AD
Home Blog Page 940

‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ Rumor Has Willem Dafoe’s Green Goblin Leading The Sinister Six

Spider-Man: No Way Home rumors are a dime a dozen, some of which are shot down by the actors themselves. A new one has emerged from Jeff Sneider on his Sneider Cut podcast, which claims to know the upcoming Marvel sequel’s lead villain, and who he’ll be runnin’ with.

According to Sneider, Willem Dafoe will reprise his role as Norman Osborne/Green Goblin in No Way Home, a rumor we’ve heard before with Thomas Haden Church returning as Sandman Only he adds that Osborne will be leading the Sinister Six. Dafoe played the character in Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man back in 2002. Other members of the Six would include fellow returnees Jamie Foxx as Electro and Alfred Molina as Doc Ock, who are already confirmed. So far there’s been nothing to Paul Giamatti reprising as Rhino, Rhys Ifans as Lizard, or even Jake Gyllenhaal as Mysterio, other villains who were part of the Six in the comics.

Sneider also says the No Way Home title doesn’t refer to Spider-Man, but to the villains who have come from different universes and are now stuck in the MCU.

Makes sense, but I caution this is more rumor than fact at this point. Especially from Sneider, who would likely do a full write-up on something like this if it were more substantial. It could still pan out, though. We’ll find out when Spider-Man: No Way Home opens this December.

 

Review: ‘Port Authority’

Fionn Whitehead And Leyna Bloom Transcend In A Brutally Honest Queer Drama

Port Authority is not your “fresh off the bus” New York story. Paul (Fionn Whitehead) is a 20 year old recently paroled kid hoping to stay with his half-sister while he gets settled into the city. Not much is revealed about his life before, but when she rejects him, he ends up staying at a halfway house at night and working for deportation services during the day. Longing for something more, he stumbles into a drag ball one night where he meets Wye, a young transwoman. Taken by her calmness, beauty and kindness, Paul slowly becomes enamored with her, despite the clear homophobia of the man who is currently providing for him. As they grow closer, their relationship starts to threaten the little stability he has.

Fionn Whitehead, best known for Black Mirror: Bandersnatch and Dunkirk, plays Paul with a quiet and violent sensitivity. He teeters beautifully between a purposefully infantile and an overwhelmed teenager trying his best. Whitehead, who is best known for playing intellectually complicated British characters seamlessly transitions into the pathos of Paul. Never overdrawn, it’s a performance that’s layered and enticing despite the character being awkward to watch at times. Whitehead is slowly becoming a young character actor to watch.

Leyna Bloom, a former ballet dancer, is a star in the making. As Wye, brings feminine light to the film. Like Paul, we breathe a sigh of relief when she is onscreen, as her presence perfectly balances out Whitehead’s performance. Bloom doesn’t play a queer savior of color to Whitehead’s ‘angry confused white boy,’ but as a dynamic, full-fledged person with a whole life of her own. While writer and director Danielle Lessovitz does keep the story to Paul’s perspective and bubble, she shows us that you can do that and still write characters of marginalized demographics with agency, even if they are not the primary focus.

Port Authority is a strong first feature for Lessovitz, who wrote 2017’s Mobile Homes with Imogen Poots and Callum Turner. Radiating with the same raw realism and authenticity of last year’s Never, Rarely, Sometimes, Always, Lessovitz rightly does everything she can to get the audience’s heart beat on the wavelength as Paul’s. Unlike the inspirational, joyous and even melodramatic portrayals of New York City’s ballroom culture (I’m looking at you, new season of Pose) that we are used to seeing lately, Lessovitz shows us a grounded, realistic side of ballroom culture. While beautiful and enticing, we still see the whole experience as an outsider, through Paul’s eyes.

Quiet, at times brutal, but always honest, Port Authority feels like a truly American love story. Not a stereotypical queer film, it’s rather an honest portrait of one of the many colors love comes in.

Port Authority is currently playing in select theaters and On-Demand June 1st. Watch the trailer below.

Review: ‘Blue Miracle’

Dennis Quaid And Jimmy Gonzales Sail Through A Choppy Script In The Inspirational True Story

Sometimes hokey and cliché can be a good thing. Like in this week’s Netflix release, Blue Miracle. It tells the true story of an orphanage based out of Cabo that enters a high stakes deep sea fishing competition in order to save itself. While Chris Dowling and Julio Quintana’s script brings the corniness and stock characters you’d expect from a sports based true story, Quintana’s direction and charming performances from a young cast save it from drowning in the inspirational biopic pool.

Omar (Jimmy Gonzales, Mayans M.C., Lodge 49) is an overwhelmed man in his 30s running an orphanage with his wife out of Mexico’s ultimate tourist destination for the rich and famous, Cabo Saint Lucas. He willingly brings in any kids who need help despite not having the funds to do so. Down on his luck grumpy fishing boat captain Wade (an oddly method Dennis Quaid) who had won the Bisbee Black and Blue Fishing Tournament twice before, reluctantly teams up with Omar and a few of his boys to catch a blue marlin and hopefully win the fishing competition to pay off a bank loan and use the rest to fix up the orphanage. Over three days of competition, people’s perceptions and truths are questioned at the gang tries to catch a big fish.

The best part of Quintana’s direction is that none of the performances, including the kids’, are too heavy handed. Gonzales brings a charming youth group leader quality to Omar that doesn’t feel weighed down or overdone. Though he leads the film, he lets other characters do their own thing and plays off of them rather beautifully.

Quaid on the other hand starts out Blue Miracle playing a caricature of Captain Quint from Jaws, that feels a bit goofy in the beginning. However. once he is working with the kids on the boat, we see “dad Quaid” grace the screen, a character we haven’t really seen from the actor in a long time since the early 2000s. It’s a nice cameo, one that I wish was a bit more consistent throughout the film.

Leading the rag tag group of orphans are Anthony Gonzalez (Coco) and Nathan Arenas (Diary of a Future President). Both bring oodles of charm to their roles and expert comedic timing and delivery. Lines don’t feel kitschy coming out of their mouths, a feat for child actors in an inspirational film.

As a director, Quintana does go very hard with the blue motif, everything is painted and everyone is dressed in shades of blue to the point that we know a character is significant if he is wearing another color. Despite this, he uses some pretty creative and beautiful shots to tell this story. Overall, Blue Miracle works pretty well for something that could easily feel derivative.

You can watch Blue Miracle on Netflix. Watch the trailer below.

 

Miles Teller Replaces Armie Hammer In ‘The Godfather’ Paramount+ Series ‘The Offer’

Miles Teller has signed on for WINTER GAMES

With Armie Hammer exiting so many projects due to his many controversies, there’s been a need to find actors to replace him, and quickly. In the case of the making-of The Godfather series, The Offer, Miles Teller is the one to step up.

Variety reports Miles Teller will take over the role of producer Al Ruddy, which Hammer vacated a few months ago. The scripted Paramount+ series will center on Ruddy’s experiences producing Francis Ford Coppola’s iconic 1972 mob drama, winning an Oscar that year for Best Picture. Showrunner Nikki Toscano will co-write the script alongside Michael Tolkin, with Dexter Fletcher (Rocketman) helming the pilot.

Next up for Teller is the long-awaited Top Gun: Maverick. He also has Sean Penn’s Flag Day coming up.

‘Infinite’ Trailer: Mark Wahlberg Is A Warrior Of Reincarnation In Paramount+ Summer Blockbuster

If Paramount+ is going to compete with the big boys at Netflix, Disney+, and HBO Max, they’re going to need some blockbuster films to drive subscribers. They can’t simply be the place for Star Trek alone. Paramount is hoping Infinite, a sci-fi thriller led by Mark Wahlberg will be the hit they’re looking for.

A reunion between Wahlberg and his Shooter director Antoine Fuqua, Infinite centers on a secret group whose members are reborn with previously-acquired skills and memories from multiple past lives. They must work together using their gained abilities to save humanity from one man bent on destroying it.

Also in the cast are Chiwetel Ejiofor, Sophie Cookson, Jason Mantzoukas, Rupert Friend, Liz Carr, with Toby Jones and Dylan O’Brien.

Infinite comes exclusivey to Paramount+ on June 10th!

For Evan McCauley (Mark Wahlberg), skills he has never learned and memories of places he has never visited haunt his daily life. Self-medicated and on the brink of a mental breakdown, a secret group that calls themselves “Infinites” come to his rescue, revealing to him that his memories are real – but they are from multiple past lives. The Infinites bring Evan into their extraordinary world, where a gifted few are given the ability to be reborn with their memories and knowledge accumulated over centuries. With critical secrets buried in his past, Evan must work with the Infinites to unlock the answers in his memories in a race against time to save humanity from one of their own (Chiwetel Ejiofor) who seeks to destroy it.

 

‘John Wick: Chapter 4’ Adds Rina Sawayama To Star Alongside Keanu Reeves

Keanu Reeves is getting some pop star support in John Wick: Chapter 4. Deadline reports the experimental British-Japanese superstar Rina Sawayama will join him in the next installment of the hit action franchise, making this her feature acting debut.

Details on Sawayama’s role are being kept a mystery for now, and she didn’t reveal anything more in her enthusiastic Twitter post about the news…

The film will once again be directed by Chad Stahelski from a script by Shay Hatten and Michael Finch.

“I’m so glad to have Rina on board to make her feature film debut in John Wick: Chapter 4,” Stahelski said. “She’s an incredible talent who’ll bring so much to the film.”

While this is Sawayama’s first big screen role, she did appear in a couple of episodes of Idris Elba’s short-lived comedy series Turn Up Charlie. She released her self-titled album in 2020 and has received widespread acclaim.

John Wick: Chapter 4 opens May 27th 2022.

 

Luca Guadagnino Rounds Out ‘Bones & All’ Cast; Isn’t Focused On ‘Call Me By Your Name 2’ Anymore

It must be tough to make a movie about cannibals right now, especially if you’re Luca Guadagnino and you famously directed alleged cannibal Armie Hammer in Call Me By Your Name. But Guadagnino is going for it anyway with Bones & All, and with the start of production we now know who will be joining stars Timothee Chalamet and Taylor Russell.

A press release for the film confirms the full cast includes Mark Rylance, Michael Stuhlbarg, André Holland, Jessica Harper (of Suspiria fame), Chloe Sevigny, Francesca Scorsese (yep, Martin’s daughter), and Halloween director David Gordon Green. Pretty weird, right? Green has acted before in small part, but it’s his friendship with Guadagnino that got the ball rolling on this…

“David is my friend, a great filmmaker, and when I read those roles I thought of Michael [Stuhlbarg], and David,” Guadagnino told Deadline. “When I sent the script to David, he said, ‘You’re mad, and I’m’ in.’ So he’s in. I asked him to change his looks radically, and he’s done that. I do like discovering, so I’m launching the acting career of David Gordon Green, the great filmmaker.”

The film is based on a book by Camille DeAngelis, adapted for the screen by David Kajganich , who worked with Guadagnino on Suspiria and A Bigger Splash, the latter my favorite of his work by far.

Here’s the synopsis: The film is a story of first love between Maren, a young woman learning how to survive on the margins of society, and Lee, an intense and disenfranchised drifter, as they meet and join together for a thousand-mile odyssey that takes them through the back roads, hidden passages, and trap doors of Ronald Reagan’s America. But despite their best efforts, all roads lead back to their terrifying pasts and to a final stand that will determine whether their love can survive their otherness.

As for that Call Me By Your Name sequel which keeps getting pushed aside for other things? Well, Guadagnino isn’t as into that anymore.

“The truth of the matter is, my heart is still there, but I’m working on this movie now, and I’m hopefully going to do ‘Scarface’ soon, and I have many projects and so will focus on this side of the Atlantic and the movies I want to make.”

So the Hammer thing definitely hasn’t helped. For sure, it would be tough for any studio to greenlight a project with the disgraced actor right now. But other reasons are Guadagnino’s busy workload, as he stated, and also the difficulty in getting Chalamet who is one of the most in-demand actors around.

 

 

An Old Enemy Returns In The Teaser For ‘Cobra Kai’ Season 4

terry silver

Terry Silver, the big bad from The Karate Kid III, wasn’t like those that came before him. He wasn’t about the sport, he was a sociopathic manipulator who used Karate as his cover. A rich guy that looked like the archetype for late 80s, early 90s, sleezebag. Jet black hair, slicked back and an expensive suit. It was inevitable that Cobra Kai, still riding high on the global popularity boom enjoyed by their move to Netflix, would end up bringing Silver into the mix eventually. It appears, from the teaser below, that season 4 will meet that eventuality. It’s not really a surprise as they’ve been teasing Terry Silver, and building up to his Cobra Kai debut all throughout season 3 by way of Sensei Kreese’s flashback segments.

This should set the lineup for the big showdown in S4, to recap season 3 ended with Johnny and Daniel-san joining forces, uniting their two dojo’s in an effort to take down the villainous Kreese once and for all. Kreese, who doesn’t let the odds go out of his favor, will most likely enlist Silver to join him in the fight. If you need a refresher on what made Terry Silver such a formidable opponent all you need to do is watch the teaser below and his viciousness will be on full display. Still to this day, I’m totally amazed by what they managed to pull off with this show, has there ever been a spin-off so enjoyable and successful? Not to my knowledge!

 

Review: ‘American Traitor’

Al Pacino's Performance Can't Save Forgettable Drama About Nazi Propagandist Axis Sally

There are countless tales that emerged from WWII. Many have been shared with the world through film. Some filled with heroism that have patriotism shining through and others on the other end of the spectrum. American Traitor: The Trial of Axis Sally highlights one of the most infamous figures from WWII. Mildred Gillars (Meadow Williams) was an American born in the early 1900s who eventually made her way to Berlin. She studied art and drama and dreamed of being a professional actress or singer. While in Berlin, Mildred was in a relationship with Max Otto Koischwitz (Carsten Norgaard). It was Max who approached her with the opportunity of a lifetime in 1941. Through her vanity, Max convinced Mildred that she would be a star if she became the voice of Berlin radio and essentially the Nazi party.

Max takes Mildred to meet Joseph Goebbels (Thomas Kretschmann), who was the chief propogandist of the Nazi party. Goebbels reiterates to Mildred the power of spoken word and how important her role would be. He would provide her scripts 24 hours in advance and she wasn’t to deviate from them in the slightest. Mildred spent the next several years broadcasting Nazi propaganda to American troops, trying to discourage them. Through her efforts she was dubbed Axis Sally. Mildred managed to survive the war and was eventually captured and brought to Washington D.C. where she was tried for 8 counts of treason. The only person willing to defend her was the notorious attorney James Laughlin (Al Pacino). With the help of a legal aide, Billy Owen (Swen Temmel), the two set out to clear the name of one of the only living faces of the Nazi party.

American Traitor: The Trial of Axis Sally is based on the book Axis Sally Confidential by William and Vance Owen. Vance Owen helped pen the screenplay along with Darryl Hicks and director Michael Polish. This group was able to capture the look and feel of the 40s. While the wardrobe and set designs helped, it was the music that truly solidified the atmosphere of the era. Polish also mixed in real life footage as well as newspaper headlines to remind the audience that this was indeed based on a true story.

Polish blended flashbacks from Mildred’s time serving in the Third Reich with her trial. This directorial choice helped not only make the narrative flow better but also shed light on what Mildred went through and how it was referenced in the trial. The audience is able to see the rationale behind her actions and how perceptions can change over time. Mildred was oddly  both loved and hated by troops during the war. Once it was over, many wanted her to hang for her perceived crimes. With Hitler and other prominent faces of the Nazi party dead, much of America’s hatred was focused on her.

American Traitor: The Trial of Axis Sally can unfortunately never find its footing. It toes the line of being a war drama and a courtroom drama, but never satisfying either. Much of the film drags on and Polish makes some questionable decisions with the direction of the narrative. There are certain characters who are highlighted, while others not, that make the film not reach its full potential. Pacino delivers a decent performance as the cooky defense attorney Laughlin. His courtroom antics provide some comic relief and there is a scene or two that are vintage dynamite Pacino. However, these moments are not enough to carry the film. The story of Axis Sally is interesting enough to merit a movie, unfortunately American Traitor: The Trial of Axis Sally squanders the opportunity. When the dust settles, it is a slow and forgettable drama that you can go ahead and avoid.

Listen To Adam Driver And Marion Cotillard Sing In New Sparks Track From Leos Carax’s “Annette”

And suddenly the peculiar pop band Sparks is hot again. Not only are they the subject of Edgar Wright’s festival darling doc The Sparks Brothers, but their sound will be featured in Annette, the first English-language film from director Leos Carax. Not only will we hear their music and lyrics, but the song will have vocal performances by stars Adam Driver, Marion Cotillard, and Simon Helberg.

You can get a listen at the Sparks track “So May We Start”, featuring Cotillard, Driver, and Helberg on vocals. Sparks and Carax collaborated on the lyrics, as well.

Here’s the synopsis for Annette:

Present-day Los Angeles. Henry is an outspoken stand-up comedian, Ann, a world-famous singer. They’re a happy celebrity couple, living life in the glare of the spotlight, but their world is turned upside-down by the birth of their first child, Annette, a mysterious little girl with an exceptional destiny. A Leos Carax film starring Adam Driver, Marion Cotillard and Simon Helberg, Annette is produced by Charles Gillibert (CG Cinéma International), Paul-Dominique Vacharasinthu (Tribus P. Films) and Adam Driver.

The Amazon Studios film opens in theaters on August 6th, followed by Amazon Prime on August 20th.