JAY KELLY – Review

With all the manic activity, preparations, shopping, and general “hub-bub” that fills the holiday season, most of us have precious little “downtime” to reflect. If you do get a “breather” you might pause to mull over your relationships with family and friends. And perhaps not all those memories are seen through “rose colored glasses”. Yup, regret can be an unexpected source for the end-of-the-year blues. This new film proclaims that those “pangs” can even affect the very-rich and famous. That includes iconic Hollywood “A-listers”, like the title character of this movie. And the “m-word” certainly applies to him because there are few movie stars that have been at the top of the box office longer than that “leading man” with the “matinée idol looks”, Mr. JAY KELLY.

Naturally, when we first meet Jay Kelly (George Clooney) he’s on a movie set, wrapping up his final scene. Right at his side is his devoted longtime manager Ron Sukenick (Adam Sandler), as they hear “Cut!”. Back at his lush estate, Jay meets with his youngest daughter Daisy (Grace Edwards), who’s preparing to join some school friends on a train trip through Europe. Jay tries to convince her to cancel and hang out with him between acting gigs. She declines just as Ron delivers a big bombshell: the director that gave Jay his “big break”, Peter Schnieder (Jim Broadbent), has died. Jay then recalls their last get together when he passed on Peter’s last film project. After attending the funeral, Jay runs into his old acting-school buddy, Tim (Billy Crudup), who suggests that the two get a drink at their old dive bar hangout. Things turn sour when Tim recalls how Jay got a role he had wanted, Their reunion ends in a fistfight on the sidewalk. The next day, Ron does damage control as Jay hits him with a bombshell. Rather than work on a new project with a hot directing duo, he’ll go to a Tuscany film festival that wants to honor him with a career award. But Jay doesn’t want another piece for his mantel. He makes a few clandestine calls, and finds out Daisy’s travel itinerary by following her BFF’s credit card trail. With Ron in tow, along with his long-time publicist Liz (Laura Dern), the “Kelly crew” flies to France where they board Daisy’s train. Along the way, Jay reconnects with the “common folk” while drifting in and out of memories before the big event in Italy, where he’ll encounter more folks from his troubled past.


So Clooney as a long-time, decades-spanning screen icon…not much of a stretch, sure. The guy has enough charm to spare, or at least for a couple more years. But here he peels back the sparkle to show the melancholy at Jay’s core. We see the sadness edging out that boyish twinkle in his eye as Clooney projects an unexpected vulnerability when Kelly realizes that time may not heal all wounds. His pairing with Sandler as the put-upon “wrangler” Ron is most inspired. Yes, Ron’s devoted to Jay, but Sandler shows us how the countless frustrations are boiling to the surface, ready to dour some hot steam into that suave mug. And he shows how his own family is losing the “tug-of-war” with Kelly. Dern’s great as another senior member of the “crew” who has his own regrets concerning her past with Ron. As Liz, Dern channels the staccato line delivery of those classic movie workin’ gals.The supporting cast is very impressive, including Patrick Wilson as another star in Ron’s “stable” (their Dinner “confab” is a highlight), Stacy Keach as the “rough around the edges” reminder of Jay’s boyhood, and Riley Keough as the elder Kelly daughter who is immune to papa’s “too late” attempts to reconnect. But the big standout may be the superb early-in-the-story turn by Crudup as the affable at first, old method acting buddy who suddenly bares his fangs on the startled “old pal”.

This is the latest work of one of the medium’s most interesting filmmakers, Noah Baumbach, who crafted the script with actress Emily Mortimer, who also plays Jay’s hairstylist Candy. This is a more grounded story than many of his more fanciful flicks like his WHITE NOISE, but not nearly as emotionally raw as MARRIAGE STORY. He gives us an interesting “insider’s view” of the industry, with riffs on several current stars and their scandals (now, who might those directing brothers be). Plus, Noah does dip his toe into fantasy with his unique flashback “transitions”. Suddenly, Jay will work through a day and be plunged into a major mistake from his past (he’s on his first movie set, he’s at a therapy session with one of his kids). We get some nice comic bits with the cute train passengers who adjust to the big star quickly. Oh, and that location works, especially in Tuscany, is quite dazzling. Though this can get a bit too fluffy and “navel-gazing”, the story does make its point concerning the consequences of putting your career first since in the non-soundstage world, we don’t get a second “take” to make things right. That’s a good lesson for moviegoers and movie stars like JAY KELLY.

3 out of 4

JAY KELLY is now steaming exclusively on Netflix

Noah Baumbach Teams Up With George Clooney And Adam Sandler In First JAY KELLY Trailer – Coming To Netflix Fall 2025

Jay Kelly. (L-R) George Clooney as Jay Kelly and Adam Sandler as Ron Sukenick on the set of Jay Kelly. Cr. Peter Mountain/Netflix © 2025.

JAY KELLY, the new film from Academy Award nominee Noah Baumbach, follows famous movie actor Jay Kelly (George Clooney) and his devoted manager Ron (Adam Sandler) as they embark on a whirlwind and unexpectedly profound journey through Europe. Along the way, both men are forced to confront the choices they’ve made, the relationships with their loved ones, and the legacies they’ll leave behind.

The teaser trailer features “Jay Kelly Theme,” an original score by Nicholas Britell.

The cast includes George Clooney, Adam Sandler, Laura Dern, Billy Crudup, Riley Keough, Grace Edwards, Stacy Keach, Jim Broadbent, Patrick Wilson, Eve Hewson, Greta Gerwig, Alba Rohrwacher, Josh Hamilton, Lenny Henry, Emily Mortimer, Nicôle Lecky, Thaddea Graham, Isla Fisher, Louis Partridge, Charlie Rowe.

JAY KELLY opens in select theaters November 14 and on Netflix December 5.

Watch on Netflix: https://www.netflix.com/title/81551446

WOLFS – Review

Brad Pitt, Austin Abrams and George Clooney in WOLFS, now playing in select theaters and streaming on Apple TV+. Courtesy of Apple+ TV

Brad Pitt and George Clooney team up as a couple of lone wolf professional “fixers” for clients who need a messy crime or accident scene cleaned up. When a district attorney (Amy Ryan) checks into a posh hotel with a young man she picked up in the bar, but then finds herself in a fix when he is accidentally killed after a fall through a glass table. Panicked, she calls a number she got from someone, for a professional fixer (George Clooney) to clean it up. Unbeknownst to her, the hotel has illegal surveillance cameras, and the hotel’s owner, determined to protect the place’s reputation, puts in her own call to another professional fixer (Brad Pitt). Both men only work solo and so are outraged that their two employers want them to work together to clean things up, saving both the DA’s and the hotel’s reputations. The professionals now have to figure out how work together to get the job done so they both get paid.

And survive the night, when the unexpected happens. It turns out the kid (Austin Abrams) in the hotel room isn’t quite dead yet after all, and it all gets very complicated in writer/director Jon Watts’ double-star action crime thriller, served up with a nice side of dark comedy.

Pitt’s and Clooney’s nameless characters start out as adversaries but both are forced to work together as complications pile up. Pitt and Clooney make a good team, and they are fun and funny together. There is plenty of snappy patter and a few wisecracks as this pair of characters, who both think they are the best and keep trying to top each other, find they have to stop polishing their own egos and get the job done.

As things get increasingly crazy, absurd even, there are twists, chases, and plenty of action. The action sequences feature quick editing and fine photography, with dashes of humor, sometimes aimed at the aging Clooney and Pitt, who occasionally huff and puff, out of breath, in chases, or winch in pain as one bends down to hoist a body. The action sequences are first rate and clever, particularly a long chase through snowy NY night time streets, in pursuit of a guy in his tighty-whities. There is a hilarious one at an Albanian wedding reception they crash, including Pitt and Clooney caught up in a folk dance. Plenty more wild, unexpected twists and crazy circumstances pop up, the more improbable the better.

For those who like action thrillers, particularly with a dark humor slant, WOLFS is great fun. There is a smattering of little movie references, with a bit of SOME LIKE IT HOT and BUTCH AND THE SUNDANCE KID among them. Sure, it’s just entertainment but entertain WOLFS surely does, with Pitt and Clooney, who make the most of every scene, giving a good boost to the absurd plot. It is pure fun to watch these two work together, and it sparks a hope to see them paired up again, in this or some other format.

WOLFS debuts streaming on Apple+ TV on Friday, Sept. 27, after opening in theaters on Sept. 20.

RATING: 3 out of 4 stars

George Clooney and Brad Pitt Together Again In New WOLFS Trailer

Global superstars George Clooney and Brad Pitt team up for the action comedy WOLFS. Clooney plays a professional fixer hired to cover up a high profile crime. But when a second fixer (Pitt) shows up and the two “lone wolves” are forced to work together, they find their night spiraling out of control in ways that neither one of them expected.

Clooney and Pitt have starred in three OCEANS movies as well as BURN AFTER READING in 2008.

Directed by Jon Watts (Spider-Man trilogy), WOLFS also features Amy Ryan, Austin Abrams, Poorna Jagannathan.

See it in theaters on September 20.

THE BOYS IN THE BOAT – Review

BITB_15372_R (l-r.) Thomas Elms stars as Chuck Day, Tom Varey as Johnny White, Bruce Herbelin-Earle as Shorty Hunt, Callum Turner as Joe Rantz, Luke Slattery as Bobby Moch and Wil Coban as Jim McMillin in director George Clooney’s THE BOYS IN THE BOAT An Amazon MGM Studios film Photo credit: Laurie Sparham © 2023 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved.

As promised the onslaught of 2023 sports films marches, or in this case paddles, on. Hot on the heels of last week’s historical sports drama, comes this one based on a popular book from a few years ago. It’s not about wrestling, like Friday’s flick, but it is set in the past, though nearly fifty years before the Von Erichs. But there is an Olympic connection. This one concerns a larger team of young men defying the odds and overcoming hardship to go for the gold, rather than fame and fortune. Yes, the idea of “team” as in teamwork is essential to them as this particular sport depends on all those involved acting and reacting “in sync”. Otherwise, it’s a splash into the murky depths (or a nasty collision) for THE BOYS IN THE BOAT.


Actually, this film begins in the 1980s with a brief prologue of a grandpa’ advising his grandson on the nuances of canoeing. Cue the “fade out/dissolve” to the 1930s at the heart of the depression. In a junkyard next to a makeshift camp (perhaps they were still “Hoovervilles”), eighteen-year-old Joe Rantz (Callum Turner). studies for his college courses by lantern light in the back of a beat-up old jalopy which is now his home since he lost his mother after his father ran off. He’s doing well at the University of Washington, getting good grades, making friends, and even attracting the attention of a cute co-ed named Joyce (Hadley Robinson). Joe is somehow adept at hiding his homelessness until the college bills catch up to him. Due to the Great Depression, jobs are truly scarce. Then a buddy informs him that he can defray some costs by being part of the rowing team. At the tryouts, Joe and the other freshman are put through “the paces” by tough veteran head coach Al Ulbrickson (Joel Edgerton). Joe barely makes the team as Coach Al pairs the “junior squad” with a somewhat rebellious coxswain. Though Al is an inspiration, Joe forms a close bond with elderly boatbuilder George Pocock (Peter Guinness), more of a father/son relationship rather than a student/mentor. Slowly Joe and the team ‘click, and Al shocks the school by sending them to the big meets instead of the senior team. Despite their inexperience, they have a shot at competing in the Summer Olympics in Germany. But after barely scraping together enough money for the trek, will they take home the gold and glory when one of the team is stricken by an unexpected illness?


As the affable, stoic everyman at the center of the story, Turner gives real dignity and strength to the hardworking Rantz, making his intimacy with his mentor and girlfriend into powerful scenes in which he exhibits his vulnerability and inner heartbreak (the little boy inside still yearns for his folks). Edgerton is every inch the tough taskmaster as Coach Al, who is careful not to overpraise “his boys” but expresses his doubts and hopes in private with his assistant Tom Bolles (the engaging James Wolk) and his gorgeous wife Hazel (played with sexy humor by Courtney Henggeler). As Joe’s gal Joyce, Robinson is an energetic flirt as she tries to “wake him up” to notice her charms, then slowly becomes the rock of support he needs when the past catches up to him. But the film’s warm beating heart might be Guinness as the wise nurturing woodworker who gently passes on his knowledge and his way of living to the somewhat aimless young Rantz, acting much like a carpentry Yoda or Mr. Miyagi.


The film’s real coxswain. and head coach is director/co-producer George Clooney who captures the bleak look of a downtrodden 1930s America intercut with old-style mahognay-tinged academia. He’s most adept at telling the story with few cinematic flourishes, giving it the feel of a film from that era. But that’s part of the film’s problem as this true tale feels as though it’s been presented so many times and teeters on “inspirational sports film” cliches. There are the underdogs from RUDY, along with its “last chance at glory” coach from HOOSIERS, mixed with training montages right from CHARIOTS OF FIRE. It doesn’t help that the “big show’ at the 1936 Olympics seems tacked on scenes from 2016’s RACE with a fleeting cameo from Jesse Owens and flimsy Fuhrer imitator. Yes, since it’s based on a true story (and a best seller) we know the outcome, but even if it was fiction there are few surprises and little suspense (no virus is going to topple this team). Oh, the team members aren’t defined characters other than Joe and a shy guy who is a musical wiz. This all resembles a fairly glorified basic cable movie ( or a “special event” broadcast network “sweeps” flick). The look of the Northwest of 85 years ago feels authentic but it is not enough to send THE BOYS IN THE BOAT over the cinematic finish line.

2 Out of 4

THE BOYS IN THE BOAT opens in theatres everywhere on Christmas Day 2023

George Clooney, Grant Heslov And Cast Talk THE BOYS IN THE BOAT In New Feature

Director George Clooney on the set of his film THE BOYS IN THE BOAT An Amazon MGM Studios film Photo credit: Laurie Sparham © 2023 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved.

This summer, the upcoming Paris 2024 Summer Olympics will be held July 26 – August 11.

For the first time in history, the Opening Ceremony of the Olympic Games will not take place in a stadium. Thousands of athletes will parade in boats along the Seine, the river that flows through Paris, in front of hundreds of thousands of spectators.

A total of 40 sports are in the Olympics, including rowing.

On Christmas Day, George Clooney’s new film, THE BOYS IN THE BOAT, is set for release – and it’s a terrific film!

Based on the best-selling book by Daniel James Brown, The Boys In The Boat tells the story of the bootstrapping University of Washington junior varsity rowing team that — against all odds — went on to represent the USA at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin.

A true underdog tale about working as a team, The Boys In The Boat depicts a beautiful landscape for the social and economic conditions of the time. Deftly navigating the staggering disparity between the haves and the have-nots leading up to World War II, Clooney and team deliver a heartwarming and bold tale of perseverance and unity.

In August 2017, PBS’s AMERICAN EXPERIENCE profiled their story in “The Boys of 36”. Catch it on Apple TV+, and Prime Video.

The new film stars Joel Edgerton, Callum Turner, Peter Guinness, James Wolk, Sam Strike, Thomas Elms, Jack Mulhern, Luke Slattery, Bruce Herbelin-Earle, Wil Cuban, Thomas Stephen Carey, Joel Phillimore, Hadley Robinson.

Around the turn of the century, particularly into the 1920s, rowing was hugely popular. Lately, its domain are colleges and certain country club circles, and the sport often flies under the mainstream radar. Though it still has its fans — ask someone from the Northeast about the Head of the Charles and you’ll get an earful — everyone worked hard to create excitement for a sport that has become more niche.

But rowing crew is not for the faint of heart. It’s a commitment. It’s not just a movie gimmick. Training for the film was rigorous, and rightly so. Actors attended mandatory training sessions twice a day involving weight training, cardio, and everything they’d be doing if they were rowers on a college team. Rowing coaches Terry O’Neill (aka Bad Cop) and Nick Harding (aka Good Cop), put them through the paces from day one.

And in the beginning, they were… not great, says Heslov.

(l-r.) Sam Strike stars as Roger Morris, Thomas Elms as Chuck Day, Joel Phillimore as Gordy Adam, Tom Varey as Johnny White, Wil Coban as Jim McMillin, Bruce Herbelin-Earle as Shorty Hunt, Callum Turner as Joe Rantz, Jack Mulhern as Don Hume and Luke Slattery as Bobby Moch in director George Clooney’s THE BOYS IN THE BOAT An Amazon MGM Studios film Photo credit: Laurie Sparham © 2023 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Says Turner, “When we started rowing, we were useless. Terry O’Neill brought his friends down that he rowed with, and they’re all in their seventies. Terry gave this amazing speech about how rowing is his life, and he said, look at these guys behind me, these are my friends from rowing and you guys are going to make friends for life. There were tears in his eyes, really, he’s an emotional guy. I gave him a hug and we got in the boat, and we rowed so badly. They looked at us and they looked at Terry and the look on their faces was like, “what are you doing?”

“But to the trainers’ credit, about four weeks later we went back out there and they were rowing as a team,” Heslov says. “And then as we started shooting they kept practicing.”

The score (Alexandre Desplat), cinematography (Martin Ruhe) and Production Design (Kalina Ivanov) are fantastic.

Although Desplat is a master of composition, when it came to this film, he was as green as Joe the first day he showed up at rowing practice. “I had never worked on a sports movie,” Desplat reveals. “This one was a good way of starting!” He used this fresh take to his advantage, navigating the uncharted waters from a unique perspective.

Even with perfect attention to detail, there’s still one thing that even the best filmmakers can’t control: Shooting on the water. “I mean, I did The Perfect Storm, I knew what I was getting into.” says Clooney, chuckling.

That didn’t make it any easier.

“There is not one thing about shooting on the water that’s fun,” he continues. “Everything is slowed down. Try running through your swimming pool. You can’t just say, “let’s line up eight boats across with nine guys in each of ‘em, and start the race.” There is a current so the boats all start moving around and they’re not in straight lines, and our boats are moving. If the wind blows, everything’s moving around you. Everything is constantly moving.”

Everyone loves an underdog story and THE BOYS IN THE BOAT is the one movie to see during the holidays.

At the end of the day, the message of pulling together is important.

“We forget that we are all in this stew together and our differences really aren’t that much and there aren’t that many. ,” Clooney says. “Ninety-nine percent of us get along every day and really wish the best for one another and try to work it out. I think that this film reminds us that we are all in this together, and we’re actually on each other’s sides.”

(l-r.) Thomas Elms stars as Chuck Day, Tom Varey as Johnny White, Bruce Herbelin-Earle as Shorty Hunt, Callum Turner as Joe Rantz, Luke Slattery as Bobby Moch and Wil Coban as Jim McMillin in director George Clooney’s THE BOYS IN THE BOAT An Amazon MGM Studios film Photo credit: Laurie Sparham © 2023 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved.

THE BOYS IN THE BOAT Trailer Rows In From Director George Clooney, Starring Joel Edgerton And Callum Turner

(l-r.) Chris Diamantopoulos stars as Royal Brougham, James Wolk as Coach Bolles, and Joel Edgerton as Al Ulbrickson in director George Clooney’s THE BOYS IN THE BOAT An Amazon MGM Studios film Photo credit: Laurie Sparham © 2023 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Inspired by the incredible true story, watch the trailer for George Clooney’s THE BOYS IN THE BOAT.

The Boys in the Boat is a sports drama based on the #1 New York Times bestselling non-fiction novel written by Daniel James Brown. The film, directed by George Clooney, is about the 1936 University of Washington rowing team that competed for gold at the Summer Olympics in Berlin. This inspirational true story follows a group of underdogs at the height of the Great Depression as they are thrust into the spotlight and take on elite rivals from around the world.

The film stars Joel Edgerton and Callum Turner. The score is from Alexandre Desplat.

THE BOYS IN THE BOAT will be in theaters Christmas Day.

Director George Clooney on the set of his film THE BOYS IN THE BOAT An Amazon MGM Studios film Photo credit: Laurie Sparham © 2023 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Check out the featurette.

https://www.mgm.com/movies/the-boys-in-the-boat

TICKET TO PARADISE – Review

Still Photography on the set of “Ticket To Paradise”

Hmmm, now this is something pretty rare. The two films I’m reviewing for this weekend have a few things in common, “subject-wise” (y’know, aside from being in color, being a “talkie”, etc.). This too concerns an estranged couple reuniting for a non-holiday event. With RAYMOND & RAY, it’s about two stepbrothers having to travel to their dad’s funeral, while this new release is about an estranged (long-divorced) parents having to travel to their daughter’s wedding. And it’s not a two-hour car trip, but a rather long flight to an exotic island. Oh, and the former marrieds are played by Oscar-winning Hollywood royalty, or about as close as you can get to that. Plus it’s their fourth flick acting opposite each other (fifth if you count when he directed her). So lots of moviegoers are hoping that their chemistry is still potent as they go to their multiplex box office, or more likely its website, to purchase a TICKET TO PARADISE.

In a bit of a switcheroo, the story begins with the main couple still apart. Each is telling their best buddy about how impossible it was to live with the other (with widely different riffs on their meeting, courtship, etc.). This all leads back to them being “pulled back in” by their only child Lily (Kaitlyn Dever). She wants them both in attendance for her law school graduation ceremony and assures them that their reserved seats will be in distant sections of the auditorium. So the big day arrives and …David (George Clooney) begrudgingly takes his place right next to his ex Georgia (Julia Roberts). Then the duo takes their daughter, along with her best pal/college roomie Wren (Billie Lourd) to the airport for her post-grad “vacay” to Bali. Her parents heave a sigh of relief as the ladies enter the gate, knowing they won’t have to endure each other for a loooong time (or so they hope). Lily and Wren have “tons o’ fun” until they get separated from their tour group while snorkeling. Luckily the long swim to shore is avoided when they spot a boat. And the luck keeps rolling along as Lily is immediately smitten by their rescuer, a hunky young seaweed farmer (there’s such a thing) Gede (Maxime Bouttier). Soon she’s contacting her folks again to invite them to her “destination wedding” to him. And, wouldn’t you know it, they get booked in the same section, on the next flight to the island. Plus (talk about a “co-inkee-dink”), the pilot is Georgia’s much-younger French “bae” Paul (Lucas Bravo). When the duo arrives they cease their bickering long enough to agree to join forces to stop this too-hasty nuptials (she’s throwing away her law career, darn it). But can these former feuding lovers really work together, or can true love really triumph against such formidable forces?

So the best description of the acting style of the two leads may seem like an insult, though it’s certainly not my intention. As the film progressed I feel as though Ms. Roberts and Mr. Clooney were, well, …coasting. It’s not that they weren’t making any effort, but rather they’re so confident and “at ease” with their screen personas that they were just going “with the flow” feeling that their audience will follow their path. This certainly was the case for many classic screen pairings of the “Golden Age” such as William Powell and Myrna Loy or Spencer Tracy and Kathryn Hepburn. It’s not just that their characters engage in playful sniping at one another. In a couple of sequences, they talk about the dissolution of their married union with remorse and regret. And their uneasy alliance results in some truly awful behavior. Yet somehow the screen personas of the two can elevate even the frothiest of premises. This audience goodwill carries over a bit to their screen sibling as Dever scores many laughs in the ingenue”second-gen” role. She’s engaging, but it feels like a bit of a “step back” after her “take charge” snarky smart turn last week in the Shakespearian farce ROSALINE, which far fewer people will see since it went straight to Hulu. Dever delivers, but the role is no challenge for her skills. Happily, she’s often paired with Lourd as Wren who brings some much-needed off-kilter energy as the rom-com cliche, the “hard-partying” frisky BFF. Speaking of another rom-com cliche, the very photogenic Bravo gives the thankless role of Paul, the “Baxter” who’s not much of a romantic threat, though his best efforts make him more sweet and endearing than this clueless doofus deserves. As for the groom Gede, Bouttier is the required gorgeous and way-too-understanding “dreamboat” who’s got a boat.


Another rom-com vet is at the helm, namely Ol Parker who last gave us the MAMMA MIA sequel. Oh and he co-wrote this with Daniel Pipski, it took a “tag team” to concoct this “lighter than air” trifle. Again, this is not meant as a “burn” as many will enjoy this while in their cushy multiplex recliner, but the plot specifics will probably evaporate from the brain during the ride home. Well, you may ponder a trip to Bali as it’s eye-poppingly beautiful here, though much of it was actually shot in Queensland, Australia (a good ad here for their own travel industry). This may be the best current example of an “auntie” or “grammy” movie as it’s a way to treat a relative to a matinee that won’t upset them (or tax the noggin), despite a blink and you’ll miss it “F-bomb”. The back-and-forth snipping between the leads gets tiresome, but it just goes to prove how powerful, and forgiving, the chemistry and charisma of these two movie icons are. They’re truly the reason why many fans will believe their theatre stub was a TICKET TO PARADISE.


2 Out of 4


TICKET TO PARADISE is now playing in theatres everywhere

Win Passes To The St. Louis Advance Screening Of TICKET TO PARADISE, Stars George Clooney And Julia Roberts

THIS FALL, GEORGE CLOONEY AND JULIA ROBERTS ARE IN THIS TOGETHER… FOR BETTER OR WORSE!  FROM THE DIRECTOR OF MAMMA MIA! HERE WE GO AGAIN, UNIVERSAL PICTURES PRESENTS TICKET TO PARADISE.  RATED PG-13.  ONLY IN THEATERS OCTOBER 21ST.

Advance Screening Oct 18th at 7pm. Ronnie’s 20 Cine.

The screening will be filled on a first come first served basis, so we encourage you to arrive early. Seats will not be guaranteed. Rated PG 13.

Enter at the link below.

SWEEPSTAKES LINK:  http://gofobo.com/qukEz28875

https://www.tickettoparadise.movie/

Academy Award® winners George Clooney and Julia Roberts reunite on the big screen as exes who find themselves on a shared mission to stop their lovestruck daughter from making the same mistake they once made. From Working Title, Smokehouse Pictures and Red Om Films, Ticket to Paradise is a romantic comedy about the sweet surprise of second chances.

Directed by Ol Parker (Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again, writer of the Best Exotic Marigold Hotel films) from his script with Daniel Pipski, Ticket to Paradise is produced by Tim Bevan (Darkest Hour, The Danish Girl) and Eric Fellner (The Theory of Everything, Les Misérables) for Working Title, by Sarah Harvey (The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, co-producer In Bruges), by Deborah Balderstone (Palm Beach, Gone), by George Clooney and Oscar® winner Grant Heslov (Argo, The Midnight Sky ) for Smokehouse Pictures and by Julia Roberts and Lisa Roberts Gillan and Marisa Yeres Gill (both co-executive producers, the Homecoming series) for Red Om Films. Ticket to Paradise is filmed on location in Queensland, Australia, aided by incentives from the Australian federal government and from Screen Queensland’s Production Attraction Strategy.

(from left) David (George Clooney) and Georgia (Julia Roberts) in Ticket to Paradise, directed by Ol Parker. Photo Credit: Universal Pictures

George Clooney And Julia Roberts Star In Romantic Comedy TICKET TO PARADISE – Watch The Trailer

Watch the trailer for TICKET TO PARADISE starring George Clooney and Julia Roberts, in theaters October 21.

https://www.tickettoparadise.movie/

Academy Award® winners George Clooney and Julia Roberts reunite on the big screen as exes who find themselves on a shared mission to stop their lovestruck daughter from making the same mistake they once made. From Working Title, Smokehouse Pictures and Red Om Films, Ticket to Paradise is a romantic comedy about the sweet surprise of second chances. 

Directed by Ol Parker (Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again, writer of the Best Exotic Marigold Hotel films) from his script with Daniel Pipski, Ticket to Paradise is produced by Tim Bevan (Darkest Hour, The Danish Girl) and Eric Fellner (The Theory of Everything, Les Misérables) for Working Title, by Sarah Harvey (The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, co-producer In Bruges), by Deborah Balderstone (Palm Beach, Gone), by George Clooney and Oscar® winner Grant Heslov (Argo, The Midnight Sky ) for Smokehouse Pictures and by Julia Roberts and Lisa Roberts Gillan and Marisa Yeres Gill (both co-executive producers, the Homecoming series) for Red Om Films. 

Ticket to Paradise is filmed on location in Queensland, Australia, aided by incentives from the Australian federal government and from Screen Queensland’s Production Attraction Strategy.  

(from left) David (George Clooney) and Georgia (Julia Roberts) in Ticket to Paradise, directed by Ol Parker. Photo Credit: Universal Pictures