Tag: Zoe Chao

  • Movie Review: ‘The Roses’

    (L to R) Olivia Colman and Benedict Cumberbatch in 'The Roses'. Photo by Jaap Buitendijk, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Olivia Colman and Benedict Cumberbatch in ‘The Roses’. Photo by Jaap Buitendijk, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    In theaters on August 29th is ‘The Roses’, the new adaptation of Warren Adler’s 1981 novel about a married couple whose relationship descends into frustration, deception and all-out war.

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    Directed by Jay Roach (‘Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery’), the new dark comedy stars Benedict Cumberbatch (‘Doctor Strange’), Olivia Colman (‘The Favourite’), Kate McKinnon (‘Saturday Night Live’), Andy Samberg (‘Hot Rod’), Ncuti Gatwa (‘Barbie’) and Allison Janney (‘The Help’).

    Related Article: Benedict Cumberbatch Addresses Doctor Strange’s Future in the MCU and a Third Stand-Alone Movie

    Initial Thoughts

    Olivia Colman in 'The Roses'. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    Olivia Colman in ‘The Roses’. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    Warren Adler’s novel about a marriage whose passion curdles into bitterness, jealousy and regret has been adapted once before, by Danny DeVito, who reunited ‘Romancing the Stone’ pair Michael Douglas and Kathleen Turner for ‘The War of the Roses’, a pitch-dark comedy drama fueled by their existing dynamic.

    Jay Roach and ‘The Favourite’s writer Tony McNamara go a different route for ‘The Roses’, which for much of its running time is a portrait of a seemingly blissful couple whose public façade hides simmering resentments, but is more cold war until it truly ignites in the third act.

    Script and Direction

    Benedict Cumberbatch in 'The Roses'. Photo by Jaap Buitendijk, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    Benedict Cumberbatch in ‘The Roses’. Photo by Jaap Buitendijk, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    McNamara has long shown a talent for writing believably toxic relationships with enough of a farcical edge to keep it all from being too brutal –– except when it needs to be. His screenplay for ‘The Roses’ is the perfect fodder for two British stars (American audiences may sometimes react the way their marriage counsellor does in the first scene, taken aback by the sheer comic vitriol on display) to trade barbs like consummate pros.

    And Roach, who has blended comedy and drama to winning effect (but also knows how to make farce serve story), was a solid choice to make this, keeping out of the cast’s way and working with them to develop the dynamics in very funny, sharp ways.

    While you do sometimes wonder whether the film would have been better set in the UK, the disconnect between the leads and their American friends/co-workers does add some spice to the story.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Kate McKinnon, Jamie Demetriou, Zoe Chao, and Andy Samberg in 'The Roses'. Photo by Jaap Buitendijk, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Kate McKinnon, Jamie Demetriou, Zoe Chao, and Andy Samberg in ‘The Roses’. Photo by Jaap Buitendijk, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    This one really works because of its firecracker central pair; Cumberbatch and Colman may not totally convince as a couple deep in the throes of love and family, but when it comes to subversive, scathing dialogue, they are experts.

    As Cumberbatch’s character sees his professional architect career (and ego) crumble even as his wife’s chef ambitions flourish, they craft excellent performances, bouncing off one another.

    There is a deep bench of comedy performers backing them up, but the standouts here are certainly Andy Samberg and Kate McKinnon as Amy and Barry, friends of the couple whose own marriage has seen better days. Credit also to Allison Janney, who pops up for one scene as Colman’s ruthless divorce lawyer, stealing every moment she’s on screen.

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R) Olivia Colman and Allison Janney in 'The Roses'. Photo by Lara Cornell, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Olivia Colman and Allison Janney in ‘The Roses’. Photo by Lara Cornell, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    ‘The Roses’ may be more a skirmish than a war, but it is also a reboot that justifies its existence with a very different type of caustic relationship clash and superlative performances from its leads.

    It may not always be a feel-good movie, but that’s not the intent. And it’ll certainly make you laugh.

    ‘The Roses’ receives a score of 80 out of 100.

    (L to R) Benedict Cumberbatch and Olivia Colman in 'The Roses'. Photo by Jaap Buitendijk, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Benedict Cumberbatch and Olivia Colman in ‘The Roses’. Photo by Jaap Buitendijk, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    What’s the story of ‘The Roses’?

    Life seems easy for picture-perfect couple Ivy (Olivia Colman) and Theo (Benedict Cumberbatch): successful careers, a loving marriage, great kids.

    But beneath the façade of their supposed ideal life, a storm is brewing –– as Theo’s career nosedives while Ivy’s own ambitions take off, a tinderbox of fierce competition and hidden resentment ignites.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Roses’?

    • Olivia Colman as Ivy Rose
    • Benedict Cumberbatch as Theo Rose
    • Kate McKinnon as Amy
    • Andy Samberg as Barry
    • Ncuti Gatwa as Jeffrey
    • Allison Janney as Eleanor
    • Zoë Chao as Sally
    • Sunita Mani as Jane
    Benedict Cumberbatch in 'The Roses'. Photo by Jaap Buitendijk, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    Benedict Cumberbatch in ‘The Roses’. Photo by Jaap Buitendijk, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘The Roses’:

    Buy Tickets: ‘The Roses’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Benedict Cumberbatch Movies On Amazon

     

     

  • Movie Review: ‘Nightbitch’

    Amy Adams in 'Nightbitch'. Photo Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2024 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    Amy Adams in ‘Nightbitch’. Photo Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2024 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    Opening in theaters December 6th is ‘Nightbitch,’ directed by Marielle Heller and starring Amy Adams, Scoot McNairy, Arleigh Snowden, Emmett Snowden, Zoë Chao, Mary Holland, Ella Thomas, Archana Rajan, and Jessica Harper.

    Related Article: Amy Adams Talks ‘Nightbitch’ and Developing the Project as a Producer

    Initial Thoughts

    Movies where characters have no names, and only referred to as “Mother” or other archetypes, always make us suspicious. While it can work in book form, film is a much more visual medium and therefore a more specific one, and while that lack of specificity may make a story on the page more universal or metaphorical, the more concrete language of film may demand a little more out of its characters.

    That’s especially true when you set them in a realistic – if also unnamed – time and place, as Marielle Heller’s film ‘Nightbitch’ does. An adaptation of Rachel Yoder’s 2021 novel, the movie stars Amy Adams as a stay-at-home mom (named ‘Mother’) who has given up a career as an artist and pretty much all of her self-identity to take care of her toddler (‘Son’). But Mother’s frustration with her choices manifests itself in some seemingly peculiar ways, leaving ‘Nightbitch’ in an uneasy and not super-successful limbo between satire, allegory, and body horror exercise.

    Story and Direction

    Marielle Heller on the set of 'Nightbitch'. Photo By Anne Marie Fox, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures © 2024 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    Marielle Heller on the set of ‘Nightbitch’. Photo By Anne Marie Fox, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures © 2024 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    Mother (Amy Adams) has given up her career as an artist to stay at home and take of, as she puts it, “a person who will pee in your face without blinking.” Her daily routine with her son – walks in the neighborhood, trips to the supermarket, crafts and games in the house, the same thing every day for lunch – becomes soul-crushingly numbing; she showed her work “at the Modern” once, but is “just dumb now.”

    She attends mommy groups at the library but confesses in voiceover that she hates the other moms, all of whom seem to be having a much blissful experience than she is. Meanwhile, the barely present Husband (Scoot McNairy) is off traveling most days for his anonymous job, leaving Mother to take care of Son, run the house, and listen to Husband’s whining about how their relationship isn’t what it was before Son came along. “What happened to my wife?” he asks at one point. “She died in childbirth,” says Mother bitterly.

    It is those punishing early days of motherhood that ‘Nightbitch’ (the film) gets right, with director Heller saying that Rachel Yoder’s book impacted her just as she stayed home for several years with her own young children. But while Heller has a great eye for emotional and physical detail in the everyday lives of dysfunctional people (just watch her marvelous ‘Diary of a Teenage Girl’ or the brilliant ‘Can You Ever Forgive Me?’), she is less sure-footed when ‘Nightbitch’ takes a turn into surrealism with a touch of body horror.

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    Mother begins to notice fuzz growing on her back and face, while her teeth seem to sharpen; a bump on the end of her spine soon elongates into what appears to be a tail. Wild dogs begin congregating around her house at night, sometimes leaving her their kills. She herself craves raw meat. And finally one night, Mother changes into a canine form, running on all fours through her nameless suburban neighborhood as if she’s just been released from solitary confinement. She’s free, she’s an animal, she’s a primal force of nature – she’s herself.

    Or is she? While such a transformation may work on the page, putting it on film makes it more literal and clunky. We’re never quite sure whether it’s all in Mother’s mind or not, and the earlier, emotionally truthful parts of the story simply don’t sit well with its flights of fancy. At one point, an enigmatic librarian named Norma (the great Jessica Harper) gives Mother a book called “A Field Guide to Magical Women,” suggesting that Mother is part of a long line of women who have “delayed their own greatness” (including Mother’s own mom). But just as things seem to come to a head – both in Mother’s own interior life and in her increasingly strained relationship with Husband – the story comes to a pat conclusion that seems to tie things up in simplistic fashion.

    ‘Nightbitch’ offers up some rich material for both Heller and Adams to mine, and hits upon some stark truths about motherhood – truths that often get buried in society’s rush to make it seem like it must be the ultimate achievement and defining moment in every woman’s life. But the film’s fantastical extension of those ideas doesn’t go very far, and the movie retreats from them almost as soon as it begins to explore them.

    The Cast

    Amy Adams in 'Nightbitch'. Photo Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2024 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    Amy Adams in ‘Nightbitch’. Photo Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2024 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    We can watch Amy Adams in just about anything, and ‘Nightbitch’ is really a showcase for her. Although Mother is more an idea than a full character in many ways, Adams brings a complexity to this woman that provides the main drive for the film. Mother’s exhaustion, boredom, and inner tension is palpable, as is her barely suppressed – and fully earned – rage when confronted with Husband’s neediness. And when her animalistic tendencies take over, her sexuality comes out unexpectedly as well, simmering, raw, and long-buried but still powerful. Although Adams is hampered by the script’s queasy sort of twilight existence, she still delivers a well-rounded and poignant performance.

    Scoot McNairy, playing his second insecure male this year after his turn in the American remake of ‘Speak No Evil,’ does not fare nearly as well as Husband, a one-dimensional punching bag who pretty much deserves every (symbolic) blow he takes. Husband is clueless, unsympathetic, and emotionally absent, which makes his abrupt character turn toward the end of the film feel hollow. McNairy is a good actor who’s not served well by this role, and while Husband certainly represents a certain kind of husband and father (not all, but a lot) who see their role as merely bringing home the bacon while leaving the parenting to their partners, the film’s portrayal comes up short.

    Although they’re all pretty thinly-drawn in a way, the women from the mommy group that Mother reluctantly hangs out with are at least fun to watch in a comic sense, and it’s always nice to see our beloved Jessica Harper (‘Suspiria,’ ‘Phantom of the Paradise’) onscreen even if her narrative thread ultimately doesn’t lead much of anywhere.

    Final Thoughts

    Amy Adams in 'Nightbitch'. Photo Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2024 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    Amy Adams in ‘Nightbitch’. Photo Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2024 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    With award season upon us, there’s a good chance that Amy Adams might land her seventh Oscar nomination for ‘Nightbitch,’ and it would certainly be well-deserved. Whether she can win or not in a field that’s already looking fiercely competitive – with ‘Anora’ star Mikey Madison, ‘Babygirl’ lead Nicole Kidman, and Angelina Jolie from ‘Maria’ all in the running, among others – remains to be seen.

    We just wish the movie around her was better. While the more realistic parts of ‘Nightbitch’ are on target much of the time, the film’s more allegorical or fantastical elements just don’t mesh as well, at least on film, and the director is never able to solve that problem. And instead of committing all the way to one direction or the other, ‘Nightbitch’ just kind of quickly wraps things up. Amy Adams’ provocative performance deserves better, but in the end this ‘Nightbitch’ lacks bite.

    ‘Nightbitch’ receives 6.5 out of 10 stars.

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    What is the plot of ‘Nightbitch’?

    An overwhelmed and frustrated stay-at-home mother (Amy Adams) begins to seemingly transform into a dog as she yearns to rediscover her own identity.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Nightbitch’?

    • Amy Adams as Mother
    • Scoot McNairy as Husband
    • Arleigh and Emmett Snowden as Son
    • Zoë Chao as Jen
    • Mary Holland as Miriam
    • Ella Thomas as Naya
    • Archana Rajan as Liz
    • Jessica Harper as Norma
    'Nightbitch' director Marielle Heller.
    ‘Nightbitch’ director Marielle Heller.

    List of Marielle Heller Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Nightbitch’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Amy Adams Movies on Amazon

  • ‘Nightbitch’ Exclusive Interview: Amy Adams

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    Opening in theaters on December 6th is ‘Nightbitch’, which was directed by Marielle Heller (‘A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood’), and stars Oscar-nominee Amy Adams (‘The Fighter’, ‘American Hustle’), Scoot McNairy (‘Speak No Evil’), Zoë Chao (‘The Afterparty’), Mary Holland (‘Senior Year’), Ella Thomas (’Desperation Road’), Roslyn Gentle (‘Bombshell’) and Jessica Harper (‘Minority Report’).

    Related Article: Amy Adams Joins Jenna Ortega in Taika Waititi’s ‘Klara and the Sun’

    Amy Adams talks 'Nightbitch'.
    Amy Adams talks ‘Nightbitch’.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Amy Adams about her work on ‘Nightbitch’, developing the project as a producer, her approach to playing her character and the difficulties in her marriage, and the challenges of working with children and dogs.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Adams and director Marielle Heller.

    Amy Adams in 'Nightbitch'. Photo Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2024 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    Amy Adams in ‘Nightbitch’. Photo Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2024 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    MF: To begin with, can you talk about developing this project as a producer and the themes you wanted to explore on screen as an actress?

    Amy Adams: Well, I read the novel before there was a screenplay, so I was brought early on to produce it with Sue Naegle and Annapurna Pictures. Then, we immediately got Mari (director Marielle Heller) on board and Mari’s unique perspective and how she brought that unique tone from the novel into the screenplay. I thought the tone was unique. I thought it dealt with so many important issues. It brings up not only motherhood, parenthood, relationships, community, generational trauma, all these things, of course, that I love to dive into. I really wanted to tell this story.

    Amy Adams in 'Nightbitch'. Photo Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2024 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    Amy Adams in ‘Nightbitch’. Photo Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2024 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    MF: Can you talk about the frustrations that your character is having with her husband and motherhood in general?

    AA: I think as we find her in the film, she’s at this place where she and father (Scoot McNairy) haven’t really communicated effectively how there would be an equitable division inside of the home. She’s taken on the bulk of responsibility of parenthood. What I love about what Mari’s done with the film and how Scoot McNairy plays the father is that he really isn’t the antagonist of the film and nor is motherhood the antagonist. There’s always a conflict of, and I think that feels so human and so true, between feeling lost and feeling like you’ve lost yourself and yet loving the new life that you could create, but not knowing how important communication and community is through that. Again, I think Scoot does such a wonderful job of playing this husband because he is so loving and invested. He just doesn’t know what’s going on and she hasn’t been able to communicate the truth and the depth of her frustration and her loss of self.

    Amy Adams in 'Nightbitch'. Photo Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2024 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    Amy Adams in ‘Nightbitch’. Photo Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2024 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    MF: Finally, there is an old saying that you should “never work with children or animals,” and you do both in this film. What was that like for you?

    AA: I said that making this movie was a lot like having a baby. Now that I’m done, I’m like, “It was not hard at all.” But I think in the moment, if I’m really being honest, there were some challenges, but it was such a wonderful experience. These boys, Emmett and Arleigh (Snowden), they’re these twins that we worked with, were so open and kind of reminded me of the natural give and take of acting that sometimes can get away from me in bigger themes. It kind of brought me back to the play of acting, and it was a lot of fun to work with them. They were so beautiful and the whole set rallied around the experience. We had the prop master constantly bringing new things for them to play with, and Mari down here talking to them. It was a full community working with these kids.

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    What is the plot of ‘Nightbitch’?

    The film concerns a magical realism-style story of a stay-at-home mom (Amy Adams) who sometimes transforms into a dog.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Nightbitch’?

    Marielle Heller on the set of 'Nightbitch'. Photo By Anne Marie Fox, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures © 2024 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    Marielle Heller on the set of ‘Nightbitch’. Photo By Anne Marie Fox, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures © 2024 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    List of Marielle Heller Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Nightbitch’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Amy Adams Movies on Amazon

  • TV Review: ‘Creature Commandos’

    (L to R) Nina Mazursky, GI Robot, The Bride, Rick Flag Sr., Dr. Phosphorus, Weasel in 'Creature Commandoes'. Photo: Courtesy of Max.
    (L to R) Nina Mazursky, GI Robot, The Bride, Rick Flag Sr., Dr. Phosphorus, Weasel in ‘Creature Commandoes’. Photo: Courtesy of Max.

    Launching with its first two episodes (of seven) on December 5th on Max, ‘Creature Commandos’ marks the start of filmmaker James Gunn and producer Peter Safran’s run in charge of DC Studios, the arm of Warner Bros. Discovery intended to adapt its sprawling DC Comics properties.

    It faces quite the challenge, since Warners has seen some truly mixed fortunes with the likes of Superman, Batman and the rest, and particularly in combining them via one cohesive cinematic universe.

    Gunn certainly brings some experience to the table, having spent a few years with the ‘Guardians of the Galaxy’ characters in the MCU (and a wealth of other genre work), plus getting a solid ‘Suicide Squad’ effort into cinemas and, possibly even more importantly, impressing audiences with his take on the Peacemaker character spun off from that on to TV.

    Related Article: Exclusive: Frank Grillo Talks ‘Superman’, ‘Peacemaker’ Season 2 and More

    Will ‘Creature Commandos’ Command Your Attention?

    (L to R) Dr. Phosphorus, GI Robot, The Bride, Nina Mazursky, Rick Flag Sr. in 'Creature Commandoes'. Photo: Courtesy of Max.
    (L to R) Dr. Phosphorus, GI Robot, The Bride, Nina Mazursky, Rick Flag Sr. in ‘Creature Commandoes’. Photo: Courtesy of Max.

    This very much has the feel of Gunn’s work –– it’s chatty, funny in a dark, sometimes sarcastic way, but is also filled with moments of humanity (even if they’re for characters who are decidedly non-human).

    Here, he’s able to indulge in even more of what he enjoys, including deconstructing tropes (while also using them when needed), poking fun at stalwart concepts such as heroism and moral gray areas and letting a talented cast. That much-aimed for cohesiveness is already showing up, since Frank Grillo, who voices Rick Flag Sr. here, will be bringing the character to live-action for ‘Peacemaker’ Season 2.

    Script and Direction

    (L to R) Dr. Phosphorus, The Bride, Nina Mazursky, Rick Flag Sr., GI Robot, Weasel in 'Creature Commandoes'. Photo: Courtesy of Max.
    (L to R) Dr. Phosphorus, The Bride, Nina Mazursky, Rick Flag Sr., GI Robot, Weasel in ‘Creature Commandoes’. Photo: Courtesy of Max.

    Gunn, in typically busy form, wrote all seven episodes, adapting the comics originally created by Pat Broderick and J.M. DeMatteis.

    The story across the episodes follows one mission –– taking down the threat of sorceress Circe (Anya Chalotra) who has tasked what is effectively an incel army obsessed with the all-female island of Themiscyra (AKA Wonder Woman’s home) with attacking a small fictional Eastern European country in the hopes of using its resources to conquer the island, which Circe believes is her right.

    Amanda Waller (Viola Davis, who has played the role across the two ‘Suicide Squad’ movies and ‘Peacemaker’ has to gather who she can to send on the mission to stop them, her resources severely depleted since the disastrous assignment in Gunn’s ‘Squad’ movie.

    (L to R) GI Robot, Dr. Phosphorus, The Bride, Rick Flag Sr., Nina Mazursky, Weasel in 'Creature Commandoes'. Photo: Courtesy of Max.
    (L to R) GI Robot, Dr. Phosphorus, The Bride, Rick Flag Sr., Nina Mazursky, Weasel in ‘Creature Commandoes’. Photo: Courtesy of Max.

    It’s a compelling set up for a misfit mission movie, the various characters quickly proving to be oil and water in their outlooks, and Flag trying to keep them unified (or at least not killing each other… or him).

    The result is an entertaining brew that is filled with plenty of action and drama and also manages to explore the backstories of the various characters (yes, even Weasel has a tragic past).

    Yves “Balak” Bigerel is the show’s supervising director, and he and his team certainly find a style that fits with Gunn’s writing. The animation brings to mind more recent efforts such as ‘Harley Quinn,’ and its dynamic enough for what it needs.

    Performances

    Gunn has recruited an impressive voice cast for the show, with a few standouts…

    Frank Grillo as Rick Flag Sr.

    (L to R) Rick Flag Sr., Amanda Waller in 'Creature Commandoes'. Photo: Courtesy of Max.
    (L to R) Rick Flag Sr., Amanda Waller in ‘Creature Commandoes’. Photo: Courtesy of Max.

    While Flag, pressed into service to lead the team, is more of a straight man to the wilder personalities that make it up, he’s not without depth and a proper storyline. Grillo lends him the appropriate amount of gruff weariness and shows the man’s layers particularly when talking about his late son (in one of several references to ‘The Suicide Squad’).

    Alan Tudyk as Doctor Phosphorus

    Dr. Phosphorus in 'Creature Commandoes'. Photo: Courtesy of Max.
    Dr. Phosphorus in ‘Creature Commandoes’. Photo: Courtesy of Max.

    Tudyk has long been an excellent voice-over actor, and his Phosphorus is imbued with all the sarcastic wit you might hope for.

    The actor also takes on a variety of other small roles throughout the show but makes them different enough so that you just enjoy watching them.

    Indira Varma as the Bride

    The Bride in 'Creature Commandoes'. Photo: Courtesy of Max.
    The Bride in ‘Creature Commandoes’. Photo: Courtesy of Max.

    The Bride of Frankenstein is one of the more interesting characters on the team, filled with rage and sadness at her creation (or re-birth) purely to serve the interests of a man. It’s one that needed a sure touch, and between Gunn’s writing and Varma’s sensitive, full-throated performance, it works well.

    Zoë Chao as Nina Mazursky

    (L to R) Nina Mazursky, GI Robot, Dr. Phosphorus in 'Creature Commandoes'. Photo: Courtesy of Max.
    (L to R) Nina Mazursky, GI Robot, Dr. Phosphorus in ‘Creature Commandoes’. Photo: Courtesy of Max.

    The team’s aquatic mutant, she’s the nerdy, nervier member who has to find her backbone to really fight alongside them. Chao does good work voicing both sides of a character who has one of the more interesting arcs.

    Maria Bakalova as Ilana Rostovic

    (L to R) Princess Ilana, Rick Flag Sr. in 'Creature Commandoes'. Photo: Courtesy of Max.
    (L to R) Princess Ilana, Rick Flag Sr. in ‘Creature Commandoes’. Photo: Courtesy of Max.

    Gunn veteran Bakalova (who voiced Cosmo in the third ‘Guardians’ movie), here voices the princess of the country that Flag and the rest are sent to help. Initially attracted to the old soldier, she reveals some hidden depths and Bakalova is good playing the layers.

    Other notable characters

    (L to R) GI Robot in 'Creature Commandoes'. Photo: Courtesy of Max.
    (L to R) GI Robot in ‘Creature Commandoes’. Photo: Courtesy of Max.

    This being a Gunn production, it surely would be complete without at least one member of his family, and Sean Gunn is back playing both the slavering Weasel (who, as mentioned, gets a convincingly sad backstory) and World War II relic creation G.I. Robot, who is obsessed with slaying Nazis. Sean Gunn brings them both to vibrant vocal life.

    David Harbour, meanwhile, scores a decently meaty role as Eric Frankenstein, the creature created by the literary doctor, who has his own reasons for keeping track of our heroes (and obviously factors into the Bride’s story).

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R) GI Robot, Dr. Phosphorus, Rick Flag Sr. in 'Creature Commandoes'. Photo: Courtesy of Max.
    (L to R) GI Robot, Dr. Phosphorus, Rick Flag Sr. in ‘Creature Commandoes’. Photo: Courtesy of Max.

    Not every filmmaker would choose to have the story of a group of violent, strange creatures be the beachhead for their new, linked comic book adaptation universe. But James Gunn is not every filmmaker, and while ‘Creature Commandos’ certainly won’t be to everyone’s taste, it’s quite the calling card.

    His take on Superman will be with us next year and that might give us more an idea of how he handles the traditional hero’s story. For now, though, this group are entertaining and emotional in equal measure.

    And those who are big DC Comics fans will find plenty of references –– not that you have to know them to understand the story –– bringing flavor to the show.

    ‘Creature Commandos’ receives 7.5 out of 10 stars.

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    What’s the story of ‘Creature Commandos’?

    The new DC animated series tracks a secret team of incarcerated monsters recruited for missions deemed too dangerous for humans.

    When all else fails… they’re your last, worst option.

    Who is in the voice cast of ‘Creature Commandos’?

    • Frank Grillo as Rick Flag Sr.
    • David Harbour as Eric Frankenstein
    • Zoë Chao as Nina Mazursky
    • Sean Gunn as G.I. Robot
    • Alan Tudyk as Doctor Phosphorus and Clayface
    • Indira Varma as the Bride
    • Viola Davis as Amanda Waller
    • Steve Agee as John Economos
    • Maria Bakalova as Princess Ilana Rostovic
    • Anya Chalotra as Circe
    'Creature Commandoes'. Photo: Courtesy of Max.
    ‘Creature Commandoes’. Photo: Courtesy of Max.

    Movies and TV Shows in the DC Universe:

    Buy DC Movies On Amazon

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  • TV Review: ‘The Afterparty’ Season 2

    Tiffany Haddish in 'The Afterparty,' now streaming on Apple TV+.
    Tiffany Haddish in ‘The Afterparty,’ now streaming on Apple TV+.

    Launched with the first two episodes on Apple TV+, the second season of ‘The Afterparty’ manages to take the story in interesting new directors while also maintaining what made the first so entertaining.

    Created by Chris Miller and produced by Miller alongside regular creative partner Phil Lord, ‘The Afterparty’ has the clever conceit of presenting the events of the story from the different points of view of the various characters, all portrayed in different genres.

    And while the new season doesn’t have the frisson of a new idea in quite the same way, there is still plenty of freshness here.

    What’s the story of ‘The Afterparty’s second season?

    Zoë Chao and Sam Richardson in 'The Afterparty,' now streaming on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Zoë Chao and Sam Richardson in ‘The Afterparty,’ now streaming on Apple TV+.

    The story picks up with Aniq (Sam Richardson) and Zoë (Zoë Chao), now a couple, having made it through the murder mystery that sprang up during the afterparty of a high school reunion.

    It’s a year later and the pair are attending the wedding of Zoë’s sister Grace (Poppy Liu), who is getting married to wealthy tech type Edgar (Zach Woods) at his family’s expansive estate north of San Francisco.

    Aniq fails to make a good impression his girlfriend’s family, but that pales in comparison when Edgar is discovered dead the morning after the wedding (along with his pet lizard, Roxana).

    Soon, accusations are being thrown around and skeletons from the past on all sides are coming to light. Aniq contacts Detective Danner –– or rather former Detective Danner (Tiffany Haddish) –– who cracked the case in the first season (and is now trying to write a book about the experience) to come and solve the new murder mystery.

    Who else appears in ‘The Afterparty’ Season 2?

    Jack Whitehall and John Cho in 'The Afterparty,' now streaming on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Jack Whitehall and John Cho in ‘The Afterparty,’ now streaming on Apple TV+.

    Season two boasts a new group of characters including Edgar’s adopted sister Hannah (Anna Konkle), his widowed mother Isabel (Elizabeth Perkins), and business partner Sebastian (Jack Whitehall); Grace and Zoë’s parents Feng (Ken Jeong) and Vivian (Vivian Wu), as well as their long-estranged world-travelling uncle Ulysses (John Cho); and Grace’s ex-boyfriend Travis (Paul Walter Hauser).

    Related Article: Producers Phil Lord, Cristopher Miller and Cast Talk ‘The Afterparty’

    Is ‘The Afterparty’ Season 2 an event worth attending?

    Anna Konkle, Elizabeth Perkins, Zach Woods, Poppy Liu, John Cho, Vivian Wu, Ken Jeong and Zoë Chao in 'The Afterparty,' now streaming on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Anna Konkle, Elizabeth Perkins, Zach Woods, Poppy Liu, John Cho, Vivian Wu, Ken Jeong and Zoë Chao in ‘The Afterparty,’ now streaming on Apple TV+.

    As we mentioned, the idea of splitting the episodes between the various characters’ viewpoints and utilizing a different genre for each one is no longer as fresh and new as the first, but the show’s creative team has worked hard to make it feel different and worthwhile rather than a retread.

    Part of that is rounding up a superb new ensemble to bring the characters to life, with the highlights including Cho as the worldly, weird uncle that Zoë and Grace idolized as youngsters, but haven’t seen for years after he fell out with their parents. His re-introduction to their lives (organized by Edgar and Sebastian) is a fantastic showcase for Cho, who has rarely gotten to play such a flamboyant, weird character.

    Jeong is also great –– a picky shaved ice magnate (he’s quick to point out that it’s Taiwanese rather than Hawaiian) –– gives him a chance to do the sort of shouty, nervy character who works well playing against the others.

    Woods’ Edgar has his own set of quirks; a painfully socially awkward genius whose closest companion is his pet reptile, and while it might come across as the character he played or some he interacted with on ‘Silicon Valley’, he brings something new to this role. Kudos also to the effects team bringing Roxana the lizard to life –– she’s almost as much of a character as she is.

    Among the genres the season offers are Jane Austen-style period drama (for Grace’s story of how she met and fell for Edgar and her worries that Zoë isn’t on board with their whirlwind romance), and one set within the word of TikTok and other social media trends.

    And a breakout hit of the season to come is the episode focused on Danner investigating a different case. We won’t go into any big spoilers but suffice to say that fans of 1980s and 1990s thrillers (and food) will heartily enjoy the craziness on display. You can also expect to see a spoof of heist movies and 1950s melodrama.

    Through it all, Haddish and Richardson provide reliable anchors –– he all nervous energy and trying to do what’s right, she the quick-thinking, smack-talking type who knows that everyone lies at some point.

    There are the same level of twists and turns this time around, the various viewpoints providing different laughs and the emotional quotient remaining high. These are characters you’ll enjoy getting to know and figuring out who might have dangerous motives and reasons to wish Edgar harm.

    It also generates plenty of knowing stories about the tensions both within Asian families and towards them –– at one point Jeong’s Feng points out that white people clustered whispering is never a good thing.

    Lord and Miller have long proved to be skilled at taking comedy and genre and twisting them together, and ‘The Afterparty’ continues to be a great example of that.

    ‘Afterparty’ problems?

    Poppy Liu and Zach Woods in 'The Afterparty,' now streaming on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Poppy Liu and Zach Woods in ‘The Afterparty,’ now streaming on Apple TV+.

    Not every genre pick is quite as effective, which means you might find yourself going from an episode you truly enjoy to one that only offers minor chuckles.

    Yet this is the only real issue with the new show, which has made a successful return to Apple’s streaming service and marks one of the best comedies on TV at the moment. The only other problem you could have is with the weekly drip feed release schedule –– your patience might be taxed waiting for each episode of the remaining eight to drop, but it’s worth it.

    And the only guarantee we can’t give is that the show sticks the landing this time and resolves the mystery effectively, as critics were not provided with the crucial final episode. But on the evidence of the season so far and the great quality of the first, we have faith.

    ‘The Afterparty’ Season 2 receives 8 out of 10 stars.

    Tiffany Haddish and Elizabeth Perkins in 'The Afterparty,' now streaming on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Tiffany Haddish and Elizabeth Perkins in ‘The Afterparty,’ now streaming on Apple TV+.

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  • ‘Party Down’ Season 3 Interviews: Jane Lynch and Ken Marino

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    Premiering on Starz February 24th is the long-awaited third season of the popular comedy series ‘Party Down,’ which was created by Rob Thomas (‘Veronica Mars’), Paul Rudd (‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’), John Enbom, and Dan Etheridge.

    Is ‘Party Down’ coming back?

    Yes! The series, which ran its first two seasons on Starz in 2009 and 2010 is returning for a six-episode revival series premiering on February 24th.

    What is ‘Party Down?’

    ‘Party Down’ is a half-hour comedy that follows a Los Angeles catering company that is comprised of aspiring actors and writers as they work small-time catering gigs hoping for their big breaks. Each episode finds the company’s employees working a new event, and getting into trouble with their rich and powerful guests.

    In season 3, ten years after season 2, most of the catering team have moved on, including actor/bartender Henry Pollard (Adam Scott). After a surprise reunion, the gang find themselves once again stoically enduring the procession of random parties and oddball guests all over Los Angeles.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Party Down’ season 3?

    ‘Party Down’ season 3 stars returning cast members Adam Scott (‘Severance’) as Henry Pollard, Ken Marino (‘Masterminds’) as Ronald Wayne “Ron” Donald, Jane Lynch (‘The 40-Year-Old Virgin’) as Constance Carmell, Martin Starr (‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’) as Roman DeBeers, Ryan Hansen (‘Bad Santa 2’) as Kyle Bradway, and Megan Mullally (‘The Disaster Artist‘) as Lydia Dunfree, as well as new cast members Tyrel Jackson Williams (‘Thunder Force’) and Zoë Chao (‘The Afterparty’).

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Jane Lynch and Ken Marino about working on the third season of ‘Party Down,’ where their characters are now, and reuniting with the rest of the cast.

    Ken Marino and Jane Lynch star in season 3 of Starz's 'Party Down.'
    (L to R) Ken Marino and Jane Lynch star in season 3 of Starz’s ‘Party Down.’

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Lynch, Marino, Ryan Hansen, Martin Starr, Tyrel Jackson Williams, Zoe Chao, and series co-creator John Enborn.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Jane, what has Constance been up to in the decade or so since season two?

    Jane Lynch: Well, when we last left Constance, she had just gotten married to a very rich old man in an episode directed by Ken Marino. He died immediately, not Ken, the guy playing my husband. Who actually, the actor did die shortly thereafter. Bless his heart. So I inherited all of his money. You saw me in fact, in the last shot (of season 2) when they say, “Your husband’s dead,” and all of a sudden it hits me, he may be dead, but I’ve got all this money. So anyway, that’s what happened with my character. So when I come back, I’m loaded and happy, always happy, and glad to see my friends again.

    MF: Ken, what has Ron been doing since we last saw him?

    Ken Marino: Ron is just still trying to live the dream and fight through what life hands him, which is a lot of crap. He keeps going, and he pushes through. He’s close to realizing his dream, but as you know, there are a lot of obstacles that he creates for himself, and get in the way. We’ll see what happens.

    Tyrel Jackson Williams, Ryan Hansen, Zoë Chao, Martin Starr, Adam Scott and Ken Marino in season 3 of Starz's 'Party Down.'
    (L to R) Tyrel Jackson Williams, Ryan Hansen, Zoë Chao, Martin Starr, Adam Scott and Ken Marino in season 3 of Starz’s ‘Party Down.’

    Related Article: Jane Lynch Transforms Into Janet Reno for ‘Manhunt: Unabomber’

    MF: What was it like your first day back on set with the entire cast after such a long time?

    JL: Well, that’s what it felt like too. I was thinking, God, am I going to be able to get back into the character? Then I get with all these guys and immediately back in.

    KM: Yeah, it’s a special show. And to get to work with everybody again is a wonderful gift that I didn’t expect was going to happen. So when it actually did happen, I was thrilled.

    MF: Jane, did you rewatch your work in the first two seasons to kind of remind you of who Constance was and how to play her now?

    JL: You know what? I think I did. Usually, I’m a very lazy actor. I mean, if I learn my lines, we’re lucky. But I think I actually did go back and look. I can’t remember exactly doing it, but the only thing I was nervous about was would it come back? Was it really in there? And it was because I was around everybody else who was doing their thing. I think it was a relief for all of us.

    MF: Finally, Ken, what did you do to get back into the role of Ron?

    KM: Ron’s deep in there and I don’t think he ever left. So I think I’ve been holding him in there in hopes that we would get to do another season. And lo and behold, here we are.

    Season 3 of 'Party Down' premieres on Starz beginning February 24th.
    Season 3 of ‘Party Down’ premieres on Starz beginning February 24th.

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  • ‘Somebody I Used to Know’ Interview: Director Dave Franco

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    Premiering on Prime Video beginning February 10th is the new romantic comedy ‘Somebody I Used to Know,’ which was written by actors Dave Franco (‘The Disaster Artist’) and Alison Brie (‘Promising Young Woman’), and directed by Franco.

    The film stars Brie as Ally, a workaholic who returns home to visit her mother (‘Airplane!’s Julie Hagerty) the same weekend that her ex, Sean (‘Top Gun: Maverick’s Jay Ellis) is getting married to his young fiancé Cassidy (‘The Flash’s Kiersey Clemons). Ally is quickly thrown into the wedding festivities as the videographer, but really plans to ruin the wedding so she can get Sean back.

    The movie also features supporting performances from Haley Joel Osment (‘The Sixth Sense’), Danny Pudi (‘Community’), Zoe Chao (‘The Afterparty’), Sam Richardson (‘Hocus Pocus 2’), and Amy Sedaris (‘Puss in Boots’).

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with director Dave Franco about his work on ‘Somebody I Used to Know,’ developing the idea for the screenplay, directing his wife Alison Brie, and putting together his crew and the rest of the cast.

    Dave Franco co-writes and directs Prime Video's 'Somebody I Used to Know.'
    Dave Franco co-writes and directs Prime Video’s ‘Somebody I Used to Know.’

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Franco, Alison Brie, Jay Ellis, and Kiersey Clemons.

    Moviefone: To begin with, can you talk about creating the story for the film and writing the screenplay with Alison, and did you to continue to write with her and change dialogue while you were shooting?

    Dave Franco: The story came about while we were walking through my hometown of Palo Alto. I think being in that setting, these ideas of going home, and reconnecting with your roots, and thinking about who you used to be compared to who you are now, all of that just became what the script ended up being. Then, in terms of how much the dialogue changed over time, it’s always changing.

    One thing I like to do is before we start filming, I meet up with all the actors, and we basically go through each scene, and I ask them, “Are there any lines of dialogue or even any single words that don’t feel natural to you? Let’s change that now, let’s put it in your voice so that by the time we’re on set, we’re hitting the ground running, we’re not figuring all that stuff out.”

    It ends up being this thing where, I think on both movies I’ve directed, I go over the script a million times, and then every day before whatever scene is coming, I look at that scene again. You just see it in a new light, and more often than not, I’m like, this is overwritten. We don’t need to say all this. Let’s chop it back. So it’s more about pairing everything back.

    Alison Brie and director Dave Franco at the premiere of Prime Video's 'Somebody I Used to Know.'
    (L to R) Alison Brie and director Dave Franco at the premiere of Prime Video’s ‘Somebody I Used to Know.’

    MF: Can you talk about the crew you put together for this project, and what was it like for you to work with your cinematographer to compose shots on set and work with your editor in the cutting room to assemble the film?

    DF: The best. I surrounded myself with people who I’m a fan of, and just having that collaboration with those people was incredible. My DP, Brian Lannin, shoots that show ‘Dave.’ I don’t know if you’ve seen that, but it’s one of my favorites because they do really hard comedy, but it’s also beautiful. The visuals are stunning, and I thought he’d be the perfect guy for this.

    With this one, it was kind of inherent to some romantic comedies. There’s a lot of scenes where it’s just two people talking, and the challenge was how do we make that exciting? How do we make that engaging visually? He’s just got such a beautiful eye, and the setting itself did a lot of the heavy lifting too. We shot in the Pacific Northwest, and any direction you point the camera, it’s stunning.

    Then, in the edit, my editor Ernie Gilbert, I love him to death. What can I say? It’s just a healthy back and forth where obviously I have very specific ideas of how I want things to play out, but I trust him so much, and he would come in with ideas, and new things that I would never think of. Anyway, this is a long way of saying I’m so collaborative. It’s my favorite thing to do, especially when I’m surrounded by people who are just so talented.

    Alison Brie and Danny Pudi in Prime Video's 'Somebody I Used to Know,' which was directed by Dave Franco.
    (L to R) Alison Brie and Danny Pudi in Prime Video’s ‘Somebody I Used to Know,’ which was directed by Dave Franco.

    MF: Finally, there are a lot of actors in the movie that you and Alison have worked with in the past, and a few that you have not. Can you talk about putting together the cast and having an opportunity to work with your friends?

    DF: It’s the best for many reasons. When you’re surrounded by people that you feel comfortable with, you feel more willing to take risks knowing that no one’s going to judge you. When I am putting together the team, of course, I want people who are talented, but it’s just as important to me that everyone is really nice and hardworking. When you’re surrounded by that type of person, it just makes it easy, man. It’s like, I don’t need to micromanage anyone.

    Everyone’s there to work, everyone’s excited, and it’s this nice family environment. As an actor, I’ve been on a couple sets that are not that way. It’s a weird vibe. I made a vow to myself that when I have control on any set that I’m on, I’m going to make sure that obviously, let’s do good work, but let’s also have a good time. We’re away from our friends and family for months at a time, it should be worth it. Let’s look back, and remember the experience itself too.

    Alison Brie in Prime Video's 'Somebody I Used to Know,' which was directed by Dave Franco.
    Alison Brie in Prime Video’s ‘Somebody I Used to Know,’ which was directed by Dave Franco.
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  • ‘The Afterparty’ Exclusive Interviews

    (L to R) Sam Richardson, Jamie Demetriou, Ben Schwartz, John Early, Tiffany Haddish, Tiya Sircar, Ilana Glazer, Zoe Chao, and Ike Barinholtz in 'The Afterparty' on Apple TV+
    (L to R) Sam Richardson, Jamie Demetriou, Ben Schwartz, John Early, Tiffany Haddish, Tiya Sircar, Ilana Glazer, Zoe Chao, and Ike Barinholtz in ‘The Afterparty’ on Apple TV+

    Premiering January 28th on Apple TV+ is the new murder mystery comedy ‘The Afterparty,’ from Oscar winning producers Phil Lord and Christopher Miller (‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’).

    The series features an impressive cast of comedic actors that include Tiffany Haddish (‘Girls Trip’), Sam Richardson (‘The Tomorrow War’), Ben Schwartz (‘Sonic the Hedgehog’), Zoe Chao (‘The High Note’), Ike Barinholtz (‘Suicide Squad’), Ilana Glazer (‘Rough Night’), and Dave Franco (‘The Disaster Artist’).

    ‘The Afterparty’ revolves around a murder that takes place at a high school reunion after party, and each episode is told from a different character’s point of view. Lord and Miller serve as executive producers and both co-wrote several episodes, with Miller also directing the entire series.

    Moviefone recently had a chance to speak with Phil Lord and Christopher Miller about their new Apple TV+ series, as well as some of the cast from ‘The Afterparty’ Including Sam Richardson, Ben Schwartz, Zoe Chao, Ike Barinholtz, Dave Franco, and Ilana Glazer.

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    Below you can read our full interview with Phil Lord and Christopher Miller about ‘The Afterparty,’ or you can watch the complete set of interviews in the video player above.

    Moviefone: Chris, can you begin by talking about the genesis of the idea for the series, and also deciding to have each episode focus on a different character’s point of view?

    Christopher Miller: It was a little over a decade ago that I had the idea to tell a murder mystery in a Rashomon style where each suspect would tell their version of the evening and it would be wildly different from the other ones. We were going to make it, we wrote it as a movie, and then we got busy making ‘The Lego Movie’ and ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ and whatnot.

    But when we got a breath of air, we revisited it and thought this would work better as a series because in a movie, you didn’t have time to really dig to each character. But as a series, you could give each character their own episode and really understand them as more complex characters. You could really learn to empathize and love each of them, and hope that they didn’t do it. So, as that was evolving, we realized that to push their style of storytelling, stylistically and thematically, we can make each episode feel like a different genre of filmmaking and storytelling.

    Then it evolved even farther, and we got an amazing writing staff full of really cool people. With the structure and outline already intact, they were able to turn it into something really special. But it was a really mind exploding process because if you’re working on episode four and you want to change something there, it affects everything in all the other episodes. So, you have to keep the whole thing in your head like this giant machinery of a massive clock in your head. It would really explode people’s heads from time to time.

    MF: Phil, was making a murder mystery something you always wanted to do?

    Phil Lord: I think Chris and I are fans of ‘Clue,’ ‘The Last of Sheila’ and ‘Murder by Death.’ There’s a long proud history of mixing comedy and murder and we’ve always been interested in what’s a unique way to pull that off. Chris had been developing this as a script for a long time for a feature. When he thought of the idea of breaking it into episodes, and then each of those episodes would have its own filmmaking style and you would get to know each of these characters even more deeply, that’s when it really took off for us and felt like it was going to be worth doing.

    MF: Phil, because each episode contains events seen from different characters perspectives, can you talk about how production actually worked?

    PL: So, the whole show, more or less, we batch shot it. Meaning that we would shoot a scene in a hallway that was like a fun rom-com and then, “Okay everyone, let’s go to lunch, we’ll come back and now it’s a dark thriller.” That’s part of the fun of it, honestly, but the poor actors did need a second to switch modes.

    MF: Chris, can you talk about the impressive cast of actors you assembled and the challenges for them with the different tones in each episode?

    CM: We got so lucky to get like a real murderer’s row, pun intended, of comedy geniuses. What was especially great about all of them is that so many of them are writers, filmmakers or show creators in their own rights. So, they really were smart about also holding this whole show in their heads, because asking an actor to be able to just do a character is one thing, but to do a character with eight different shadings of that character is a really big ask. It has to be people who are really smart and savvy, and luckily, they all were amazing, and they added so much to it. We all had a great time together and it was a real love fest. You could really feel the chemistry and joy on the screen.

    (L to R) Ben Schwartz and Sam Richardson in 'The Afterparty' on Apple TV+
    (L to R) Ben Schwartz and Sam Richardson in ‘The Afterparty’ on Apple TV+