Tag: western

  • Yellowstone’ Season 5: Wes Bentley and Cole Hauser Interviews

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    Premiering on the Paramount Network November 13th is season 5 of the popular series ‘Yellowstone,’ which was created by Taylor Sheridan (‘Hell or High Water’).

    The series follows the Dutton family, owners of the largest ranch in Montana, known as the Yellowstone Dutton Ranch. Season 5 will explore John Dutton’s (Kevin Costner) political career, Beth (Kelly Reilly) and Rip’s (Cole Hauser) marriage, Beth and her brother Jamie’s (Wes Bentley) rivalry, Kayce’s (Luke Grimes) family, and the future of the ranch.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Wes Bentley and Cole Hauser about their work on the fifth season of ‘Yellowstone,’ Jamie’s rivalry with the family, Beth and Rip’s relationship, John Dutton’s political career, and the future of the ranch.

    Wes Bentley stars as Jamie Dutton in Paramount Network's 'Yellowstone' season 5.
    Wes Bentley stars as Jamie Dutton in Paramount Network’s ‘Yellowstone’ season 5.

    You can read the full interviews below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Wes Bentley and Cole Hauser.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Wes, Jamie did some pretty terrible things at the end of last season, where is he mentally and in terms with the family when the new season begins?

    Wes Bentley: I was just laughing because you said he did a terrible thing at end of the season. It feels like (he does that) almost every season. I mean Jamie is, for the first time in his life, I think, fully checkmated. I think he feels cornered and in a cage. He has no plan. For Jamie, that’s terrifying. He’s always had a plan. He’s always had an idea. He’s always had an out. He has none of that now. Beth has him locked down and she knows it and he knows it.

    I think what he’s doing is he’s upset. He’s upset and he’s raging inside about what he’s had to do, and now how they’re treating him again. But I think he’s also, like Jamie does, staying loyal and trying to help them through the governorship as he enters it, and help them not mess everything up and try to keep the ranch. I mean, in Jamie’s world, he’s trying to keep the ranch too. He’s conflicted I think. There’s a real struggle going on inside of him and I don’t know if he can maintain it for the whole time.

    MF: Now that Beth has leverage on Jamie and is blackmailing him, how does that affect their relationship, and will we see that storyline play out this season?

    WB: I mean, we don’t build the relationship, but it gets better though. It only gets more intense. She really is enjoying, I think, having Jamie now locked down. It seems to be that she’s relishing it and taking advantage of it. I think that’s only going to spark Jamie more to react. I think now Jamie is no longer going to try to play her games.

    He’ll answer her questions. He’ll do what she says, but he’s going to try not to participate in this thing she does. I don’t know if he can pull it off the whole time. Like I said, his anger is only building. He’s a pot boiling with a lid on and it’s going to burst. Whether that’s to his benefit or not, I don’t know yet, but something’s going to happen.

    MF: Now that John Dutton is involved in politics, how does that make Jamie feel and how does it change his relationship with his father?

    WB: I mean, I think any sort of mythical character John was to Jamie died when he ran for governor because he spent his whole life railing against politicians, railing against lawyers, the law, the government, and now he’s the governor, not Jamie, but John.

    I think it cleared something up, that his dad is a hypocrite. I mean, he probably knew that in a lighter way before, but this is full hypocrite. This is not a real man. Two things happen there. You lose respect and also, he sees a weakness and that might be something to exploit.

    Cole Hauser stars as Rip Wheeler in Paramount Network's 'Yellowstone' season 5.
    Cole Hauser stars as Rip Wheeler in Paramount Network’s ‘Yellowstone’ season 5.

    MF: Cole, Rip and Beth finally got married at the end of last season. How are they doing as a couple when the new season begins?

    Cole Hauser: I don’t think much has changed when it comes to them being a couple. I mean, they’ve been a couple since they met each other at 12 and 13 years old. But I think what Taylor wrote this year, which is wonderful, is there’s some stuff that comes up in the past when it comes to Beth and what she’s dealing with.

    Certainly, in the first episode you see that. But once again, Rip is there, not only as a rock, but as a friend and her lover. I think it’s just more of him being the man that she’s always wanted. I love playing that guy, he’s just solid when it comes to her.

    MF: As I’m sure you know, fans love seeing Rip and Beth together. Why do you think their relationship resonates so much with the show’s audience?

    CH: I would say they’re imperfect and I think a lot of people want to see that. I don’t watch all the television shows that are out there right now, so I can’t speak for all of them, but I think what Taylor does really well is he writes them imperfect.

    Also, they need to help each other to fix not only issues outside of their relationship but within it. I think the audience seems to resonate not only with that, but also their passion for each other and the love, which is unwavering no matter what you do. So, I’m assuming that’s why people are attracted to them.

    MF: Finally, now that John Dutton is involved in politics, Rip fears for the future of the ranch. Can you talk about that and what does he see that no one else is does?

    CH: I talked to Taylor about this when we were shooting the scene that’s on the hillside and why he feels the way he does. It’s uncomfortable for him to have people in his backyard, so to speak. I think that’s never been something that has been allowed in the past.

    So, I think that’s kind of a reaction based on allowing them into this world that is very private. This is a guy who doesn’t have an ID. He’s not really on the planet. People don’t know about him. He’s kind of an animal in the Montana landscape. So, it’s the idea of having that in his backyard, that I think is troublesome to him.

    But what’s kind of happening this year, which he’s struggling with and certainly Taylor wrote it this way to see another side of Rip, is the idea of being thrusted into this responsibility of being the foreman while John’s away, and how he deals with that personally and also with Beth. So, this year there’s a lot of stuff going on mentally that’s different from any other year with Rip.

    Kelly Reilly as Bethany "Beth" Dutton and Cole Hauser as Rip Wheeler in Paramount Network's 'Yellowstone' season 5.
    (L to R) Kelly Reilly as Bethany “Beth” Dutton and Cole Hauser as Rip Wheeler in Paramount Network’s ‘Yellowstone’ season 5. Credit: Paramount Network.
    Wes Bentley as Jamie Dutton in Paramount Network's 'Yellowstone' season 5.
    Wes Bentley as Jamie Dutton in Paramount Network’s ‘Yellowstone’ season 5. Credit: Paramount Network.
    Kevin Costner as John Dutton III in Paramount Network's 'Yellowstone' season 5.
    Kevin Costner as John Dutton III in Paramount Network’s ‘Yellowstone’ season 5. Credit: Paramount Network.
  • First Teaser for Emily Blunt Western Series ‘The English’

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    We’ve seen Emily Blunt ride horses before and she’s certainly done her fair share of historical drama work. But ‘The English’ represents her first time saddling up for a Western, and also shows that the age of film stars heading up TV projects remains in full force.

    For this latest outing, a six-episode limited series premiering on Prime Video, she’s riding deep into Western genre territory, with a side of thriller and, from the looks of the new teaser, a fair dollop of horror for good measure.

    Blunt stars in the series alongside Chaske Spencer, who you might recall as Sam Uley from several of the ‘Twilight’ movies but has also been seen in ‘Woman Walks Ahead’ and ‘Wild Indian’. He’s recently finished work on Marvel’s Disney+Hawkeye’ spin-off ‘Echo’ but has Marvel form from an earlier era of superhero TV, having been part of the cast for Netflix’s ‘Jessica Jones’.

    Synopsis time! An epic chase Western, ‘The English’ takes the core themes of identity and revenge to tell a uniquely compelling parable on race, power, and love.

    Emily Blunt in 'The English' which premieres November 11th on Prime Video.
    Emily Blunt in ‘The English’ which premieres November 11th on Prime Video.

    An aristocratic Englishwoman, Lady Cornelia Locke (Blunt), and a Pawnee ex-cavalry scout, Eli Whipp (Spencer), come together in 1890 mid-America to cross a violent landscape built on dreams and blood. Both of them have a clear sense of their destiny, but neither is aware that it is rooted in a shared past. They must face increasingly terrifying obstacles that will test them to their limits, physically and psychologically. But as each obstacle is overcome, it draws them closer to their ultimate destination—the new town of Hoxem, Wyoming.

    It is here, after an investigation by the local sheriff Robert Marshall (Stephen Rea) and young widow Martha Myers (Valerie Pachner), into a series of bizarre and macabre unsolved murders, that the full extent of their intertwined history will be truly understood, and they will come face-to-face with the future they must live…

    Alongside Blunt, Spencer, Rea and Pachner the ensemble also includes Rafe Spall, Tom Hughes, Toby Jones and Ciarán Hinds.

    ‘The English’ comes from award-winning British writer/director Hugo Blick, whose resume features the likes of ‘The Honourable Woman’, ‘Black Earth Rising’, ‘The Shadow Line’. He wrote and directed all six episodes. And – trivia alert! – way back in his younger, acting days, he played the young Jack Napier in 1989’s ‘Batman’. That has absolutely nothing to do with this new show, but we thought you might find it interesting.

    As opposed to streaming services’ more recent swing to weekly releases, ‘The English’ will drop in full on November 11th, and, because it’s a co-production with the BBC, this isn’t a global launch on the service, as British viewers will have seen it the night before on BBC Two and BBC iPlayer.

    'The English' premieres November 11th on Prime Video.
    ‘The English’ premieres November 11th on Prime Video.
    'The English' premieres November 11th on Prime Video.
    ‘The English’ premieres November 11th on Prime Video.
    Emily Blunt in 'The English' which premieres November 11th on Prime Video.
    Emily Blunt in ‘The English’ which premieres November 11th on Prime Video.
    Emily Blunt in 'The English' which premieres November 11th on Prime Video.
    Emily Blunt in ‘The English’ which premieres November 11th on Prime Video.
    Chaske Spencer in 'The English' which premieres November 11th on Prime Video.
    Chaske Spencer in ‘The English’ which premieres November 11th on Prime Video.
    Chaske Spencer and Emily Blunt in 'The English' which premieres November 11th on Prime Video.
    (L to R) Chaske Spencer and Emily Blunt in ‘The English’ which premieres November 11th on Prime Video.
    'The English' premieres November 11th on Prime Video.
    ‘The English’ premieres November 11th on Prime Video.
  • Phil Morris Talks ‘Ghosts of the Ozark’

    Phil Morris in 'Ghosts of the Ozarks'
    Phil Morris in ‘Ghosts of the Ozarks’

    Opening on digital and On Demand beginning February 3rd is the new supernatural Western ‘Ghosts of the Ozarks,’ which was directed by Matt Glass and Jordan Wayne Long. The film stars Phil Morris (‘Star Trek III: The Search for Spock’), Thomas Hobson (‘Stone Fruit’), Tara Perry (‘12 Hour Shift’), Tim Blake Nelson (‘The Incredible Hulk’), and David Arquette (‘Scream’).

    The new movie takes place in post-Civil War Arkansas, as a young doctor, James McCune (Hobson) is mysteriously summoned to a remote town in the Ozarks only to discover that the utopian paradise is filled with secrets and surrounded by a menacing, supernatural presence. The town’s leader is James’ uncle, Matthew McCune (Morris), who may know more than it seems about the town’s strange ghost problem.

    The son of ‘Mission: Impossible’ TV series star Greg Morris, Phil Morris actually portrayed his father’s character’s son on the 80’s reboot series, which also featured original series star Peter Graves. The actor would go on to appear in numerous film and TV projects including ‘Star Trek III: The Search for Spock,’ ‘Jingle All the Way,’ ‘Wag the Dog,’ ‘Seinfeld,’ and ‘Melrose Place.’ But he’s probably best known to DC Comics fans for playing Martian Manhunter on ‘Smallville’ and Cyborg’s father, Silas Stone on HBO Max’s ‘Doom Patrol.’

    (L to R) David Arquette, Thomas Hobson, Phil Morris and Tim Blake Nelson in 'Ghosts of the Ozarks'
    (L to R) David Arquette, Thomas Hobson, Phil Morris and Tim Blake Nelson in ‘Ghosts of the Ozarks’

    Moviefone recently had the chance to speak with Phil Morris about his work on ‘Ghosts of the Ozarks.’

    Moviefone: To begin with, as an actor, can you talk about the challenge of working within a period piece? Is it more challenging than playing a character from your own time period?

    Phil Morris: It’s an interesting question because here’s what I think. When you’re so adorned with wardrobe, makeup, the sets and the background and everything is so period perfect, it’s almost as though you have to try to get it wrong. You know what I mean? It gives you a great cover for you as an actor, and it informs you more and more. I’ve done a lot of ‘Star Trek,’ and every time I put on the wardrobe or the makeup of a Klingon, you know who you are. In this movie, it was no different.

    I was very fortunate to have some of the best makeup people, wardrobe people and hair people. So, each layer of the character, interestingly enough, gets layered on as you hit the makeup trailer, as you sit in the chair. It’s a process that I, as an actor, really appreciate. It informs me more and more every day that I go in and it sets up the character more and more.

    Yes, you do have to do your research on that period, on people of the period, what they looked like, how they sounded, how they stood, and how they walked. That informs you going forward as to how this character behaves and what their wants and dislikes are.

    MF: What can you tell us about your character Matthew, and the utopia that he has created in this small town?

    PM: Well, at the time, there were a few communities of color and diversity in the United States that were trying this grand experiment of inclusion. One of the most famous is Tulsa in Oklahoma and Black Wall Street, and we all know what happened there. Or if you don’t, check out your history. So, there were several attempts to try and bring this country together in these communities, so our community is no different.

    Matthew’s different in that there’s the phrase that “power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely,” and that’s what happens to Matthew. I believe Matthew had all the good intentions, and all the right intentions. My prep for Matthew was that he was an ex-slave, but he was a very educated ex-slave. He learned control and he learned manipulation from his masters, from his overseers. How else would he get it? How else would he know it?

    So, when he comes to town and he has all the best intentions, as everybody does, and he realizes what is really in the town, that sense of control that he learned from his white masters starts to overwhelm him. I believe that the difficulty of being a Black man at that time never left him, so there was always an underlying sense of difficulty, upset, and revenge.

    So, when he had the chance to exert his power, in the movie, we see what happens. It was a very difficult character for me to play, very complex, and very nuanced. I had a very difficult time approaching him, because I knew that his controls were not mine, not Phil Morris’ controls. But I had to commit to this character of Matthew so that he lived and breathed beyond Phil Morris.

    Like I said, he’s using the same controls that are used on him in a way. Not physically, not beating people and whipping them, but mentally subjecting them to a servile role almost in a way. They were doing his bidding. So, that was hard for me. It isn’t who I am as a human, and I had to make him believable and real. So, I had to own those controls, and that was a challenge quite honestly.

    MF: On one level the movie tells an entertaining supernatural story, but on another level, it also deals with serious real-world themes. Was it nice to be in a project that really does both, educate and entertain?

    PM: That was terrific. It was incredibly unique, and I believe a very authentic vision from Matt Glass, Tara Perry, and Jordan Wayne Long, the creators of the film. So, it was a joy. We come with our own preparation and then all these layers are hitting you. As a film, it just makes it so textured and dimensional. So, you think you’re getting a period piece, then you think you’re getting a bit of a horror show, then you’re getting a bit of a social commentary. It’s like, what else can this movie throw at you?

    (L to R) Thomas Hobson and Phil Morris in 'Ghosts of the Ozarks'
    (L to R) Thomas Hobson and Phil Morris in ‘Ghosts of the Ozarks’

    MF: What was it like for you to work with your co-star, Thomas Hobson?

    PM: I had never met Tommy before the film, but I knew he was very good friends with Tara, Jordan and Matthew. I had worked with Tara on another little short film, so meeting Tommy, we met working on one of our most difficult days. What I realized about him was that he was just a game actor. He was ready to go. He was fearless, and that is beautiful to get into a scene, especially with somebody that you really don’t know. You’re trying to create this relationship that you’ve had for his whole life.

    To be with an actor who’s willing to throw down, who’s willing to kind of “go there with you” is a joy. That’s who Tommy Hobson is. He’s incredibly talented. He’s a triple threat. He’s a dancer, he is a singer, he’s an actor, and he brought something really special to this role. I think that the audience will see it and our relationship is palpable. I don’t know where this comes from. I really don’t know where actors get this from, this instant ability to connect and make real these relationships that are really kind of “add water and mix.”

    I don’t want to know everything. I like to be surprised. I like to be excited. I like to be thrilled and titillated. So, to work with another actor like Tommy Hobson, as the actor, I am entertained as well. I’m taken on a ride as well, and that’s the best way to work.

    MF: Finally, I know you only have one scene with him, but what was your experience like working with Tim Blake Nelson?

    PM: He was fantastic. I mean, this man has depth of creativity that a lot of us wish to have. So again, where Tommy’s a younger actor and not as experienced, working with Tim, or Angela Bettis, or David Arquette, those are more versatile, vintage, veteran actors that bring so much. It’s like your wardrobe, right, what we just talked about. When they bring that much, it’s best to just let it play.

    You have to get in there and play, and respond to this amazing energy. They bring this spirit, an actor like Tim Blake Nelson, that is so engaging for you as a performer, there’s no acting involved. You’re just being, and you’re just involved in this reality that they make much more palpable because of how much they bring to it. It was just a joy. It’s not working at all, it’s playing. It’s collaboration on the highest level.

    Tim Blake Nelson in 'Ghosts of the Ozarks'
    Tim Blake Nelson in ‘Ghosts of the Ozarks’
  • 11 Things You Never Knew About ‘Maverick’ on its 25th Anniversary

    11 Things You Never Knew About ‘Maverick’ on its 25th Anniversary

    Warner Bros.

    Maverick” may not be the most critically acclaimed Western released in the ’90s, but you’ll be hard-pressed to find a more enjoyable trip back to the Wild West and the days of rascals, card sharks and lawmen. Celebrate the 25th anniversary of this it Western by learning some fun facts about the making of “Maverick.”

    1. “Maverick” is an adaptation of the 1957-1962 TV series of the same name, which starred James Garner as Bret Maverick.

    Warner Bros.

    2. Garner played a very different role in this remake as Marshal Zane Cooper. The name is an homage to influential Western writer Zane Grey and actor Gary Cooper.

    3. The film includes cameo appearances from many popular country music singers, including Reba McEntire, Waylon Jennings, Hal Ketchum, Carlene Carter and Vince Gill.

    Warner Bros.

    4. Paul Newman was originally offered the role of Bret Maverick, but ultimately turned it down when the producers failed to meet his salary requirements.

    5. The steamboat is named “Lauren Belle” in tribute to director Richard Donner‘s wife, producer Lauren Shuler Donner. She also has a cameo in the film as “Mrs. D,” one of the maids in the bath house.

    6. The ship used for the Lauren Belle was a fully functional stern-wheel tugboat borrowed from the Oregon Maritime Museum.

    Buena Vista Pictures

    7. Julia Roberts, Meg Ryan and Michelle Pfeiffer were all considered for the part of Annabelle.

    8. Annabelle’s clumsiness wasn’t actually written in the original screenplay. Donner was inspired to add that element to the character after Jodie Foster fell out of a stagecoach when co-star Mel Gibson failed to help her down.

    Warner Bros.

    9. “Maverick” includes numerous callbacks to the “Lethal Weapon” series, including Danny Glover‘s cameo appearance and the scene where Mel Gibson’s character discovers his shirt has shrunk in the wash.

    10. The film includes a deleted sequence where Maverick attempts to demonstrate his supposedly magical card-playing abilities to a hermit played by Linda Hunt. Donner opted to cut this material because he felt it didn’t mesh with the rest of the film.

    Warner Bros.

    11. Another deleted scene features musician Alice Cooper in a cameo role as the town drunk. Rock on!

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  • ‘Once Upon a Time in Hollywood’ May Provide a Clue About Quentin Tarantino’s Next Project

    ‘Once Upon a Time in Hollywood’ May Provide a Clue About Quentin Tarantino’s Next Project

    Sony

    Quentin Tarantino‘s upcoming ’60s-set flick “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” is shrouded in mystery, though it will revolve in part around the infamous Charles Manson murder spree. But the film may also be hiding a clue about Tarantino’s next project, too.

    A new story from The Hollywood Reporter suggests that a character in the film could be serving as a gateway for Tarantino to reboot a classic western TV series. In “Once,” Luke Perry is playing a man named Scott Lancer — which also happens to be the name of one of the leads on “Lancer,” which ran on CBS for two seasons, from 1968 to 1970.

    According to THR, “Tarantino negotiated a deal with the widow of the show’s creator, Samuel A. Peeples, for the rights to the series and is contemplating bringing ‘Lancer’ back as a limited-run TV series or movie.” It may not be just a coincidence that Perry’s character has the same name as a character from that show, but the film could perhaps serve as a jumping off point for Tarantino to make his own version of “Lancer.”

    That’s all purely speculation, though, and THR says that it reached out to both Peeples’s wife and Tarantino, and has not received comment. If this is truly a secret, it would make sense that both parties would want to keep it hush-hush.

    We’ll have to wait until Tarantino talks — or “Once” hits theaters — before we know for sure. “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” is set for release on July 26, 2019.

    [via: The Hollywood Reporter]