Tag: trust

  • ‘Trust’ Interview: Sophie Turner and Director Carlson Young

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    Opening in theaters on August 22nd is the new thriller ‘Trust’, which was directed by Carlson Young (‘Upgraded’) and stars Sophie Turner (‘Game of Thrones’ and ‘Dark Phoenix’), Rhys Coiro (‘Entourage’), Billy Campbell (‘The Rocketeer’), and Katey Sagal (‘Sons of Anarchy’).

    (Left) Sophie Turner stars in 'Trust'. (Right) 'Trust' director Carlson Young.
    (Left) Sophie Turner stars in ‘Trust’. (Right) ‘Trust’ director Carlson Young.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Sophie Turner and director Carlson Young about their work on ‘Trust’, Turner’s first reaction to the screenplay, her approach to the role, the themes Young wanted to explore with the movie, and the challenges of directing a dog.

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    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interview with Turner and Young.

    Related Article: ‘Game of Thrones’ Sophie Turner in Talks to Be Lara Croft for Prime Video’s ‘Tomb Raider’ Series

    Sophie Turner in 'Trust'. Photo: Republic Pictures (a Paramount Pictures label).
    Sophie Turner in ‘Trust’. Photo: Republic Pictures (a Paramount Pictures label).

    Moviefone: To begin with, Sophie, what was your first reaction to reading the screenplay and what were some of the aspects of your character that you were excited to explore on screen?

    Sophie Turner: I mean, my initial reaction reading the screenplay was like, is there a higher power that has dropped this into my lap? Because it felt like it came at the perfect time in my life to get some anger out, and it was so cathartic. The thing I was so excited to play was, I mean, there are so many elements that she’s so multifaceted, but there’s the motherhood element I was incredibly excited to play, but it was more her journey. I mean, it’s so extensive this arc that she goes on throughout this movie, and I don’t think there’s one emotion that we didn’t explore or one kind of challenge that we didn’t take. Then it was also just the physical aspect of it that I was so excited to play. The fact that I’d never done any sort of thriller in my life. So, that was something that I’d never done before and I was just excited to be vulnerable and bring so much of my own stuff into it. I think that’s what I was the most excited about.

    MF: Carlson, as a director what were the themes you wanted to explore and what did you want to say with this film?

    Carlson Young: I wanted to explore so many things. I wanted to explore how the universe has this way of putting things in front of you and that we will keep colliding with patterns until we change the story. It had this contained survival thriller aspect of it on the surface, but I saw something much deeper. When I met Sophie as a creative partner, it just made sense to me. She had a bravery and a fearlessness and the way that she spoke about the material, I knew that it was a creative kindred spirit, and I could not have made this movie with anyone else. I can say that cosmically.

    Billy Campbell in 'Trust'. Photo: Republic Pictures (a Paramount Pictures label).
    Billy Campbell in ‘Trust’. Photo: Republic Pictures (a Paramount Pictures label).

    MF: Just to follow up, you said that there was something “much deeper” to the screenplay than just a survival thriller. What do you mean by that?

    CY: That there’s a predator through line and it was important for me to take the power away from them, from that narrative, to tell the full story about what it means to be a mother, to accept that responsibility, to accept a child with someone who is a perpetrator of your deepest trauma. Oh, there was a lot and fighting your way through that, and absolutely facing that challenge and being brave and everything kind of working out in the end because of that bravery. You’re rewarded for that bravery in a sense. There’s a freedom that comes.

    MF: Sophie, can you talk about where Lauren is personally, emotionally and mentally when we meet her at the beginning of the movie? What is her mindset when she arrives at the house?

    ST: When she arrives there at this mansion, we’ve all been in that place where I think, or at least I have so many times where you’re so overwhelmed that you are paralyzed, and you genuinely don’t know what to do about it. I think she’s in that stage where she can’t think in a straight line. She can’t think logically. She can’t see the forest for the trees. It is an existential crisis, basically, her coming and arriving at this place. I think in earlier drafts of the scripts, there was mention of, maybe I just want to walk into the woods and let the woods swallow me up. I think there’s a full chance that she was going to that place to go and commit suicide. There’s a chance that she was going there to just get some rest away from the world. But I think she’s almost inside, totally catatonic. It’s not a good place to be in. But also, again, there’s a relief to be there and a relief to be away from all of this. So, it was balancing all those things at once. I think so many times she’s sitting outside watching the trees blow in the wind, and then suddenly, she gets this feeling of, “Oh my God, I’m so overwhelmed I don’t know what to do with my body.” So, you need to go. I think she’s just all over the place, basically.

    Katey Sagal in 'Trust'. Photo: Republic Pictures (a Paramount Pictures label).
    Katey Sagal in ‘Trust’. Photo: Republic Pictures (a Paramount Pictures label).

    MF: Carlson, what is like directing a dog?

    CY: I love Georgie. Let’s talk about the dog. It’s such an element of light, I think, in the face of that existential crisis that she’s going through. There’s a friend just before she steps off the edge. Her name was Penga and she was an incredible performer. She was good and it was a joy to work with her. They say don’t work with kids and dogs. We did have both, and I can report a really good experience with that. She was dialed. She could hit her mark.

    MF: Sophie, did you enjoy working with Penga and can you talk about how Georgie helps save Lauren in more than one way?

    Sophie Turner: You’re so right. Georgie’s like, he grounds her. I think later, when eventually Georgie runs or gets kicked out, literally, then the grounding force becomes her baby, her unborn child. So, it’s nice to have that grounding theme throughout the show and that grounding thing, because otherwise, I don’t know if Lauren would’ve made it out of that room without having that.

    Sophie Turner in 'Trust'. Photo: Republic Pictures (a Paramount Pictures label).
    Sophie Turner in ‘Trust’. Photo: Republic Pictures (a Paramount Pictures label).

    MF: Finally, Sophie, your character is isolated through much of the movie, and it is a physically and mentally demanding role. Can you talk about the challenges of playing this character?

    ST: I mean, to be honest, it wasn’t a challenge. It really fed into the performance. It was all so useful to basically shoot. I mean, I think there were maybe two or three scenes where, maybe more than that, but most of my scenes were on my own. So that isolation, you do feel it and the set was practical. We were in a very small room shooting that, and I’m really breaking the walls and I’m really scratching at the wallpaper and really being covered in these horrible cockroaches. So, because of the practicality of it all, it made it so much easier to step into that world. But again, it’s a challenge for me. I don’t really do that, or I haven’t really done that much physical stuff in my career before this. So, it was something totally new and different and I loved every minute of it.

    Sophie Turner in 'Trust'. Photo: Republic Pictures (a Paramount Pictures label).
    Sophie Turner in ‘Trust’. Photo: Republic Pictures (a Paramount Pictures label).

    What is the plot of ‘Trust’?

    After a scandal, a Hollywood starlet (Sophie Turner) retreats to a remote cabin—but she’s not alone. Betrayed by the man she trusted most; she’s trapped in a brutal game of survival. She can hide, but she can’t run.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Trust’?

    'Trust' opens in theaters on August 22nd. Photo: Republic Pictures (a Paramount Pictures label).
    ‘Trust’ opens in theaters on August 22nd. Photo: Republic Pictures (a Paramount Pictures label).

    List of Sophie Turner Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Trust’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Sophie Turner Movies on Amazon

     

  • Turmoil as Joaquin Phoenix Abruptly Drops Out of Todd Haynes’ New Movie

    Joaquin Phoenix arrives on the red carpet of The 92nd Oscars® at the Dolby® Theatre in Hollywood, CA on Sunday, February 9, 2020. Credit/Provider: Nick Argo / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.
    Joaquin Phoenix arrives on the red carpet of The 92nd Oscars® at the Dolby® Theatre in Hollywood, CA on Sunday, February 9, 2020. Credit/Provider: Nick Argo / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.

    Preview:

    • Joaquin Phoenix has left Todd Haynes’ new movie days before shooting was to start.
    • It’s a romantic drama focused on two men that Phoenix himself developed.
    • The movie likely now won’t get made and the team is angry at the actor.

    Joaquin Phoenix is a man who can be quirky when it comes to his acting performances; some might even describe him as precious about the work. Still, though some filmmakers have expressed frustration with him in the past, he has certainly had some winners, including nabbing an Oscar for ‘Joker’ and other directors who have happily worked with him multiple times.

    We’re not sure that Todd Haynes is about to join that club anytime soon.

    Because recently, Phoenix walked away from Haynes’ new, untitled movie mere days before it was due to start shooting in in Guadalajara, Mexico, leaving the production not just scrambling, but effectively shut down.

    Related Article: Director Todd Phillips Shares Romantic New ‘Joker: Folie à Deux’ Images

    What was the story of the untitled new movie?

    Joaquin Phoenix in director Ari Aster's 'Beau Is Afraid.'
    Joaquin Phoenix in director Ari Aster’s ‘Beau Is Afraid.’

    Only the most basic details emerged about the new movie’s plot, which Haynes and Phoenix worked on alongside ‘Showing Up’ and ‘Night Moves’ writer Jonathan Raymond.

    It was known to focus on an intense romance in the 1930s between Phoenix’s character and a man played by co-star Danny Ramirez, of ‘Top Gun: Maverick’.

    What happened with Joaquin Phoenix on the new Todd Haynes film?

    Director Todd Haynes attends Netflix's 'May December' Los Angeles premiere at Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on November 16, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. Photo by Natasha Campos/Getty Images for Netflix.
    Director Todd Haynes attends Netflix’s ‘May December’ Los Angeles premiere at Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on November 16, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. Photo by Natasha Campos/Getty Images for Netflix.

    No one is saying exactly why Phoenix suddenly got cold feet about the project, a situation which is even more surprising given that Phoenix brought the idea to the director in the first place.

    This what Haynes told IndieWire about the new project while promoting ‘May December’:

    “The whole experience was prompted by Joaquin. It was prompted by his daring, his desire to push through barriers and to really get into the uncomfortable places about this relationship. And yet it felt like a very organic process.”

    So what happens now with the movie? The production team, which includes Christine Vachon and Pamela Koffler’s Killer Films, is focused now on paying those crewmembers who actually did show up in Mexico to start work on the movie. There appears to be no move to recast the main role, which would likely mean finding someone on Phoenix’s level who would want to take on the part.

    For this part, Haynes is reportedly pivoting to focus on directing HBO limited series ‘Trust,’ an adaptation of Hernan Diaz’s novel about upper-class financial ruin in the 20th century, with his ‘Mildred Pierce’ star Kate Winslet in the lead.

    What else has Joaquin Phoenix been unsure about?

    Joaquin Phoenix poses backstage with the Oscar® for Actor In A Leading Role during the live ABC Telecast of The 92nd Oscars® at the Dolby® Theatre in Hollywood, CA on Sunday, February 9, 2020. Credit/Provider: Nick Agro / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.
    Joaquin Phoenix poses backstage with the Oscar® for Actor In A Leading Role during the live ABC Telecast of The 92nd Oscars® at the Dolby® Theatre in Hollywood, CA on Sunday, February 9, 2020. Credit/Provider: Nick Agro / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.

    In the wake of the Haynes movie mess, reports of other issues with the Oscar-winning actor, who has previously said he’s almost always nervous about taking on new roles.

    According to The Hollywood Reporter’s sources, he threatened to retreat from making Ridley Scott’s ‘Napoleon’ unless Paul Thomas Anderson (who steered Phoenix to an Oscar nomination for ‘The Master’) was brought in to work on the script. He did, and the result hit theaters last year.

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    This could well cause bad blood for Phoenix moving forward, but the actor has ‘Joker’ sequel ‘Folie à Deux’ due in October, with a world premiere set for the Venice Film Festival.

    The notoriously press shy actor will have even more reason to dodge questions this time, but if the movie is a success like the 2019 original, that will no doubt mean producers and directors will still want to work with him –– and he already has other jobs either in the can or lined up.

    Joaquin Phoenix in Director Todd Phillips' ‘Joker: Folie à Deux.'
    Joaquin Phoenix in Director Todd Phillips’ ‘Joker: Folie à Deux.’ Photo courtesy of Todd Phillips’ Instagram account.

    List of Joaquin Phoenix Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Joaquin Phoenix Movies on Amazon

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  • Kate Winslet to Star in New Limited Series ‘Trust’

    (Left) Kate Winslet stars in director James Cameron's 'Avatar: The Way of Water.' (Right) Director Todd Haynes attends Netflix's 'May December' Los Angeles premiere at Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on November 16, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. Photo by Natasha Campos/Getty Images for Netflix.
    (Left) Kate Winslet stars in director James Cameron’s ‘Avatar: The Way of Water.’ (Right) Director Todd Haynes attends Netflix’s ‘May December’ Los Angeles premiere at Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on November 16, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. Photo by Natasha Campos/Getty Images for Netflix.

    Preview:

    • Kate Winslet is attached to new HBO limited series ‘Trust’.
    • Todd Haynes will co-write and direct the show.
    • There’s also word of a potential follow-up to Winslet’s ‘Mare of Easttown’.

    In between her big screen gigs, Kate Winslet has become something of a fixture on HBO/Max with the likes of ‘Mare of Easttown’ and this year’s ‘The Regime’.

    According to Variety, she has another in development, called ‘Trust’, and it’ll mark a reunion for the actor with writer/director Todd Haynes, with whom she previously worked on HBO series ‘Mildred Pierce’.

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    What’s the story of Kate Winslet’s new limited series, ‘Trust’?

    Kate Winslet in 'The Regime.'
    Kate Winslet in ‘The Regime.’ Photograph by Miya Mizuno/HBO.

    ‘Trust’ adapts Hernan Diaz’s Pulitzer Prize-winning 2023 novel, which tells its story from multiple, competing perspectives.

    A 1920s Wall Street tycoon amasses a sudden fortune but loses a beloved wife. Decades later, his attempts to control the narrative of his life are undone by a biographer who uncovers the ultimate secrets of the legendary marriage.

    Related Article: Director James Cameron and Kate Winslet Talk ‘Avatar: The Way of Water’

    Who is making ‘Trust’?

    Natalie Portman as Elizabeth, Julianne Moore as Gracie, Todd Haynes (Director) on the set of 'May December.'
    (L to R) Natalie Portman as Elizabeth, Julianne Moore as Gracie, Todd Haynes (Director) on the set of ‘May December.’ Photo: François Duhamel / Courtesy of Netflix.

    Alongside Haynes, ‘Trust’ will feature writing from Jon Raymond, who previously worked on ‘Mildred Pierce’ with the director and Winslet.

    The actor will also be an executive producer on the new show alongside Christine Vachon and Pamela Koffler of Killer Films.

    Haynes plans to direct the series.

    What else is happening with Kate Winslet and HBO?

    Kate Winslet in 'Mare of Easttown'.
    Kate Winslet in ‘Mare of Easttown’. Photo: HBO.

    While making it clear that there is nothing official yet, Winslet has admitted to Variety that discussions are ongoing for a potential follow-up to 2021’s crime drama ‘Mare of Easttown’.

    The series, which followed the story of smalltown Pennsylvania police detective Mare Sheehan (Winslet), who juggles a murder case while dealing with grief and complicated family dynamics.

    Here’s what Winslet said about the current status:

    “We did run to have discussions about a Season 2. But it did feel too soon. While there’s nothing in the works, we are having early discussions about whether it might be time to start thinking of building something. We might be willing to figure out with Mare, years later, picking her up — not on the heels of where she ended, but there have been years for the character that have passed. Who is she now?”

    Executives have said that they’re going to be speaking to Winslet (who was an executive producer) and creator Brad Ingelsby about potential ideas soon, but the actor has yet to commit to anything solid.

    When will ‘Trust’ be on screens?

    There is no information yet on when the new limited series will be on HBO. It already carries ‘Mildred Pierce’ and ‘Mare of Easttown’ available to watch via Max.

    Kate Winslet in 'The Regime.'
    Kate Winslet in ‘The Regime.’ Photograph by Miya Mizuno/HBO.

    Kate Winslet Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Kate Winslet Movies On Amazon

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  • Brendan Fraser Felt ‘Depressed’ & ‘Reclusive’ After Alleged Groping From HFPA Boss

    A new GQ profile addresses the question “What ever happened to Brendan Fraser?”

    The now 49-year-old actor was everywhere in the ’90s and early ’00s — “The Mummy” movies, “George of the Jungle,” “Encino Man,” “Gods and Monsters,” “The Quiet American,” and Best Picture Oscar winner “Crash.” Then his career kind of fell off the face of the earth, or so it seemed.

    Fraser’s new “Trust” and “Condor.”

    In the interview, Fraser addressed an incident he said he didn’t have “the courage to speak up” about previously, “for risk of humiliation, or damage to my career.” It happened in 2003, he told GQ, at a luncheon held by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association (HFPA), the organization that hosts the Golden Globes.

    Here’s that part of the story:

    On Fraser’s way out of the hotel, he was hailed by Philip Berk, a former president of the HFPA. In the midst of a crowded room, Berk reached out to shake Fraser’s hand. Much of what happened next Berk recounted in his memoir and was also reported by Sharon Waxman in The New York Times: He pinched Fraser’s ass—in jest, according to Berk. But Fraser says what Berk did was more than a pinch: “His left hand reaches around, grabs my ass cheek, and one of his fingers touches me in the taint. And he starts moving it around.” Fraser says that in this moment he was overcome with panic and fear.

    Fraser said he was eventually able to remove Berk’s hand but “felt ill.”

    “I felt like a little kid. I felt like there was a ball in my throat. I thought I was going to cry.”

    His reps asked the HFPA for a written apology. Philip Berk acknowledged to GQ that he did write a letter to Fraser, but qualified, “My apology admitted no wrongdoing, the usual ‘If I’ve done anything that upset Mr. Fraser, it was not intended and I apologize.’”

    After what happened, Fraser said:

    “I became depressed. I was blaming myself and I was miserable—because I was saying, ‘This is nothing; this guy reached around and he copped a feel.’ That summer wore on—and I can’t remember what I went on to work on next.” He said it “made me retreat. It made me feel reclusive.”

    He said he even wondered if the HFPA had blacklisted him, adding that he was rarely invited back to the Globes after 2003. Berk disputed that idea: “His career declined through no fault of ours.”

    AT&T AUDIENCE Network 2018 Winter TCAFraser is working with actress Mira Sorvino in the new Audience Network series “Condor,” and he addressed her and others in the #MeToo movement:

    “I know Rose [McGowan], I know Ashley [Judd], I know Mira [Sorvino]—I’ve worked with them. I call them friends in my mind. I haven’t spoken to them in years, but they’re my friends. I watched this wonderful movement, these people with the courage to say what I didn’t have the courage to say. […]

    Am I still frightened? Absolutely. Do I feel like I need to say something? Absolutely. Have I wanted to many, many times? Absolutely. Have I stopped myself? Absolutely.”

    On the phone, he breathes deeply. “And maybe I am over-reacting in terms of what the instance was. I just know what my truth is. And it’s what I just spoke to you.”

    Read his full profile for a lot more.

    So far, Fraser is getting support for his candor — and not just for the part about the HFPA story. Many fans are rooting for him to have a career “renaissance,” on par with Winona Ryder in “Stranger Things.”

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  • FX Sets Premiere Dates For ‘Atlanta,’ ‘The Americans,’ ‘Trust’

    ATLANTA -- �The Big Bang� --  Episode 101 (Airs Tuesday, September 6, 10:00 pm e/p) Pictured: (l-r) Keith Standfield as Darius, Donald Glover as Earnest Marks, Brian Tyree Henry as Alfred Miles. CR: Guy D'Alema/FXFX is booking a return trip to “Atlanta” in March.

    The cable network announced premiere dates for several of its shows, including Season 2 of the Emmy-nominated comedy “Atlanta” and the final season of Emmy-nominated “The Americans.”

    The former returns Thursday, March 1 and has a new title: “Atlanta Robbin’ Season.” Earn (Donald Glover) continues to work the city’s music scene, trying to get cousin Paper Boi’s (Brian Tyree Henry) off the ground.

    The latter will conclude the story of Russian spies (played by Keri Russell and Matthew Rhys) starting Wednesday, March 28. Elizabeth and Philip Jennings find themselves on opposite sides of KGB conflict, all while daughter Paige follows in their spycraft footsteps.

    FX also announced that its new drama, “Trust,” premieres Sunday, March 25. “Trust” tells the story of the 1973 kidnapping of Getty heir John Paul Getty III (also the premise of the recent movie “All the Money in the World”). The cast features Donald Sutherland, Hilary Swank, and Brendan Fraser.

  • Hilary Swank Joins Danny Boyle’s FX Drama ‘Trust’

    Mon Cheri Hosts Barbara Tag 2016“Trust” is counting on a “Million Dollar Baby.”

    Two-time Academy Award winner Hilary Swank is joining the cast of the FX drama “Trust,” created by Danny Boyle. She’ll star opposite Donald Sutherland in the 10-episode limited series set in 1973.

    Swank will play Gail Getty, the mother of John Paul Getty III, heir to the Getty oil fortune, who is kidnapped in Rome by mafia members seeking a multi-million dollar ransom. The Italian police don’t take the kidnapping seriously and his father is in a heroin daze, so it’s up to Gail to get her son back. The only problem is that she’s broke. Sutherland is J. Paul Getty, the family patriarch.

    This marks Swank’s first television series since the ’90s, when she appeared in shows like “Beverly Hills, 90210” and “Leaving LA.” She went on to a successful, acclaimed film career, winning Oscars for “Boys Don’t Cry” and “Million Dollar Baby.”

    “Trust” is slated to premiere in January 2018.