minutes into the future, it’s an alternate now. We went out of our way to make sure all of the tech in the film is either built from the ground up or seriously adapted from other things so you’ll really only see it in the film. Yes, the technology will definitely change but we still watch movies with older cars.

    And there is a little bit of magic to the technology.

    Oh, totally. There’s certainly a sense of humor to the book and hopefully the movie. It is satire and it is ridiculous and I’m not sure, when the book came out, that everybody read it that way. But it does have a sense of humor about it. I don’t think it an overly techno-phobic or Luddite book. I think there’s some belief that if you write something that engages with issues of technology, that you hate technology. That’s like making a movie about fascism and saying that you hate politics. But it’s like, no, you’d argue for good politics and ethnical politicians. But we were trying to tell the story through one person.

    Was it fun going from the wintery desolation of “The End of the Tour” to “The Circle,” which is so sunny and bright and has graphics all over the place?

    Yeah. But they present their own challenges. On one hand, it’s easy to do a naturalism, although “End of the Tour” had a period naturalism that was pretty hard actually because it was 20 years ago. We think we know what 1946 or 1968 looks like, but 1996 is like now but not quite. So a lot of it was just removing, removing, removing. In this case, I think people are used to anything involving technology being dystopian looking — cold and symmetrical and everyone wears white. But that’s not how these companies look and feel, and it doesn’t benefit the story, it makes things a little too binary. These companies are young and fun and idealistic. They can also feel naïve but there is a youthful energy and spirit there, for better or worse. My time at tech campuses, I spent time in giant open floor plans with walls that say, “DISRUPT.” Where you’re like, is this a parody of itself? But it’s easy to be a cynic in that world.

    You bring up cynicism and what’s interesting about Mae is that she never succumbs to cynicism. She’s the same optimist at the end of the movie that she was at the beginning. Was that important for you?

    Yeah, totally. I think Dave’s book is tricky and fun. It’s like a dark fairy tale or adult fable or something. Through Mae’s choices, there are tragic, cataclysmic repercussions, and it doesn’t mean that she doesn’t fundamentally changes her feelings about privacy or what she’s open to or what she sees in the future. Personally, she’s not going to get into government regulation antitrust issues. She’s a believer. She’s a disrupter who, like all of us, believes our position is better than those that came before us. But the truth is her vision for the future could be far worse. She just can’t possibly know. This year alone we’ve seen what disruption means and that can be aided by the Internet and Twitter, with people using it as a platform to affect elections in multiple countries. I’m sure there were people on both sides who believed they were right and the other side was wrong.

    I wanted to ask you about someone who is becoming a regular collaborator: composer Danny Elfman. His score for this movie is amazing, and I don’t know that he’s ever done a score that’s this electronic.

    I don’t know that he has. You go back to Oingo Boingo, there’s a lot of synth stuff there. Danny is amazing. I was a huge fan. I knew who Danny Elfman was before I understood what composers did. “The Simpsons.” There’s definitely a sound. Danny can do anything. But there’s the stuff with Tim Burton and the stuff with Sam Raimi. There’s also the stuff he’s done with David O. Russell and Gus Van Sant. I was excited for “End of the Tour” because, like most of my films, there’s probably about 20 minutes of music. But I was excited to collaborate with him in a way that I hadn’t heard him do before.

    With “The Circle,” it was a movie with a lot of sound, especially when she gets into the world of The Circle. Surprisingly, there’s a lot of human voice that’s been futzed with, or auto-tuned to the point that you can’t recognize it’s a human voice, which was intentional. We talked a lot about electronic music and I’m a huge fan of it. To some people, who are not fans of it, it can sound cold, but for me I’ve never found that. But starting with Kraftwerk and onward there’s so much humanity and wit and warmth to it. We wanted to create a soundscape for Mae that was overwhelming. There’s a lot. In the same way that the camera doesn’t stop moving when she starts working at the Circle, neither does the score.

    Can you talk about working with Beck?

    Yeah. Working with … “My pal Beck,” say that with quotes. The truth is, when you go to some of these places and I went to one of them for research and there was a free Hot Chip concert on a Thursday night. Of course there’s a free Hot Chip concert and yoga and free food. We wanted someone to come in and perform that feels very matter-of-fact, another Tuesday night at The Circle. When his name came up, I had been a huge fan forever but I didn’t think there was any way he’d do it. And then we heard that he thought it’d be really fun. But I still didn’t think it would happen because I just assume things would fall apart. And we got to the day and it was like, He’s really going to be there, huh? And he was there and he was amazing! It’s hard to tell, but the camera swoops down and swirls around him; it’s pretty elaborate. He was great and had incredible dance moves and was spot on. He did it again and again. Then he said, “We probably have another hour, hour and a half in us.” So I was like, “Cool!”

    Did he know your movies or was he a fan of the book or what? Did you ever find out?

    That’s a really good question. Some of the folks involved, like our music supervisor, grew up in L.A., and she had grown up in some of the same circles as Beck. I don’t know what she told him. I assume he read the book because he’s very cultured and he and Dave Eggers know each other. But beyond that I didn’t fish too much. I didn’t want to tempt fate. I was just excited that he was there.

    You dedicate the movie to Bill Paxton and his performance is so great and affecting. Everyone loved him, and he was known as being the nicest guy. What was your experience with him?

    He was the nicest guy. I hadn’t worked with him before, so my only frame of reference was with this film. He had this kind of aw-shucks Texas demeanor, but he was genuinely kind, properly disciplined; he knew how to do his job and was obsessed with getting the details right for his character and framing the character honestly and humanely and not judging the character.

    Like most great actors, he was most concerned with making his fellow actors feel good. And he was also a really good filmmaker. It’s obvious that he understood how a set worked and what everyone’s job was and had a lot of respect for everyone. He was the glue on set with this animating energy. He is someone who would text me and say, “Turn on TCM, there’s a really obscure noir you need to watch.” I knew him through the lens of that experience.

    Everyone loved him and he seemed to genuinely love everybody. I feel bad, first and foremost, for his family, but it feels like a bummer for everybody — his family, his fans. He should have been here for decades to come.

    Your take on casting is really interesting. Because when I found out Bill Paxton was in the movie I assumed he was one of the Three Wise Men. Can you talk about your approach to casting?

    With the Three Wise Men, my first frame of reference was Dave’s book. So I checked there; I was thinking about people in the real world although they’re fictional characters. It’s like, “Who would have been a hacker programmer in real life?” What do those images look like? And have they been influenced by other movies I’ve seen? What do people who actually run multimillion-dollar companies look like? How do they talk? What’s their background? Are they villainous like I think they’d be? Probably not. It was a lot of those things. In the case of Tom Hanks’s character, what are the aspects of a charismatic person who really believes what he believes? Really wants to democratize the world but that being said is making billions of dollars for the company, which muddies up the intentions.

    Bill’s character was hard because it’s tricky to portray someone with a chronic illness. That’s part of the dynamic of Mae’s family, it’s part of the drama, part of the anxiety, and one of the aspects of The Circle, which is that they have an amazing health care and can treat a member of her family with a preexisting condition. You need an actor like Bill Paxton to get that character spot-on.

    Was it hard casting an actor as charismatic as John Boyega and leaving him in the back of the room for most of his scenes?

    Well, it’s Emma’s movie, right? She’s in every scene. But one is really fortunate to get amazing actors to play those other roles. I’m someone who would make a movie with that actor or actress and have them in every scene. I can’t wait to make a movie that’s John Boyega in every scene or Karen Gillan in every scene. That would be really thrilling. John’s amazing, and you see Tom doing it as well. Tom has had no problem starring in movies but they also have no problem serving the story and being a supporting role. I had loved John in “Attack the Block” and met with him and found him to be so intense in the best way. He was charismatic, intense, and focused. So I was thrilled that he was going to do it, because his life was going to change very soon.

    As a filmgoer, I’m always excited when actors who are typically stars play a very different version that what they’re known for or play a supporting role. Part of having a vibrant career is making those decisions.

    You’re of the age/resume of filmmakers who are having big projects thrown their way. Has that happened to you? Does any of that stuff interest you?

    You know. Yes, they have offered things to me. But it depends. For me, I like ideas that aren’t beholden to massive corporate interests. I could imagine making a movie that’s an absolute no-budget movie or a movie with a pretty big budget. But something that is just part two or three or four or five doesn’t necessarily sound as exciting to me.

    I am writing something for Disney, but it’s an original idea that, if I’m lucky enough to make it, will be a much bigger budget than what I’m used to. So there will be those pressures. But I’m excited to build that world. I have tremendous respect for those filmmakers, some of whom are friends of mine, who step into a franchise where there’s a lot of love for the graphic novel or whatever it is it’s based on. It’s a different type of pressure. It’s nice to build your own little universe and go on and build another one.

    “The Circle” is out today everywhere.