The BIFA and BAFTA qualifying Bolton Film Festival has become a staple in Dn’s festival calendar. Every year the festival presents a wonderful selection of carefully curated shorts that always offer up an exciting opportunity to watch some of the best short films currently on the circuit. This year the festival takes place in person from Wednesday 2nd October through to Sunday 6th October at the Light Cinema in Bolton and online from Wednesday 9th October through to Sunday 20th October. Alongside its curated selection of films, it also boasts an informative programme of industry sessions – including the inaugural edition of the £10K Slick Films Fund live pitch event of which Directors Notes is a partner organisation. Dn was graciously offered the chance to survey the short films screening at the festival next month and we can gladly report that the expected high bar of artistic quality has once again been met.
- 9/18/2024
- by James Maitre
- Directors Notes
Cate Blanchett was, in Sienna Miller‘s words, “floored” by Joe Weiland and Finn Constantine’s short film Marion.
After premiering in Venice, the 13-minute-long film is now screening at its second international stop for the Toronto International Film Festival. It’s made Weiland and Constantine “the happiest boys in the world.” It’s made executive producers Blanchett and Miller just as elated — they see big talent in the two Brits.
Marion follows a real-life bull-jumper, Frenchwoman Caroline Noguès-Larbère, who sacrifices a lot for her sport. She is poked and prodded at by the men around her while juggling the stress of motherhood and pondering her own femininity. Noguès-Larbère had never acted before Marion and doesn’t speak a word of English, but that didn’t stop Weiland and Constantine from seeing what she could do in front of a camera. The final product is a gut-wrenching short film that...
After premiering in Venice, the 13-minute-long film is now screening at its second international stop for the Toronto International Film Festival. It’s made Weiland and Constantine “the happiest boys in the world.” It’s made executive producers Blanchett and Miller just as elated — they see big talent in the two Brits.
Marion follows a real-life bull-jumper, Frenchwoman Caroline Noguès-Larbère, who sacrifices a lot for her sport. She is poked and prodded at by the men around her while juggling the stress of motherhood and pondering her own femininity. Noguès-Larbère had never acted before Marion and doesn’t speak a word of English, but that didn’t stop Weiland and Constantine from seeing what she could do in front of a camera. The final product is a gut-wrenching short film that...
- 9/13/2024
- by Lily Ford
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Cate Blanchett has boarded Venice-bound short film “Marion” as an executive producer.
Sienna Miller is also an exec producer on the project, which was written and co-directed by Joe Weiland (“Gorka”) and Finn Constantine.
The short film, about a female bull-jumper juggling motherhood and career, is set to premiere at the Venice Film Festival this fall as part of the Orizzonti Short Films International Competition.
Over 13 minutes, “Marion” focuses on the French tradition of bull-jumping at La Course Landaise.
“As Marion prepares, being the only woman in the team, the film explores her battle against misogyny and prejudiced attitudes,” reads the synopsis. “A journey of one woman through an all-male world – juggling motherhood and the contentious pursuit of her passion. The film blends fiction and reality, creating a captivating thirteen minutes of tension.”
Caroline Larbère, a real French bull-jumper, plays Marion. Larbère’s real-life story inspired the script, which was...
Sienna Miller is also an exec producer on the project, which was written and co-directed by Joe Weiland (“Gorka”) and Finn Constantine.
The short film, about a female bull-jumper juggling motherhood and career, is set to premiere at the Venice Film Festival this fall as part of the Orizzonti Short Films International Competition.
Over 13 minutes, “Marion” focuses on the French tradition of bull-jumping at La Course Landaise.
“As Marion prepares, being the only woman in the team, the film explores her battle against misogyny and prejudiced attitudes,” reads the synopsis. “A journey of one woman through an all-male world – juggling motherhood and the contentious pursuit of her passion. The film blends fiction and reality, creating a captivating thirteen minutes of tension.”
Caroline Larbère, a real French bull-jumper, plays Marion. Larbère’s real-life story inspired the script, which was...
- 7/23/2024
- by K.J. Yossman
- Variety Film + TV
Danis Tanović’s ‘My Late Summer’ To Open Sarajevo
Bosnian director Danis Tanović’s My Late Summer will open the 30th Sarajevo Film Festival this August. The film is billed as a comedy-drama about a young woman Maja who comes to a remote island to solve an issue of family inheritance. In a whirlwind of new emotions and through a series of unpredictable situations, she will finally face questions from her past. The search for inheritance becomes a search for her own identity, but also for forgiveness. Tanovic is one of Bosnia and Herzegovina most acclaimed directors. He broke out internationally with his Bosnia War inspired No Man’s Land which clinched the Oscar and Golden Globe for best foreign language film in 2002. He has also won the Berlinale’s Silver Bear for An Episode in the Life of an Iron Picker (2013) and Death in Sarajevo (2016). My Late Summer is produced...
Bosnian director Danis Tanović’s My Late Summer will open the 30th Sarajevo Film Festival this August. The film is billed as a comedy-drama about a young woman Maja who comes to a remote island to solve an issue of family inheritance. In a whirlwind of new emotions and through a series of unpredictable situations, she will finally face questions from her past. The search for inheritance becomes a search for her own identity, but also for forgiveness. Tanovic is one of Bosnia and Herzegovina most acclaimed directors. He broke out internationally with his Bosnia War inspired No Man’s Land which clinched the Oscar and Golden Globe for best foreign language film in 2002. He has also won the Berlinale’s Silver Bear for An Episode in the Life of an Iron Picker (2013) and Death in Sarajevo (2016). My Late Summer is produced...
- 7/12/2024
- by Melanie Goodfellow
- Deadline Film + TV
Jeremy Irons has joined the cast of “The Morning Show.”
In the Apple TV+ drama’s upcoming fourth season, he will play Martin Levy, the father of Alex Levy (Jennifer Aniston).
Irons first rose to prominence in 1981, when he starred opposite Meryl Streep in “The French Lieutenant’s Woman” in the roles of Charles Henry Smithson and Mike. Also among his long list of credits is “Moonlighting” (1982), “The Mission,” “Dead Ringers” (1988), “Reversal of Fortune” (1990), “Lolita” (1997), “Margin Call” (2011), “The Borgias” (2011-2013) and “Watchmen” (2019). In 1994, he voiced Scar in “The Lion King,” and from 2016 to 2023, he played Alfred Pennyworth in four DC Extended Universe films.
Throughout his career, Irons has won an Oscar, two Golden Globes, three Emmys, a SAG Award and a Tony. He is repped by CAA.
“The Morning Show” follows the major players of a morning news show and the network that airs it during major political, financial and personnel scandals.
In the Apple TV+ drama’s upcoming fourth season, he will play Martin Levy, the father of Alex Levy (Jennifer Aniston).
Irons first rose to prominence in 1981, when he starred opposite Meryl Streep in “The French Lieutenant’s Woman” in the roles of Charles Henry Smithson and Mike. Also among his long list of credits is “Moonlighting” (1982), “The Mission,” “Dead Ringers” (1988), “Reversal of Fortune” (1990), “Lolita” (1997), “Margin Call” (2011), “The Borgias” (2011-2013) and “Watchmen” (2019). In 1994, he voiced Scar in “The Lion King,” and from 2016 to 2023, he played Alfred Pennyworth in four DC Extended Universe films.
Throughout his career, Irons has won an Oscar, two Golden Globes, three Emmys, a SAG Award and a Tony. He is repped by CAA.
“The Morning Show” follows the major players of a morning news show and the network that airs it during major political, financial and personnel scandals.
- 7/2/2024
- by Selome Hailu
- Variety Film + TV
In many ways, “Letters From Drancy” has hewed a prestigious if unremarkable path. The VR doc premiered at last year’s Venice Immersive before additional festival slots at the BFI London Film Festival, South by Southwest and now the NewImages Festival in Paris. In other ways the title is all too uncommon – as it was one of three films commissioned by the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center, where it is now on permanent display.
The wrenching film follows survivor Marion Deichmann as she returns to her native France to retrace both family tragedy and her own path to safety. Produced by East City Films, “Letters From Drancy” is part of a trilogy that uses new-media tools to shine light on these tales. Other films include “Walk to Westerbork” and “Escape to Shanghai.”
The film also crystalizes a major theme of this year’s NewImages, showing how an affecting and artistically...
The wrenching film follows survivor Marion Deichmann as she returns to her native France to retrace both family tragedy and her own path to safety. Produced by East City Films, “Letters From Drancy” is part of a trilogy that uses new-media tools to shine light on these tales. Other films include “Walk to Westerbork” and “Escape to Shanghai.”
The film also crystalizes a major theme of this year’s NewImages, showing how an affecting and artistically...
- 4/23/2024
- by Ben Croll
- Variety Film + TV
Exclusive: Comedian and writer Julian Clary (Julian Clary: Live – Lord of the Mince) will play the title role in this festive season’s London Palladium pantomime Robin Hood, with singer and travel show presenter Jane McDonald (Cruising with Jane McDonald) topping the bill as Maid Marion.
The annual Palladium show, now in its ninth consecutive season, has become an eagerly awaited staple in the West End’s calendar. It runs from December 7 through January 12, 2025. Priority booking opens 10 Am (GMT) April 25.
Last year’s production, Peter Pan, with comedy legend Jennifer Saunders making her pantomime debut as Captain Hook, and with Clary playing Seaman Smee, was a sold-out success, playing 56 performances -often two a day – to an audience of more than 123,000 at the 2,200 capacity variety house.
When tickets went on sale, there was a moment when 90,000 people were in the queue, waiting their turn to book seats.
The annual Palladium show, now in its ninth consecutive season, has become an eagerly awaited staple in the West End’s calendar. It runs from December 7 through January 12, 2025. Priority booking opens 10 Am (GMT) April 25.
Last year’s production, Peter Pan, with comedy legend Jennifer Saunders making her pantomime debut as Captain Hook, and with Clary playing Seaman Smee, was a sold-out success, playing 56 performances -often two a day – to an audience of more than 123,000 at the 2,200 capacity variety house.
When tickets went on sale, there was a moment when 90,000 people were in the queue, waiting their turn to book seats.
- 4/21/2024
- by Baz Bamigboye
- Deadline Film + TV
I'm sure you all know the famous, then-shocking twist of Alfred Hitchcock's "Psycho." Marion Crane (Janet Leigh) is set up as the film's protagonist; the opening scene is an intimate moment between her and lover Sam Loomis (John Gavin), who can't commit until he pays his debts. So, she impulsively steals $40,000 from her boss' client. Surely the movie will be about her on the run.
Well, it is for a while, but then she makes it to the Bates Motel. She chats up polite young innkeeper Norman (Anthony Perkins), but his elderly mother sure seems creepy. With an hour to go, Marion is murdered by a knife-wielding assailant in the motel shower (a scene so scary it left Leigh scared of showers). The film's second half becomes a new story about Sam and Marion's sister Lila (Vera Miles) investigating her disappearance. They stumble onto the truth -- that Marion was killed by Norman,...
Well, it is for a while, but then she makes it to the Bates Motel. She chats up polite young innkeeper Norman (Anthony Perkins), but his elderly mother sure seems creepy. With an hour to go, Marion is murdered by a knife-wielding assailant in the motel shower (a scene so scary it left Leigh scared of showers). The film's second half becomes a new story about Sam and Marion's sister Lila (Vera Miles) investigating her disappearance. They stumble onto the truth -- that Marion was killed by Norman,...
- 4/16/2024
- by Devin Meenan
- Slash Film
As the social and political turmoil of 1960s America spilled into the 1970s, network television executives and producers knew they could no longer ignore the thorny issues being argued over kitchen tables and at work/school. The Vietnam War, the Civil Rights Movement, the Equal Rights Amendment, etc. were driving a wedge between families and neighbors. So when Norman Lear trotted out the unrepentant bigot Archie Bunker on "All in the Family" in 1971, many people in the country felt seen. And while they might not agree on the hot-button topics explored on this show, they could at least laugh through their many disagreements.
There came a point, however (somewhere between President Richard M. Nixon's resignation and the end of the Vietnam War), where television viewers grew weary of all these socially conscious sitcoms. Yes, they were still watching them in huge numbers, but they needed a break from the nonstop tumult of their lives.
There came a point, however (somewhere between President Richard M. Nixon's resignation and the end of the Vietnam War), where television viewers grew weary of all these socially conscious sitcoms. Yes, they were still watching them in huge numbers, but they needed a break from the nonstop tumult of their lives.
- 3/17/2024
- by Jeremy Smith
- Slash Film
Sylvester Stallone’s 1986 film Cobra became a cult-classic favorite despite its mixed reviews; however, this might be the reason why the iconic action movie never received a sequel.
Sylvester Stallone in Cobra (1986)
As years passed by, it has become one of his forgotten franchises, though a rumor of its revival has been spreading on social media after Stallone himself hinted at its potential return to the screen as a television series.
Sylvester Stallone Planned A Cobra Sequel For TV
In 2019, actor Sylvester Stallone responded to a fan’s question about his plans for Cobra. In the movie, he played Marion ‘Cobra’ Cobretti, a tough police officer who would do anything to protect the only surviving witness who can identify the serial killer who is part of a cult. He told Empire:
“That should have been another franchise because that character was so cool. And I blew it. My personal life got in the way.
Sylvester Stallone in Cobra (1986)
As years passed by, it has become one of his forgotten franchises, though a rumor of its revival has been spreading on social media after Stallone himself hinted at its potential return to the screen as a television series.
Sylvester Stallone Planned A Cobra Sequel For TV
In 2019, actor Sylvester Stallone responded to a fan’s question about his plans for Cobra. In the movie, he played Marion ‘Cobra’ Cobretti, a tough police officer who would do anything to protect the only surviving witness who can identify the serial killer who is part of a cult. He told Empire:
“That should have been another franchise because that character was so cool. And I blew it. My personal life got in the way.
- 3/12/2024
- by Ariane Cruz
- FandomWire
Move over, James Bond fans. Your endless campaigning to see Christopher Nolan take his talents to the super-spy franchise has officially been made irrelevant. That's old news. Real ones know that the blockbuster filmmaker would be much better suited flexing his muscles a bit and expanding to the horror genre. None other than Nolan himself apparently agrees ... though with a caveat or two.
If it feels like the "Oppenheimer" director has been on a never-ending press tour for much of the last year, well, that's because he has. Pop culture hype and serious awards contention surrounding one of the best movies of 2023 will do that to you, though at least this marketing cycle has uncovered much more interesting gems than simply whether, I don't know, Nolan likes Marvel movies or not. While talking to the British Film Institute at an event billed as "Christopher Nolan in Conversation" (via The Hollywood Reporter...
If it feels like the "Oppenheimer" director has been on a never-ending press tour for much of the last year, well, that's because he has. Pop culture hype and serious awards contention surrounding one of the best movies of 2023 will do that to you, though at least this marketing cycle has uncovered much more interesting gems than simply whether, I don't know, Nolan likes Marvel movies or not. While talking to the British Film Institute at an event billed as "Christopher Nolan in Conversation" (via The Hollywood Reporter...
- 2/16/2024
- by Jeremy Mathai
- Slash Film
Prepare for an emotional rollercoaster as Channel 4 unveils Season 1 Episode 6 of “Truelove” on Thursday, January 18, 2024, at 9:00 Pm. In this riveting episode, viewers will witness Phil and Ken grappling with the shocking revelation about Marion, setting the stage for a powerful narrative that transcends time.
As the truth unravels, Phil finds herself in a race against time to rescue Ken from the clutches of a revelation that could jeopardize the rest of his life. The episode promises an intense exploration of love, regret, and the consequences of choices made five decades ago. Phil’s journey to salvage a love that slipped through her fingers 50 years earlier adds layers of poignancy to the storyline, creating a captivating narrative that tugs at the heartstrings.
Tune in at 9:00 Pm for an episode that delves deep into the complexities of relationships, promising both heartbreak and redemption. “Truelove” continues to deliver an emotional...
As the truth unravels, Phil finds herself in a race against time to rescue Ken from the clutches of a revelation that could jeopardize the rest of his life. The episode promises an intense exploration of love, regret, and the consequences of choices made five decades ago. Phil’s journey to salvage a love that slipped through her fingers 50 years earlier adds layers of poignancy to the storyline, creating a captivating narrative that tugs at the heartstrings.
Tune in at 9:00 Pm for an episode that delves deep into the complexities of relationships, promising both heartbreak and redemption. “Truelove” continues to deliver an emotional...
- 1/12/2024
- by Posts UK
- TV Everyday
A jaunty little crime spree might not be the most conventional mother-son activity but it does make for a glorious opening to writer/director Tom Stuart’s directorial debut short Good Boy. It’s a touching examination of life, love and loss, filmed around the glorious Somerset farms of Glastonbury and featuring a vintage Vw van meandering through country lanes that plays host to an array of colourful characters. Stuart has given the film a vintage lens which speaks fittingly to the surreal emotional exploration of Danny, played by Ben Whishaw, as he goes about his bizarre day kept company by his doting if somewhat overbearing mother, played by Marion Bailey. Good Boy proffers a magically tinged reflection on grief which feels both true and comforting for those of us who can relate to the stabbing reality of loss. As the BAFTA and Oscar qualified short continues to delight on its festival circuit journey,...
- 12/15/2023
- by Sarah Smith
- Directors Notes
The Oldenburg Film Festival, Germany’s leading all-indie fest, unveiled highlights for its 30th-anniversary edition, including several world premieres featuring Oscar-winner Marion Cotillard and Mission : Impossible star Ving Rhames.
Uppercut, a boxing film featuring Mission: Impossible star Ving Rhames, will close the festival on September 17. Director Torsten Ruether remade his own, German-language, debut Leberhaken, which premiered in Oldenburg in 2021. The Million Dollar Baby-style story sees Rhames as a disillusioned former boxer who gets a shot at redemption when a young woman shows up at his gym, begging him to train her.
Spanish genre director F. Javier Gutierrez will bring his latest horror tale, The Wait, to Oldenburg this year. Gutiérrez’s 2008 debut Before the Fall, an end-of-the-world sci-fi thriller, was a cross-over hit, and his follow-up was the big-budget Rings (2017) for Paramount, the third entry in the Japanese-inspired horror saga. But the film, despite grossing $83 million worldwide, was...
Uppercut, a boxing film featuring Mission: Impossible star Ving Rhames, will close the festival on September 17. Director Torsten Ruether remade his own, German-language, debut Leberhaken, which premiered in Oldenburg in 2021. The Million Dollar Baby-style story sees Rhames as a disillusioned former boxer who gets a shot at redemption when a young woman shows up at his gym, begging him to train her.
Spanish genre director F. Javier Gutierrez will bring his latest horror tale, The Wait, to Oldenburg this year. Gutiérrez’s 2008 debut Before the Fall, an end-of-the-world sci-fi thriller, was a cross-over hit, and his follow-up was the big-budget Rings (2017) for Paramount, the third entry in the Japanese-inspired horror saga. But the film, despite grossing $83 million worldwide, was...
- 8/16/2023
- by Scott Roxborough
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
For Oscar-winning film composer Michael Giacchino (“Up”), Steven Spielberg’s “Raiders of the Lost Ark” is the defining movie of his life. It’s what sparked his love of movies and film scores, and what started him on his path to becoming a successful composer, all thanks to John Williams’ rousing, orchestral masterpiece.
Giacchino, who most recently scored Taika Waititi’s “Next Goal Wins” and Juan Antonio Bayona’s “Society of the Snow,” and is prepping a remake of the giant ant movie “Them!” as his directorial feature debut, first saw “Raiders” as a 13-year-old in New Jersey when it opened the summer of 1981. He went back about a dozen times and even sneaked a tape recorder into the theater so he could replay it every night. He also had the soundtrack on vinyl and later bought a second LP containing score, dialogue, and sound effects.
“I think that record,...
Giacchino, who most recently scored Taika Waititi’s “Next Goal Wins” and Juan Antonio Bayona’s “Society of the Snow,” and is prepping a remake of the giant ant movie “Them!” as his directorial feature debut, first saw “Raiders” as a 13-year-old in New Jersey when it opened the summer of 1981. He went back about a dozen times and even sneaked a tape recorder into the theater so he could replay it every night. He also had the soundtrack on vinyl and later bought a second LP containing score, dialogue, and sound effects.
“I think that record,...
- 8/15/2023
- by Bill Desowitz
- Indiewire
Run-ins with creepy crawlies are an obligatory element of every Indiana Jones movie. "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom" is loaded with centipedes, millipedes, and cockroaches; "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade" plunges our hero into the rat-infested catacombs of Venice; "Indiana and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull" has those not-very-terrifying CGI Siafu ants; and "Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny" brings back the centipedes and other disgusting insects for the penultimate set piece at Archimedes' tomb.
But when you think of Indiana Jones and slithery, scurrying things, you automatically think of snakes -- although Indy wishes you didn't.
As we learn at the outset of "Raiders of the Lost Ark," our favorite globetrotting archaeologist hates snakes. Personally, I think they're beautiful creatures, but that doesn't mean I'd like to fall into a pit loaded with the sometimes lethal reptiles. This, of course, occurs during the Well of Souls sequence,...
But when you think of Indiana Jones and slithery, scurrying things, you automatically think of snakes -- although Indy wishes you didn't.
As we learn at the outset of "Raiders of the Lost Ark," our favorite globetrotting archaeologist hates snakes. Personally, I think they're beautiful creatures, but that doesn't mean I'd like to fall into a pit loaded with the sometimes lethal reptiles. This, of course, occurs during the Well of Souls sequence,...
- 8/1/2023
- by Jeremy Smith
- Slash Film
Baters
It’s nearly time to close out the month of July, which has been another scorching hot one for Trace and me. We kicked things off with Insidious: Chapter 2 (2013) to coincide with our coverage of The Red Door, then we talked about another sequel to celebrate the two-year anniversary of Adam Robitel’s Escape Room: Tournament of Champions (2021).
Now we’re up to a huge milestone: Alfred Hitchcock‘s Psycho (1960) aka one of the original slasher prototypes. In the iconic film, Marion Crane (Janet Leigh) steals $40K from her crappy job before stopping at the abandoned Bates Motel. There she meets young proprietor Norman Bates (Anthony Perkins) who seems a little…off.
Unfortunately for Marion, soon afterward she’s brutally murdered in the shower by Mother, setting off a chain reaction as first private investigator Arbogast (Martin Balsam), then Marion’s lover Sam Loomis (John Gavin) and her...
It’s nearly time to close out the month of July, which has been another scorching hot one for Trace and me. We kicked things off with Insidious: Chapter 2 (2013) to coincide with our coverage of The Red Door, then we talked about another sequel to celebrate the two-year anniversary of Adam Robitel’s Escape Room: Tournament of Champions (2021).
Now we’re up to a huge milestone: Alfred Hitchcock‘s Psycho (1960) aka one of the original slasher prototypes. In the iconic film, Marion Crane (Janet Leigh) steals $40K from her crappy job before stopping at the abandoned Bates Motel. There she meets young proprietor Norman Bates (Anthony Perkins) who seems a little…off.
Unfortunately for Marion, soon afterward she’s brutally murdered in the shower by Mother, setting off a chain reaction as first private investigator Arbogast (Martin Balsam), then Marion’s lover Sam Loomis (John Gavin) and her...
- 7/24/2023
- by Joe Lipsett
- bloody-disgusting.com
With Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny in theatres and playing to divisive audience reactions and less spectacular than expected box office, we thought now would be the time to do our definitive ranking of the Indiana Jones films. Of course, these rankings are just our opinions, so if you disagree – and many of you probably do – make sure to hit us up in the comments. Time to let er’ rip!
5 – Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny
Some of you reading this probably think I’m crazy. Am I actually saying Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull is better than Dial of Destiny? Here’s the thing – some parts of Crystal Skull are worse than anything in Dial of Destiny. There’s nothing horrifically embarrassing in this movie, but the thing is, there’s nothing terribly memorable, either. The action is bland, and Phoebe Waller-Bridge,...
5 – Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny
Some of you reading this probably think I’m crazy. Am I actually saying Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull is better than Dial of Destiny? Here’s the thing – some parts of Crystal Skull are worse than anything in Dial of Destiny. There’s nothing horrifically embarrassing in this movie, but the thing is, there’s nothing terribly memorable, either. The action is bland, and Phoebe Waller-Bridge,...
- 7/8/2023
- by Chris Bumbray
- JoBlo.com
Spoilers for Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny. Indy (Harrison Ford) and Marion (Karen Allen) tied the knot at the end of Indiana Jones and the Crystal Skull and were headed for wedded bliss. However, Marion doesn’t seem to be in the picture in The Dial of Destiny, but Karen Allen told Variety that that wasn’t always the case.
Related Mission: Impossible: Tom Cruise says he’d love to keep playing Ethan Hunt until he’s Harrison Ford’s age
While Karen Allen does make a cameo in Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny, the actress had imagined that she would have had a bigger role given where the last movie left off. “I think because the last time you see Indy and Marion, they’ve gotten married,” Allen said. “I don’t know that I thought we’d pick up from where we left off,...
Related Mission: Impossible: Tom Cruise says he’d love to keep playing Ethan Hunt until he’s Harrison Ford’s age
While Karen Allen does make a cameo in Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny, the actress had imagined that she would have had a bigger role given where the last movie left off. “I think because the last time you see Indy and Marion, they’ve gotten married,” Allen said. “I don’t know that I thought we’d pick up from where we left off,...
- 7/6/2023
- by Kevin Fraser
- JoBlo.com
This piece contains spoilers for the ending of “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny”
If “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny” closes the book on its title character after 42 years, then what better way to send off the world’s most famous archaeologist than with Marion Ravenwood (Karen Allen) by his side?
In the closing moments of James Mangold’s new film – after Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford) and his goddaughter Helena Shaw (Phoebe Waller-Bridge) have returned from the distant past since “Dial of Destiny” features literal time-traveling – Indy and Marion reunite after years of estrangement following the death of their son, Mutt, in Vietnam.
The brief scene – which heavily references one of their beloved romantic interactions in “Raiders of the Lost Ark” when Indy shows Marion his various injuries only to have her give each a kiss – is the only appearance for Allen in the film. But it...
If “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny” closes the book on its title character after 42 years, then what better way to send off the world’s most famous archaeologist than with Marion Ravenwood (Karen Allen) by his side?
In the closing moments of James Mangold’s new film – after Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford) and his goddaughter Helena Shaw (Phoebe Waller-Bridge) have returned from the distant past since “Dial of Destiny” features literal time-traveling – Indy and Marion reunite after years of estrangement following the death of their son, Mutt, in Vietnam.
The brief scene – which heavily references one of their beloved romantic interactions in “Raiders of the Lost Ark” when Indy shows Marion his various injuries only to have her give each a kiss – is the only appearance for Allen in the film. But it...
- 7/1/2023
- by Christopher Rosen
- Gold Derby
Spoiler Alert: This story discusses major plot developments, including the final scene, in “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny,” currently playing in theaters.
When Lucasfilm announced in 2016 that Steven Spielberg was making a fifth “Indiana Jones” movie with Harrison Ford, fans naturally wondered how much of a role Karen Allen’s Marion Ravenwood — Indy’s spitfire equal from 1981’s “Raiders of the Lost Ark” and the love of his life — would play in the new film. The last time audiences saw Marion, she was getting married to Indy at the end of 2008’s “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull,” after she revealed to Indy that they’d had a child together, who Indy meets as teenage greaser Mutt Williams (Shia Labeouf). So any follow-up movie would at the very least need to address the fact that Indy is married with a (grown) kid.
That’s certainly what Allen was thinking,...
When Lucasfilm announced in 2016 that Steven Spielberg was making a fifth “Indiana Jones” movie with Harrison Ford, fans naturally wondered how much of a role Karen Allen’s Marion Ravenwood — Indy’s spitfire equal from 1981’s “Raiders of the Lost Ark” and the love of his life — would play in the new film. The last time audiences saw Marion, she was getting married to Indy at the end of 2008’s “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull,” after she revealed to Indy that they’d had a child together, who Indy meets as teenage greaser Mutt Williams (Shia Labeouf). So any follow-up movie would at the very least need to address the fact that Indy is married with a (grown) kid.
That’s certainly what Allen was thinking,...
- 6/30/2023
- by Adam B. Vary
- Variety Film + TV
Harrison Ford filming Raiders of The Lost ArkPhoto: Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty Images (Getty Images)
We all know that the arrival of Indiana Jones And The Dial Of Destiny marks Harrison Ford’s fifth and final entry in the enduring franchise, but how many of us know about previous...
We all know that the arrival of Indiana Jones And The Dial Of Destiny marks Harrison Ford’s fifth and final entry in the enduring franchise, but how many of us know about previous...
- 6/29/2023
- by Phil Pirrello
- avclub.com
Goodbyes don’t tend to mean much in the Hollywood franchise system. Death isn’t a reliable end for characters or, lately, even actors. Technology, nostalgia and the often-inflated value of brands and IP have created a nightmarish cycle of resurrection and regurgitation, curdling what we love most.
And yet when someone like Harrison Ford says he’s hanging up Indiana Jones’ fedora, for better or worse, you believe him. “Indiana Jones” producer Frank Marshall has also said that they won’t recast the character, which seems more dubious and, though well-intentioned, something he won’t be able to guarantee. All it takes is a new executive demanding a reboot.
Not that it would ever really work, though. Any self-respecting movie fan knows the truth: The magic of Indiana Jones belongs wholly to Harrison Ford. Apparently, he doesn’t even necessarily need Steven Spielberg behind the camera, though, to be fair,...
And yet when someone like Harrison Ford says he’s hanging up Indiana Jones’ fedora, for better or worse, you believe him. “Indiana Jones” producer Frank Marshall has also said that they won’t recast the character, which seems more dubious and, though well-intentioned, something he won’t be able to guarantee. All it takes is a new executive demanding a reboot.
Not that it would ever really work, though. Any self-respecting movie fan knows the truth: The magic of Indiana Jones belongs wholly to Harrison Ford. Apparently, he doesn’t even necessarily need Steven Spielberg behind the camera, though, to be fair,...
- 6/28/2023
- by Brent Furdyk
- ET Canada
Here’s the thing: you can argue for another Indiana Jones film as the archaeologist’s greatest adventure, but then Raiders comes along and outshines it with a light that reduces all who disrespect it to dust. Raiders is a perfect film: if it had flaws they’d be like the scar on Harrison Ford’s chin: a flourish to set off the perfection of the rest. If Raiders had a flaw (see Note 2), it would be like the deliberate mistake that master Persian carpet weavers introduce to their intricate patterns so that they don’t challenge God himself. And if this film teaches us anything, it’s that challenging God is not a good idea. The other are (mostly) astonishingly great because they’re a lot like Raiders. Raiders is astonishingly great because it is a perfect film.
First and foremost, that’s down to Steven Spielberg, which explains...
First and foremost, that’s down to Steven Spielberg, which explains...
- 6/21/2023
- by Helen O'Hara
- Empire - Movies
When is one of the most decorated and generally beloved actresses of all time an awards dark horse? Perhaps when her latest hope for recognition is as part of possibly the greatest Emmys dark horse of all time.
In the upcoming months, expect to hear a lot about Better Call Saul and the statistical aberration that has placed the exceptional AMC drama sufficiently on the Emmy radar to receive 46 nominations and yet zero wins.
For a while, it looked like the solution to this bizarre drought was going to be Carol Burnett. With six Primetime Emmy wins to her credit and in a year in which a 90th birthday tribute to the iconic star is likely to compete for Emmys of its own, Burnett seemed to be lined up for an easy nomination and probable win for her pivotal turn as Marion in the second half of the sixth season of Better Call Saul.
In the upcoming months, expect to hear a lot about Better Call Saul and the statistical aberration that has placed the exceptional AMC drama sufficiently on the Emmy radar to receive 46 nominations and yet zero wins.
For a while, it looked like the solution to this bizarre drought was going to be Carol Burnett. With six Primetime Emmy wins to her credit and in a year in which a 90th birthday tribute to the iconic star is likely to compete for Emmys of its own, Burnett seemed to be lined up for an easy nomination and probable win for her pivotal turn as Marion in the second half of the sixth season of Better Call Saul.
- 6/19/2023
- by Daniel Fienberg
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Marion Cotillard is opening up about an unpleasant experience she had with a male director who left her feeling “manipulated.”
Cotillard shared the revelation while promoting her new film, “Little Girl Blue”, at the Cannes Film Festival.
“I don’t see a director and an actor as being in relationships of manipulation. It’s more a collaboration. It happened to me only once where I felt that I was being manipulated by a director, and I really didn’t like that,” she said in an interview with Variety.
Read More: Marion Cotillard Says She And Adam Driver Had To Sing While ‘Mimicking Cunnilingus’ In New Musical ‘Annette’
According to Cotillard, she entered the project under the assumption that the director would foster “a process of working together with a collaborative connection.”
That, however, didn’t prove out; instead, she felt he was using manipulation to influence her performance.
Read More:...
Cotillard shared the revelation while promoting her new film, “Little Girl Blue”, at the Cannes Film Festival.
“I don’t see a director and an actor as being in relationships of manipulation. It’s more a collaboration. It happened to me only once where I felt that I was being manipulated by a director, and I really didn’t like that,” she said in an interview with Variety.
Read More: Marion Cotillard Says She And Adam Driver Had To Sing While ‘Mimicking Cunnilingus’ In New Musical ‘Annette’
According to Cotillard, she entered the project under the assumption that the director would foster “a process of working together with a collaborative connection.”
That, however, didn’t prove out; instead, she felt he was using manipulation to influence her performance.
Read More:...
- 5/25/2023
- by Brent Furdyk
- ET Canada
Who could have ever predicted that when “Better Call Saul” premiered in 2015, straight off the heels of one of the most victorious final seasons at the Emmys with its predecessor “Breaking Bad,” that it would suffer one of the biggest Emmy droughts in history? The AMC prequel series amassed 46 total nominations in the loss column to date, and has still yet to win a single Emmy Award. This will be its last chance as it contends for its final season’s second installment, which contains its concluding six episodes; will this be the year it finally wins something as the show bids farewell?
Last year for its first half of its final season, the legal crime drama garnered seven Emmy nominations, including Best Drama Series, Best Drama Actor for Bob Odenkirk (as Jimmy McGill/Saul Goodman/Gene Takovic), Best Supporting Actress for Rhea Seehorn (as Kim Wexler) and Best Drama Writing for Thomas Schnauz.
Last year for its first half of its final season, the legal crime drama garnered seven Emmy nominations, including Best Drama Series, Best Drama Actor for Bob Odenkirk (as Jimmy McGill/Saul Goodman/Gene Takovic), Best Supporting Actress for Rhea Seehorn (as Kim Wexler) and Best Drama Writing for Thomas Schnauz.
- 4/3/2023
- by Christopher Tsang
- Gold Derby
Announced in Deadline on March 23, a remake of Alfred Hitchcock's 1958 film "Vertigo" may very well be in the works. It's likely the cineastes of the world screwed up their faces in disapproval. "Vertigo" might be considered one of cinema's more indelible classics, and it regularly appears near the top — or at the top — of lists of the best movies of all time. Indeed, back in 2012, it surpassed "Citizen Kane" as the #1 film on the famed Sight & Sound poll. It has since been supplanted by Chantal Akerman's 1975 film "Jeanne Dielman, 23 quai du Commerce 1080 Bruxelles."
Briefly: "Vertigo" is a psychodrama about a police investigator named Scottie (James Stewart) who is hired by an old friend to follow his wife Madeline (Kim Novak). Madeline has been behaving strangely, and she seems to be convinced that she is possessed (?) by a dead woman she saw in a portrait. Scottie ends up saving...
Briefly: "Vertigo" is a psychodrama about a police investigator named Scottie (James Stewart) who is hired by an old friend to follow his wife Madeline (Kim Novak). Madeline has been behaving strangely, and she seems to be convinced that she is possessed (?) by a dead woman she saw in a portrait. Scottie ends up saving...
- 3/28/2023
- by Witney Seibold
- Slash Film
The similarities between Andor‘s Bix Caleen, played by Adria Arjona (Emerald City), and Raiders of the Lost Ark‘s Marion Ravenwood are not insignificant.
Marion was happily running a saloon when a rakish man from her romantic past came looking for a favor, appealing to her unique access to certain information.
More from TVLineAndor Review: Rogue One Prequel Differs From Every Star Wars Series Before It, in the Best WaysShe-Hulk Director on Episode 5's 'Missing' Bonus Scene, What Was Left on Cutting Room FloorFrom Rogue One to Andor: Diego Luna, Genevieve O'Reilly Share What Most Surprised Them About Prequel Series
Andor‘s Bix,...
Marion was happily running a saloon when a rakish man from her romantic past came looking for a favor, appealing to her unique access to certain information.
More from TVLineAndor Review: Rogue One Prequel Differs From Every Star Wars Series Before It, in the Best WaysShe-Hulk Director on Episode 5's 'Missing' Bonus Scene, What Was Left on Cutting Room FloorFrom Rogue One to Andor: Diego Luna, Genevieve O'Reilly Share What Most Surprised Them About Prequel Series
Andor‘s Bix,...
- 9/20/2022
- by Matt Webb Mitovich
- TVLine.com
Like it or not, fall 2022 appears to be the season of Harry Styles. He’s been discussed ad infinitum in the most overexposed film in memory and also this one, “My Policeman,” helmed by English theater director Michael Grandage. On the press trail, Styles informed us that this film about the decades-spanning relationship between Tom, a closeted cop (Styles); art curator Patrick; and Emma Corrin as Tom’s long-suffering wife Marion, is not “a gay story about these guys being gay.’ It’s about love and about wasted time to me.”
If you say so, but the way he seems to read his own movie suggests he didn’t understand the assignment. That’s reflected in a performance that registers as a blank beyond inscrutable gazes and sappy breakdowns. To play a repressed gay man involved in a steamy, behind-closed-doors affair requires levels of complexity and conveying inner turmoil that Styles can’t provide.
If you say so, but the way he seems to read his own movie suggests he didn’t understand the assignment. That’s reflected in a performance that registers as a blank beyond inscrutable gazes and sappy breakdowns. To play a repressed gay man involved in a steamy, behind-closed-doors affair requires levels of complexity and conveying inner turmoil that Styles can’t provide.
- 9/12/2022
- by Ryan Lattanzio
- Indiewire
English novelist E.M. Forster never married, and why would he? The author of “Maurice” and “Howards End” was gay, reportedly maintaining relations with a much-younger police officer over the span of four decades. That man did marry, and history has it that his wife knew their secret. In “My Policeman,” this unconventional arrangement lends itself quite nicely to one of those slightly stuffy yet respectable period pieces of the kind that Ismail Merchant and James Ivory have made of Forster’s novels, jumping back and forth in time between the sexy stuff and the maudlin way it resolves itself so many years later.
It all starts with a special delivery to a dreary seaside cottage: An invalid arrives at the house of retired policeman Tom (Linus Roache) and his schoolteacher wife Marion (Gina McKee). It was her idea to take in the unpleasant and largely uncooperative Patrick Hazelwood, whose presence clearly annoys her husband.
It all starts with a special delivery to a dreary seaside cottage: An invalid arrives at the house of retired policeman Tom (Linus Roache) and his schoolteacher wife Marion (Gina McKee). It was her idea to take in the unpleasant and largely uncooperative Patrick Hazelwood, whose presence clearly annoys her husband.
- 9/12/2022
- by Peter Debruge
- Variety Film + TV
My Policeman, which had its world premiere today at the Toronto Film Festival, has its roots in a novel by Bethan Roberts which was actually based on a complicated love relationship between famed novelist E.M. Forster; his male lover of 40 years, a policeman named Bob Buckingham; and Buckingham’s wife May Hockey, who slowly came to realize her husband had a long-standing affair with Forster, but even after he had suffered a series of strokes took care of the author in his later life so deep was their friendship. Roberts changed the names and fictionalized it all for her book, which is now the basis of Ron Nyswaner’s (Philadelphia) screenplay that explores the love triangle of three freewheeling friends in 1957 who each was hobbled by the mores of the time, repressing rather than expressing their own sexuality, even as the...
- 9/12/2022
- by Pete Hammond
- Deadline Film + TV
The setting: a small resort, Les Cimes, in the Swiss Alps, a stone’s throw from the French border. The moment: the end of ski season, tourists have left, time seems to be suspended. The plot: a corpse is found, tied up, with an edelweiss in its mouth. The protagonist: Captain Sterenn Peiry (Marina Hands) leads the investigation. She still mourns her 15-year-old daughter, killed three years before in an avalanche.
So much for the beginning of “Off Season” (Hors saison), a Franco-Swiss police series, produced by Akka Films, Gaumont Television with Rts and France Télévisions, and beautifully filmed in CinémaScope by Pierre Monnard.
This thrilling six-part series, presented to buyers at the French TV market Unifrance Rendez-Vous in Biarritz, is best in class in the art of constantly misleading the viewer. From the very first minutes, the plot thickens: a second corpse, found in the same gloomy setting, but on the French side,...
So much for the beginning of “Off Season” (Hors saison), a Franco-Swiss police series, produced by Akka Films, Gaumont Television with Rts and France Télévisions, and beautifully filmed in CinémaScope by Pierre Monnard.
This thrilling six-part series, presented to buyers at the French TV market Unifrance Rendez-Vous in Biarritz, is best in class in the art of constantly misleading the viewer. From the very first minutes, the plot thickens: a second corpse, found in the same gloomy setting, but on the French side,...
- 9/9/2022
- by Trinidad Barleycorn
- Variety Film + TV
Marion Cotillard will star as Coco Chanel in “Rencontre(s) ,” an immersive, interactive, and multi-sensorial project that whisks participants back to Paris of the Roaring Twenties. Making its world premiere as part of the Venice Film Festival’s recently rebranded Venice Immersive showcase for new-media projects, the pop-history experience mixes live elements with 2D animation and Xr embellishments to retrace the creation of Chanel No 5. Variety debuts the teaser here (below).
Commissioned by Chanel and produced by Paris-based studio Atelier Daruma, the 15-minute immersive experience puts participants into the shoes of Ernest Beaux, the Russo-French perfumer who created the iconic elixir for the fashion icon. Voicing an animated version of Coco Chanel in both English and French, the Oscar-winning actress plays the designer at the height of her Queen of Paris fame, as a 38-year-old doyenne and magnetic pole for the city’s modernist and avant-garde scenes.
“Marion did an incredible job visualizing,...
Commissioned by Chanel and produced by Paris-based studio Atelier Daruma, the 15-minute immersive experience puts participants into the shoes of Ernest Beaux, the Russo-French perfumer who created the iconic elixir for the fashion icon. Voicing an animated version of Coco Chanel in both English and French, the Oscar-winning actress plays the designer at the height of her Queen of Paris fame, as a 38-year-old doyenne and magnetic pole for the city’s modernist and avant-garde scenes.
“Marion did an incredible job visualizing,...
- 9/1/2022
- by Ben Croll
- Variety Film + TV
"The Dark Knight Rises" is the third and final film in director Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy, bringing a close to the legend that started in 2005's "Batman Begins." Following the massive critical and financial success of the second chapter in the trilogy, "The Dark Knight," anticipation was at an all time high for the epic conclusion. Released in 2012, the film was a financial success. However, the positive critical reception was nowhere near the level of universal acclaim that "The Dark Knight" had received.
It makes sense then that director Christopher Nolan considers Tom Hardy's turn as Bane as overlooked. The villains were one of the biggest highlights of Nolan's trilogy, and Hardy had big shoes to fill — especially considering the posthumous Oscar that Heath Ledger earned for his performance as the Joker. According to Nolan, Hardy's performance as Bane has yet to be fully recognized, given the...
It makes sense then that director Christopher Nolan considers Tom Hardy's turn as Bane as overlooked. The villains were one of the biggest highlights of Nolan's trilogy, and Hardy had big shoes to fill — especially considering the posthumous Oscar that Heath Ledger earned for his performance as the Joker. According to Nolan, Hardy's performance as Bane has yet to be fully recognized, given the...
- 8/28/2022
- by Ernesto Valenzuela
- Slash Film
Spoilers for "Better Call Saul" follow.
Who could have imagined, back when "Breaking Bad" was the reigning non-genre drama on TV, that almost a decade later we would be talking about a prequel focusing on the funny lawyer as one of the best TV shows of the decade, on par if not better than the original? "Better Call Saul" quickly proved to be more than just a spin-off of "Breaking Bad," but a show as complex, if not more so.
After six seasons, we finally said goodbye to James Morgan McGill, Kimberly Wexler, and the characters of the two-shows-and-a-movie universe with a perfect finale. After the previous episode ended with Gene on the run after being uncovered by Carol Burnett's Marion, the finale, aptly titled "Saul Gone," ties up loose ends, brings the themes of the show to the foreground and closes the book on Jimmy/Saul/Gene.
In between all of these,...
Who could have imagined, back when "Breaking Bad" was the reigning non-genre drama on TV, that almost a decade later we would be talking about a prequel focusing on the funny lawyer as one of the best TV shows of the decade, on par if not better than the original? "Better Call Saul" quickly proved to be more than just a spin-off of "Breaking Bad," but a show as complex, if not more so.
After six seasons, we finally said goodbye to James Morgan McGill, Kimberly Wexler, and the characters of the two-shows-and-a-movie universe with a perfect finale. After the previous episode ended with Gene on the run after being uncovered by Carol Burnett's Marion, the finale, aptly titled "Saul Gone," ties up loose ends, brings the themes of the show to the foreground and closes the book on Jimmy/Saul/Gene.
In between all of these,...
- 8/16/2022
- by Rafael Motamayor
- Slash Film
When Carol Burnett was announced as being a guest star in the final season of “Better Call Saul,” awards pundits everywhere had the same thought: would she be the one to finally break the show’s Emmy curse? Indeed, the AMC drama is 0-39 at the Emmys so far and has seven more nominations this year. However, there’s a wacky Emmy rule you may not know about that prevents Burnett from earning a guest actress nomination at next year’s ceremony.
The Emmy rule in question states that “only performers appearing in less than 50 of the eligible episodes can submit in the Guest Performer categories.” What does that mean in layman’s terms? “Better Call Saul” split up its sixth and final season into two parts, with episodes 1-7 competing at the current 2022 Emmys and episodes 8-13 competing at the 2023 Emmys. Burnett has so far appeared in three episodes...
The Emmy rule in question states that “only performers appearing in less than 50 of the eligible episodes can submit in the Guest Performer categories.” What does that mean in layman’s terms? “Better Call Saul” split up its sixth and final season into two parts, with episodes 1-7 competing at the current 2022 Emmys and episodes 8-13 competing at the 2023 Emmys. Burnett has so far appeared in three episodes...
- 8/9/2022
- by Marcus James Dixon
- Gold Derby
Click here to read the full article.
[This story contains spoilers for “Waterworks,” the Aug. 8 episode of Better Call Saul.]
The all-star run of Better Call Saul directors is nearing its conclusion, with Vince Gilligan stepping behind the camera one last time to helm this week’s penultimate episode, following series veterans Thomas Schnauz, Michelle MacLaren and Michael Morris. Only one episode remains, and it was written and directed by Gilligan’s co-creator and longtime Saul showrunner Peter Gould.
Not surprisingly, this week’s Saul was a pivotal episode, jumping around in both time and geography, introducing Kim Wexler’s life as a brunette with bangs in Florida and pushing things toward the series conclusion with a surprising confession and a surprising discovery, featuring guest star Carol Burnett.
Gilligan is a mighty busy man, but he got on the phone for a quick chat covering just a few key episodic details including the concluding scene, Kim’s airport shuttle breakdown...
[This story contains spoilers for “Waterworks,” the Aug. 8 episode of Better Call Saul.]
The all-star run of Better Call Saul directors is nearing its conclusion, with Vince Gilligan stepping behind the camera one last time to helm this week’s penultimate episode, following series veterans Thomas Schnauz, Michelle MacLaren and Michael Morris. Only one episode remains, and it was written and directed by Gilligan’s co-creator and longtime Saul showrunner Peter Gould.
Not surprisingly, this week’s Saul was a pivotal episode, jumping around in both time and geography, introducing Kim Wexler’s life as a brunette with bangs in Florida and pushing things toward the series conclusion with a surprising confession and a surprising discovery, featuring guest star Carol Burnett.
Gilligan is a mighty busy man, but he got on the phone for a quick chat covering just a few key episodic details including the concluding scene, Kim’s airport shuttle breakdown...
- 8/9/2022
- by Daniel Fienberg
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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