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‘You Should Have Left’ Trailer: Kevin Bacon Reunites With ‘Stir Of Echoes’ Director On Blumhouse’s Latest Horror

The game “Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon” exists for a reason; the actor has connections that run pretty far and wide. For his latest film, Blumhouse’s You Should Have Left, Bacon reunites with a writer/director from his past, David Koepp, who he worked with on 1999’s Stir of Echoes.

You Should Have Left is a psycho-horror based on a novel by Danie Kehlmann about a successful man and his actress wife who attempt to fix their fraying marriage with a restful vacation far away from the rest of the world. How do you think that goes? Let’s just say that problems to travel, no matter how far you go. Bacon’s wife is played by Amanda Seyfried, with Avery Essex as their young daughter.

SYNOPSIS: “In this terrifying, mind-twisting tale, a father fights desperately to save his family from a beautiful home that refuses to let them leave.

“Theo Conroy (Bacon) is a successful middle-aged man whose marriage to his much younger actress wife, Susanna (Seyfried) is shredding at the seams, frayed by her secretiveness, his jealousy, and the shadow of his past. In an effort to repair their relationship, Theo and Susanna book a vacation at a stunning, remote modern home in the Welsh countryside for themselves and their six-year-old daughter, Ella (Avery Essex). What at first seems like a perfect retreat distorts into a perfect nightmare when Theo’s grasp on reality begins to unravel and he suspects that a sinister force within the house knows more than he or Susanna have revealed, even to each other.”

You Should Have Left opens on June 19th.

Escape The Zombie Apocalypse With New ‘Peninsula’ Posters

While the Cannes Film Festival was canceled, they still put together their list of Official Selections. Most of these are films that would’ve been shown, and one of those is Peninsula, the anticipated sequel to South Korean zombie horror Train to Busan.  On another note, I was also trying to court the film to be part of the canceled Lakefront Film Festival. Sadly, it won’t play at either, but with a summer release set we at least have a pair of new posters to check out.

Train to Busan won accolades all around the world, not the sort of thing one would expect from a movie about a zombie outbreak aboard a passenger train. Peninsula is more of a followup than a sequel, taking place four years later and expanding on the post-apocalyptic world. The story follows a soldier named Jung-seok who survived the initial outbreak but must return to a destroyed Korea on a retrieval mission, only to become trapped there with other survivors looking to escape.

That theme of “escape” is echoed in the two posters, one showing the armed survivors facing down a threat from the undead, and a second that looks like a car chase might be in order. Do zombies drive? I hope so because that would be pretty cool.

Peninsula is set to hit theaters in South Korea this summer. Hopefully we’ll get a stateside release soon after.

Jon Favreau Confirms ‘The Mandalorian’ Season 2 Is Right On Schedule

The outbreak of COVID-19 overturned plans for a number of productions, from TV to the big screen. Disney was affected just as much if not more, considering the number of projects they have going at any given time, from animated features, to Marvel, and Star Wars. In the case of the latter, there has been some concern The Mandalorian season 2 may be delayed, but exec-producer Jon Favreau assures fans that won’t be the case.

Favreau confirmed during the ATX TV fest that The Mandalorian is on track to hit Disney+ right on schedule because of their quick production, and a healthy amount of help from their visual effects folks…

“We were lucky enough to have finished photography before the lockdown, so thanks to how technology-forward Lucasfilm and ILM are, we’ve been able to do all the editing visual effects remotely,” Favreau explained. “It will be available as planned on Disney+ in October.”

Favreau didn’t offer anything in terms of what to look forward to, other than it feels like a “continuing” rather than a new season. That’s interesting given the introduction of popular characters including Ahsoka Tano (played by Rosario Dawson) and Boba Fett (played by Temuera Morrison) who have little connection to the first season.

‘Snowpiercer’ Season 1 Review: Rebellion Fuels A Much-Needed Course Correction

A few weeks ago I booked passage on the first episode of TNT’s long-troubled, oft-delayed Snowpiercer. Thinking it would be a disaster straight out of the station, it was still disappointing to find my early concerns justified. The adaptation of Oscar-winner Bong Joon-ho’s 2013 film about the last vestiges of humanity circling the world in a train, 1001 cars long, as we are reminded roughly 1002 times, couldn’t come at a better time. A world broken down by excess, greed, and class division forced to come together due to a catalyzing global event. But despite the show’s timeliness, a decision to saddle it with a belabored murder mystery threw it off the rails right from the beginning.

That mystery, which involved a serial killer slicing up third-class passengers from limb to genitals, hangs around like lost luggage in the passenger car for too long. But it serves as an easy introduction for those unfamiliar with Joon-ho’s sci-fi action flick; give them a crime procedural they can easily relate to because that’s what every other show on network TV is right now. Plus it serves as a way to introduce the broken down class systems within the massive vehicle. Daveed Diggs is Andre Layton, a former detective now one of the “tailies”, where the ragged poor live in squalor having forced themselves aboard at the start of the global climate disaster which froze the planet. Layton is thoughtful, rugged, humanist; he’s someone who wants it to be “one train” for all. Meanwhile, the rich live in relative comfort in first class. Second class has it slightly worse, while those in third mostly comprise the labor force and security forces.

Layton’s opposite is the mysterious Melanie Cavill, played by a beautiful and austere Jennifer Connelly. Melanie is the voice of the train and its secretive benefactor, Mr. Wilford. She runs “Hospitality”, which is some Orwellian bullshit because they can be anything but hospitable. In an early sequence, a bloody riot breaks out caused by the tailies, and payback is an icy cold bitch; an arm shoved outside the train until it’s an icicle, then smashed into pieces. It’s a brutal tactic that will be repeated, with just as grisly an effect.

While Snowpiercer is based on Joon-ho’s film and the graphic novel which launched this post-apocalyptic tale, it’s not totally beholden to either. Taking place seven years after the “event” and about eight years before the movie, the series is its own beast, one that veers away from the anti-capitalism message of its predecessors for far too long, before eventually finding its footing once the rebellion actually starts. This fractured, uneven narrative probably has to do with the show’s embarrassing production. Josh Friedman (The Sarah Connor Chronicles) was original showrunner but left over creative differences, only to be replaced by Orphan Black‘s Graeme Manson. Doctor Strange filmmaker Scott Derrickson helmed the pilot but, too, left reshoots over the same reason. Not only that, but Snowpiercer found itself bouncing between TNT and TBS networks before finally pulling into the TNT station for good. That’s a lot to contend with.

So for about the first four episodes we are treated to what is a very bland, uninspired detective story that only vaguely resembles Snowpiercer.  Layton is dragged away from the tail, his adopted son Miles (Jalin Fletcher) and lover Josie (Katie McGuinness), to investigate the murders uptrain. From there he gets a taste of what the rest of the passengers really lives like. The rich are uniformly grotesque in their snobbishness, and dismissive of the rest of the train’s needs. They dine on the last delicacies left in the entire world while the tail choke down on blocks of refuse mixed with insects for protein. Some of the finest moments, that always gave me a smile, is when someone from the tail gets to eat something they haven’t had in years. Even a spoonful of oatmeal is like a taste of Heaven.

But this murder…it goes nowhere. The actors seem bored with it, and you can sense that someone finally decides it’s time to pull the plug because of the rushed, haphazard way in which it wraps up. And almost immediately it’s like someone flipped the switch to “Revolution”. This is also the moment when Snowpiercer begins to realize what it should’ve always been. There’s plenty of political subtext to be found here, but what made Joon-ho’s movie so good is that it didn’t waste time getting bogged down in the details. It simply couldn’t afford to. This latest serialized version has more time to spare, and so we see a lot of wrangling together of various forces, occasional betrayals, and at least one shocking death of a key character. Layton emerges as a defiant, complex (his issues with women run DEEP!), conquering hero worth following into future seasons. Meanwhile, Melanie is just as complicated with loads of secrets waiting to be unearthed. These pieces work to build the momentum for the coming battle, which is really what Snowpiercer is all about. Life under crony capitalism is war, and it’s ugly and it’s violent and a lot of people are going to die if it’s ever going to change. Snowpiercer, capturing some of the grimy aesthetic and edginess of Battlestar Galactica, is best when it just gives us the fight head-on and throws the other stuff overboard.

NOTE: Thanks to Khalil Johnson for tagging in on the last couple of episodes while I was unavailable. That gave me time to watch the entire season and so decided it was best to wrap up the whole thing in one shot. Thanks again!

Podcast: Talking Race And Hollywood

A bit of a departure this week as Travis and John reflect and discuss the recent events surrounding the murder of George Floyd and the subsequent protests. Like all things American the African-American community has contributed immeasurably to the world of cinema we know today. With this in mind we take a look at Hollywood’s response to the recent tragedy and see how the film world at large is reacting.

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‘The Last Of Us’ TV Series Has ‘Chernobyl’ Filmmaker Johan Renck As Director And Exec-Producer

The wait for an adaptation of Naughty Dog’s bestselling post-apocalyptic video game The Last of Us has been a long one, with teases of a feature film often falling by the wayside. But recently we learned an HBO series was in the works, and now we know the network is turning to a familiar place to steer the pilot episode.

Speaking with Discussing Film, Johan Renck, an exec-producer and director on multiple episodes of HBO’s Emmy-winning series Chernobyl, will play the same function on The Last of Us. Renck will direct the pilot episode and exec-produce, joining with showrunner Craig Mazin who he also worked with on Chernobyl. The game’s creative director Neil Druckmann is involved as a writer and exec-producer, as well.

“I’m an executive producer on it and attached to it,” Renck said. “It’s an ongoing TV series. So that’s not something that I will be able to take on to that extent, but I’m part of that series and I will be directing at least the pilot. Then we’ll see how it goes on further. I mean, both Craig and I, we are working with each other again and we will work with each other on other things because we like each other.”

“You have for instance The Last of Us with Craig, in which you have a video game character who’s very much top of mind with anybody who’s ever played that game. More than that, they know exactly what he looks like, how he talks, how he acts, and so on and so forth.”

“So with the The Last of Us, this is something that we’re discussing. We’re having weekly calls, Craig and I and also Neil [Druckmann] who created the game, about various approaches and how to deal with that. How to deal with the fact that a video game character is way further than a character from a book. But also it’s more different to deal with than a real person.”

Menck and Mazin are a proven team with the credentials to match, so fans of The Last of Us shouldn’t need to worry. I’ll still be very interested in seeing if they find a way to cast Game of Thrones actress Maisie Williams in playing the role of Ellie as she had wanted to years ago. She may have grown too old for the part now, though.

Hailee Steinfeld Thinks It’s Time For A Female-Led ‘Into The Spider-Verse’ Spinoff

Sony has been goin’ hard with the number of Spider-Man spinoffs they have planned. Everything from Morbius to Madame Web to Kraven the Hunter are in the works, and that’s just a small sample of them. But one that has slipped through the cracks lately is a female-led spinoff of their Oscar-winning film, Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, which would presumably center on the breakout Spider-Gwen character voiced by Hailee Steinfeld.

Speaking with Entertainment Tonight, Steinfeld says not even she knows what’s up with a Spider-Verse spinoff centering on a female lead. That said, she does think it’s time somebody decide something already…

“I am not in the know with these things,” she said. “I feel like this is the time to figure it all out…there hasn’t been much that I’ve heard.”

At the time of initial reports, Bek Smith (Zoo) was named as writer of the film. It’s unclear if that’s still the case. We don’t even know if it’s necessarily about Gwen Stacy or any one of many female Spider-man characters. Hell, why not just use a bunch of them and keep the alternate universe fun going?

Steinfeld may have another Marvel superhero to suit up as first. She’s long been rumored to play Kate Bishop in Jeremy Renner’s Hawkeye series on Disney+. That has yet to be confirmed and word on that has been pretty quiet, as well.

 

Josh Trank Wishes He Had Quit ‘Fantastic Four’ When Denied A Black Actress For Sue Storm

It’s funny that Josh Trank is suddenly such a frequent topic of discussion. It’s like 2015 all over again the way we’re still talking about his Fantastic Four. But to be fair, this time it actually makes some sense and is incredibly timely, because it has to do with Trank’s desire to cast a black actress as Susan Storm, and the pushback he received from the studio.

You may recall in a recent piece on Trank that he feared for his life and slept with a gun because of the many death threats he received over casting Michael B. Jordan as Johnny Storm. He wanted to do what would seem to be the natural thing and cast a black woman to play Johnny’s sister, Sue “Invisible Woman” Storm, but Fox wasn’t down for it and Trank regrets not taking a stand right then…

“There were a lot of controversial conversations that were had behind the scenes on that,” Trank said to Geeks of Color. “I was mostly interested in a black Sue Storm, a black Johnny Storm, and a black Franklin Storm. But also, when you’re dealing with a studio on a massive movie like that, everybody wants to keep an open mind to, like, who the big stars are going to be. ‘Maybe it’ll be Margot Robbie,’ or something like that. But when it came down to it, I found a lot of pretty heavy pushback on casting a black woman in that role.”

Trank continued, “When I look back on that, I should have just walked when that realization sort of hit me, and I feel embarrassed about that, that I didn’t just out of principle. Because those aren’t the values I stand for in my own life; those weren’t the values then or ever for me. Because I’m somebody who always talks about standing up for what I believe in, even if it means burning my career out. I feel bad that I didn’t take it to the mat with that issue. I feel like I failed in that regard.”

What was stupid about this whole thing is that it would’ve been easier, just from a script perspective, to cast a black actress as Sue rather than Kate Mara. And if Fox execs really were holding out for a superstar talent, Mara wasn’t it. Nothing against her, by the way, I think she’s great, but she’s not selling any tickets.  Having two of the Fantastic Four be persons of color on the other hand? That might’ve seriously moved the needle.

On the other hand, the movie sucked and would be forgotten if stuff like this would cease popping up every few months.  But there’s a part of me that thinks if Trank had stood his ground and fought the casting choices he wanted, perhaps he wouldn’t have needed to fight, and ultimately lose, all of the other battles which hurt his movie.

David Oyelowo Says Oscar Voters Punished ‘Selma’ Over Cast’s “I Can’t Breathe” T-Shirts

'Selma' Available Digitally For Free All This Month

Ava DuVernay’s Selma was one of the most acclaimed movies of 2014, with high praise not only for her direction, but David Oyelowo’s incredibly-difficult performance as Martin Luther King Jr., and a screenplay that wrapped his legacy with modern context. But quick, tell me how many Oscars was Selma nominated for that year? The answer is two. Just two, winning one for Best Original Song but losing in the Best Picture category.

So what the Hell happened, eh? In a year that saw black films reach a new pinnacle of recognition, Selma was largely overlooked when the Oscars came around. Well, Oyelowo has an answer, and it has to do with the cast and crew choosing to make a statement following the murder of Eric Garner by police in July 2014…

Speaking with Screen Daily, Oyelowo says the Selma team’s decision to wear “I Can’t Breathe” t-shirts caused Academy members to say they were “stirring shit.”  Further, they said “it wasn’t their place to do that” and would not vote for the movie…

Look, this story ain’t much of a surprise. While the Academy has done its part to try and be more diverse in its voting membership, it wasn’t long ago they were more interested in staying silent, especially in regards to racial issues. That’s how you get an inoffensive movie like Green Book to be Best Picture in the first place.

I’ve had occasion to speak with much of the Selma cast since then, and let me tell you they are STILL hot over how the movie was treated and I don’t blame them. It’s a shame there isn’t another movie like that coming out right now that can challenge the system. Spike Lee’s BlacKkKlansman did that a couple of years ago, and maybe his Da 5 Bloods can do it again.

Some good news to wrap up this story, though. Paramount has decided to make Selma available to rent digitally for free all this month. Definitely go and check it out, and ponder how in the damn world Oyelowo wasn’t nominated for Best Actor.

Review: ‘Hammer’

A Father's Love For His Son Is Pushed To The Limit

Hammer explores how the decisions of one member of a family can impact the rest. The Davis family sees this firsthand after their oldest son Chris (Mark O’Brien) has engaged in some questionable activities. It seems like history is repeating itself for Chris when he is involved in a botched drug deal. Chris is getting into some shady business with two of his old friends Lori (Dayle McLeod) and Adams (Ben Cotton). Lori and Adams have known Chris for quite some time and have gone down a bad path themselves. Adams has been to prison in the past and has pledged not to go back. When the drug deal turns ugly, Lori and Adams end up shot and Chris flees the scene with the money. Chris decides to stash some things in a local corn field, with plans to return once the coast is clear.

Chris’s father Stephen (Will Patton) happens to be on an errand when he sees Chris speed by on a motorbike. Stephen follows Chris and eventually gets him to accept his help unraveling the mess he is in. Of course, Chris is lying to Stephen and completely misrepresenting what has actually happened. Stephen becomes more and more entangled in Chris’s chaos as the day goes on. Not only is Stephen drawn in, but the Davis’s youngest son Jeremy (Connor Price) is now in danger as well. On top of that, Stephen is forced to lie to his wife, who is still trying to keep it together after Chris’s last run in with drugs. As things come to a dangerous head, Stephen is left to question if he even knows who his son is anymore, or what he is capable himself.

Hammer begins by highlighting the dichotomy in Chris and Stephen’s lives, with Writer/director Christian Sparkes contrasting them against each other. Everything from the camera shots, colors of the scenery, to the relaxing music is calm and collected when showing Stephen. As Chris pulls Stephen into his hectic world and Stephen is forced to do unthinkable things, these items begin to become more and more similar.

Patton is excellent throughout portraying a father that is at the brink. A man that would do anything for his son, but one that is still trying to impart wisdom. Stephen never gives up on Chris, no matter who else in his life has. Patton does overshadow O’Brien, but O’Brien still turns in a solid performance. The emotion between Patton and O’Brien comes off incredibly genuine and that helps draw the audience in to the story. Their relationship is at the center of Hammer and the chemistry the two of them share is vital to the film.

Sparkes tells a coherent tale weaving multiple story lines and characters together. He does not need to resort to over-the-top violence or action as many modern thrillers feel the need to. Hammer is driven by its script and the acting of its leads. While there are lots of positive things to say about Hammer, the film does have issues. Most notably being how Chris and Stephen blatantly break the law numerous times in broad daylight. I was left wondering how they could be so obvious and brazen. I guess desperate times call for desperate measures and Chris and Stephen sure are desperate. Hammer is an entertaining thriller/drama, but not one I expect to have any true staying power. It is an enjoyable film, but the truly memorable moments or scenes just aren’t there. Hammer is certainly worth a watch, but it will most likely be one and done for most.