Tag: @tv2014dl

  • What Those ‘Final Four Words’ Really Mean for ‘Gilmore Girls’

    gilmore girls, a year in the life, final four words, last four words, netflix, ending, fallWARNING: This post contains MAJOR SPOILERS for “Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life,” and reveals the infamous “final four words.” Do not read on if you have not watched and do not want to be spoiled.

    If you’re a “Gilmore Girls” obsessive, you probably spent the day after Thanksgiving enjoying your leftovers with a hefty helping of binge-watching, too, devouring the four installments of Netflix revival series “Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life.” It was wonderful and a bit surreal to suddenly be back in Stars Hollow, picking up with Lorelai, Rory, and Emily nine years after the original show signed off, and finding out just where life had taken them in the time since we last saw them on our television screens.

    With any revival of a long-dormant, much-beloved series, there are bound to be things that both delight and disappoint viewers in equal measure, and “A Year in the Life” was chock full of that dichotomy. Seeing Rory and Lorelai banter about coffee and pop culture again was great; seeing Rory cheat on her boyfriend with an engaged Logan, not so much. Discovering that Emily was born to be a museum docent (and swear up a storm in front of her buttoned-up DAR pals) may have been the best thing about the revival; finding out that Paris and Doyle are getting divorced, or that Lane had almost no lines at all, made us pretty sad.

    But the biggest — and most divisive — plot line was saved for the very end of the series, with the last scene in “Fall” finally delivering the long-anticipated, much-hyped, now-legendary “final four words,” with which “Gilmore” creator Amy Sherman-Palladino intended to end the original series before departing amid a contract dispute ahead of season seven. Here they are, as delivered by Rory (Alexis Bledel) and Lorelai (Lauren Graham):

    Rory: Mom?

    Lorelai: Yeah?

    Rory: I’m pregnant.

    That shocking mother-daughter exchange raises some major questions not only for the characters themselves, but the future of “Gilmore Girls” going forward. Let’s break down the biggest talking points:

    Who’s the father?

    The answer to this one seems pretty straightforward, since Rory was consistently sleeping with Logan (Matt Czuchry) throughout “Winter,” “Spring,” “Summer,” and “Fall,” and only finally broke up with him for good a few weeks before making her big announcement at the end of “Fall.” And her pregnancy sheds some new light on an earlier scene with her father, Christopher (David Sutcliffe), in which Rory asks if he regretted letting Lorelai raise Rory on her own, indicating she’s debating whether or not she wants to involve Logan at all in her pregnancy and the baby’s life.

    Still, there are some who wonder if perhaps Rory’s sad sack boyfriend Paul is the father (a possibility we’re ruling out, since Rory never had time to see him, let alone sleep with — or break up with — him throughout the revival), or maybe that Wookiee she slept with while reporting her lines story (a timeline that just doesn’t work out, based on the season of her pregnancy announcement). The most popular dueling theory is that Rory could be serving as a surrogate for Lorelai and Luke, using Paris’s services to give her mom and new step-dad a baby. Judging by the surprise on Lorelai’s face, though, and the urgency in Rory’s voice when she broke the news to her mother, it certainly doesn’t seem like a likely scenario (or that this pregnancy was planned). Logan is almost definitely the daddy.

    What would have happened if the words were actually used when Amy Sherman-Palladino intended?

    As noted above, much has been made about Sherman-Palladino having intended to use these words to end the show’s original run. But if she had stayed on through season seven (the show’s last before getting canceled by The CW), would it have made sense for Rory to get pregnant then? After all, she would have just graduated from Yale and been only 22 at the time. Would Logan have been the father? And would they have still been together, rather than breaking up after a rejected marriage proposal? A pregnancy would have made things a bit tricky for the aspiring journalist, fresh out of college and just beginning her career. Then again, at 22, and with a prestigious degree under her belt, Rory had many more options (and a lot more emotional and financial support) available to her than her mom did when she got pregnant at 16.

    As part of her contract dispute that prompted her exit, Sherman-Palladino had wanted an eighth season to wrap up the story; perhaps she would have used those extra episodes to skip ahead into the future a bit, setting Rory up for a slightly easier time as a single mom. We’ll never know, but it’s certainly an intriguing aspect of the reveal to ponder.

    Does this mean the show will continue? And should it?

    Not even Sherman-Palladino knows yet whether or not we’ll get another season of “A Year in the Life,” and honestly, we’re not sure whether or not we want one. On the one hand, of course, seeing more from Stars Hollow — and getting some more resolution to Rory’s story line — is certainly a welcome prospect. On the other, Rory’s revelation is truly a full-circle moment, a Gilmore girl potentially giving life to another Gilmore girl, and following in her mother’s footsteps. (Not to mention the finality of Lorelai and Emily’s story lines, with each of them seeming to come to terms with where they are in life, and finding personal peace.) And not for nothing, but it was always ASP’s intention to have things end this way, finally and definitively.

    But excitement for the revival was ridiculously high, and while the notoriously secretive Netflix probably won’t be divulging viewing numbers, we feel confident that rabid “Gilmore” fans watched the new episodes in droves. It would be a no-brainer, then, for the streaming service to order up another installment of “A Year in the Life.” Sherman-Palladino has hedged her bets a bit, telling The Hollywood Reporter that she wants to see how the revival performs before thinking about making more.

    “We really had a very specific journey in our minds and we fulfilled the journey. So to us, this is the piece that we wanted to do. And the whole thought about, is there more, is there more, is there more — this has to go out into the universe now,” she told THR. “And then whatever happens, happens.”

    Actress Kelly Bishop, who plays Emily, told the trade that wherever Sherman-Palladino led, she would follow (meaning she’d definitely do more episodes), while Scott Patterson, who plays Luke, said that he’d be willing to sign up to do additional installments every year or two. But even Patterson admitted that there was some finality to the end of “Fall.”

    “It was really rewarding and people got a sense that if this was going to be the last thing, that we now have some closure,” the actor told THR.

    Setting the final four words aside, there are still plenty of questions and plot holes that we’d like to see addressed should “A Year in the Life” get another order. A.V. Club critic Myles McNutt has suggested that there be more focus put on the supporting “Gilmore” characters (we’re most interested in actually catching up with Lane, and perhaps seeing Paris and Doyle reunite). And that final look that Jess (Milo Ventimiglia) gave Rory in “Fall” indicates that he’s still carrying a torch for her, setting up a future season in which they finally give their relationship another try as adults. (A popular fan theory is that Logan is Rory’s Christopher, while Jess is her Luke.)

    The jury is still out, though your personal opinion on the matter may depend most heavily on your answer to the next question.

    Was the ending even good?

    This will probably be the biggest debate among “Gilmore” fans, and we don’t see the discussion over it ending anytime soon. For some, it makes perfect sense (see the full circle argument above). For others, it seemed like a cheap (and some say predictable) twist. It’s hard to judge “A Year in the Life” on its own merits without factoring in the final four words — they really do color much of the revival differently once you know them — but we’d say that overall, we’re certainly happy that it exists. (Again, the greatness of Emily’s DAR rant can’t be understated.) And no matter what you think about that last bit of dialogue, it’s gotten us obsessing over “Gilmore Girls” all over again, after so many years without our beloved show. We’ll raise a steaming mug of coffee to that any day.

    Photo credit: Saeed Adyani/Netflix

  • ‘Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life’: 7 Things You Need to Know

    GILMORE GIRLS: A YEAR IN THE LIFEAt long last, the premiere of Gilmore Girls” revival series, “Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life,” is finally upon us, and with it, the return of our beloved Lorelai, Rory, Emily, Luke, Sookie, Paris, and the rest of the town of Stars Hollow.

    The four-part series — divided into season-specific episodes titled “Winter,” “Spring,” “Summer,” and “Fall” — picks up about nine years after the Season 7 finale, and finds our characters in markedly different stages of their lives, a little older but not necessarily much wiser, and still striving to figure themselves out.

    The season theme indicates there will be plenty of change, and we can’t wait to see what “Gilmore Girls” creator Amy Sherman-Palladino has in store for our titular girls. Read on for the key things to watch out for when “Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life” debuts on November 25.

    Gilmore Girls1. Lorelai and Luke are still together — but in a rut

    The first full-length trailer for “Gilmore: Girls: A Year in the Life” was a bit ominous about Luke and Lorelai’s relationship, with Lorelai trying to convince herself out loud that she and Luke — who still haven’t gotten married — are truly happy. Lorelai also admits that she feels a bit lost, and doesn’t really know what she wants out of life. Does this mean that she and Luke are on the verge of a(nother) breakup? From the promotional photos to the short clips we’ve seen so far, they certainly look like a content, comfortable couple. Only time will tell if they remain that way for the rest of the revival — and whether or not that’s a good thing.

    gilmore girls, a year in the life2. Rory’s journalism career isn’t going well

    Rory’s dream of being a professional journalist seemed to be off to a great start when Season 7 ended, with the former Yale Daily News editor landing a job covering Barack Obama’s presidential campaign straight out of college. But whatever success that that brought her appears to have been short-lived, with the official Netflix synopsis for “Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life” noting that she’s living in New York, but her career has stalled. In the trailer, she tries to put a positive spin on her rootless existence, but seems more than a little wistful about what could have been, lamenting to Jess, “I could have been a contender.” Early promo photos show that she winds up back at Chilton, but what she’s doing there is so far unclear (is she just visiting as an alumna, or is she a teacher now?).

    gilmore girls, a year in the life3. Emily is rebuilding her life after Richard’s death

    The death of Richard Gilmore was written into the show to reflect the real-life passing of actor Edward Herrmann, who died in 2014. The storyline is bound to be an emotional one, and it hits every Gilmore woman hard, but particularly Emily, whose entire life revolved around her husband. After Richard’s previous health scares during the original series’ run, she confided to Lorelai that she didn’t know who she was if she wasn’t Richard Gilmore’s wife. Now, she has to figure that out. The trailer makes light of this to a certain extent, depicting Emily decluttering her life (while wearing jeans — a truly revolutionary fashion choice for a woman who typically wouldn’t be caught dead in anything other than Chanel), though there are some more somber moments, too, that reflect her overwhelming grief. Expect that dichotomy to play a major role in her journey.

    gilmore girls, a year in the life4. All of Rory’s boyfriends are back

    Rory’s three old boyfriends — Dean (Jared Padalecki), Jess (Milo Ventimiglia), and Logan (Matt Czuchry) — will all appear in at least one episode each of the revival, though it seems fair to say that they won’t all play equal roles. Who, if anyone, will Rory wind up with? Based on what we’ve seen so far, all signs currently point to Jess, the only former paramour who has dialogue in the trailer, has appeared in a separate teaser, and has been featured in a promotional photo. That could be deliberate misdirection, though, and with lots of new characters in the mix, Rory could end up someone completely different — or even, perhaps most fittingly, no one at all.

    gilmore girls, a year in the life5. Stars Hollow is as quirky as ever

    Just about every resident of Stars Hollow will be returning for the revival, including Lane (still rocking out as a drummer), Taylor (still leading ridiculous town meetings), Kirk (as weird as ever, and attending Friday night dinner for some reason), Miss Patty and Babette (who are spearheading a musical about the town), and Michel (just as snarky and withering as you remember). Expect many, many more familiar faces in addition to those, and all the small town shenanigans that go with them.

    gilmore girls, a year in the life6. Sookie is back!

    After a lot of back and forth between actress Melissa McCarthy and “Gilmore Girls” creator Amy Sherman-Palladino, the pair finally worked out a deal for McCarthy to reprise her role as Lorelai’s BFF and co-owner of the Dragonfly. Because of McCarthy’s insanely busy schedule, it will only be a small cameo, but still, a little Sookie is better than no Sookie at all. And it should come as no surprise that the lovable, accident-prone chef is still her same quirky self, as her brief appearance in the trailer teased.

    gilmore girls, a year in the life7. Those final four words will be satisfying — but also controversial

    “Gilmore Girls” fans have waited almost a decade to hear the famed final four words with which Sherman-Palladino originally intended to end the series, which were abandoned when she left amid a contract dispute ahead of Season 7. The creator has teased that those mysterious words — which are spoken in dialogue, most likely between Lorelai and Rory — are the perfect punctuation mark to the revival, and stars Lauren Graham and Milo Ventimiglia have both stated that they’re a lovely, fitting end to the show. Actor Matt Czuchry, however, recently told Entertainment Weekly that he believes they’ll spark a “heated debate” among the show’s loyal fans — and after nearly a decade of build-up, he’s probably correct. Whatever they are, we’re still excited to hear them, though it’s possible that they may not be the last words the Gilmore girls ever speak.

    “Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life” premieres November 25 on Netflix.

  • Which TV Family Should You Spend Thanksgiving With? [QUIZ]

    Which fictional family should you break bread with this Thanksgiving? Take our handy quiz and find out the TV household that best suits your Turkey Day needs.

  • 10 ‘Gilmore Girls’ Characters You Need to Revisit Before Watching ‘A Year in the Life’

    gilmore girls, a year in the life

    The residents of Stars Hollow aren’t done with you yet.

    On May 15, 2007, “Gilmore Girls” fans thought they’d seen the last of Lorelai, Rory, Emily, and the rest of Stars Hollow when the series signed off after seven seasons. Now that Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life,” which hits the streaming service on November 25, we’ll finally get to see the continuing adventures of our beloved Gilmores and their quirky friends and family. Here, we’ve provided a refresher course with a brief breakdown of the major returning characters, and where we left off with them at the end of the show’s original run.

    Lorelai Gilmore (Lauren Graham)Lauren Graham as Lorelai Gilmore in GILMORE GIRLS: A YEAR IN THE LIFEWhen we last saw Lorelai Gilmore, she was bidding farewell to Rory, who was off to start her journalism career. As she grappled with the thought of going months without seeing her daughter, Lorelai decided to extend an olive branch to her parents, and continue the Friday night dinner tradition in Rory’s absence. With business booming at the Dragonfly (hello, celebrity guest Christiane Amanpour), Lorelai was in a great place professionally. And after her “I Will Always Love You” serenade, she and Luke officially rekindled their relationship with a big, romantic kiss.

    Rory Gilmore (Alexis Bledel)Alexis Bledel as Rory Gilmore in GILMORE GIRLS: A YEAR IN THE LIFEAfter some false starts (and fresh off a painful breakup with Logan), Rory finally landed her first post-college journalism job, covering then-Senator Barack Obama’s burgeoning presidential campaign for an online magazine. The gig required her to crisscross the country — and leave her mom and Stars Hollow behind on only a few days’ notice. The town came together to throw her a surprise going away party, complete with heartfelt tributes from all of the colorful characters fans had come to know and love over the years. She and Lorelai ended the series (for the time being, anyway) the way it began: Laughing over a cup of coffee at Luke’s.

    Emily Gilmore (Kelly Bishop)Kelly Bishop as Emily Gilmore in GILMORE GIRLS: A YEAR IN THE LIFETo say that Emily and Lorelai didn’t have the greatest relationship throughout the series is an understatement, but the Season 7 finale saw the Gilmore women at a sort of peace with each other. Though Emily was still nagging Lorelai about making changes to the inn (she and Richard thought Lorelai should add a Dragonfly Spa), she seemed pleased that Lorelai wanted to continue Friday night dinners. And though she wasn’t the one to say it, Richard told Lorelai he was proud of her — a sentiment we’re sure Emily shared, even if she’d never tell Lorelai herself.

    Luke Danes (Scott Patterson)Scott Patterson as Luke in GILMORE GIRLS: A YEAR IN THE LIFEThe gruff diner proprietor wasn’t the best at expressing his feelings, but throwing together a last-minute surprise going away party for Rory said a lot: How much he cared about Rory, but more importantly, how much he still cared about Lorelai. His over-the-top efforts to make sure the party still happened despite the rainy forecast (including stitching together — by hand! — a giant tent to cover the town square) were beyond sweet, as was his declaration to Lorelai that he just wanted to see her happy (which led to their passionate kiss). And he opened the diner early so the girls could have one final goodbye breakfast together, proving that he understands the importance of mother-daughter bonding (and coffee — so much coffee). Luke also ended the series with joint custody of his daughter, though the less said about April, the better.

    Sookie St. James (Melissa McCarthy)Melissa McCarthy as Sookie St. James in GILMORE GIRLS: A YEAR IN THE LIFEQuirky chef Sookie St. James was also enjoying the success of the Dragonfly, and still (adorably) squabbling with her husband, Jackson. Earlier in season seven, Sookie discovered she was pregnant for the third time, the result of Jackson hiding the fact that he didn’t get a vasectomy as promised after their second child was born. Despite that breach of trust, their marriage was still going strong at the end of the series, as was Sookie’s desire to see Luke and Lorelai reunited. She worked with the diner owner to help stage Rory’s surprise party, and in one final bit of successful matchmaking, gently coaxed him into thinking about how Lorelai would respond to the thoughtful gesture – and later spilled the beans to Lorelai that it was Luke who spearheaded the effort.

    Lane Kim (Keiko Agena)Emily Kuroda, Keiko Agena, Alexis Bledel in GILMORE GIRLS: A YEAR IN THE LIFEMany fans were disappointed by Lane’s Season 7 storyline, which saw the young newlywed suddenly saddled with twin boys after getting unexpectedly pregnant on her honeymoon with Zack. The overwhelmed new mom was initially planning on going on tour with her husband, who was offered a lead guitarist gig by another band, but ultimately bailed when she realized caring for two newborns on a tour bus would be impossible without constant help. While she seemed at peace with her decision, we couldn’t help but feel a bit sad for the formerly rebellious Lane, and hope she gets to live out her rock’n’roll dreams when “A Year in the Life” debuts.

    Paris Geller (Liza Weil)Alexis Bledel, Liza Weil, Darkin Matthews in GILMORE GIRLS: A YEAR IN THE LIFEThe ruthless work ethic of Rory’s high school frenemy turned college roommate paid off at the end of Season 7, when she had her pick of prestigious post-grad options. While deciding between attending law school or med school, Paris ultimately landed on the latter, and enrolled in Harvard Medical School. (It helped that she already knew several of her fellow incoming classmates, having sized them up — and deemed them weak competition — during pre-med courses in their undergrad years at Yale.) And Paris found her true match in Doyle, whose devotion to her was one of the sweetest developments of the show’s later years. He took a cue from Carole King’s theme song, and promised that wherever Paris led, he would follow.

    Logan Huntzberger (Matt Czuchry)Matt Czuchry as Logan Logan Huntzberger in GILMORE GIRLSThe Huntzberger scion was on a bit of a professional rollercoaster in Season 7, when his once successful business dealings failed in epic fashion, leaving him completely broke and embroiled in a lawsuit. Despite that setback — and a brief return to his hard-partying ways — Logan eventually rebounded and decided to cut ties from his father for good, seeking a job at a startup in San Francisco. He wanted Rory to come with him to the west coast, and proposed to her; after thinking it over, Rory decided she wasn’t ready for marriage, and turned him down. She suggested that they try long distance again, but Logan didn’t want to continue their relationship without taking a step forward, and the pair broke up.

    Jess Mariano (Milo Ventimiglia)Milo Ventimiglia, Scott Patterson in GILMORE GIRLS: A YEAR IN THE LIFEAfter his departure at the end of Season 3, Jess only pops up a handful of times throughout the rest of the series. But Luke’s nephew really grows up in that time period, finally admitting he’s in love with Rory (even if he doesn’t do it in the best way), helping found a small publishing company in Philadelphia, writing a short novel, and, finally, thanking Luke for everything (and giving him a check to pay back his kindness). When Jess meets up with Rory again early in Season 6, during her separation from Lorelai and her hiatus from Yale, he attributes his success to her, and helps her to realize she’s on the wrong path. Our last glimpse of him came later in Season 6, during a rough patch in Logan and Rory’s relationship. Rory visits Jess in Philadelphia, where they share a brief kiss before Rory admits she’s still dating Logan. Jess is initially upset, but they end things on good terms.

    Dean Forester (Jared Padalecki)Jared Padalecki as Dean Forest in GILMORE GIRLSThings didn’t end well with Rory’s first boyfriend, with Dean ultimately dumping her three times over the course of the series. The pair rekindled their failed high school romance at the end of Season 4, when a married Dean cheated on his wife by sleeping with Rory. Lindsay eventually discovers the transgression and kicks him out, and he and Rory begin dating again, though the relationship is short-lived. They have trouble coordinating their schedules with Rory living at school and Dean working several jobs, and then Dean abruptly breaks up with Rory at a party at her grandparents’ house, citing the fact that he’ll never fit into her world. His last appearance in the series comes late in Season 5, when a bitter Dean tells Luke that Lorelai will never be satisfied with him, because the Gilmores want more than Stars Hollow — and they — have to offer.

    “Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life” premieres November 25 on Netflix.

  • What’s New on TV, Netflix, Digital, and DVD/Blu-ray This Week: Nov. 21-27

    At a loss for what to watch this week? From new TV, we’ve got you covered.

    New Video on Demand, Rental Streaming, and Digital

    “The Secret Life of Pets”
    What do your pets do all day while you’re off at work or school? If this animated hit is anywhere close to the truth, they are BUSY little bees. Louis C.K. voices terrier Max, who is perfectly happy until his owner (voiced by Ellie Kemper) brings home a mutt named Duke (Eric Stonestreet). The two end up lost in New York City, and meet a band of abandoned pets led by a bunny named Snowball (Kevin Hart). Watch it all play out when the film comes to Digital HD November 22, and Blu-ray/DVD/On Demand December 6. The home release comes so many special features, including three Mini-Movies, making-of featurettes with the voice actors, “The Best Of Snowball,” and Hart and Stonestreet working with an animal trailer to educate fans on average and not-so-average household pets.

    Here’s an exclusive clip from the bonus features, with Jenny Slate talking about her role voicing Gidget the Pomeranian, who has a crush on Max:“Don’t Think Twice”
    When a member of a New York City improv troupe catches a big break, the other members are forced to reevaluate their own successes and fears in this painfully real comedy starring Keegan-Michael Key, Gillian Jacobs, Mike Birbiglia, Kate Micucci, Tami Sagher, and Chris Gethard. The critical darling arrives on Digital HD November 22, ahead of the DVD/Blu-ray release December 6. The home release includes deleted scenes and three behind-the-scenes featurettes.

    “The Wild Life”
    Mak the macaw and friends meet human castaway Robinson Crusoe, then team up with him to save their tropical island from savage cat invaders, in this animated adventure out on Digital HD November 22. The film is out on DVD, Blu-ray, and On Demand November 29, and the releases all come with four behind-the-scenes featurettes.

    New on Netflix

    “Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life” (Netflix Original)
    Yeah, you’ve probably heard about this one. “Gilmore Girls” fans have been waiting since 2007 to see Rory and Lorelai again, and they’ll get their chance Friday, November 25. True to its title, this revival heads to Stars Hollow to follow the Gilmore girls for one year — a new season for each episode — starting with winter and ending with fall. Will those final four words bring fans closure, or just whet appetites for another year?

    “Mercy” (Netflix Original)
    Two sets of brothers return home to say goodbye to their dying mother, then find themselves under attack as masked intruders try and invade the house, in this drama/thriller/horror starring James Wolk, Caitlin Fitzgerald, Tom Lipinski, Dan Ziskie, Michael Godere, Michael Donovan, Dion Graham, and Constance Baron. Watch it on Netflix November 22.

    “3%” Season 1 (Netflix Original)
    This Brazilian series is set in a future where the elite inhabit an island paradise far from the crowded slums, and you get one chance to join the 3 percent saved from squalor. Watch it November 25.

    “Michael Che Matters” (Netflix Original)
    The “Saturday Night Live” Weekend Update anchor is the latest comedian to get his own Netflix stand-up special, covering “inequality, homophobia, and gentrification,” among other topics, in a set filmed live in Brooklyn. Watch it November 25.

    New on DVD and Blu-ray

    “Hell or High Water”
    Chris Pine plays a desperate father who learns the bank is going to take his family’s land, so he and his ex-con brother (Ben Foster) decide to rob the bank’s branches, and come into the crosshairs of an aging Texas Ranger (Jeff Bridges). The highly acclaimed thriller is out on DVD, Blu-ray, and On Demand November 22. The home release includes filmmaker Q&A; footage from the red carpet premiere; and the featurettes “Enemies Forever,” with an intimate look at the characters; “Visualizing the Heart of America,” on the setting and how the filmmakers used real locations to bring the story to life; and “Damaged Heroes,” exploring the cast performances.

    “I.T.”
    In this thriller out on DVD and Blu-ray November 22, Pierce Brosnan plays Mike Regan, a successful, self-made man who finds himself in a high-stakes game of cat-and-mouse when his I.T. consultant (James Frecheville) starts using his skills to put Mike’s whole world at risk. The home release includes a making-of featurette with Pierce Brosnan, Anna Friel, and James Frecheville.

    “Chicken People”
    This documentary — a “Best in Show” about chickens — follows three chicken breeders whose shared passion of raising the perfect chicken brings them together in competition, from the Ohio National Poultry Show to the Dixie Classic in Tennessee. The New York Times Critics’ Pick is available on DVD November 22.

    “Mechanic: Resurrection”
    Grab some popcorn and join Jason Statham, Jessica Alba, Michelle Yeoh, and Tommy Lee Jones for this sequel to Statham’s 2011 action thriller, out on Blu-ray, DVD, and On Demand November 22. The home release includes five behind-the-scenes featurettes on making the sequel, scoring the film, a breakdown of the Malaysian prison break sequence, and in-depth interviews with Michelle Yeoh and Jason Statham.

    TV Worth Watching

    “Search Party” (Monday on TBS at 11 p.m.)
    Alia Shawkat plays Dory, who becomes obsessed with finding out what happened to her missing college acquaintance Chantal — even though none of her other friends care — in this new dark comedy/mystery on TBS. According to Deadline, the entire first season is airing during Thanksgiving week, with two episodes each night from 11 p.m. to midnight. It all starts November 21 with “The Mysterious Disappearance of The Girl No One Knew” and “The Woman Who Knew Too Much.”

    “Dancing With the Stars” (Tuesday on ABC at 9 p.m.)
    This is it. The Fall 2016 Season 23 is coming to a close, and James Hinchcliffe, Laurie Hernandez, or Calvin Johnson will win the coveted Mirror Ball trophy. (Jana Kramer is also still a contender, but she seems less likely to win. But we could be wrong.) After two hours of dancing from 8 to 10 on Monday, the Finale will air from 9 to 11 p.m. Tuesday, with the finalists dancing one last time, and the winner most likely revealed around 10:57 p.m. ET.

    “Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade” & “National Dog Show” (Thursday on NBC at 9 a.m.)
    It’s time for another great Thanksgiving Day tradition: Watching all, or at least part, of the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade from 9 a.m. to noon, then chasing that with purebred shenanigans from John O’Hurley, David Frei, Tara Lipinski, Johnny Weir, and the beautiful canine stars of the 15th annual National Dog Show. Here’s hoping the Komondor finally wins this year.

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  • James L. Brooks Reveals His Proudest Achievement and a ‘Simpsons’ Breakthrough

    When you’re writer/director/producer The Mary Tyler Moore Show,” “Lou Grant,” and “Taxi,” and continues to executive produce the full-blown cultural institution known as “The Simpsons,” which just reached its 600th episode; in film, he wrote and directed the enduring classics including “Terms of Endearment,” “Broadcast News,” and “As Good as It Gets,” and produced equally beloved movies like “Big,” “Say Anything…,” “Bottle Rocket,” and “Jerry Maguire.”

    So what do you do for an encore? You keep making high-quality movies and television series, that’s what.

    Now 76, Brooks served as a very involved executive producer on “The Edge of Seventeen,” the critically hailed, alternately hilarious and poignant teen dramedy that stars Hailee Steinfeld in a bravura performance as a snarky, often surly high schooler contending with a confounding life that, frankly, pisses her off a lot — the film has an enduring, relatable, and utterly re-watchable quality built into its DNA. And then there’s his ongoing, hands-on oversight of “The Simpsons,” including — at long last — a possible second feature film set in Springfield.

    Brooks shared the current tricks of his trade with Moviefone, and, along the way, reveals what he considers, in a career full of high-watermarks, the scene he wrote that he remains the proudest of.

    Moviefone: You’ve certainly taken on that mentor/producer role before. With this particular film and this particular filmmaker, Kelly Fremon Craig, what was it that you saw that made you want to sprinkle your particular brand of fairy dust on the film?

    James L. Brooks: In this [material], at the time that I saw it, it wasn’t such a motivating factor for me. Meeting Kelly was a motivating factor for me. Then it began a journey, where I don’t know if that’ll ever happen again.

    Usually, when there’s a first draft — I don’t even know if we can even call it a first draft. Let’s call it a “getting-to-know-you.” Usually, when there’s a first draft, you say, “Let’s do this on page 24,” and “I think this act, you’re moving around things …” In this case, we just began an experience together. I was impressed with her. I was really impressed with her.

    And then we started, she went out, she did research, and she’s really good at it. She can ask young women questions and get them to open up, because I think she’s empathic. And then we’d look at the videos of that, and then we’d just talk. Then at a certain point, she went away and wrote.

    And it wasn’t like a new script happened in those years, because we’re talking about a four-year period, from beginning to end. It wasn’t just like a new script happened, a writer happened. A voice happened. Popped in a way that I know I’ll never see it again. I’ve never seen it before.

    What’s the get-back for you? You’ve done this with people like Cameron Crowe and Wes Anderson, and now Kelly. What’s the fun and rewarding part for you to do this?

    I like the work. I like the work. I think there’s a thing where, we have this thing called Gracie Films, which, really, most years, we don’t do a movie. The majority of years we don’t do a movie. But when we do a movie, it’s because we care about the writer. And that was always the thing that we said, “What’s the void? What’s the niche you can fill?” And that’s giving a writer control of their work.

    Do we take pride in “no writer was ever re-written by an outside writer”? I think we’re proud of that. And every writer who ever worked on any film that we were connected with was with it to the end, either directing it or playing a production role. So that’s our sort of like — I think the term became 15 years after we started — mission statement.

    That experience doesn’t happen very often, where there’s a writer that you want to get in with. In this case, in all the cases to different degrees, it’s a specific relationship where it’s intense, it’s open, it’s personal, it’s real stuff — it’s real stuff! We were on the front lines together, and there were front lines. In any movie, if this goes this way, it’s all over. Well, maybe if you’re hitting beats of genre maybe, maybe something else. But not in any movie where you couldn’t say in two sentences what you’re after.

    And, in this case, I think there were three, or four pieces of casting where if the right person didn’t walk in the door, Woody Harrelson wasn’t coming through town at that moment, if Hailee didn’t finally show up after 1,000 — literally — young women had been read, we wouldn’t have made a movie. It’s not like we would have made another movie. We wouldn’t have made the movie.

    The landscape of media, in film and television both, is shifting like crazy, constantly. How easy was it to stick to your mission statement in the current environment?

    That’s a great question. That was my extra motivation because you can’t go in and say, first of all, I think we’re going uphill in two instances. I know what you mean by the current situation. The business is the business is the business. Every man a businessman. But I also believe good pictures always get made. Every year. Every year. It might be some people having an uphill climb while other people are skiing down.

    But, in this case, we went and we asked for money. I think we were going uphill. I hate to say it because it sounds so political and social, but just for honesty’s sake, there were times we went into meetings where people loved the script, and it was a pro forma meeting, and we walked away without the money. Happened enough times, so I said, “If this was a guy directing and writing, would it have been different?” I don’t think that way. Would it have been different?

    Women are on the other side of those desks, too. And I don’t know that that’s true. But all I know is on these three occasions, they love it, they love it, they love it, they just want to meet, and then we walk away. Maybe that happens anyway — I don’t know. For me to have the suspicion enter my mind, that that could possibly be it, because I was there, I was going to back it up.

    And then I wanted to do a “Hey kids, let’s do the show right here” movie. I wanted the spirit. I wanted to do a movie for all the right reasons. For passion. So many people on this movie worked for free. It was just so many. People that work with me all the time, they all worked for free on this. So many people came through, and to nurture it. The first round of it was so idealistic. Sometimes I just take Kelly to meet somebody great at what they do. Rick Carter, we talk about production design. I take her to Larry Moss’s acting classes. We just start to get the spirit, and just have the illusion that just a look at the sky a little.

    And then you get down and you fight for a 30-day schedule. Every day less than that and your movie’s going to be a little different, I believe. That seemed to me, to try and do it right, we needed the 30. Twenty-six is a somewhat different movie. It is. So all those things, and then each moment — and I was there; I was on set, and it was surreal in the intensity, and the rawness, in the movie becoming the boss for all of us, which I believe in. At a certain point … that’s the boss. So that’s the bond, even when you’re discussing things in a phonetic way.

    So much of your work has either been set in a media context — a newsroom, or some kind of similar setting. Or you’ve really done a very journalistic approach behind-the-scenes, a lot of interviews, a lot of investigation to get where you’re going. Give me your thoughts on today’s landscape, having immersed so much in both media and the journalistic style of investigating things. Have things changed in such a dramatic way that it’s foreign to you to look at it? Or is it very familiar, it’s just the context that’s changed?

    I would say — I’m not sure I’m right about anything — I think sometimes it’s important, the question is more important than the answer. A lot of times the question is more important.

    Television continues, I think, to be “the writer rules.” Writers have control of their material to an extraordinary extent. That continues to be television. Movies are where directors ruled — and directors do, there’s no way to exaggerate, that’s the person who says print. That’s the person that says, “Let’s do this, I don’t like that, I don’t like that dresser, this is the actor for this.” So there’s no way to exaggerate that. But studio rules as well. Because it’s become a business, and everybody talks numbers.

    Everybody talks numbers. That’s the world now. Everybody talks numbers: “What’s my tracking? What’s the thing? Test this. What’s our preview score?” That’s going on. And it used to be that went on, but it was sort of silly because you couldn’t quantify it … And now you can say “This movie made this much if I do this,” and you write. You just run it through a computer and you write, and you go make the picture. But lots of great movies this year. Somehow it always happens. Somehow there are always people making it over the wall, and this picture did, and a lot of other pictures did.

    You’ve got such a rich legacy in television, and we’re at this moment of peak TV, where there’s so much great content out there. Are you intrigued by doing more TV again?

    I’m blessed with my “Simpsons” job. I’m really blessed, because we not only do our show, we’re always doing side things with our characters. We just did a virtual reality thing, which is two and a half minutes long, with Google. That was labor-intensive, but really fun. Really fun. Now we know a little about it, out of total ignorance. Now we know a little about it, and we’re doing this other thing with them.

    And we did a movie. It’s not impossible that we’ll do another one, but it’s not impossible that we won’t as well. But it’s serving that spectacular thing that’s been so good to us that takes up a lot of television time. So it’s occurred to me a few times. It’s occurred to me a few times. But “The Simpsons” is my day job. I break away for hunks of time, but I’m on the phone for the reading and stuff like that. And we’ve built up, it’s like a little city that we have when we work there together. How many people get to say they work with some of the same people for over 25 years? It’s ideal.

    You just hit 600 episodes.

    Yes, sir!

    And you’re still landing on people’s lists of, if not always number one, in the top five greatest TV shows of all time. In your wildest dreams, what’s your fantasy for the longevity of “The Simpsons”? How long would you like to see it keep going?

    As long as we feel this way about it. I think that’s the answer … It’s magical, and I always take pride in that you come down from Mars, you go on to 20th Century Fox lot, you go past all the writing rooms, and you’d say, “Oh, those people are the new show,” and that’s us because we go at each other, and we fight for it.

    Somehow, there’s a crazy thing that happened to us about the eight-year mark. It’s ludicrous to say, but it happens to be sort of the truth: “Where the hell are we going to get another story?” And then we broke through that. And it’s that thing in marathons, I think, where you just break through, and something happens, and suddenly you let down, you change your rules a little. Somebody new comes in and joins you and says something, and we keep on each other. It’s community. It’s like living in a town, in a certain way. And with all new stuff happening all the time.

    So that’s great, and I’m working on a script, a movie script, and that’s been very challenging. I always take a long time, but I’ve blown off a little by the work on this film, and this was a key year for the show. And I’m back to it now, which is very important to me, and will take preeminence. So there’s not much room, and my life is working OK these days.

    This is a loaded question for anybody, but what are you proudest of as far as your legacy as a writer of film and television?

    Today? The devil speech in “Broadcast News.”

    It still rings pretty true. Did you feel something special when you were writing that?

    Oh God, yeah! I just felt privileged. I just felt, “Yes, yes, and yes.” Yeah, at the time, it was very important to me. And the whole scene was getting the right set. I remember the right practical set, the right house to put it in, consumed us. There’s always one crazy problem on a movie that you don’t think will become the key problem. Where to place that scene became the key problem. Where to place that scene? And then just rehearsing it, and just the staging of it. I just remember how important it was to me. Without thinking of it in the terms that we’re talking, just for some reason. It was key in their relationship. It was a key story point, too.

    Your work with Jack Nicholson has been so revered. Do you two have anything that you’re noodling around where you might work together again?

    We chat. We chat about it. In what I’m writing now, there’s nothing appropriate. But he’s the best. Way back, I remember having a drunken argument with a friend of mine, who was a writer, about who was the best actor alive. This was way back — I’d say Jack was in his late 30s or something, I don’t know, mid-30s, whatever the hell it was.

    And [my friend] said The Odd Couple.’”

    “The Edge of Seventeen” opens nationwide November 18.

  • Kyra Sedgwick on Her ‘Edge of Seventeen’ Reunion and What Has Her ‘Scared Sh*tless’

    Screening Of STX Entertainment's "The Edge Of Seventeen" - ArrivalsKyra Sedgwick continues to close strong.

    In the alternately hilarious, prickly, and moving film “The Edge of Seventeen,” the actress has a choice supporting role as Mona, the widowed single mother of sullen, sharp-tongued high schooler Nadine (Hailee Steinfeld) whose already cynical attitude gets raised to a new Defcon level when her brother starts dating her one and only friend. When she isn’t preoccupied with her own everyday woes, like her dating life, which send her into occasional tailspins, Sedgwick’s character does what she can to keep the peace and struggles to understand her increasingly embittered offspring.

    It’s another in a long line of affecting performances from Sedgwick, a standout film role after her acclaimed stint on television starring in “The Closer.” And she’s not done with TV, either: not only does she step behind the camera to direct Lifetime’s coming of age movie “Story of a Girl” (starring her husband, Kevin Bacon), she’s set to headline the upcoming ABC drama “Ten Days in the Valley,” playing the overworked producer of TV potboilers whose life is turned upside-down by the mysterious disappearance of her daughter — all of which she dives into in a candid chat (complete with reflexive curse word) with Moviefone.

    Moviefone: I think, maybe, the most interesting and complicated human relationship is mother and daughter.

    Kyra Sedgwick: Oh, me too!

    Maybe even more so when it’s a single, solo-parent mother. What was interesting to you about delving into this character and this relationship?

    I love characters that are complicated, and Mona is very complicated. I think it takes a certain kind of person to really have empathy for her and what she’s going through. I definitely think that, as a mother, it’s really hard when your kids reflect back to you the deep insecurities that you have about yourself, and that they’re suffering through the same kind of pain that you went through. I think it’s so hard to separate as a parent, their journey from your own.

    Mona is a person that has no one to talk to about that. I think that, honestly, I don’t know that she really should have been a parent. But so many people have kids who shouldn’t be parents. So I think that she really lost the better parent, and she knew it too. She knew that her husband had the way in with the kids, and she really doesn’t. But I do. I think it’s reflected beautifully and very, very honestly.

    I think that we try so hard. Being a parent is the hardest job — oh my God, it’s so hard, and it continues to be hard. You think when they’re infants, OK, it’s going to get easier. And it’s the greatest thing ever, don’t get me wrong, but my kids are 27 and 23, and if they have a bad day, I have a terrible day, you know what I mean? And in your wise mind and in your mature mind, you’re like, “I’ve had some bad days, too, and I got through them, and it’s OK.” I learn from my pain, but the truth is, you don’t really want your kids to have any pain.

    I met your daughter, Sosie, when she was having her whole Miss Golden Globe experience. For you to see that, here she is stepping into this industry — you’ve been through it yourself. Is it harder as a mom knowing what she’s walking into, or is it easier having done it yourself?

    I don’t know if it’s harder or easier because it’s my experience. I can tell you I didn’t want her to be an actor for a really long time. But once she actually decided to do it, I was like, what’s my problem? I’ve had a great life as an actor. I’ve worked with the most extraordinary people. I’ve traveled all over the world. I’ve gotten to love my work, and not dread going to work every day. So what’s my problem? Why am I so negative about it?

    I had to do some real deep soul searching about that. She’s had some knocks, for sure, but she’s also had some success. So that feels really good, too. I think if she had nothing but knocks, I don’t think I could handle it. I just don’t know. It’s hard. It’s so hard when the people you love are struggling, even though you know that the only way you grow is through struggle. So it’s complicated.

    It must have been at least a little bit of a relief that, as your kids were coming into their own, your TV show “The Closer” came along, and that you got to have another great spike in your career as they were finding their own path.

    Yeah. That’s true. That’s true. I feel for the people whose kids leave and suddenly they go, “What am I going to do with my life?” It is like a job you get fired from. When they get older, you really do, on some level, get fired. So yeah, I’ve been really lucky that I’ve been able to have a very full career, and also wake up first thing in the morning and know that’s what I am as a mother. That is what I am.

    What was the fun watching James L. Brooks sprinkle his fairy dust on this new filmmaker, Kelly Fremon Craig — something which you’ve seen before, early in your career, as he did it with Cameron Crowe on “Singles.”

    Yes, that’s right! It’s funny because I read “Singles,” and I met with Cameron Crowe a million years ago, and I was like, “This is the most amazing thing.” I knew of the connection of he and James Brooks, that they had sort of a mentor/mentee relationship. So when this came along — well, first of all, he’s one of my idols, James Brooks. Every single movie he’s ever done, directed, written, or produced, is extraordinary, and special, and unique, and authentic, and painful, and funny, and everything that life is. Those were always the kind of movies that I wanted to be in when I first started acting.

    So it was pretty extraordinary when I heard that he was producing this, and that they had a mentor/mentee relationship. And I read it and I thought, “This is a totally fresh voice” — which Cameron Crowe was as well — “and is doing it better and with more layers than anybody else, and that really understands the drama and the comedy of life.”

    It was very important to me — I actually bought a book in 2007 called “Story of a Girl” that I just finished directing. It was a teen novel, a young adult novel. The reason I bought that book in 2007 was because I felt like there were no films for teenagers that really reflected what it’s like to be a teenager. There was “Twilight,” and movies like that, that were like a fantasy. And I just felt so much like, growing up, I had so many things reflected back to me in the films that I saw that helped me to process what I was going through in life. That’s what I feel like as artists and as art, people who seek out art in any form is because we’re trying to process what we’re living through.

    So I was so happy and so grateful that someone else thought this was important to talk about as well. So I would do anything to be a part of it. And he’s remarkable, and he’s a remarkable soul. You see him and he’s joyful, but he also has deep pain, and he’s very funny, and he knows what’s funny. Oh my God, to make Jim Brooks laugh is like … I don’t know if any of the actors have talked about it, but there’s nothing quite like getting a guffaw from him, because you think to yourself, “I know that was right in the pocket.” I’ve always felt that true comedy comes from pain. So you just know you’ve gotten it right when you make him laugh, because his comedy is all based in pain.

    There was a big announcement this summer that you’re coming back to television. Tell me about your new TV show, “Ten Days In the Valley.”

    I know. It’s crazy. I’m scared. I’m scared sh*tless, to be completely honest with you. Can you say that on Moviefone?

    Absolutely!

    No, it’s scary, because I had such a remarkable situation: that family, that world, that I didn’t know anything about TV before I started “The Closer.” It was a phenomenon in so many different ways. At the time, for me, for a female-led show, of a woman of a certain age, who wasn’t 20. So I don’t know. It’s a great script. It’s written by a Canadian — I seem to be having a lot of Canadian people in my life right now: I just shot [“Story of a Girl”] in Canada; this movie shot in Canada …

    Anyway, it’s a thriller. It was originally conceived as a 10-episode show. It’ll be on ABC, where I think they’re really embracing a lot of the cable-type shows but they’re more accessible on ABC — like “American Crime” is extraordinary. Hopefully, it’ll be a very real story about this woman, who’s actually a showrunner. She writes and is a creator of this TV show, and it’s kind of “Day for Night,” kind of “Chinatown.” It’s a thriller. It’s like a film noir kind of thing.

    I hope it’s wonderful. It’s a leap of faith, these things. You read one script and you meet the people and you go, “OK. Skydance is the studio and ABC is the network. We’re getting a lot of autonomy. We have Carl Franklin directing the first episode, who’s amazing and wonderful and knows that film noir, L.A., ‘Devil in a Blue Dress.’” Yeah, so I feel like I’m in good hands so far.

    Tell me about what’s going on with your directing career. Do you think you’re going to direct some of the show as well?

    I don’t know! This is the first time I’ve ever directed. I’ve never directed before. So it was an extraordinary experience. We were shooting a day of reshoots on [“Story of a Girl”], on this movie, when I told James and Kelly about it. What’s so amazing to me is the generosity that you get from, especially other female directors. They’re so happy that you’re doing it. There’s no weird competitive thing. They’re just, like, jumping up and down out of their skin as excited for you, probably even more so than you are.

    It was an incredible experience. I’m desperate to find something else. Frankly, the idea of going in front of the camera again scares the crap out of me on so many levels. I didn’t even want to come today because it’s so nice being in the background. It’s so nice creating a space where people can do great work, but, like, not having pressure on you in that way. Although, directing is pressure, but it felt like less pressure somehow. We’ll see if the movie’s any good — I’ll keep my fingers crossed! I like what I shot, so we’ll see.

    What do you feel your strength was as a director? Do you have a sense?

    I definitely was working with the actors, and knowing what they’re going through, and being able to talk to them about history, and character, and motivation, and all that crap. But what surprised me as a director is that I actually had an an image language that I didn’t think I had. A language of imagery that I definitely didn’t think I had!

    I was like, “I’m going to let the DP do that,” but I knew what I wanted. I knew how I wanted to see it in my head. I didn’t realize that was the language of film. Just say what’s in your head, and then letting them set it up for you, and then going, “That’s not quite what I had in my head. How about let’s try this?” Then you go, “Wow, that actually works. I didn’t even know that it would, but it does.” It was very exciting. Like, shockingly, at 51, I suddenly feel like I have a new career.

    “The Edge of Seventeen” opens in theaters nationwide November 18. “Story of a Girl” is slated to premiere on Lifetime in 2017, and “Ten Days in the Valley” will air in 2017 on ABC.

  • Michelle Dockery Embraces Being Bad on ‘Good Behavior’

    If you think that sometimes Downton Abbey,” just wait until you see how she steps right up to the edge in “Good Behavior.”

    For her new TNT drama, Dockery steps directly from the lavish estate of early 20th Century British aristocracy into the modern world, leaving Lady Mary’s fragile veneer of civility behind and embracing darker impulses. As Letty, she’s a career con artist and recovering meth addict fresh out of prison and looking to rebuild her life with her 10-year-old son while still pursuing her illicit craft, and when she tries to access her more altruistic nature and help avert the contract killing of a stranger, it leads her to become entangled with an enigmatic hitman (Jaun Diego Botto), who has the potential to be her undoing … or perhaps her salvation.

    It’s a wholly different star turn for Dockery, who discussed why being bad feels so good with a small group of journalists.

    On how the new series helped her move forward from “Downton Abbey”:

    Michelle Dockery: I was very fortunate to go from “Downton Abbey” on to this quite quickly. I like to keep working. They’re two very, very different characters. So it was very different and very freeing to play someone new.

    On whether she was looking for a role far removed from Lady Mary:

    No. It just happened to come along, so I was very lucky to find something that was quite different.

    There are parallels with those women: Letty is a very colorful, complex character. She’s much like Lady Mary was. I always have a place in my heart for that character, and I think that you kind of take your characters with you as you go on in your career. Yeah, she’s someone I love to play.

    On whether she expects that she’ll play Lady Mary again one day:

    We’ll see. I’m open to the idea of the film. Yeah, I’m looking forward to seeing if that happens.

    On playing characters that can be unlikable on occasion:

    I mean, in my experience, they’re the best of characters to play! I don’t think they need to be likable to like them in that sense. I think some of the best characters don’t always behave well. The relationship between them is so interesting, and it is a messed up love story and a very unconventional love story, and they recognize so much in one another. In some ways, it’s like a meeting of minds because they are so similar in many ways.

    I think Letty finds it hard to sort of exist as normal people do. I think she she gets bored very, very easily, and the dressing up part of it and becoming another character within the character is also the addiction. It’s the high, you know, following people and being someone else to escape the pain or who she really is. And that has been really fun to play. It’s character within character, which is a dream for an actor. I have four different wigs. They all have different names.

    On Letty’s ever-changing array of looks, accents, and, of course, those wigs:

    Well, it really varies on the situation that Letty’s in. With the first wig, there’s a business-like quality to that character. She’s very into the hotel. She wants to just get the job done, so it’s like that sort of toughness to that one. Whereas the blonde one, that’s a contrast because she’s a little bit more fluttery, and she’s flirting with Javier.

    So it’s really fun playing those characters-within-a-character, and getting to change the accent. Actually, we decided from the very beginning that Letty was very good at that, good at accents and good at changing her persona.

    And a Southern accent is much easier for a British actor than a general American — I think so, anyway.

    On the research discovery that helped shape her performance:

    I found this great documentary on Netflix called “The Life and Crimes of Doris Payne,” which is a documentary about a thief who is 86 years old, and she’s still at it. She, throughout her life, has put on these personas and pretended to be other people in order to go about her thieving.

    On her experience in America while shooting on location:

    I love spending time here! It’s been a real change for me. It’s been, obviously, a very interesting time to be here with the election coming up. It’s something that I felt was always at the forefront for me, because of course being away from home, you can take your eye off the ball a little bit because you’re not at home, and the politics here has been something that I’ve been reading about more than I normally would.

    It’s lovely to be in a climate like this for a change. Not as much rain, and seeing different states. Spent time in North Carolina, and now in New Mexico. So I like spending time here. It’s good to change it up.

    On what she’s discovered about her career as an actor:

    What I’ve learned, I guess, is to not expect … and to try and live in the moment as much as possible, because in a career like acting, you never really know where you’re going to be.

    And that’s what’s so exciting about it, actually, is that you end up in places and with people you would never expect to meet. That’s what’s so lovely about the journey as an actor.

    “Good Behavior” premieres November 15 on TNT.

  • Mandy Moore Teases ‘Tricky’ Mother-Daughter Friction on ‘This Is Us’

    THIS IS US -- "The Best Washing Machine in the Whole World " Episode 107 -- Pictured: Mandy Moore as Rebecca -- (Photo by: Ron Batzdorff/NBC)Yes, we’re well aware that, after we first met her as a teen pop singer and actress, This Is Us,” she taken it to a wild extreme, playing her character all the way into her 60s.

    Moore, 36, has skyrocketed back into the pop-culture scene with the success of NBC’s family drama, in which she plays matriarch Rebecca Pearson, who audiences first met through a steady succession of flashbacks documenting the early days of starting her uniquely assembled family alongside husband Jack (Milo Ventimiglia), juxtaposed alongside the contemporary daily dramas of their three children, Kate (Chrissy Metz), Kevin (Justin Hartley), and Randall (Sterling K. Brown).

    But Rebecca also recently made her first debut in the present day as a well-preserved sexagenarian interacting with her kids and grandchildren — and with not-so-subtle nods to a currently strained relationship with Kate. Moore gave Moviefone some inside dish on her behind-the-scenes aging process, as well as a hint that a big reveal about Rebecca and Kate’s conflict may be imminent — oh, yeah, and she’s incredibly stoked to be singing on the show, too.

    Moviefone: I was so impressed with the old-age makeup when we finally saw Rebecca in the present day. But I’m sure that that’s a mixed blessing for you. Tell me about the experience.

    Mandy Moore: It’s a lot of work on my skin. It’s really harsh on my skin. I just went through two days of it. I’m so grateful for this job. I love the opportunity to work with what I think is such an incredibly strong ensemble on television. And the opportunity to play this character from 27 to 66 is like, when other time, when else am I ever going to have this kind of opportunity in my career? So I’m totally find to sit down for four hours to put that makeup on.

    Tell me about the physicality of playing her at that age. What do you do in your head to get there?

    I really think about where she is in her life, and the wisdom and clarity that comes with age. The sort of grounded-ness, keeping in mind the nurturing aspect, the maternal aspect of being a mother and a grandmother, but also where she is at this phase in her life. She’s raised her kids. I think there is a sense of like, not like “I don’t give a f*ck” that comes with age, but a little bit of like, I know who I am, I make no apologies for it, I’m a strong woman, I raised these kids, I know what I want from my life.

    So thinking about that kind of mama bear, empowered woman is something that I try and keep in mind, and then the physicality of it is like, she’s 66, she’s not 86. She’s vital and vibrant and kind of in the most exciting phase of her life, I think. So, maybe her body doesn’t move as quick as it used to. Maybe there’s a little arthritis in her hand, but other than that, there’s not a lot stopping her.

    She’s got a little friction with Kate, we’ve learned. So give me a little tease as to what’s ahead: Are we going to get to the bottom of that soon, or are we going to have to wait to learn the cause?

    We’re going to wait, because I don’t think even we have all the answers. Chrissy and I, we just worked together, really, for the first time not that long ago, and before we shot those scenes we talked about how we’ve gotten to where we are, what we think sort of came in between us.

    And although [series creator] Dan Fogelman is really great about having this over-arching idea and trajectory of what happens in these milestone moments for the family, he doesn’t have all the answers, or at least he hasn’t given us all the answers. I think he gives us a little bit of leeway to come up with stuff ourselves. So, hopefully, what we’ve sort of surmised is going to be in line with the writers.

    But I think there’s been a tricky sort of amount of friction with them. And I think some things have already been revealed, like Randall and Rebecca are very, very close, and that’s got to be hard to feel like there is a favorite child, and for the other two siblings to feel like they’re kind of chopped liver, to a certain extent. It’s messy, it’s life, it’s something we all can relate to.

    When did they tell you that you were going to be able to sing on the show, and what did that mean to you?

    Dan told me pretty early on that there was music in my character’s backstory, and that was some way in how Milo met me, that I was singing and that I was in a bar, and he heard me sing. And so I knew fairly early on that like that was going to be a part of the story. I didn’t know when it was going to factor in, because he sort of peppered us with all of this wealth of information: This is who you are, this where you guys are going, this is what happens to your marriage, and you’re like, “Ah…” Trying to take everything in and trying to remember everything.

    But I’m so happy that it’s sort of activated that part of me again, and I’m honored to get to share the show with Chrissy and her beautiful voice. I remember everybody was like, “Oh yeah, Chrissy sings, too.” I was like, “Oh, that’s nice, that’s cool. I can’t wait to see that episode,” and then I’m like, “Holy cow — it’s unbelievable!” But, I love that, again, we’re able to have that sort of connective tissue, as well, and that’s something that our characters have that we love about each other.

    What are you loving about the ’70s vibe that you get to live in from time to time?

    I love the carefree aspects. I love that it’s kind of the least amount of time in hair and makeup. You just slap on some hair extensions and a little bit of makeup, and we go. It’s more fun. Because, obviously, as the show goes further along and we go deeper into the ’80s, that means I get to wear some real mom jeans, and the fashion is not as fun or as forgiving in the ’80s.

    “This Is Us” airs Tuesdays on NBC.

  • ‘Crazy Ex-Girlfriend’ Star Vincent Rodriguez III on Josh Chan’s ‘Big Spiral’

    Entertainment Weekly & People Upfronts Party 2016 - ArrivalsJust how close is Rebecca Bunch’s long-pursued, on-again/off-again, increasingly anxiety-riddled paramour Josh Chan to a meltdown big enough to mark him as a crazy ex-boyfriend?

    Multitalented performer Crazy Ex-Girlfriend” character has been in a downward spiral since Josh and Rebecca entered into — and then out of — their full-on romantic relationship, with each on entirely different pages as far as commitment goals.

    Now that the couple’s dynamic has shifted dramatically yet again, Rodriguez joined Moviefone for a deep-dive into Josh’s tailspin, as well as being an Asian leading man on TV and the multiple joys and occasional pains of putting together an hour of musical-comedy each week for one of TV’s funniest and most ambitiously genre-bending series.

    Moviefone: The season has gotten off to a really interesting start. For you, what got you excited about where they were starting Josh and Rebecca, and where it’s starting to go?

    Vincent Rodriguez III: I’m really actually glad you asked me that question, because when we first read Episode 1 of the new season, I was taken aback just because this is a different direction in mindset for Josh. Josh has been kind of oblivious to Rebecca and her truths, I guess you could say — he kind of had an inkling. So now it’s totally out. So to see what Josh does with that was kind of startling to me, though not surprising, based on how we had set him up.

    But it was just kind of like a big spiral, I started to notice. So that’s exactly what Josh does, is he spirals. I didn’t really know what that was going to actually look like, or what that would mean, in terms of like his actions and what would happen. After reading the next few episodes of Season 2, I still kind of can’t wrap my head around it, because it’s a lot, very, very fast.

    But it also is a testament to, when something this major happens to your main character, Rebecca Bunch, it affects all of us. So I definitely see how it’s affected me, but we start to see how it really affects others. It’s very surprising how that can be beneficial to us in the long-term, but also like just big old hot sh*tty mess at the same time.

    Does he start to wake up? He’s really been sleepwalking his way into this new phase of his life. He’s not really thinking things through too much.

    I think Josh is blinded by something. Unfortunately, Josh is not as evolved as I think we’d like him to be. Especially at this point where Rebecca has kind of spilled all her beans. To see how Josh takes advantage of that, and really doesn’t fully learn from it. He doesn’t piece it all together. It’s like, does he think he’s invincible? Does he not realize what this combination of events means?

    Yeah, that’s a really great way of putting it: In a way, he’s kind of sleepwalking. He doesn’t get it. But he knows he’s asleep, and he knows this stuff is crazy, and is a little off, and isn’t quite right, but he kind of coasts through it anyway. I also think that’s a very important aspect of Josh and Rebecca. All of our characters are all flawed, but particularly Josh and Rebecca, they’re enablers of each other.

    So Josh needs to grow up. Josh needs to find himself, and his wants, his needs, his goals, his future on his own, and he can’t do that. He’s very overly reliant on his crew, this classic crew, to define him, and this relationship with Rebecca, or with Valencia, which has kind of been this very present entity in his life – he’s always been with Valencia. He’s always been with her, since as long as he can remember. Except for that summer where he met Rebecca, so he had two girlfriends at that point. And then now as an adult, he can’t be alone.

    So it’s unfortunate, but this is also something that’s so common, and now we’re just watching it manifest itself in a guy like Josh, who isn’t very bright, doesn’t have a whole lot of ambition, but means well, and is very easy going. It’s to a point where it’s just kind of ruining him.

    What’s been the fun for you to play him in this sort of tailspin?

    It’s been very up and down. [In the episode where Rebecca thinks she and Josh are pregnant] in one scene, I don’t know how many pages it was, two or three pages, we shot it all day. All day. By the end of the day, I didn’t know what daylight was. It was like Groundhog Day, which is typical for filming, but for this particular scene, it was more obvious because we went through this roller coaster of emotion, in a very short period of time, all because Rebecca was trying to protect herself and was being very self-serving. And in this particular case, Josh was just being bat around like a dog, being thrown across the room emotionally, and it doesn’t end well for them.

    It’s a perfect example of what Josh’s future with Rebecca would be like on the path that they’re on. So in that one scene, it’s kind of a very condensed example of what is happening to Josh in this season. So we get to see Josh go through that, as opposed to seeing Rebecca go through that. She keeps putting herself through that, but now we’re seeing how Josh is just holding on to dear life trying not to fall off this very fun, crazy ride.

    How is this show testing your stamina? Here you guys are, cranking out a musical comedy with dramatic elements every week. Is it a challenge to keep up to speed with everything you need to know and be able to do to get an episode done?

    It’s been challenging, yes. What people don’t know about our show, a lot of people who have just heard about our show barely know it’s a musical. Yes, it is a musical. It is also an hour-long comedy, which I found out when I got to L.A. It’s my very first TV show. An hour-long comedy films typically 10 filming days, 10 business days. So we get Saturdays and Sundays off. We film Monday through Friday. However, we do it in seven.

    But we are also a musical comedy, so we have to learn music. First, they’ve got to write the songs, two or three songs an episode, which is a whole lot for us. They write it, they rewrite it, we learn it, we record it, they mix it, then we have to memorize it when we sing along with ourselves on set, and then there’s various locations that have to do with that, then there’s choreography rehearsal, memorizing the choreography, playing it to different cameras. It’s a lot. So the fact that we do an hour long musical comedy on television in seven days is a very big feat.

    I think the only reason we can do that is because our cast has a very strong, grounded theater background, live. Rachel Bloom has done a lot of stand-up, she’s done a lot of improv. A lot of our writers have done a lot of improv, are actually in improv groups. Like, Rachel’s husband Dan Gregor is in an improv group called JV, along with Father Brah — the role of Father Brah is played by Rene Gube. So I’ve seen a Friday night show, and they create stories on the spot. So we got those guys as writers, and we actually did see them on the show. So everyone, there’s just this nice combination of thinking on your feet, going with the flow.

    And in specifically the musical theater aspect of it, a majority of the series regulars have that experience. More so in singing and acting. A few of us have very strong dance backgrounds, and our writers know that, and they write to that. So on our show, what you’re seeing is what you’re getting. Everything you’re seeing could be done live, because we’re really doing it. We’re really singing. That’s really us, obviously, acting, and the dancing on the show, that’s really us. We learned it, we filmed it, and there actually have been live performances where we recreated.

    It’s interesting because online some people are like, “Was that really you singing?” I’m like, ‘Yeah, it’s me singing! Why wouldn’t it be me singing?” [Laughs] In this day and age, with shows like “The Sing-Off,” and movies like “Pitch Perfect,” movie musicals are becoming more popular, it’s becoming kind of a staple now. A lot of these actors are showing off their singing skills all of a sudden, because it’s becoming very topical. Especially with like “Hamilton” being the rage on Broadway. Our show has all that background, so we take advantage of that.

    What did it mean to you to find a project like this that allowed you to tap into all your different creative talents, and you get to be a non-white romantic lead on a network television series?

    It was a dream come true. It was also a complete gamble. What I mean when I say that is, I’ve been training for this my whole career. I didn’t just learn how to sing for the show. I didn’t just learn how to do hip-hop, or jazz, or musical theater for the show. I’ve been doing this for a very long time. I’ve been performing on stages across the country, including countries like Japan. I’ve been auditioning for shows and hearing a lot of noes, and trying to be on Broadway, and hearing a lot of noes, and teaching a lot of classes back where I’m from in San Francisco, and even teaching on the road when I’m on tours of Broadway shows.

    I’ve been kind of hoping and dreaming of something like this for a while now. It wasn’t until about two or three years ago, I started to dream this up, this idea that what if all this time I’ve been trying to be on Broadway and be just a working actor and be happy doing the things I like to do, theater and acting, and dancing, and singing, and what if there’s something bigger out there for me, and I need to prepare for it?

    So when I wrapped my head around that, all of a sudden I focused on the things I knew weren’t my strengths. Like TV and film, and more specifically my acting. And I did. Then through more TV and film auditions, and a lot more noes, and being in New York, and just kind of working my survival job, taking my classes, trying to figure out how to do this, how to maneuver this, how to sustain, it was a stroke of luck. It was purely timing.

    The fact that Aline [Brosh McKenna, the series’ co-creator] was procrastinating one night and found Rachel Bloom’s video on YouTube, then loved her and binge-watched all of her videos. Then they took a meeting and decided they were going to do a musical comedy on television. Then they had auditions, and then I auditioned, and it just so happened they wanted the lead to be Asian. I auditioned and they said I was great for the role, I was perfect for the role.

    Then at that point, it’s, “Well, here are all my skills I’ve been working so hard to have. Can I do this, too? Would that help? Would that compliment what you’re doing?” That’s what happened. So the writers’ room has a list of special skills from all the actors, and I’ve been very blessed that they’ve been giving me a lot of opportunity to exercise those skills. It’s a dream come true, it really is.

    If you told me that I was going to be doing this when I first started this business, I don’t know if I would have believed you. I wasn’t seeing me on stage playing the roles I wanted to play. I wanted to be a lead, but I thought I was a character actor, because I was Asian, and I was tall. I wasn’t built like a leading man. I didn’t have like chiseled features. I didn’t feel handsome. I felt very much not what they wanted. And I tried so hard to make myself into that. It got to a point where I didn’t need to be that anymore. I just needed to train for it. So I did.

    Now, given the opportunity, I had the skills I needed because I was trying to be more than what the industry was allowing me to be. Now I’m really lucky I get to be here, and I’m very hopeful that things are changing right now for the better. I’m seeing way more Asians on television, Filipinos specifically, more diversity in shows, and content, and actors, and casting.

    I am so honored to be a part of that, because I feel like this is something we’ve been waiting for for a very long time. I feel strongly that “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend” is one of those shows that has helped push that envelope. I think we’re going to keep going and we’re going to see more shows like it.

    Have you headed out to West Covina since the show started? I’m sure you would be treated like a king.

    Last year we got the key to the city. So I was greeted with a pretzel, and they let me hold the key to the city. I was on the news, and it was really cool. The key to West Covina resides in the writers’ room here at “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend.” And then, recently, West Covina declared October 21st — the season premiere of Season 2 of “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend” — as “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend” Day. So our show aired that night, and West Covina was like, “You have a day now, in our town. It is ‘Crazy Ex-Girlfriend’ Day.”

    So it’s very surreal. I don’t really know what else to say. I don’t think I’ve ever experienced or been a part of something like that before where people are offering me keys to things and naming days after shows I’ve done.

    “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend” airs Fridays on The CW.