We Are Movie Geeks All things movies… as noted by geeks.

November 4, 2015

First Photos From FANTASTIC BEASTS AND WHERE TO FIND THEM Arrive

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Warner Bros. Pictures has released the first photos from their upcoming film FANTASTIC BEASTS AND WHERE TO FIND THEM. (via EW)

The all new adventure is set in the wizarding world created by J.K. Rowling in her best-selling Harry Potter books, which were adapted into the highest-grossing film franchise of all time.

Filming began in August at Warner Bros. Studios, Leavesden, under the direction of David Yates, who helmed the last four “Harry Potter” feature films.

Academy Award winner Eddie Redmayne (“The Theory of Everything”) stars as Newt Scamander, the wizarding world’s preeminent magizoologist, who stops in New York following his travels to find and document magical creatures.

FANTASTIC BEASTS AND WHERE TO FIND THEM also stars Katherine Waterston (“Inherent Vice”) as Tina; Alison Sudol (“Dig,” “Transparent”) as Tina’s sister, Queenie; Tony Award winner Dan Fogler (“The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee”) as Jacob; Ezra Miller (“Trainwreck”) as Credence; two-time Oscar nominee Samantha Morton (“In America,” “Sweet and Lowdown”) as Mary Lou; Jenn Murray (“Brooklyn”) as Chastity; young newcomer Faith Wood-Blagrove as Modesty; and Colin Farrell (“True Detective”) as Graves.

See more photos over at EW.com.

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Marking the screenwriting debut of J.K. Rowling, the script was inspired by her character Newt Scamander’s Hogwarts textbook, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them.

The film is being produced by David Heyman, producer of all eight of the blockbuster “Harry Potter” features; J.K. Rowling; Steve Kloves; and Lionel Wigram.

Collaborating with Yates behind the scenes are: Oscar-winning director of photography Philippe Rousselot (“A River Runs Through It,” the “Sherlock Holmes” movies), three-time Oscar-winning production designer Stuart Craig (“The English Patient,” “Dangerous Liaisons,” “Gandhi,” the “Harry Potter” films), three-time Oscar-winning costume designer Colleen Atwood (“Chicago,” “Memoirs of a Geisha,” “Alice in Wonderland”), Oscar-winning visual effects supervisor Tim Burke (“Gladiator,” the “Harry Potter” films), Oscar-nominated visual effects supervisor Christian Manz (“Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1”), and Yates’ longtime editor Mark Day (the last four “Harry Potter” films).

Warner Bros. Pictures has slated FANTASTIC BEASTS AND WHERE TO FIND THEM for worldwide release in 3D and IMAX on November 18, 2016.

Visit the official site: www.fantasticbeasts.com

September 26, 2015

Fantastic Fest 2015: THE LOBSTER – The Review

Filed under: Fantastic Fest,Review — Tags: , , , — Michael Haffner @ 12:51 pm

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Yorgos Lanthimos doesn’t make easily digestible films. His films aren’t meant to be soul-searching soul food or sweet little treats for a date night or light popcorn fare. The Greek arthouse director aims more for the mind than the stomach. Films like ALPS and DOGTOOTH placed Yorgos Lanthimos on the radar of many for his sheer audacity to examine elements of the human experience in absurd and unusual ways. Whether he’s examining the mental effects of death and loss or social constructs surrounding family and education, Yorgos Lanthimos is an anthropologist with a passion for telling stories.

As you can expect, THE LOBSTER continues his study of cultural norms. Even though it’s his English language debut and he’s now working with Hollywood actors, Lanthimos shows no signs of watering down his approach. Colin Farrell plays a recently single man named David. Accompanied by his brother, David enters The Hotel and has 45 days to find a suitable companion to live the rest of his days. If after 45 days David does not find a partner, then he is turned into an animal of his choosing and sent out into the wild. This might now be a good time to explain that David’s brother is actually a dog.

Although it comes across as a dystopian future, the world in which the film takes place doesn’t seem out of this world. Considering how many commercials I see on TV for Match.com and Okcupid.com and other dating sites, there’s clearly a trend to move singles into a “happier” more “acceptable” way of life. The future doesn’t seem that far off. THE LOBSTER is ultimately a dark comedy that cuts into the center of society’s need for companionship. As evident by the simply named Hotel in the simply named CIty, this world is one that’s not meant to have unique characteristics or any form of imagination. In one forced relationship in The Hotel, “The Limping Man” (Ben Whishaw) continuously forces his nose to bleed on his dates with another woman he likes because she suffers from random nose-bleeds. It’s this look at how individuals connect with one another on a superficial level that makes THE LOBSTER a searing critique of our desire to find a mate akin to our “public self.”

The first half of the film takes place entirely in The Hotel. Lanthimos injects a large amount of absurd humor into these scenes at the cost of his emotionless and lifeless characters. Colin Farrell doesn’t break a smile even once as he interacts with the other guests – one of which is John C. Reilly, continuing his sad sack streak on film, but this time turning it up even more with an unfortunate speech impediment. It isn’t until the second half of the film where we’re introduced to another group of outsiders living on the run outside The City that we see that Lanthimos is not just critiquing the antiquated civilians, but also the rebellious fringe communities. A scene where he describes the music the outsiders listen to and how they dance practically made me howl with laughter.

THE LOBSTER shows that expectations and norms are put in place in every society. Any time a group of individuals with specifics characteristics come together, regardless if the intentions are good or not, they eventually melt into one entity – what made them unique becomes common. This is evident even in the outsider group. It’s the second half of the film that will test audiences the most. Humor is replaced more with heart, while still maintaining Lanthimos’ extra dry approach. Even though the tone is consistent with his other films, the air in THE LOBSTER is unchanged from start to finish and becomes a stifling – its dreary tone becomes a little repetitious after two hours.

By the end of THE LOBSTER you will appreciate the special relationships you have in your life; the relationships that can’t be classified; the little quirks you share with someone that only the two of you know about; the loving memories that can only be gained through real experiences. You can’t simply explain the complexities of a relationship through a couple of shared traits. THE LOBSTER as a film is similar in this way – it’s hard to explain its complexities in a few paragraphs. There are rich ideas at work, that aren’t easy necessarily easy to embrace. It’ll take some time for me to fully accept it all, but it’s a relationship that I’m willing to take some time with and develop over the years.

 

Overall rating: 4 out of 5 

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February 14, 2014

WINTER’S TALE – The Review

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WINTER’S TALE… more like WINTER’S SNAIL, because this movie is slow, boring, and incredibly hard not to shake your head at.

Based off of the novel by Mark Helprin, WINTER’S TALE tells the romantic tale of Peter Lake (Colin Farrell) , a orphaned thief trying to run away from the evil crime leader who took him in, Pearly Soames (Russell Crowe). While on his way out-of-town, destiny brings him to the doorstep of Beverly (Jessica Brown Findlay), a 20-year-old woman who is dying of consumption. Fate has brought them together, and Pearly is determined to rip them apart. See, Peter isn’t aware that he is surrounded by angels and demons. He must discover on his own that his fate has already been mapped out.

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As a woman, I am really sick of movies that tell a half-assed story, but assume that because it’s a love story, it’s ok. Romance does not distract from holes in a story, nor is it an answer for things that don’t make sense. That’s like covering a pothole with a piece of glittery wrapping paper. It might sparkle, but the second you try to walk on it you’re gonna fall through because the hole is still there.

My first problem with this film is that it fails to explain anything. There is this hidden magical society living amongst humans, and they don’t really touch on how or why. Russell Crowe’s character is some sort of demon in human form that tries to stop miracles from happening, and robs the townspeople to try to rid the world of hope. Why does he want to rid the world of hope? Not sure. We do find out later on that he works for the devil (Will Smith), but we don’t know how that came to be, or why. He just is what he is. There are some religious references in this film, and it’s hard to ignore all of the good vs. evil, light vs. dark references that are put in weird spots throughout the film. Without giving too much away, this magical world exists, they don’t really explain why, and they give us no explanation of the magic or the rules. We, as the audience are just supposed to go “Oh, the devil. Cool. He’s in a t-shirt and hoop earrings during the turn of the century. Guess he transcends time. Gotcha!”. It’s not too much to ask for them to explain the rules of magic, or of their universe.

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Normally I would worry about certain spoilers, but this next one goes along with my precious point, so consider this your warning. We learn that Peter Lake is frozen in time by love, and that the loss of Beverly has completely wiped his memory… that is, until Peter meets Virginia Gamely (Jennifer Connelly). Not only does Virginia help Peter regain his memory at lightening speed, but she doesn’t even begin to question how it’s possible for him to be the same man from the hundred year old photograph that she found. There is a slight moment of confusion, and then she just accepts it. Now, let’s get this straight… A modern-day New Yorker meets a stranger, helps him do some research, and then when the possibility arises that he is frozen in time, she simply accepts it? I’m all for hope, magic and romance, but if you are setting a story in modern-day New York, you need to take a few more minutes in your movie to explain some things. I mean, come on! How boring can you make this film? Things happen, and everyone just accepts it. Way to shake up the story guys.

Colin Farrell was actually quite likable in this film. My problems with this film has nothing to do with his acting. In fact, I rather enjoyed him. There were a few moments between his character and Beverly that I found extremely charming and heartwarming. Those moments were ripped away quickly by a terrible screenplay and horrible visual effects. Take the glorious Pegasus for example. I love mystical creatures. Who doesn’t? Having said that, there was a scene where Peter was riding the horse (before we found out that the horse could fly) across the bridge, and it looked like a bad green screen project from the internet. The horse wasn’t hitting the ground, but wasn’t supposed to be gliding or flying, and the bridge looked completely fake. Sure, the film has a stylized look, but even miracles have rules. If they didn’t, wouldn’t everyone know that they exist – ruining the faith part? Everyone can see your horse running away, but not hitting the ground Peter! Don’t you think half of the city would question that?

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I could spend all day ripping this film apart, but I won’t. Akiva Goldsman (A BEAUTIFUL MIND, I AM LEGEND) is a great writer, but he missed the mark on his first directing feature. I don’t know if he took a different approach to writing this screenplay since he knew he would be directing it, but this film really missed the mark. With a cast like this, it’s really a bummer.

OVERALL RATING: 2 out of 5 stars

WINTER’S TALE is in theaters now

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December 19, 2013

WAMG At The SAVING MR. BANKS Press Day

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Two-time Academy Award®–winner Emma Thompson and fellow double Oscar®-winner Tom Hanks topline Disney’s “Saving Mr. Banks,” inspired by the extraordinary, untold backstory of how Disney’s classic “Mary Poppins” made it to the screen. This past  month WAMG attended the SAVING MR. BANKS press conference where Tom Hanks, Emma Thompson, Colin Farrell, Jason Schwartzman, BJ Novak, Bradley Whitford, director John Lee Hancock, writer Kelly Marcel and producer Alison Owen discussed making the film, Nanny McFee, and scarring grandchildren with Winnie the Pooh.

When Walt Disney’s daughters begged him to make a movie of their favorite book, P.L. Travers’ “Mary Poppins,” he made them a promise—one that he didn’t realize would take 20 years to keep. In his quest to obtain the rights, Walt comes up against a curmudgeonly, uncompromising writer who has absolutely no intention of letting her beloved magical nanny get mauled by the Hollywood machine. But, as the books stop selling and money grows short, Travers reluctantly agrees to go to Los Angeles to hear Disney’s plans for the adaptation. For those two short weeks in 1961, Walt Disney pulls out all the stops. Armed with imaginative storyboards and chirpy songs from the talented Sherman brothers, Walt launches an all-out onslaught on P.L. Travers, but the prickly author doesn’t budge.  He soon begins to watch helplessly as Travers becomes increasingly immovable and the rights begin to move further away from his grasp. It is only when he reaches into his own childhood that Walt discovers the truth about the ghosts that haunt her, and together they set Mary Poppins free to ultimately make one of the most endearing films in cinematic history.

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Please welcome, if you will, Colin Farrell, writer Kelly Marcel, B.J. Novak, Jason Schwartzman, Tom Hanks, Emma Thompson, director John Lee Hancock, Bradley Whitford, and producer Alison Owen. That’s-that’s not gonna go well.

Emma Thompson climbs over the table to get to her seat. The crowd laughs. 

EMMA THOMPSON: I think we’ve all had a little bit too much attention.

TOM HANKS: What a perfectly choreographed entrance that was.

EMMA THOMPSON: Yes, it’s worked so well.

Hi. Emma, and anybody else who’d like to comment, why do you think Pamela Travers, who can be so hurtful and so mean, is so much fun, and kind of irresistibly adorable?

EMMA THOMPSON: That is the first time I’ve heard her called irresistibly adorable, but I’ll take it. Um, is it-is it not rather nice for all of us, who’ve been so well brought up, and we’re all so bloody polite all the time, Americans particularly, um, to see someone being rude? It’s bliss, isn’t it? I think we act quite a lot of the time in, um, uh, uh, sort of conflict with what we really feel.

TOM HANKS: That’s a stupid thing to say.

EMMA THOMPSON: Exactly, there you go. How much did we enjoy that? We loved that.

TOM HANKS: So, so rude to celebrate rudeness.

EMMA THOMPSON: We could carry on like this for a long, long time.

Miss Thompson and Mr. Hanks, you’re playing characters where one’s got a very high public profile, one less well-known. What were the little breadcrumbs that you used to follow the trail to get the essence of who these people were, rather than to try to do imitations?

TOM HANKS: Uh, there is a bit of a, of a vocal cadence and a rhythm that Mr. Disney had that took a while to figure out. But a lot of the-the-the little anecdotes that we found specifically from the likes of, uh, Richard Sherman and were already in the screenplay. For example, Walt’s cough. Uh, you know, Walt smoked three packs a day, and Richard Sherman writes, and this was in the screenplay as well, he said, you always knew when Walt was coming to visit your office, ‘cause you could hear him coughing, you know, from down by the elevator. So you’re able to put that kind of stuff into it, and it just ends up being, you know, one of the delightful cards in the deck.

Emma, for you?

EMMA THOMPSON: Well, I liked that you used “breadcrumbs,” you know, ‘cause, I think it makes me think of Theseus and the minotaur, and the fact that P.L. Travers was so fascinated with myth, and was a searcher all her life. So, it was very breadcrumb-y, my search for her. Um, she went everywhere, you can imagine, she was like going into a maze. You know, and round some corners, you’d find this terrible monster. And round another corner you’d find a sort of beaten child. So, she was the most extraordinary combination of things. I suppose that was the scary thing, because in films, I don’t know whether my colleagues would agree, but we often get to play people who are emotionally, or at least morally consistent in some way. And she wasn’t consistent in any way. You would not know what you would get from one moment to the next. You could have had a very close moment with her on one day, and I got this from her friends, and then the next day, they might have gone to see her and she would have treated them as if… it’s like that moment that Kelly created and invented with Paul Giamatti’s character, where she says, you know, “You’re the only American I’ve ever liked.” And he says, “Oh, really, how fascinating, why? And j-, can-, will you-, can-, will you tell me why?” And she says, “No. I don’t want to tell you any more about that. Now you’re just asking too much. Go away.”

TOM HANKS: And you know what you do with breadcrumbs don’t you? [SINGS] “You feed the birds, tuppence a bag…” [OTHERS JOIN IN] “Tuppence, tuppence, tuppence a bag…”

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My question is for, uh, Emma. Um, you, I found it a little bit funny, you, you’ve won an Oscar for a screenplay, and you have played a nanny. And here you ar-, uh, “Nanny McPhee?”

EMMA THOMPSON: Yes…

Yes, okay….

EMMA THOMPSON: [OVERLAPPING] No, no, no, I was, that was my “I, I’m intrigued” face.” Sorry.

Oh, my God. Okay. Well-

EMMA THOMPSON: Did it come out wrong? Sometimes that happens.

I was, like, “Did I totally just mess that up?” All right. Heart attack. Okay. Well, my question is, here you’re playing a person who is helping in a screenplay about a nanny, and I’m wondering if that (playing Nanny McPhee) at all affected your approach to this film?

EMMA THOMPSON: I’ll tell you what is interesting. P.L. Travers likened, um, well, she used to talk a lot about Buffalo Bill. And while I was playing her, and discovering what she was – well, while I was researching her, I found out that she referred to Mary Poppins in very similar ways. She had understood that there was a spot of Zen mastery in the way in which she worked, but also that – and this is my theory – but I think that, because women have traditionally been locked out of the superstructures or the power structures that we all live in – Buffalo Bill’s a very good example, because I’ve always thought that “Nanny McPhee” was essentially a Western, only set in a domestic environment. And she felt the same way about “Mary Poppins.” So there’s a ver-, there’s a very real connection in the sense that, you know, the outsider comes into the place where there is difficulty and solves the problem using unorthodox methods, and then must leave. That’s a Western. And because women don’t have that kind of power, the Western form, which is a myth, an essential myth, what she would have called an essential myth, uh, uh, emerges in the female world in the nursery. Um, so that’s what comes to mind when you-, I don’t think I’ve answered your question at all. Do forgive me. But it, it was the interesting thing I thought that I could tell you.

Hi, my question is for Colin. Your rapport with little Annie Rose Buckley is genuinely beautiful. How did you go about creating that special bond with her?

COLIN FARRELL: A stick. A stick. [laughs] Um, alternated with sugar cubes. Which I got from the horse trainer. [laughs] No, she was just a dream, Annie, to be around. I think people say you shouldn’t work with children or animals, but you must only work with children, because you work eight hours a day. She was a dream. She’s, she from what I could tell, she didn’t exude ambition, and sometimes kids do, of course, and which is not to say she’s not ambitious, and that would be fine if she was, but she didn’t exude ambition, and she didn’t seem to be too fazed by any of it, and she was just a really, really sweet presence to be around. And, to see how beautiful and open her face was on the monitor and just in being around her was kind’a like, it was the most exquisite of canvases, upon which the later life of P.L. Travers was born, as she witnessed what her father was putting himself through and thereby putting everyone else in the family through as well. I mean, I have to accept some responsibility for the emotional inconsistency of P.L. Travers. I think that probably the apple fell a little bit close to the stump on that one.

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For Miss Thompson and Mr. Hancock, and anybody else who might want to weigh in… P.L. Travers made it very clear in the film what she thought of Disney’s “Mary Poppins,” but how do you think she would have responded to SAVING MR. BANKS?”

EMMA THOMPSON: You take this one. Go on.

TOM HANKS: Silently.

JOHN LEE HANCOCK: Yeah.

BRADLEY WHITFORD: Dead. [LAUGHTER]

TOM HANKS: Too much? [LAUGHTER]

BRADLEY WHITFORD: Just to the edge.

EMMA THOMPSON: You know what? I’ve been asked this question a few times, and I reckon this is a woman who kept on saying, “I don’t want anything. I don’t want a biography, I don’t want anything like that, I don’t want anyone to do or know anything about me.” Meanwhile, she kept everything she wrote and sent it to-, for the archives at Brisbane University. So she felt, I’m certain, that she was an important contributor to the artistic, to the culture, and wanted, I think, to have it preserved. And I think that’s what she would say about this, is, “Absolutely ridiculous film. Uh, I h-, [STUTTERS] n-n-n-no relationship whatsoever to what was happening. Uh, but, you know, uh, it’s about me. And, uh, um, at-at last. Uh, and I thought that the clothes were really rather nice.” I think that’s what she would have said.

EMMA THOMPSON: Don’t you think? (To John Lee Hancock)

JOHN LEE HANCOCK: Oh, God, yeah.

Mr. Hanks and Miss Thompson, I was wondering if you could talk a little bit about the challenges of playing such iconic characters, research you did, talking to people who knew them, and how that helped you inform your performances.

TOM HANKS: There is a lot of anecdotal information that kept coming to us. There were people, uh, who knew Walt, and they still have access to the studio, ‘cause I think they still have their cards that let them onstage. They searched us out. Richard Sherman was a never-ending, literally, never-ending, fountain of stories, of facts, of anecdotes, of bits and pieces of everything that had happened. And Diane Disney Miller, his daughter, uh, gave me al-, uh, unlimited access to the archives and the museum in San Francisco. Made a couple of visits there. So I had, I had a lot of video and audio that I could work with, which, the only handicap there was a lot of it is Walt Disney playing Walt Disney. Uh, but even in some of that and plenty of others, there’s an ocean cadence to the man, and that sense that he, he had great – he believed everything that he said about his projects. And he completely embraced the possibilities of wonder in the movies that he was going to make as well as the rides he was going to come up with, and the things that he was going to build. So I had a lot, I had a great road map in order to search it out.

Emma and Tom, both of your characters are pretty obsessed with this book and this character. I was wondering, in your own lives, is there something that you have just either wanted to do as an actor, or you were just obsessed with the book and the character, you love it, and hope maybe to produce it or something like that? Or just love it? Is there somebody like that?

EMMA THOMPSON: I, well, just off the top of my head, which is probably the best place to start. For me as a child, it was always Sherlock Holmes, with whom I was deeply in love, and who I wanted really to be. Um, but that’s the problem, isn’t it, if you’re a female, that a lot of the heroic models are, in fact, male. So, you, you know, one of my first questions to everybody as I was getting older is, “What’s, who’s the female hero? Who is she? What does she do? What does she actually do?” Um, and, so, anyway, yeah.

TOM HANKS: I always wanted to play Lestrade of Scotland Yard, just ‘cause he’s kind of a buffoon that gets to wear a uniform, and I thought, “Well, that would be fun.” So maybe we got something.

EMMA THOMPSON: Yeah. Let’s do it.

Hi, Mr. Hanks, it must have occurred to you this is your second “Saving” movie, and you’re a funny guy. Did you have any thoughts on that, and will you do a third “Saving” movie?

TOM HANKS: I like to think of it as a trilogy. There’s gotta be some era of history that we can explore. It seems to be moving forward. I’d like to play, “Saving John DeLorean.” Uh, I, no, I have no idea. That’s the, John DeLorean invented the car, okay, never mind. I got nothin’, I did my best that, uh…

Emma, this is a movie about words, but one of my favorite things with actors is watch them when they have a scene that doesn’t have dialogue. In LOVE ACTUALLY and this, you have two memorable scenes where you have no dialogue. Is that harder on you, because there are no words to fall back on, or is it easier for you to, sort of, get those emotions across because you don’t have to worry about the words?

EMMA THOMPSON: Oh, scenes without words are bliss to do, reacting scenes are-are wonderful to do. I think we’d all feel the same way about that. I mean, not because one is frightened of words, or learning words, or using words, of course not… but just because, it’s a different kind of – you’re not so active somehow. Uh, yes. It’s not even that you’re passive, but you’re just responding and that’s, the scene that you’re talking about at the end, John, we didn’t know how to do that quite, ‘cause it is quite a-, she’s having a huge reaction, I mean, huge. It’s like an elemental reaction she’s never had before in her life. So, what was interesting to me about it was the thing that made it work was the clip from “Mary Poppins.” That’s what did it. And, so that’s what I was responding to. So, that was nice.

JOHN LEE HANCOCK: You know what was fascinating about that, though, ‘cause I remember that day obviously very clearly in the Chinese Theater. And, we were talking about it and how this would progress, and the number of cameras, and you told me, “Um, I’m not sure where the bridge will be built, but once I know, I can cross it again and again.” And I thought that was just fascinating, ‘cause I’m not an actor, but to witness that in terms of, “I’m not sure where that’s going to be, or how it’s going to happen, but once I know how the bricks lay and how we cross the river, I can go there again and again,” which-, and she did, which was amazing.

EMMA THOMPSON: I’d forgotten that.

JOHN LEE HANCOCK: You’re lying.

EMMA THOMPSON: Oh, no. I’d just forgotten that as-, how interesting. Gosh. Who knew?

JOHN LEE HANCOCK: [OVERLAPPING] Yeah. Yeah.

I have a question for Tom Hanks. You have two grandchildren, and that is the Mr. Banks side of you that we don’t know. So, do you take them, uh, to Disneyland, for example? What is like to be Tom Hanks as a grandfather?

EMMA THOMPSON: Old. [Laughs]

TOM HANKS: Uh, we did go, I had taken them to Disneyland on the day that we shot in Disneyland. They came, and an interesting thing happens as a grandparent – that you see no reason whatsoever that your granddaughter shouldn’t be delighted to take a ride on the Winnie the Pooh Adventure. It’s Winnie the Pooh. It’s fun. It’s Pooh Bear. It’s Kanga, and Roo, and Owl. It’s Christopher Robin. It’s gonna be a blast. She’s gonna remember this the rest of her life, her ride on Winnie the Pooh’s Great Adventure. My granddaughter was terrified by the noise, the big spinning bears. She is now-, haunted for the rest of her days by this first image of Winnie the Pooh in a loud, short, herky-jerky ride that her grandfather forced her to do on the day he played Walt Disney in Disneyland. That is just a sample of the fantastic job I do as a grandparent. Thank you. [Laughs]

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Well, first of all, I want to congratulate all of you. The film is, to paraphrase Mary Poppins, practically perfect in every way. Now, along the same Disneyland vein, John Lee, Alison, for only the third time in history a film has been shot partially in Disneyland. What kind of challenges did that face, and how did the rest of you feel about the opportunity to do something as iconic as that, that is rarely done, and then also shutting down the Chinese and part of Hollywood Boulevard for another major sequence?

JOHN LEE HANCOCK: We were very prepared for Disneyland, kind of military precision. They were very helpful down there. We knew when we could come in before it opened, and we knew at 9:17 we needed to be on Main Street, and here by there, and we carefully went down there and scouted it many, many times with lenses, because if you would, you know, pan this far over here, it would be something from 1981, pan to the left and it’s 1969. So, trying to solve those problems without spending money. Um, and you know, being there on Main Street before the park opened and the sun is just coming up, and everybody’s moving stuff around, and I remember a moment there where you’re so worried and prepared for the day, and you’ve got that ahead of you, “Are we gonna do it, we gonna get everything done?” But then there was just that moment with the sun coming up, and I thought, “Damn, this is cool. I got a great job.” And then I looked over, and there was Tom sitting there, and I go, “This is Walt Disney and-, it’s all too great.” So, it was fantastic.

Obviously, Mary Poppins meant a lot to Walt Disney. I’m curious to know for everyone on the panel, what did Mary Poppins mean to you before making this film?

TOM HANKS: Jason Schwartzman.

B.J. NOVAK: Uh… should I go? Do we have anything? You want to coordinate something for a second?

JASON SCHWARTZMAN: Uh, yeah. Well, it meant a lot to me, this movie, growing up. I saw it a lot of times, and, in fact, I knew most all the songs from the movie. In fact, that’s what I remembered the most, I think. It’s funny just how much when you’re little, a movie and things can affect you and, when I got the part in the movie, and I started looking through archives and photos, and you’d see all these behind-the-film, behind-the-scenes, snapshots of the movie being made, and it was only then that it occurred to me that it was shot in Burbank. Um, because I experienced it as a young person thinking it was in England, and it was only recently that I realized that it was all made up. That’s how deep into my body it had gone, and how much I believed that it was all real. And in many ways, I wish I hadn’t ever seen those photos. Do you know what I mean? Like, you don’t want to see Jaws, how, you know, Jaws is. Like, there’s photos of guys smoking cigarettes by Jaws? I wish I had never seen those photos. And I wish I had never seen the Cherry Tree Lane on Burbank Boulevard, ‘cause it’s deep in my-, so, it means a lot to me, this movie. I loved it very much.

B.J. NOVAK: We talked last night about this, because I thought I had seen “Mary Poppins.” I knew all the songs. I knew the characters. I had absorbed it without ever having seen it. I didn’t realize that till we all went to your house and watched it, and I realized there were so many scenes, and complicated,- and dark shadings, and directions that I had never associated with that film. It’s a very-, the film itself is so much, odder than we remember and so much more complicated, let alone the story of the film when you know the context of it. So, it was something for me, and we talked about this, all these Disney films, they feel like they’re in your DNA-

JASON SCHWARTZMAN: Yeah.

B.J. NOVAK: Um, growing up-, these songs, the Sherman Brother songs especially, you just feel they just came from heaven fully formed. It’s so interesting to see that people, we went to the archives and saw drafts with different lyrics and different script pages, and it’s so odd to think that this ever could have been any different. And that was so interesting about making this movie, seeing all the drafts-

JASON SCHWARTZMAN: Yeah.

B.J. NOVAK: Let alone the scenes that I had never even known were there.

What have you learned about Walt Disney after doing the movie that you didn’t know before, and how challenging was for you to have to look and sound like him?

TOM HANKS: Uh, we had the most discussed, photographed, analyzed, diagrammed-, tested mustache on the planet. I mean, I think actually, documents went to United States government to discuss the angle of the shave… how much mustache was going to be there. [Laughs] I don’t look too much like him, but there is a line, there is an angular figure you can get from, by way the boxiness of the suits, and, the playing around with various pieces of hair in order to get there. I had a little bit of luck in that this, Walt Disney at this time in his life was, is very much already Walt Disney. He is the accomplished artist, industrialist, that he was. The nature of the surprises came down to the fact-, was that really, coming from Diane, about how much of just a regular dad this guy was. I mean, Disneyland itself came about because he used to spend every Saturday with his two daughters. And after a while, here in L.A., he ran out of places that he could take his two daughters. There were pony rides over where the Beverly Center is now, and there was the merry-go-round in Griffith Park, but after that, that was it. And he was sitting eating peanuts on a park bench in Griffith Park and the girls were on the merry-go-round, he said, “God, there really should be place dads can take their daughters on a Saturday in L.A.” And from that, Disneyland was born. So, that connection that he had, through very tight family. His brother Roy, his Mom and Dad who were a part of his life as soon as he had money, that was it. Um, and also the fact that he was, sadly, a victim of the times. He smoked three packs of cigarettes a day and he died of lung cancer. Um, that’s just another one of the grim realities of the, that’s the way the world operated back then.

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Mr. Hanks, as a storyteller-, that you are also a director and producer. How do you relate with the conflict of Mr. Disney that wants to tell this marvelous story that maybe he has in his mind, and the songs, and he has to deal every day with the author? How do you relate with the struggle of creating something, and in the day-by-day as a filmmaker?

TOM HANKS: Well, as everybody here is, more or less some version of a person who has tried to see a story brought to its-, you know, it’s something, and it starts in your head, and you see possibilities for it, and it’s just one damn thing after another. I mean, it seems like you’re always comin’ across somebody like, you know, this hell-in-a-gasbag right here that just says “No-no-no-no-no, it’s not gonna happen.” and Walt Disney, at this point was pretty much used to getting his way because everybody loved him and he’s the guy who invented Mickey Mouse. Listen, in the creative process, which is really what this movie is about, you come to loggerheads and you have to just keep the process moving forward, even if that requires jumpin’ on a plane and flying to London and knockin’ on hell-in-a-gasbag’s door. It’s just what the creative process requires sometimes, and it’s a good thing. It’s fun. Otherwise, you know, it’d be too much work.

Kelly, what a great script you wrote. My question for you is… did you find any sort of irony in being the writer on a film about a writer, and did you find that you had to make some sacrifices along the way that you didn’t want to make? Did you ever feel kind of like P.L. Travers at any point? 

KELLY MARCEL: Um, actually, weirdly no. I’ve been asked this question a lot, and this particular process was kind of beautiful from day one, really. Unlike what Tom was just saying, nobody said “no.” Everybody said “yes” all the way through, including all of these amazing people sitting at this table, which sort of still blows my mind. It’s, “my God, Colin Farrell.” Um-

COLIN FARRELL: I know, I know. [laughs]

KELLY MARCEL: Hi.

COLIN FARRELL: It’s very nice meeting you.

KELLY MARCEL: So,no. It was a great process. And, I did think at, you know, at one point, Alison and I did think that Disney would probably give us a cease and desist order, and not make the movie. But, in fact, they embraced us with open arms. I don’t think John Lee and I ever felt the hand of the studio on our shoulder. They really trusted us to go ahead and make it the way that we wanted to make it. So, no, we didn’t make any compromises and I don’t feel like P.L. Travers.

COLIN FARRELL: But no lifetime pass for the theme park, either, which is-

KELLY MARCEL: No.

COLIN FARRELL: Kind’a’ stingy.

KELLY MARCEL: But I still get to sit next to Colin Farrell.

Was it difficult to combine these episodes of L.A., London, and these flashbacks which are like a film in a film? And how challenging was it for you?

JOHN LEE HANCOCK: Kelly’s script laid out kind of pretty much like it is in the movie. I thought it worked very well on the page, so you want to make sure that you give your best effort to accomplish it on the screen. I think the most difficult part for me was just wrapping my brain around the idea that it’s not just 1961 Los Angeles and 1906 Australia, but that these two time frames start to fold over each other at some point, and even to the point where Richard and Robert Sherman’s lyrics are ending up in her memories in her father’s mouth, which makes her not an incredibly reliable narrator of these, which is why they’re stylized to a point, like childhood memories are. So I think that was a difficult thing to think about. But all of us talked about it, and Kelly and I, in prep, spent a lot of time talking about the way one scene would influence the next, and how this would hopefully, brick after brick, add up to one plus one equaling three.

One of my readers is a really big fan of yours and wanted me to ask you if there is a possibility of yet another Nanny McPhee movie?

EMMA THOMPSON: The second one, we had a lovely time making it, and it went down very well in my country, and I came here, I’ve just told this story with Tom. We came here and we did what we’re all doing now, which is sort of big old two week tour of all the States, and it was just wonderful, because I had never been to many of the States, and everybody was very enthusiastic. And the film played beautifully, and I got to the end of the tour, and I was pretty tired. You know. And I was on my way home, and I was in New York just packing my bags, literally packing my bag to go home, when the phone rang. I said, “Oh, hello,” you know. “How’s it going?” This was opening weekend. “Well, uh…” I said, “What? What?” “Well, it’s, you know, the box office, it’s not as good as we wanted it to be.” I said, “Okay. What do you mean?” “We wanted, we projected-,” this is what happens these days, okay? Just so as you know. “We projected that it would take 14 million dollars. It only took 9.7.” I’m s-, I, I mean, I don’t understand what that means. I go, “Gosh, 9.7 million dollars for a-, I mean, that seems like quite a lot of money, really. Um, but, anyway, you seem to be suicidal.” So I better take that as evidence that there won’t be another one. And that’s how it works. So it doesn’t matter how good the movie is. It doesn’t matter how th-, what matters is what it takes during the opening weekend. So, you know, you guys should know that, ‘cause it’s slightly distressing sometimes.

TOM HANKS: I am hoping to make “Saving Nanny McPhee,” [laughs] which would really be, the way I count it, six birds with one stone, three and three, and I don’t know, that’s what I’m hopin’.

So much of this movie is about the pre-production process, but it basically skips the entire production and it goes straight to the premiere. I’m wondering if the production was ever on the table as something to be added into the film, or if it was something that you always knew you were going to skip?

KELLY MARCEL: No, there was, there was never a point that we talked about putting the production of the film into it, I don’t think, was there, Alison?

ALISON OWEN: No.

KELLY MARCEL: We-, yeah? No. It was, I mean, it just, you know, it’s gonna be a 20-hour movie if we try and that bit as well with a whole new cast. It wouldn’t have worked. I quite like that time jump.

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Disney presents “Saving Mr. Banks,” directed by John Lee Hancock, produced by Alison Owen, Ian Collie and Philip Steuer, and written by Kelly Marcel and Sue Smith. Executive producers are Paul Trijbits, Christine Langan, Andrew Mason and Troy Lum.

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SAVING MR. BANKS opens in theaters limited on December 13th and opens wide on December 20th

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November 13, 2013

SAVING MR. BANKS – The Review

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Emma Thompson and Tom Hanks shine in Disney’s new feature film SAVING MR. BANKS, a heartwarming tale about the making of the Mary Poppins film.

When Walt Disney and his daughters discovered the book “Mary Poppins” by P. L. Travers, they fell in love. Disney then made a promise to them, that took him 20 years to keep. He would bring Mary Poppins to life. What he didn’t expect was a stubborn writer with no intention of handing over her beloved nanny. When finally convinced to discuss the film, Disney and his team pull out all the stops to impress Travers enough to sign off on the film. What they didn’t bargain for was uncovering some of her ghosts from the past, or where the story of Mary Poppins actually came from.

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SAVING MR. BANKS is a magical tale filled with heart. Thompson and Hanks are simply delightful as P.L. Travers and Walt Disney, and they play off of each other incredibly well. Thompson is marvelous as a cold, stern Travers. She does a great job of adding a softer side to her character, which is best displayed in the scenes with her driver Ralph, played by Paul Giamatti. The addition of Ralph to the story (which is admitted to be the only fictitious character in the film) allows the audience a glimpse of an adult Travers as she interacts with someone outside of the Disney madness. It gives her a sense of humanity, and gives the audience a reason to feel a bit more compassion for her, rather than only showing her as an uptight stick in the mud.

As for Hanks, he had the cheerful, wide-eyed characteristics of Disney down pat. His character is not the main focus of this film, so they didn’t dig deep into who Disney really was. Instead, they kept his character development rather shallow, allowing more time for the character of Travers to unfold.

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Rounding out the film as Disney’s creative team were animator and co-screenwriter (Bradley Whitford), and songwriters Richard and Robert Sherman (Jason Schwartzman, and B.J. Novak), who aided in the agitation of Travers throughout their brainstorming sessions. These sessions added plenty of comedic relief to the film, and showcased a few unforgettable songs from the Poppins film.

The film looks absolutely stunning, and showcases some of the more beautiful parts of LA, including the palm trees, breathtaking views, and the Beverly Hills Hotel, which oozes old school elegance and class. We also get a glimpse of the Disney Studio grounds, which still look very similar to what they did back then. What really impressed me were the flashback scenes, showing a young Travers and the relationship with her father (played by Colin Farrell). These scenes were beautifully shot, and added a much-needed explanation to the behaviors of P.L. Travers in her adult life.

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Overall, the film is heartwarming and enjoyable. Its  mission is to entertain audiences with an interesting tale about the making of a Disney classic. That is exactly what they do. This is a fun story about one of the most beloved movies (and books) in history. Having said all of that, director John Lee Hancock, and writers Kelly Marcel and Sue Smith certainly added a “spoonful of sugar” to make the tale more enjoyable, and a little less truthful. Everything that I have read about the real life Travers has blatantly stated that she was not happy with the film version of her beloved nanny. She felt that they ignored the hard sides of Poppins, she despised the animation in the film, and was not too fond of the music. Overall, she was not pleased.

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While I enjoyed the film of SAVING MR. BANKS as a whole, audiences should know that it’s only loosely based on actual events. Go into this film looking for a good time at the movies. If you pick it apart based on the factual way the making of this film really went down, you won’t enjoy it.

OVERALL RATING: 3.75 out of 5 stars

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SAVING MR. BANKS opens in theaters limited on December 13th and opens wide on December 20th

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November 6, 2013

Russell Crowe, Jennifer Connelly And Colin Farrell Star In First Trailer For WINTER’S TALE

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Colin Farrell and Russell Crowe are at odds in an age-old battle between good and evil in this first trailer for WINTER’S TALE. Set in a mythic New York City and spanning more than a century, WINTER’S TALE is a love story of miracles and crossed destinies.

Bring the hankies – this tear-jerker opens Valentine’s Day 2014. For those not prone to sentimental films of the heart, The Weinstein Company’s VAMPIRE ACADEMY also debuts on February 14th.

The film stars Colin Farrell (“Total Recall”), Jessica Brown Findlay (TV’s “Downton Abbey”), and Oscar winners Jennifer Connelly (“A Beautiful Mind”), William Hurt (“Kiss of the Spider Woman”), Eva Marie Saint (“On the Waterfront”) and Russell Crowe (“Gladiator”).  It also introduces young newcomers Ripley Sobo and Mckayla Twiggs (both from Broadway’s “Once”).

The film marks the directorial debut of Academy Award-winning screenwriter Akiva Goldsman (“A Beautiful Mind”), who also wrote the screenplay, based on the acclaimed novel by Mark Helprin.

Goldsman is also producing the film with Marc Platt (“Drive”), Michael Tadross (“Sherlock Holmes”) and Tony Allard (Showtime’s “The Baby Dance”). The executive producers are Kerry Foster and Bruce Berman.

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The behind-the-scenes creative team includes five-time Oscar-nominated director of photography Caleb Deschanel (“The Passion of the Christ,” “The Patriot”), production designer Naomi Shohan (“Constantine,” “I Am Legend”), costume designer Michael Kaplan (“Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol,” “Star Trek”) and editors Wayne Wahrman (“I Am Legend”) and Oscar nominee Tim Squyres (“Life of Pi,” “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon”). The music is composed by Oscar® winner Hans Zimmer (“The Lion King,” “Inception,” “Man of Steel”).

A presentation of Warner Bros. Pictures, in association with Village Roadshow Pictures, WINTER’S TALE opens February 14, 2014.

http://www.winterstalemovie.com/

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Emma Thompson And Tom Hanks Talk SAVING MR. BANKS In New Featurette

SAVING MR. BANKS

When Disney’s SAVING MR. BANKS opens in theaters in December, audiences will delight in a movie that gives them not only a rare glimpse of the behind-the-scenes tug-of-war that ultimately brought “Mary Poppins” to the screen but also a glimpse of the creative geniuses it took to envision the classic film – everyone from a cantankerous, difficult author to an ever-optimistic, visionary entrepreneur.

John Lee Hancock’s film will have it’s North American Premiere at the Opening Night Gala of the 2013 AFI Fest on Thursday, November 7.

Actors Tom Hanks and Emma Thompson discuss the backstory of what would ultimately set the wheels of the beloved film in motion.

Prior to it’s screening at the AFI Fest 2013, the Oscar-winning actress will be honored with a handprint-footprint ceremony at the TCL Chinese Theatre in Hollywood.

In preparation to take on the persona of P.L. Travers, Thompson listened to tapes of the sessions in Los Angeles between the songwriting team of Richard and Robert Sherman, Walt Disney and Travers, all of which had been saved in the Disney Archives.

“The tapes remind me of the myth of Sisyphus because it’s like listening to people push something very, very heavy up a hill and then get to the top and just watch the whole thing roll back down again. It’s really hard work listening to those tapes because P.L. is so awful and so irritating. Just listening to them makes you want to throw something heavy at her.”

And Tom Hanks himself seems to also embody Walt Disney. Says director John Lee Hancock, “This film portrays a side of Disney we haven’t seen before,” Hancock reveals.  “It’s not the Walt we know from ‘The Wonderful World of Disney,’ which was fun to explore.

“I don’t look or sound anything like Walt Disney,” Hanks affirms in responding to Hancock’s comments. “In addition to growing a mustache and parting my hair, the job at hand was to somehow capture all that whimsy that is in his eyes as well as all of the acumen that goes along with that. You can’t do an imitation of Walt Disney.

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On dressing the cast, Veteran costume designer Daniel Orlandi was offered great insights from Richard Sherman. “Richard Sherman was a great help,” affirms Orlandi. “He had a lot of insight into Walt and what the Sherman brothers and Don DaGradi wore to work every day. In the film, we have Jason Schwartzman as Richard Sherman wearing a bright red vest that Pamela points out specifically because the legend is that she did not want the color red in the movie ‘Mary Poppins.’”

Hancock confirms the anecdote about Travers’ demands to remove the color red by saying, “The craziest demand is that she declared that she was simply off the color. In our film, Walt confronts her in front of the Shermans and Don DaGradi and capitulates. And they’re aghast. They’ve never seen Walt give in to anything like that.”

“I don’t think it had anything to do with the color red,” Hancock surmises. “It was just a demand that she was making and if he couldn’t give in on something as simple as no red in the picture, then they would have many more fights. Then she should just go back to London. So he gives in, at least momentarily, on the color red which was a silly and crazy demand.”

Although P.L. Travers made many demands in the film, Emma Thompson counts the “no red” one as her personal favorite. “She just turned up one day and said, ‘I’ve gone off the color red and you can’t have any red in the film.’ Disney replied, ‘But it’s set in London. There are pillar boxes and there are postboxes and buses and a British flag.’ This was witnessed by the Sherman brothers with Walt Disney finally going, ‘Okay, okay. No red, no red.’ Of course it all changed and there was plenty of red in the movie. But she really tested those guys.”

For Hancock’s film, “There’s no red in Emma’s wardrobe,” Orlandi confirms. “Of course, when you see the movie ‘Mary Poppins,’ Mr. Banks is in a bright red velvet smoking jacket in his first scene,” points out Orlandi about who actually won the final argument.

A sequence in the upcoming film portraying Travers’ demand to eliminate the color red took place in the last stage set in which Hancock filmed – the rehearsal studio where the Shermans and DaGradi staged their storyboard displays and musical numbers to win the author over and get her to sign a contract with their boss.

SAVING MR. BANKS

When Walt Disney’s daughters begged him to make a movie of their favorite book, P.L. Travers’ “Mary Poppins,” he made them a promise—one that he didn’t realize would take 20 years to keep. In his quest to obtain the rights, Walt comes up against a curmudgeonly, uncompromising writer who has absolutely no intention of letting her beloved magical nanny get mauled by the Hollywood machine. But, as the books stop selling and money grows short, Travers reluctantly agrees to go to Los Angeles to hear Disney’s plans for the adaptation.

For those two short weeks in 1961, Walt Disney pulls out all the stops. Armed with imaginative storyboards and chirpy songs from the talented Sherman brothers, Walt launches an all-out onslaught on P.L. Travers, but the prickly author doesn’t budge. He soon begins to watch helplessly as Travers becomes increasingly immovable and the rights begin to move further away from his grasp.

It is only when he reaches into his own childhood that Walt discovers the truth about the ghosts that haunt her, and together they set Mary Poppins free to ultimately make one of the most endearing films in cinematic history.

SAVING MR. BANKS

Colin Farrell (“Minority Report,” “Total Recall”) co-stars as Travers’ doting dad, Travers Goff, along with British actress Ruth Wilson (Disney’s “The Lone Ranger,” “Anna Karenina”) as his wife, Margaret; Oscar and Emmy nominee Rachel Griffiths (“Six Feet Under,” “Hilary and Jackie,” “The Rookie”) as Margaret’s sister, Aunt Ellie (who inspired the title character of Travers’ novel); and a screen newcomer—11-year-old Aussie native Annie Rose Buckley as the young, blossoming writer, nicknamed Ginty, in the flashback sequences.

The cast also includes Oscar nominee and Emmy winner Paul Giamatti (“Sideways,” “Cinderella Man,” HBO’s “John Adams”) as Ralph, the kindly limousine driver who escorts Travers during her two-week stay in Hollywood; Jason Schwartzman (“Rushmore,” “Moonrise Kingdom”) and B.J. Novak (“NBC’s “The Office,” “Inglourious Basterds”) as the songwriting Sherman Brothers (Richard and Robert, respectively); Emmy winner Bradley Whitford (“The West Wing,” “The Cabin in the Woods”) as screenwriter Don DaGradi; and multi-Emmy winner Kathy Baker (“Picket Fences,” “Edward Scissorhands”) as Tommie, one of Disney’s trusted studio confidantes.

The film will release in U.S. theaters on December 13, 2013, limited, and open wide on December 20, 2013.

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August 17, 2013

Akiva Goldsman’s WINTER’S TALE Set For February 14, 2014 Release – Stars Colin Farrell, Jennifer Connelly And Russell Crowe

Filed under: General News — Tags: , , , , , — Michelle McCue @ 11:22 am

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Warner Bros. Pictures has set a winter release date for WINTER’S TALE, written and directed by Oscar-winning screenwriter Akiva Goldsman (“A Beautiful Mind”) and based on the novel by Mark Helprin. The film, from Warner Bros. Pictures and Village Roadshow Pictures, will open in North America on February 14, 2014.

Set in a mythic New York City and spanning more than a century, WINTER’S TALE is a story of miracles, crossed destinies, and the age-old battle between good and evil.

The film stars Colin Farrell (“Total Recall”), Jessica Brown Findlay (TV’s “Downton Abbey”), and Oscar winners Jennifer Connelly (“A Beautiful Mind”), William Hurt (“Kiss of the Spider Woman”), Eva Marie Saint (“On the Waterfront”) and Russell Crowe (“Gladiator”). It also introduces young newcomers Ripley Sobo and Mckayla Twiggs (both from Broadway’s “Once”).

WINTER’S TALE marks the directorial debut of Akiva Goldsman, who also wrote the screenplay, based on the acclaimed novel by Mark Helprin.

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Goldsman is also producing, with Marc Platt (“Drive”), Michael Tadross (“Sherlock Holmes”) and Tony Allard (Showtime’s “The Baby Dance”). Kerry Foster and Bruce Berman serve as executive producers.

The behind-the-scenes creative team includes five-time Oscar-nominated director of photography Caleb Deschanel (“The Passion of the Christ,” “The Patriot”), production designer Naomi Shohan (“Constantine,” “I Am Legend”), costume designer Michael Kaplan (“Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol,” “Star Trek”) and editors Wayne Wahrman (“I Am Legend”) and Oscar nominee Tim Squyres (“Life of Pi,” “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon”). The music is composed by Oscar winner Hans Zimmer (“The Lion King,” “Inception,” “Man of Steel”).

February 18, 2013

Colin Farrell, Terrence Howard And Noomi Rapace Star In DEAD MAN DOWN Film Clips

Filed under: General News — Tags: , , , — Michelle McCue @ 11:55 am

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With all the new releases entering the market in March, this new film is one to be on the lookout for. Colin Farrell, Noomi Rapace and Academy Award® nominee Terrence Howard star in Niels Arden Oplev’s DEAD MAN DOWN. Oplev, director of the original The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, makes his American theatrical debut with the new thriller.

Farrell and Rapace star as two strangers who are irresistibly drawn to one another by their mutual desire for revenge. The film also co-stars Dominic Cooper, from a screenplay by J.H. Wyman (Fringe).

Watch these new clips and get a behind-the-scenes look at all the action from the upcoming film.

Revenge is coming when DEAD MAN DOWN hits theaters March 8th.

http://blooddemandsblood.com/

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https://twitter.com/deadmandownfilm

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November 21, 2012

Blue Sky Studios’ EPIC New Trailer Features Beyonce, Colin Farrell, Christoph Waltz And Josh Hutcherson

Blue Sky Studios and 20th Century Fox take their animated films to lofty heights in their new action-adventure, EPIC. In theaters over the Memorial Day Weekend 2013, watch the brand new trailer from the folks who brought you ICE AGE and the adorable RIO. EPIC is a 3D CG action-adventure comedy that reveals a hidden world unlike any other and tells the story of an ongoing battle deep in the forest between the forces of good and the forces of evil. When a teen age girl finds herself magically transported into this secret universe, she must band together with a rag-tag team of fun and whimsical characters in order to save their world…and ours.

Look magnificent! I’m such a fan of Blue Sky and their previous films – especially the elaborate ROBOTS. If you’ve never seen it, go find it and watch it this holiday weekend with the family! Their 1998 short, BUNNY, was inspiring and went on to win the 1998 Academy Award for Best Animated Short

In October it was announced that Twentieth Century Fox Animation and Blue Sky Studios acquired rights to make a feature film based on the late Charles Schulz’s beloved and iconic “Peanuts” franchise. The as yet untitled animated movie will be released on November 25, 2015. 2015 will mark the 65th anniversary of the debut of the “Peanuts” comic strip and the 50th anniversary of the landmark television special, “A Charlie Brown Christmas.”

Starring Beyonce Knowles, Colin Farrell, Josh Hutcherson, Amanda Seyfried, and Christoph Waltz, EPIC charges into theaters everywhere on May 24, 2013.

Visit the official site: http://www.epicthemovie.com/

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