Tag: zootopia

  • Director Peter Sohn Discusses Scenes from Pixar’s ‘Elemental’

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    The trailer for Pixar’s new movie ‘Elemental’ dropped today, (which you can watch above), and Moviefone had the pleasure of traveling to Pixar Studios in Emeryville, California to meet director Peter Sohn and screen some exclusive scenes from the new movie!

    What is the plot of ‘Elemental?’

    Disney and Pixar’s “Elemental” is an all-new, original feature film set in Element City, where fire, water, land and air residents live together. The story introduces Ember (Leah Lewis), a tough, quick-witted and fiery young woman, whose friendship with a fun, sappy, go-with-the-flow guy named Wade (Mamoudou Athie) challenges her beliefs about the world they live in.

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    Who is in the voice cast of ‘Elemental?’

    Directed by Peter Sohn (‘The Good Dinosaur’), ‘Elemental’ features the voices of Leah Lewis (‘The Half of It’) as Ember and Mamoudou Athie (‘The Circle’) as Wade, as well as the recently announced Ronnie del Carmen (‘Soul’) as Ember’s dad Bernie, Shila Ommi (‘The Illegal’) as Ember’s mom Cinder, Wendi McLendon-Covey (‘Bridesmaids’) as Wade’s boss Gale, Catherine O’Hara (‘Best in Show’) as Wade’s mom Brook, Joe Pera (‘Bob’s Burgers’) as Fern, and Mason Wertheimer as Ember’s neighbor Clod.

    Disney and Pixar’s 'Elemental' directed by Peter Sohn and produced by Denise Ream, releases on June 16, 2023.
    Disney and Pixar’s ‘Elemental’ directed by Peter Sohn and produced by Denise Ream, releases on June 16, 2023. © 2023 Disney/Pixar. All Rights Reserved.

    What footage did we screen at Pixar?

    Moviefone had the pleasure of screening four never-before-seen scenes from ‘Elemental.’ Director Peter Sohn explained that some of the shots were just finalized days before the screening.

    The first scene we screened was the opening on the movie. It begins with Ember (Lewis) as a small child arriving in Element City for the first time with her parents, Bernie (del Carmen) and Cinder (Ommi). What follows is a montage of Ember’s childhood as her family opens a “coffee shop,” they become an important part of the fire community and Ember learns to control her fiery temper.

    The scene continues to present day, where Ember is still trying to control her temper, and her mother warns her that “Elements don’t mix.” When Ember’s father puts her temper to the test by letting her be in charge of their red dot sale, she loses her temper causing the water pipes to break and putting her parent’s store in jeopardy.

    The flooding in their basement brings an uninvited guest in the form of Wade, an easygoing water-based being who works for the city’s health department. While the two have an instant attraction, Wade is forced to write up Ember and her family’s business for their violations.

    Disney and Pixar’s 'Elemental' directed by Peter Sohn and produced by Denise Ream, releases on June 16, 2023.
    Disney and Pixar’s ‘Elemental’ directed by Peter Sohn and produced by Denise Ream, releases on June 16, 2023. © 2023 Disney/Pixar. All Rights Reserved.

    The second scene involves Ember finding Wade to ask him not to report her family to his boss, a wind-creature known as Gail (McLendon-Covey). The two eventually go to a sporting event to find Gail, and this scene was shown to us in 3D. The sport they are attending is a version of basketball meets Quidditch that is played in the air by the gaseous creatures that reside in Element City. Gail is an obsessive fan and his too enthralled in the game to give Ember any attention. The scene ends with Ember in danger when the water-based creatures decide to start the wave to cheer on their team, which in this world is an actual tidal wave in the crowd that the fans create.

    The third scene was a montage of Ember and Wade’s romance, which includes them walking around Element City, seeing the movie ‘Tide & Prejudice,’ having their photo taken together, Ember walking on minerals to change the colors for Wade, and Wade creating a rainbow for Ember.

    The final sequence was like a scene from ‘Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner,’ when Wade takes Ember home to meet his affluent mother and family. They live in a luxury apartment building that is flowing with water everywhere, which makes it more than difficult for Ember to enter. Wade’s mother, Brook (O’Hara), is extremely welcoming to Ember, which makes Wade cry … a lot. We are also introduced to Wade’s little brothers, Marco and Polo.

    Disney and Pixar’s 'Elemental' directed by Peter Sohn and produced by Denise Ream, releases on June 16, 2023.
    Disney and Pixar’s ‘Elemental’ directed by Peter Sohn and produced by Denise Ream, releases on June 16, 2023. © 2023 Disney/Pixar. All Rights Reserved.

    The footage was impressive, both in 3D and the traditional format, and the animation looked unlike anything we’ve seen from Pixar before, actually making elements like fire and water come alive in a believable way. The story is also very cute, using a basic ‘Romeo and Juliet’ plot to tell a modern story about different cultures coming together to live in one community. Element City may also remind some Disney fans of ‘Zootopia,’ while the idea of bringing elements to life may remind some of the way emotions were brought to life in ‘Inside Out.’

    Director Peter Sohn at Pixar Animation Studios in Emeryville, Calif.
    Director Peter Sohn at Pixar Animation Studios in Emeryville, Calif. Photo by Deborah Coleman/Pixar.

    Related Article: D23 Expo 2022: Disney Studios Presentation

    What Director Peter Sohn had to say about ‘Elemental?’

    After screening the footage, we had a chance to meet director Peter Sohn and he began by talking about the very personal inspiration he had for this movie.

    “I thought I would share where this idea of ‘Elemental’ came from. It’s really a mix of three very personal parts of my life. The first one is my parents. My parents came here from Korea in the late ’60s, early ’70s, to New York, and they didn’t have a lot of money. They had no family. They didn’t speak any English, but they managed to create a beautiful life in the Bronx. My dad owned a grocery store. I have so many memories of growing up in this shop and all my dad’s customers came from everywhere. Like my parents, they left their homes to come to a new land and they all were mixing into beautiful little neighborhoods with their cultures and their languages. So from that, came this idea of beautiful little neighborhoods.”

    Disney and Pixar’s 'Elemental' directed by Peter Sohn and produced by Denise Ream, releases on June 16, 2023.
    Disney and Pixar’s ‘Elemental’ directed by Peter Sohn and produced by Denise Ream, releases on June 16, 2023. © 2023 Disney/Pixar. All Rights Reserved.

    The director also talked about how he took his family’s story and combined it with elements from the periodic table.

    “When I saw the periodic table of elements when I was a kid, all I thought about was that these were apartment complexes and they all lived next to each other. Platinum lives next to gold, but be careful of mercury because they have toxic relationships. Stories of what these elements were doing in their apartments were just mixing around in my head.”

    Finally, the director revealed where the third part of his inspiration for the film came from.

    “Then the last little piece was my wife, and this experience of marrying someone that wasn’t Korean, or was a non-Korean woman. Because growing up, my grandmother’s dying words were, “Marry a Korean.” You saw a little bit of that in the footage. That comes from a real place and it created all these sort of culture clashes growing up.”

    Disney and Pixar’s 'Elemental' directed by Peter Sohn and produced by Denise Ream, releases on June 16, 2023.
    Disney and Pixar’s ‘Elemental’ directed by Peter Sohn and produced by Denise Ream, releases on June 16, 2023. © 2023 Disney/Pixar. All Rights Reserved.

    But Sohn explained that even with this inspiration, he didn’t have the story until he came up with the romance between Ember and Wade.

    “But even with these key pieces in place, we could go anywhere. The possibilities were endless. But until we came up with the idea of opposites attracting, fire and water, we didn’t have a clear focus of the film. Once that was our north star, we could adjust the characters and the obstacles that could happen to them. So with these three key inspirations and our guiding light of opposites attracting, the stories started to come together. I wanted to tell a story for everyone who’s ever made a sacrifice or taken a risk and set it in the hustle and bustle of a crazy city.”

    Disney and Pixar's all-new theatrical short 'Carl's Date' to release in front of 'Elemental' on June 16, 2023.
    Disney and Pixar’s all-new theatrical short ‘Carl’s Date’ to release in front of ‘Elemental’ on June 16, 2023.

    Will There be a Theatrical Short Released with ‘Elemental?’

    Yes! Disney is bringing back their theatrical shorts that screen before their animated movies beginning with the release of ‘Elementals.’ The new short is entitled ‘Carl’s Date,’ and features characters from Pixar’s Oscar nominated ‘Up.’

    In the new short, Carl Fredrickson (voiced by the late Ed Asner) and his dog Dug (voiced by Bob Peterson) return as Carl reluctantly agrees to go on a date with a new lady friend, but admittedly with no idea how dating works these days. Ever the helpful friend, Dug steps in to calm Carl’s pre-date jitters and offer some tried-and-true tips for making friends, if you’re a dog. The short was written and directed by Bob Peterson and is a must-see for any ‘Up’ fans.

    Disney and Pixar’s 'Elemental' directed by Peter Sohn and produced by Denise Ream, releases on June 16, 2023.
    Disney and Pixar’s ‘Elemental’ directed by Peter Sohn and produced by Denise Ream, releases on June 16, 2023. © 2023 Disney/Pixar. All Rights Reserved.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Elemental:’

    Buy Pixar Movies on Amazon

    ‘Elemental’ is produced by Walt Disney Pictures and Pixar. It is set to release in theaters on June 16th, 2023.

  • ‘Frozen’ ‘Toy Story,’ and ‘Zootopia’ Sequels Are In The Works

    Anna (Kristen Bell) and Elsa (Idina Menzel) in Walt Disney Pictures' 'Frozen.'
    (L to R) Anna (Kristen Bell) and Elsa (Idina Menzel) in Walt Disney Pictures’ ‘Frozen.’

    Get ready to head back into the unknown. Disney animated films ‘Frozen,’ ‘Toy Story,’ and ‘Zootopia‘ have been greenlit for sequels. The news was announced during Wednesday’s Q1 earnings call by Disney CEO Bob Iger, his first since returning to the company.

    “Today I’m so pleased to announce that we have sequels in the works from our animation studios to some of our most popular franchises, ‘Toy Story,’ ‘Frozen’ and ‘Zootopia,’” says Iger. “We’ll have more to share about these productions soon, but this is a great example of how we’re leaning into our unrivaled brands and franchises.”

    ‘Frozen’ quickly became a household favorite when it premiered in 2013. With Kristen Bell and Idina Menzel as its leads, the sequel ‘Frozen 2’ garnered just as much attention in 2019. It got so popular that the musical version made its way to Disneyland’s Hyperion Theater and later to Broadway. ‘Toy Story’ stars the voices Tom Hanks and Tim Allen as Woody and Buzz Lightyear, becoming a beloved franchise since its debut in 1995. It even expanded its own universe with the release of ‘Lightyear’ in 2022 with Chris Evans as the lead.

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    Related Articles: D23 Expo 2022: Disney Studios Presentation

    The Box Office Success Of ‘Frozen’, ‘Toy Story’, and ‘Zootopia’

    This should come as no surprise as all three films have had major success at the box office worldwide. ‘Frozen’ (2013) earned 1.2 billion with its sequel ‘Frozen 2’ (2019) earning 1.4 billion, and both ‘Toy Story 4’ (2019) and ‘Zootopia’ (2016) grossed over one billion.

    On top of their financial success, these films have all taken home plenty of awards. ‘Toy Story 3,’ ‘Toy Story 4,’ ‘Frozen,’ and ‘Zootopia’ have all received Best Animated Feature at the Oscars. Frozen’s hit original song “Let It Go” (sung by Broadway superstar Idina Menzel) won Best Original Song at the 2020 Academy Awards.

    The animation giant has released plenty of amazing titles such as ‘Luca,’ ‘Raya and the Last Dragon‘ and ‘Encanto,’ which also won Best Animated Feature at the 2022 Academy Awards. However popular, none of these titles were able to achieve the financial success of the aforementioned films.

    Woody (Tom Hanks) and Buzz Lightyear (Tim Allen) in y Pixar Animation Studios' 'Toy Story.'
    (L to R) Woody (Tom Hanks) and Buzz Lightyear (Tim Allen) in y Pixar Animation Studios’ ‘Toy Story.’
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    But Do We Need More Sequels?

    Some may say there’s no need for a sequel to these films but I think, there are plenty of stories left to tell. What type of adventures (or misadventures) can the sisters get into now that Elsa is the Snow Queen and Anna rules as the Queen of Arendelle? How expansive has Zoopotia become since the last film? And while Woody and Buzz may have parted ways (for now), there’s always something that brings the duo back together, plus we all would love to see a post-college Andy.

    Those who are craving original stories can look forward to Pixar’s ‘Elemental’ this summer and ‘Wish’ from Walt Disney Animation in the fall.

    Judy Hopps (Ginnifer Goodwin) and Nicholas P. "Nick" Wilde (Jason Bateman) in Walt Disney Animation Studios' 'Zootopia.'
    (L to R) Judy Hopps (Ginnifer Goodwin) and Nicholas P. “Nick” Wilde (Jason Bateman) in Walt Disney Animation Studios’ ‘Zootopia.’
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    Other Movies Similar to ‘Frozen’ and ‘Toy Story:’

    Buy Disney Animated Movies On Amazon

  • D23 Expo 2022: Disney Studios Presentation

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    Walt Disney Studios kicked off the first day of D23 Expo 2022 in style today with tons of advance looks at what the House of Mouse has in store for fans in the coming days, months, and years. You can watch Moviefone‘s exclusive backstage interviews by clicking on the video player above.

    The first D23 Expo in three years began with the president of Walt Disney Studios Motion Picture Production, Sean Bailey, revealing the first-ever footage from ‘Hocus Pocus 2’.

    Bailey was joined by the wacky Sanderson Sisters themselves – stars Bette Midler, Sarah Jessica Parker, and Kathy Najimy – who appeared via video to show how their characters are back for the first time since 1993 for more soul-stealing Halloween action.

    Battling them this time around are aspiring witch Becca (Whitney Peak) and magic shop owner Gilbert (Sam Richardson).

    But the audience’s biggest applause went to the original film’s Billy Butcherson (‘The Shape of Water’s Doug Jones) upon his return from the grave. ‘Hocus Pocus 2’ hits Disney+ on September 30th. The trailer is in the video player above.

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    Next up on the panel was another eagerly anticipated sequel, ‘Disenchanted’. Returning stars Amy Adams, Patrick Dempsey, Idina Menzel, and James Marsden took the stage, alongside Maya Rudolph, the film’s new villain. ‘Disenchanted’ finds Adams’ Giselle and hubby Dempsey moving to the suburbs with their infant and teenage children.

    “I was a huge fan of the original,” said Rudolph. “I can’t believe I got to be part of this… It’s not easy being mean to Amy Adams.” The new teaser trailer for the sequel is in the video player above.

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    As far as live-action remakes of Disney animated classics go, ‘Peter Pan & Wendy’ was the first on deck today: with star Jude Law (Captain Hook) flanked by newcomers Alexander Molony (Peter Pan), Ever Gabo Anderson (Wendy), and Alyssa Wapanatâhk (Tiger Lily).

    Expect more empowered female characters this time around, including at least one Lost Girl among Peter’s Lost Boys.

    “Disney has worked very hard to give her more depth and a lot more character,” said Anderson of Wendy. “She and Peter are equals in this film.”

    Law added that Hook and Pan’s prior relationship is also fleshed out. “We got to mine their back story a little bit more. You get to understand their past,” he said, hinting that the two were once friends.

    Peter Pan & Wendy poster
    © 2022 Disney Enterprises, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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    Another reworking of a Disney classic comes with March 10th’s ‘Haunted Mansion’, directed by ‘Dear White People’ creator Justin Simien. Today’s first look showcased stars Rosario Dawson and LaKeith Stanfield exploring the titular house with a priest played by Owen Wilson and a historian played by Danny DeVito.

    “I got to make sure all the little details, all the Easter eggs are there. Because I’m a nerd,” confessed Simien. He then joined another of the film’s stars – scream queen Jamie Lee Curtis – in a Doom Buggy rolling across the D23 Expo stage.

    Haunted Mansion
    © 2022 Disney Enterprises, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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    Few Disney films are so beloved as 1994’s ‘The Lion King’. And fans will get more of the film’s animal kingdom in the 2024 prequel ‘Mufasa: The Lion King’.

    Director Barry Jenkins appeared to explain how “Mufasa is the origin story of one of the greatest kings of the Pride Land… It’s the real story of how Mufasa found his place in the circle of life. What you learn is that Mufasa is great because of the family and the friends he has with him.”

    Of course Disney Studios wouldn’t exist without its very first animated classic, 1937’s ‘Snow White’.

    Director Marc Webb is tackling the live-action 2024 remake, featuring Gal Gadot as the Wicked Queen and Rachel Zegler as its eponymous heroine. The two were touched by the warm response they received as they presented a first look at their characters.

    “Just your reaction means the world to us,” said Gadot.
    A visibly moved Zegler explained that, “Snow White is the girl you remember, but she’s definitely made for the modern age,” stating the film redefines what it means to be the fairest of them all.

    Rachel Zegler and Gal GAdot at Disney D23 Expo
    Rachel Zegler and Gal Gadot at Disney D23 Expo 2022 Getty Images
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    While ‘Snow White’ is Disney’s first animated feature, 1989’s ‘The Little Mermaid’ is responsible for the studio’s renaissance. As well as its renewed dedication to musicals, as Rob Marshall, director of May 2023’s live-action adaptation, reminded fans today.

    “It was very important for us to honor the original. We went to Alan Menken, who was divine to work with, and also our dear friend Lin-Manuel Miranda. They had never worked together before… There are four new songs. We still retain the beauty of the original score, written by the late great Howard Ashman as well.”

    Fans were treated to the film’s entire “Part of Your World” number, featuring a note-perfect Halle Bailey, who appeared on stage with Marshall.

    “Three days of filming ‘Part of Your World,’” said Bailey, “that was the most beautiful experience of my life. Just getting to sing a song I’ve loved since I was a child was so exciting.”

    “The camera loves you,” Marshall told Bailey. “But it’s more than that. [It] loves what’s inside. [It] loves what you bring.”

    The two then unveiled a teaser that recalled ‘Finding Nemo’ in the color and detail of its underwater world. You can find a teaser version of the clip in the video player at the top of the page.

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    Elemental
    Pixar’s Elemental © 2022 Disney/Pixar. All Rights Reserved.

    It was then time for Pixar Animation Studios’ turn in the spotlight, with chief creative officer Pete Docter introducing next summer’s ‘Elemental’.

    Director Peter Sohn spoke of how the film’s Element City was inspired by the culturally mixed New York of his childhood. Footage shown depicted the star-crossed romance of its fire-based heroine Ember (Leah Lewis) and her watery boyfriend Wade (Mamoudou Athie).

    Pixar also unveiled its first original long-form series in the form of ‘Win or Lose’, each episode of which follows the perspective of a different character connected to a co-ed softball team, the Pickles.

    With this year’s ‘Lightyear’, Pixar returned to the science fiction of ‘Wall-E’. Expect more in this vein soon, starting with ‘Elio’.

    Announced today at D23 with star America Ferrera on stage, the film’s title character is an 11-year-old boy who doesn’t feel like he fits in his world. His mom (Ferrera) runs a top-secret military project, which inadvertently results in Elio making first contact with alien life and becoming our planet’s ambassador to the rest of the universe. It’s due out in spring 2024.

    Last but by no means least on the Pixar slate – ‘Inside Out’ star Amy Poehler made a surprise appearance alongside Docter to announce ‘Inside Out 2’.

    Inside Out 2 logo
    Pixar’s Inside Out 2 logo. © 2022 Disney/Pixar. All Rights Reserved.

    “Joy and the emotions are back for an all new adventure inside Riley’s head,” said a fittingly ebullient Poehler. “Only this time she’s a teenager!”

    New emotions will also appear in the film, as Kelsey Mann takes over the directing chores from Docter, with Meg LeFauve returning to write the summer 2024 release.

    To cap off the panel, Disney Animation’s chief creative officer (and Oscar-winning ‘Frozen’ director) Jennifer Lee greeted the D23 Expo audience to show what’s in store for the studio’s 100th anniversary next year.

    But first, Disney’s fan-favorite 2016 ‘Zootopia’ will get a spin-off series this November on Disney+. And attendees got an advance look at the aptly titled ‘Zootopia+’, consisting of six short ‘Zootopia’-style spoofs of everything from ‘The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills’ to ‘The Godfather Part II’.

    Perhaps Disney’s most unique offering at the Expo was ‘Iwaju’. Coming this year to Disney+, it finds the animation studio partnering for the first time in its long history with an overseas animation studio – Africa’s Kugali. Its three founders appeared today, describing their Afrofuturism fable and its characters as a love letter to their hometown of Lagos, Nigeria.

    Iwaju
    Disney’s Iwaju. © 2022 Disney. All Rights Reserved.

    More sci-fi arrived with a new look at ‘Strange World’, described by Lee as “a film about family, legacy, and what we leave behind for the generations that follow.” Director Don Hall explained how the film chronicles three generations coming together on an alien planet in order to save their world.

    Stars Jake Gyllenhaal, Dennis Quaid, and Lucy Liu introduced a rip-snorting clip of an exciting chase through ‘Strange World’s creature-packed planet.

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    The Disney Animation segment, and indeed entire panel, concluded with the revelation of the studio’s 100th anniversary feature film – ‘Wish’. The tale of the star upon which so many Disney characters have wished throughout the past century, ‘Wish’ is co-directed by the attending team of Chris Buck and Fawn Veerasunthorn.

    Buck, who co-wrote the film with Lee, explained how ‘Wish’ explores a kingdom of wishes, in which wishes can literally come true. Offering a lush, animated watercolor style coupled with CG animation, it stars newly minted Oscar winner Ariana DeBose as 17-year-old Asha, who pleas to the heavens for help, and gets an actual star from the sky, named Star, who communicates through pantomime.

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    Disney “good luck charm,” actor Alan Tudyk appeared with footage of his character, a goat named Valentino who wishes to communicate with people. Finally, DeBose saw fans off with a sizzling live performance of “More for Us,” one of the film’s songs by Grammy winner Julia Michaels.

    Wish
    Disney’s Wish. © 2022 Disney. All Rights Reserved.
  • Best Idris Elba Movies

    Idris Elba as Dr. Nate Samuels in 'Beast,' directed by Baltasar Kormákur.
    Idris Elba as Dr. Nate Samuels in ‘Beast,’ directed by Baltasar Kormákur.

    Idris Elba is one of the best actors working today!

    Not only does he have the new thriller ‘Beast‘ opening in theaters on August 19th, he will also be seen in director George Miller‘s ‘Three Thousand Years of Longing‘ opposite Tilda Swinton, which opens in theaters on August 26th.

    In honor of the actor’s two upcoming movies, Moviefone looks back at the twenty best movies of Idris Elba ‘s career.

    Without further ado, let’s begin!


    Thor (2011)

    Against his father Odin’s (Anthony Hopkins) will, The Mighty Thor (Chris Hemsworth) – a powerful but arrogant warrior god – recklessly reignites an ancient war. Thor is cast down to Earth and forced to live among humans as punishment. Once here, Thor learns what it takes to be a true hero when the most dangerous villain of his world, Loki (Tom Hiddleston) sends the darkest forces of Asgard to invade Earth. Based on the Marvel Comics characters, Elba plays all-hearing Asgardian sentry Heimdall.

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    The Mountain Between Us (2017)

    Stranded after a tragic plane crash, two strangers (Elba and Kate Winslet) must forge a connection to survive the extreme elements of a remote snow covered mountain. When they realize help is not coming, they embark on a perilous journey across the wilderness.

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    Prometheus (2012)

    A team of explorers (Noomi Rapace, Michael Fassbender, Charlize Theron, and Elba) discover a clue to the origins of mankind on Earth, leading them on a journey to the darkest corners of the universe. There, they must fight a terrifying battle to save the future of the human race.

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    No Good Deed (2014)

    Terri (Taraji P. Henson) is a devoted wife and mother of two, living an ideal suburban life in Atlanta when Colin (Elba), a charming but dangerous escaped convict, shows up at her door claiming car trouble. Terri offers her phone to help him but soon learns that no good deed goes unpunished as she finds herself fighting for survival when he invades her home and terrorizes her family.

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    Obsessed (2009)

    Sony Pictures
    Sony Pictures

    Things couldn’t be better for Derek Charles (Elba). He’s just received a big promotion at work, and has a wonderful marriage with his beautiful wife, Sharon (Beyonce). However, into this idyllic world steps Lisa (Ali Larter), a temporary worker at Derek’s office. Lisa begins to stalk Derek, jeopardizing all he holds dear.

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    The Jungle Book (2016)

    A man-cub named Mowgli (Neel Sethi) fostered by wolves. After a threat from the tiger Shere Khan (Elba), Mowgli is forced to flee the jungle, by which he embarks on a journey of self discovery with the help of the panther, Bagheera (Ben Kingsley) and the free-spirited bear, Baloo (Bill Murray).
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    Molly’s Game (2018)

    Molly Bloom (Jessica Chastain), a young skier and former Olympic hopeful becomes a successful entrepreneur (and a target of an FBI investigation) when she establishes a high-stakes, international poker game. With her reputation in ruins and future in jeopardy, she turns to attorney Charlie Jaffey (Elba) for legal help.

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    Star Trek Beyond (2016)

    The USS Enterprise crew including Captain James T. Kirk (Chris Evans) and Spock (Zachary Quinto) explore the furthest reaches of uncharted space, where they encounter a mysterious new enemy (Elba) who puts them and everything the Federation stands for to the test.

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    Sonic the Hedgehog 2 (2022)

    The world’s favorite blue hedgehog is back! After settling in Green Hills, Sonic (Ben Schwartz) is eager to prove he has what it takes to be a true hero. His test comes when Dr. Robotnik (Jim Carrey) returns, this time with a new partner, Knuckles (Elba), in search for an emerald that has the power to destroy civilizations. Sonic teams up with his own sidekick, Tails (Colleen O’Shaughnessey), and together they embark on a globe-trotting journey to find the emerald before it falls into the wrong hands.

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    American Gangster (2007)

    Following the death of his employer and mentor, Bumpy Johnson (Clarence Williams III), Frank Lucas (Denzel Washington) establishes himself as the number one importer of heroin in the Harlem district of Manhattan after killing fellow gangster Tango (Elba). He begins buying heroin directly from the source in South East Asia and comes up with a unique way of importing the drugs into the United States. At home, he crosses paths with a dirty cop (Josh Brolin), and a crusading detective (Russell Crowe).

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    Takers (2010)

    A seasoned team of bank robbers, including Gordon Cozier (Elba), John Rahway (Paul Walker), A.J. (Hayden Christensen), and brothers Jake (Michael Ealy) and Jesse Attica (Chris Brown) successfully complete their latest heist and lead a life of luxury while planning their next job. When Ghost (Tip “T.I.” Harris), a former member of their team, is released from prison he convinces the group to strike an armored car carrying $20 million. As the “Takers” carefully plot out their strategy and draw nearer to exacting the grand heist, a reckless police officer inches closer to apprehending the criminals.

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    The Losers (2010)

    Warner Bros. Pictures
    Warner Bros. Pictures

    On a mission deep in the Bolivian jungle, a team of elite commandos led by Franklin Clay (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) and William Roque (Elba) finds itself on the receiving end of a lethal betrayal. Now presumed dead, the men join forces with a mysterious operative named Aisha (Zoe Saldana) to hunt down their enemy and even the score. Based on the DC Comics characters.

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    Pacific Rim (2017)

    Directed by Guillermo del Toro, as war between humankind and monstrous sea creatures wages on, a former pilot (Charlie Hunnam) and a trainee (Rinko Kikuchi) are paired up to drive a seemingly obsolete special weapon in a desperate effort to save the world. Elba plays commanding officer Marshal Stacker Pentecost.

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    Zootopia (2016)

    Determined to prove herself, Officer Judy Hopps (Ginnifer Goodwin), the first bunny on Zootopia’s police force, jumps at the chance to crack her first case – even if it means partnering with scam-artist fox Nick Wilde (Jason Bateman) to solve the mystery. Elba plays Chief Bogo, an African buffalo who is the police chief of the Zootopia Police Department’s 1st Precinct.

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    Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw (2019)

    Ever since US Diplomatic Security Service Agent Luke Hobbs (Dwayne Johnson) and lawless outcast Decker Shaw (Jason Statham) first faced off, they just have traded smack talk and body blows. But when cyber-genetically enhanced anarchist Brixton’s (Elba) ruthless actions threaten the future of humanity, they join forces to defeat him.

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    Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom (2013)

    A chronicle of Nelson Mandela’s (Elba) life journey from his childhood in a rural village through to his inauguration as the first democratically elected president of South Africa.
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    Beasts of No Nation (2015)

    Based on the experiences of Agu (Abraham Attah), a child fighting in the civil war of an unnamed, fictional West African country. Follows Agu’s journey as he’s forced to join a group of soldiers led by Elba’s Commandant. While he fears his commander and many of the men around him, his fledgling childhood has been brutally shattered by the war raging through his country, and he is at first torn between conflicting revulsion and fascination.

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    Concrete Cowboy (2021)

    When fifteen-year-old Cole (Caleb McLaughlin) is expelled from school in Detroit, he is sent to North Philadelphia to live with Harp (Elba), his estranged father. Harp finds solace in rehabilitating horses for inner city cowboys at the Fletcher Street Stables, a real-life black urban horsemanship community that has provided a safe haven for the neighborhood residents for more than 100 years.

    Torn between his growing respect for his father’s community and his reemerging friendship with troubled cousin Smush (Jharrel Jerome), Cole begins to reprioritize his life as the stables themselves are threatened by encroaching gentrification.

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    The Harder They Fall (2021)

    Gunning for revenge, outlaw Nat Love (Jonathan Majors) saddles up with his gang to take down enemy Rufus Buck (Elba), a ruthless crime boss who just got sprung from prison.

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    The Suicide Squad (2021)

    (L to R) David Dastmalchian, John Cena, Idris Elba and Daniela Melchior in 'The Suicide Squad.'
    (L to R) David Dastmalchian, John Cena, Idris Elba and Daniela Melchior in ‘The Suicide Squad.’

    Welcome to Belle Reve, the prison where the worst Super-Villains are kept and where they will do anything to get out, even join the super-secret Task Force X. Today’s  assignment? Assemble a collection of cons, including Bloodsport (Elba), Peacemaker (John Cena), Ratcatcher 2 (Daniela Melchior), King Shark (Sylvester Stallone), and everyone’s favorite psycho, Harley Quinn (Margot Robbie).

    Now arm them heavily and drop them on the enemy-infused island of Corto Maltese. Trekking through a jungle teeming with militant adversaries and guerrilla forces at every turn, the Squad is on a search-and-destroy mission with only Colonel Rick Flag (Joel Kinnaman) on the ground to make them behave, and Amanda Waller’s (Viola Davis) government techies in their ears, tracking their every movement. And as always, one wrong move and they’re dead (whether at the hands of their opponents, a teammate, or Waller herself). If anyone’s laying down bets, the smart money is against them all!

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  • ‘Ralph Breaks the Internet’ Actor Alan Tudyk on Contributing to the Legacy of Disney Animation

    ‘Ralph Breaks the Internet’ Actor Alan Tudyk on Contributing to the Legacy of Disney Animation

    Disney

    Although he hasn’t gone through the official induction ceremony, for our money Alan Tudyk is already a Disney legend. The actor, who TV fans will remember from his collaborations with Joss Whedon (“Firefly” and “Dollhouse”), has become something of a lucky charm for Walt Disney Animation Studios, having contributed significant vocal performances in every animated feature since 2012. Late last year, he co-starred as Knowsmore, a helpful, erudite search engine in “Ralph Breaks the Internet,” the visually astonishing follow-up to “Wreck-It Ralph,” adding another colorful cartoon character to his already robust portfolio.

    We caught up with the actor at the Walt Disney Animation Studios campus, the building constructed after the success of “The Lion King” in 1994 and adorned with a giant Sorcerer’s Mickey hat from “Fantasia” (for a long time the cone of the hat was home to the office of Walt’s nephew, Roy E. Disney). It was here that we discussed all things Disney, from his inspiration for certain voices to whether or not he’d show up in this fall’s “Frozen 2.”

    Moviefone: “Wreck-It Ralph” was your first Walt Disney Animation Studios film. Was that a dream for you?

    Alan Tudyk: It was one of those dreams that I didn’t dream because you’re like, ah, I don’t even know how that happens. That was crazy. I got called up to do a read through. We all flew up to San Francisco to do the readthrough. We all got on a southwest flight. It was like Sarah Silverman, Jane Lynch. We were all on this Southwest Airlines plane and you go spend the day there and fly back. And after the reading I got the role, I got sent them big bucket of candy afterwards.

    Did you have the like Charles Nelson Reilly voice going into it?

    I’m glad you said Charles Nelson Reilly cause there was a little Charles Nelson Reilly in it. They said, “Go for Ed Wynn,” who was an old Disney voice. [Editor’s note: Wynn played the Mad Hatter in “Alice in Wonderland” and starred in a number of live-action Disney productions, including “Mary Poppins,” “The Absent-Minded Professor” and ”That Darn Cat!” He is an official Disney Legend.] And then as we went along, people kept piling on in there. Ruth Gordon was even in there because of how she talks and how she emphasizes the words.

    Disney

    And you’ve been in every Disney animated movie since. Are you expecting that call now?

    Now … I’ll just say when. Yes. I’ll be like, “I was expecting this day it was coming.” I mean it’s tricky. I can’t believe I’m in “Moana.” Because I’m the white dude from Texas, but they found the role for me.

    I was going to say, is anything beneath you?

    Nothing’s beneath. Heck no! It’s just … I know that Disney does a lot of movies that take place in far off lands where there aren’t people like me. So it’ll be interesting. I don’t expect to be in everyone. But gosh, I love them.

    Well, I was going to say were you surprised to be asked back for the sequel? Because obviously it seems like King Candy’s arc had ended.

    I’d hoped that I would. I wanted King Candy to live. You can’t kill him! He can’t be dead! He can’t be dead because he’s so much fun to do, but Knowsmore is fantastic.

    How did you come up with the voice for the Knowsmore character?

    Rich asked me before I came in, he said, “Watch a few interviews with Truman Capote and put him in that same sort of realm.” Not in terms of one of the characters from his books, but vocally. So I did [starts doing Knowsmore voice] and he’s more relaxed and he speaks much slower or it’s not higher but frailer voice depending on his age. We started there and then he became Droopy for a second. Like, there’s an interesting way those are two crossed over. And so then he came back and once we found, “Oh that’s interesting” and that high place where you can go, that’s when we found it.

    Do you have a favorite of your Disney characters?

    I like King Candy because he can talk about anything go on and on and he’s happy. But then he can be so angry. He’s so bad. He becomes a terrible, terrible person.

    Do little kids to recognize you?

    Um, no. You know who will recognize me? 15-year-olds. Because they have phones and they can look me up. They’ll see me and they’ll know me from something. Probably some movie or some TV show I’ve done. And then when they look me up, they see that I’m from “Moana” and that’s what they want to talk to him about. “Frozen.” They want to talk about the Duke of Weselton because they’re 15 now. So that they, that put them in, you know, the perfect age.

    So you’re really in meshed in that Disney culture. I’m assuming that you’re going to have your own stage at the D23 Expo this year. The Alan Tudyk stage.

    Yeah, the next show starts in 20 minutes! I’ll just come out on stage.

    I know that we are, you know, very secretive around here but have you recorded any voices for upcoming Walt Disney animated features?

    I have not.

    Even for the one that’s coming out in November of this year (“Frozen 2”)?

    Is it that soon? This may be the one …

    Disney

    There also has been a lot of talking about some further adventures in “Zootopia.” Would you be excited to bring your weasel out again?

    Yeah. He’s fun.

    I think that might be the most meta joke, going from the Duke of Weselton to Duke Weaselton.

    Isn’t that great?

    What did you think when they brought you that idea?

    I loved it! And then he’s also selling knock-off black market movies before they come out. And he’s got “Rhino Ralph.”

    Are you still dazzled when they show you the final cut? I mean, this movie is one of the most visually amazing animated movies ever.

    Oh absolutely.

    Disney

    What is the process like for you?

    It’s been different every time. Every single one has been different. Sometimes they’re later in the game, right? Like if it something was coming out this November, we don’t know. Because the story shifts. The way Disney makes movies is amazing. I got to go through the first “Wreck-It Ralph” from the very first reading and it was different. There were all these scenes that got cut. And I record the whole movie and they put it together and they go, “Oh hey, you know what, that doesn’t work. You know what, we need more of King Candy or he needs to be worried,” you know, until they get it into the final product. And so that one was always evolving. Take “Moana.” That one was pretty much done and they showed it to me and I just watched it about three times through with a microphone doing Hei-hei. Just going through different places.

    Well, you’re now part of sort of this like amazing legacy of the studio. Do you ever stop and think about that?

    I mean it hits me when I come here because of the hallway and the pictures on the walls that now especially cause it’s been so long since the first “Wreck-It Ralph” came out that they’ve accumulated on the walls. You can turn to everybody and say, “I’m in that. Um, oh that’s, that was my character.” And then you keep going down the hallway. That one too, that one too. It’s not just relegated to one little spot where like, that was the one movie I did. And there’s the little thing celebrating that movie. There’s so many now. It makes you pomnder.

    Children in 100 years are going to be listening to your voice, which is sort of amazing too.

    Oh, there’s not going to be people here in 100 years. 

    “Ralph Breaks the Internet” is on digital HD now and will be on Blu-ray tomorrow!

  • Shanghai Disneyland Adding ‘Zootopia’-Themed Land

    Shanghai Disneyland Adding ‘Zootopia’-Themed Land

    Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures

    Mammalian magic is headed to Shanghai Disneyland.

    Shanghai Disney Resort has announced that it is adding a new land inspired by the 2016 animated film “Zootopia.” As other areas in the park do, the forthcoming attraction will offer themed entertainment, merchandise, food, and beverages. Guests will get to wander through the “mammalian metropolis” and likely catch glimpses of Judy Hopps and Nick Wilde as they do.

    “Zootopia” has proved to be a popular film in China and beyond. The movie earned more than $1.02 billion at the global box office. It was also 2016’s second highest-grossing film in China, according to Box Office Mojo data, and it took over as the country’s top animated movie ever.

    The “Zootopia” expansion will be Shanghai Disneyland’s second since the park opened in 2016. The first, “Toy Story” Land, opened on April 26, 2018. The other themed areas include Mickey Avenue, Garden of Imagination, Fantasyland, Treasure Cove, Adventure Isle, and Tomorrowland. Ah, there’s so much fun to be had.

    Construction on the “Zootopia” expansion is slated to begin before the end of 2019.

    [via: Disney Parks Blog]

  • The 11 Best Animated Disney Movies of the Past 20 Years

    The 11 Best Animated Disney Movies of the Past 20 Years

  • ‘Total Recall’ Writer Accuses Disney of Copying ‘Zootopia’

    Disney’s “Zootopia” does suggest you “Try Everything,” but they probably don’t mean “file a lawsuit against us.” Disney just picked up the Best Animated Feature Film Oscar for “Zootopia” and now the studio is fighting back after the co-screenwriter of “Total Recall” and “Big Trouble in Little China” filed a lawsuit alleging they copied “Zootopia” from an idea he pitched to them — twice.

    According to The Hollywood Reporter, writer Gary Goldman filed the complaint Tuesday, and the lawsuit alleges that Disney has a history of ripping off the work of uncredited writers:

    “They did it with ‘Zootopia,’ too, when they copied Gary L. Goldman’s ‘Zootopia.’ Twice — in 2000 and 2009 — Goldman, on behalf of Esplanade, pitched Defendants his ‘Zootopia’ franchise, which included a live-action component called Looney and an animated component called Zootopia. He provided a treatment, a synopsis, character descriptions, character illustrations and other materials. He even provided a title for the franchise: ‘Zootopia.’ Instead of lawfully acquiring Goldman’s work, Defendants said they were not interested in producing it and sent him on his way. Thereafter, consistent with their culture of unauthorized copying, Defendants copied Goldman’s work. They copied Goldman’s themes, settings, plot, characters, and dialogue — some virtually verbatim.”

    The complaint included artwork comparisons from Goldman’s pitch to Disney’s “Zootopia” characters (via Deadline):

    The lawsuit alleges that Goldman pitched his idea to former Disney executive and Mandeville Films’ CEO David Hoberman at Disney’s offices in 2000, and that everyone at the pitch meeting “understood that writers pitch ideas and materials to studios and producers in confidence in order to sell those ideas and materials for financial compensation.” The company passed, but Goldman tried again nine years later, allegedly pitching his “Zootopia” idea to Disney exec Brigham Taylor in February 2009. Disney then allegedly began work on its own “Zootopia” movie. The lawsuit alleges violation of plaintiff’s copyrights, breach of implied contract, breach of confidence, and unfair competition.

    A Disney spokesperson responded to the suit in a statement, saying, “Mr. Goldman’s lawsuit is riddled with patently false allegations. It is an unprincipled attempt to lay claim to a successful film he didn’t create, and we will vigorously defend against it in court.”

    Read the full complaint here. “Zootopia” has made more than $1 billion at the worldwide box office.

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  • From ‘Rogue One’ to ‘Powerless,’ Alan Tudyk Has Mastered His Comedic Voice

    NBCUniversal Press Tour - 2017What do a dryly witty, reprogrammed Imperial droid, “Moana‘s” oddball chicken Hei-Hei, the weaselly Duke of Wesselton, and, now, a clueless Wayne family scion have in common? They all either look, sound, or move a lot like Alan Tudyk.

    The past year marked a significant career high for the actor, who’s best known for his roles in fare ranging from “Firefly” and “Dollhouse” to “Suburgatory” and “Powerless.”

    Tudyk joined Moviefone for a look at his recent phenomenal run, including the perks of being a Disney voice and his notion to put K-2SO back on the big screen.

    Moviefone: Here you’ve steadily built a career as an actor, you’re working all the time, and then all of a sudden you have a year like the last year that you’ve had. Tell me a little bit about what it’s been like to have this very special moment in your career, walking into “Powerless” along with all the great things that have just happened.

    Alan Tudyk: It’s great, now that we’ve started 2017, that a lot of things — “Star Wars” came out, and I finished “Con Man,” and it is now about to be all fully released and the season will be out. Obviously, “Moana” is out — I can focus solely on “Powerless.”

    It was all very thrilling and dizzying, and now it’s great to be here just focusing on “Powerless.” I don’t know that, I guess, because it was so busy and so many things were happening at once, I really understood what was involved — I also got married, so that was a fun thing to put in the middle of it all. It was actually the best thing last year.

    Yeah, you’re right. It was a very full year. And now, I can’t wait for people to see “Powerless.” I love that it’s part of the sci-fi world, and sort of in keeping with so many things that I’ve done now. It’s nice to have some continuity.

    The genre field has been good to you, and you have been good to it. So tell me what was creatively exciting about being able to probe for the comedy in the world of superheroes with “Powerless” — and especially playing a character that we’ve learned is related to Bruce Wayne himself.

    I think it’s a blast! DC tends to be a little bit more serious, I think, than Marvel, absolutely. To be able to do a comedy and have the supers from that world as objects of humor is very exciting to me. When there’s anything that’s really serious, it’s fun to turn it on its head and poke fun, and compare it to a regular world. The stakes are really high when you have such a fantastic world happening alongside office work. That’s exciting to me, and it’s been really fun to play.

    Who is this guy, Van Wayne, to you? How are you perceiving him as you get to know him a little better?

    He’s a broken character. He’s a broken man. He’s a product of being spoiled and growing up with the promise of being a Wayne and that everything’s going to be handed to him, and he doesn’t really have everything handed to him that he wants. He has a lot, but he doesn’t appreciate it.

    He’s not, definitely, the most clever person in the office, but he thinks he is, and those are really fun characters to play. He has girlfriends, he’s his own worst enemy, he’s a child. He’s a baby-man. He’s a baby-man with parents that are cold, and that’s what broke him.

    You know how devoted the fans of genre entertainment are, more than anybody else out there. What are you excited about them coming to this show and getting to see what you guys are doing there? You know that you’ve got fans that follow you from project to project and are always interested in what you’re doing.

    I hope that they do follow, and come and check it out, and laugh. That’s what I hope people do, is laugh. While this is on on my mind, I saw the director of a movie I did called “Tucker & Dale [vs. Evil]” today, which was a genre movie. It was a horror movie, but it was a horror comedy. People who are fans of horror movies watched it, but it’s a comedy. It not only caught the horror audience, it went outside of that just to people who like comedy. So I guess the answer is, I hope that sci-fi fans come in and find it funny and that it grows from there, because it isn’t just meant for sci-fi fans.

    But also, sci-fi fans love comedy in their superhero world. Joss Whedon does that really well. “Firefly” that I did in 2003, and whenever I have seen those episodes again, I’m always taken aback by how funny they are. I think that the writers have done a great job, and I’ve been having a lot of fun, so I hope that’s what people take away from it, that it’s funny, and it’s just as much fun to watch, it sounds so trite, but it’s true: it’s just as much fun to watch as it is to make.

    I got to sing a song last week. I’ve sung two songs, a blues song on a guitar that I can barely play. I had a harmonica. They give you a lot of freedom to play. It’s what you want as an actor.

    It really does sound like an actor’s holiday, in that they’re throwing you the opportunity to do all kinds of stuff to get a laugh. I’m sure you’ve got to keep it within the confines of who this guy is, too.

    Oh yeah, absolutely. Luckily, the character is a classic comedic character, that he’s someone who’s full of himself, who’s not very bright, who will get himself into trouble. So the things he does that are extreme or really fun come from that. So his character drives that.

    Tell me what it was like for you to be the comedic voice of “Rogue One” — an otherwise very serious-minded movie — with as deadpan a touch as possible, and create this really distinctive character.

    K-2SO! It was great. We had so much fun. I don’t know — I didn’t really think of him as being this — I don’t know why — droid in the long line of droids. It’s about within this serious movie being the comic breath that you can take inside of all of the high-paced drama.

    It was a blast. I would go on set and have fun. Some characters just have a lot of room to play around, and you kind of don’t know which ones those are going to be. K-2 was one of those, and they let me really play around with him. I’d do the lines as written, and then I would do some of my own. “I want to say a thing here, in addition to what’s written,” and they were game for all of it.

    It was great, and I’m so happy they used it, because it all just came out of the fun I was talking about. It was a blast, working with Diego [Luna] and Felicity [Jones] — I mainly worked with the two of them most of the time. We were standing in the rain in London most of the time, so it kind of became that I was the smart-ass anyway on set. Although Diego’s a pretty good smart-ass.

    When you saw the reaction to that character — people didn’t know what to expect and they immediately fell in love with K-2 — what was that like for you to see how instantly he’s been embraced, and he’s now going to be an iconic part of the “Star Wars” lore?

    I’m really happy people like him. I didn’t think about doing a droid in the “Star Wars” universe, like how important it is — at least to how important the other droids are to me, that I didn’t think of myself being one of them until, I guess, I saw it in some people’s reaction.

    I don’t know — it’s humbling. It’s hard to get your head around still. I haven’t been able to go to a Con yet. I can’t wait to go to another Con. Yeah, because I feel like that’s the sounding board I need to meet fans, to meet them.

    Do you hope that you can return to that character — or a variation on that character, in some way, given that he’s a droid? We presumably could see him again in the past, or another version of him in the future?

    I would jump at the chance. He seems very dead, but if somebody wants to revise him in some way, I wouldn’t disagree, I wouldn’t ignore it. Again, I would have a blast.

    I have my own take on it. I have a way to do it: It’s doing a prequel where we follow Cassian and K-2 before they join up on this mission to get the plans of the Death Star. So you kind of see the two of them being spies. I think that would be fun. Would just get a different mission, and it’d be like “Mission: Impossible,” I don’t know — maybe not that.

    I would buy a ticket to that. I would also buy a ticket to a K-2 and BB-8 road movie.

    [Laughs] I’m there! Let’s do it! That’s great.

    Tell me what it’s been like to have this great ongoing relationship with Disney on the animation side, and to be given the kind of creative opportunities as a voice artist that they’ve given you over the last several years.

    It’s ridiculous! It’s another thing that I can’t make sense of. I’m so happy. I’m so happy they’ve embraced me. It all started after “Wreck-It Ralph,” which was one of my favorite roles I’ve ever had a chance to play. Then right into “Frozen,” and then they decided to keep it going.

    I realized I was a bit spoiled when there’s this great dinner that happens when a movie is about to come out and all of the voice actors go to Disney, and John Lasseter and everyone who worked on the movie that were the heads and the directors, and the animators, and the writers, and all of that, get together and watch the movie. It’s usually about 20 people, you watch the movie at Disney in the animation building before it comes out, then you go upstairs and there’s this amazing catered meal, and they present you with a drawing — a pencil sketch of your character done by the artist who drew your character — and it’s amazing.

    I think it was for “Zootopia,” I was like, “These things are always fun.” It was always like, “What are we going to have? What did we have last time? What was the dessert? I remember the fish was underdone.” It’s this magical gift of a night. It’s a beautiful, rare occurrence in most actors’ experience. And my wife and I were like,”Oh, right, the fish wasn’t good. Are you going to order the steak this time?” I’ve become spoiled, and they’ve given me the opportunity.

    Tell me a little bit about, in the midst of all this, having your own project in “Con Man,” trying to keep that on an even keel as you’re doing all these other great things.

    Oh, my God, man! Yeah. There’s a lot of hats! I’m wearing a lot of hats on that one. It truly, with all these other things, it is the thing that takes up most of my focus because of that.

    But it’s amazing when you push the boundaries of yourself, any artist I’m sure, but I’m an actor primarily, and I am writing on “Con Man,” and directing, also wearing a producer hat, you change, like as an actor, I’ve changed now. I see projects differently. So even though it’s work, and it is a tricky thing to balance and to juggle with the rest, it fuels the other projects in a way that I couldn’t have anticipated before doing it.

    And having something at the end of it all where you can point to it and say, “We made that” — it takes a lot of work to make a thing, and to have it to share is a really extraordinary feeling, that I always hoped to make something, and I’m really proud of it.

    “Powerless” airs Thursdays on NBC.

  • Zootopia: Raymond Persi Voices Flash the Sloth

    Raymond Persi, the voice of Flash
    Raymond Persi, the voice of Flash

    Raymond Persi pulls double-duty on the Academy Award-nominated “Zootopia” as both a story artist and as the voice of the sloth named Flash. Persi says he got the role after providing a temporary — or “scratch” — voice while developing the character for the Disney animated feature. “As a story artist, part of your job is to pitch what you’ve drawn, and so sometimes by pitching it you’re acting out and doing little voices,” Persi explains. “You’ll do the scratch and they’ll realize, yeah, that works. That’s happened for me on a couple of films here, including this one.”

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