AD
Home Blog Page 518

‘Gladiator 2’: Barry Keoghan Exits As Fred Hechinger, May Calamawy, & More Join, Derek Jacobi Returns

There’s been a casting shake-up on Ridley Scott’s Gladiator sequel. Deadline reports Oscar-nominated The Banshees of Inisherin actor Barry Keoghan has dropped out due to scheduling conflicts. Fortunately, another rising star talent has jumped at the opportunity as the full is finalized.

According to the report, Fred Hechinger has stepped in to replace Keoghan in the role of Emperor Geta. Joining Hechinger are Moon Knight breakout May Calamawy, Spartacus and Snake Eyes actor Peter Mensah, actor/comedian Matt Lucas, and 6 Underground‘s Lio Raz.

Also set to reprise his role as Senator Gracchus is veteran actor Derek Jacobi. Gracchus was an ally of Russell Crowe’s Maximus, which put him odds with the villainous Commodus.

Jacobi joins Connie Nielsen and Djimon Hounsou as one of the few who are returning for the sequel. The rest of the impressive cast is led by Oscar nominee Paul Mescal as the grown-up Lucius Verus II, Denzel Washington, Pedro Pascal, and Joseph Quinn.

Gladiator 2 opens on November 22nd 2024.

Review: ‘Buddy Games: Spring Awakening’

Josh Duhamel's Attempt to Replicate Adam Sandler's Style Delivers Laughs But Leaves Much to be Desired

I always thought it was funny that people got so mad at Adam Sandler for making films with his friends in an exotic locale with a beautiful woman cast as his wife, as if that isn’t the #1 log line for dream job. One person who wasn’t mad about it was Josh Duhamel, as evident in last years Buddy Games and this week’s follow up Buddy Games: Spring Awakening. Now, to be fair, I don’t know that Josh Duhamel, Kevin Dillon, Dan Bakkedahl, James Roday Rodriguez and long time Sandler collaborator Nick Swardson are all actual buddies, but it certainly would seem so from the chemistry on screen…these guys are having fun.

Buddy Games: Spring Awakening sees the gang come back together, this time for a less then joyous reason when core buddy group member, Durfy (Dax Shepard), passes away. Determined to let him rest forever in a place of importance the gang steal Durfy’s ashes from his brother (Jensen Ackles Supernatural) and Uncle (The always awesome to see Lochlyn Munro) and make a B-line to “Party Marty’s” the birthplace of the Buddy Games. Finding that the younger crowd has usurped their place as holder of the Buddy Games the group begin a mission to show the Spring Breakers who the real champs are all while hunting down Durfy’s lost love and ensuring their friend has a rockin’ place to rest for all eternity.

If this sounds like a throwback to films like Revenge of the Nerds 2: Nerds in Paradise, or any one of 100 raunchy spring break movies from the 80’s (but older), you’re not wrong. Shakespeare this is not, but damn I didn’t realize how much I missed movies like this. The first Buddy Games was fine, a perfectly funny lazy Saturday afternoon flick but something about Buddy Games: Spring Awakening struck a cord of nostalgia that brought me back. Sure, that was partly the scattered homophobia and general anti-woke feeling but more so it hit the good parts of that time, the real joy of good friends and good times. Anyone that’s followed our site for any amount of time knows that I’m a Supernatural superfan and therefore a big fanboy for Jensen Ackles, the guy deserves all the fame he is now getting and can really do it all, so having him in pursuit for the road trip part of the film was a special bonus. I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention Johnny Drama himself, Kevin Dillon. I’ve only seen him few and far between since Entourage ended (which is probably a good thing, as he’s best in smaller doses) but I’ll be damned if the guy doesn’t keep me laughing whenever I see him on screen, ‘Just for Men’ dyed goatee and all.

I will say the film borders on sketch comedy at parts, with the actual Buddy Games taking a back seat but I didn’t really see a problem with that. We got a good feeling for the games in the first film and, to be honest, it only works as a framing device anyway. This is all to say that, if you’re looking for story and structure, keep looking because you won’t really find it here. That feels like it should be something I harp on further but I have a certain appreciation for films that know what they are and don’t try to check all of the boxes, focusing just on those that matter.

Buddy Games: Spring Awakening was a surprisingly good time, thanks in no small part to the chemistry of the cast and their willingness to go all in for the joke. I caught the film by myself, mid-afternoon on a Thursday and still laughed through a good 70% of what played in front of me. I can only imagine how much better it would be with a few friends during a late-night Saturday showing.

Review: ‘Master Gardener’

Joel Edgerton Is A Violent Horticulturist Digging For Redemption In Paul Schrader's Latest

Paul Schrader has found his mojo in this latest act of his storied career, and Master Gardener acts as a thematic companion to his two previous films, First Reformed and The Card Counter. All three center on emotionally-bruised men who have found a sense of balance in their work, only to have the delicate solitude disrupted by passion. They all begin with these men dutifully writing in their journals in a lonely, isolated back room. Schrader is an old hand at violent stories of redemption and revenge, and he sets the soil for another one here. And while it takes time to fully sprout, the wait for full bloom is worth it.

Joel Edgerton’s Narvel Roth is the perfect Paul Schrader protagonist: brooding, mannered, a man with a tortured past. Narvel works as the horticulturist for wealthy employer Mrs. Haverhill (Sigourney Weaver), an old antebellum South-style dowager with a prominent estate. Mostly, her concern is for the garden, a lush and lovely thing with rare plants that she hopes to keep in the family for generations. She has entrusted this task to Narvel, a meticulous man both in action and in demeanor. He doesn’t speak much, but he waxes poetic about the beauty of gardening. “You amaze me when you get romantic”, a fawning female colleague says to him. Narvel doesn’t show any kind of romantic interest, though.  He shows a little towards Haverhill, though, perhaps because the two occasionally enjoy a nice dinner and a tumble together, always at her request.

But it’s clear that something about Narvel doesn’t quite jibe with the perfectly-curated surroundings. Nothing about the world he lives in feels authentic. We get clues in flashes of a violent past, and a time before he was Narvel Roth. It’s the arrival of Naverhill’s troublesome grand niece Maya (Quintessa Swindell) who begins to shatter the facade. Tasked with becoming Narvel’s new apprentice, she becomes something considerably more: a lover, a possible path towards redemption.

Schrader constructs a simple story where all of the relationships are knotty ones. Haverhill can’t be left out of this equation, either. She invites Maya to stay with her but can barely acknowledge the “mixed-blood” girl’s presence, too caught up in years-old family squabbles passed down from one generation to the next. Weaver’s Haverhill is fascinating, and funny in the way old rich folks from bygone eras tend to be. The film is somewhat less interesting when she goes away for long stretches. You want to just sit with her and listen to her cope with “the help” and complain about the quality of sandwiches served for lunch.

Narvel’s past, once revealed, isn’t anything new. It causes some conflict with Maya due to her cultural background, but they are interesting together for other reasons. Maintaining the mentor/student dynamic even as lovers, Narvel’s past personal demons clash with Maya’s present ones. The way they help one another deal with them feels natural, organic. Even Narvel’s retreat to old, savage tendencies on her behalf make sense to someone fighting to maintain what he never thought he’d have.

Schrader’s direction and production design are predictably simple. He frames each shot in workmanlike fashion and with a bare minimum of bells and whistles. Haverhill’s estate doesn’t actually look like much for all of the talk of lavish galas that she throws. The simple construction and color scheme only draw more attention to the one scene where the colors are fully allowed to explode, a drive through a floral wonderland where Maya and Narvel allow their emotions to finally burst free.

While always a gripping character study, Master Gardener is sometimes modest to a fault, with stretches that are like watching the weeds grow. But Edgerton offers a powerful performance, shifting from imposing to sensitive at a moment’s notice. He has a presence that few actors can match, and he has found the perfect director in Schrader whose austere style suits him. Weaver compels with every single word, while Swindell, the non-binary actor who recently played the superhero Cyclone in Black Adam, more than holds her own and is a vital component to bringing this garden to blossom.

Master Gardener is in theaters now.

 

Cinema Royale: Talking ‘Fast X’ And The Beginning Of The End (Special Guest: Chris Bumbray of Joblo.com)

The end of the road begins here? Say it ain’t so! Those of us who are still living our lives a quarter mile at a time, and hoping for the elusive 10-second-mile, can’t imagine what it would be like without our Family. If it wasn’t obvious enough, on this week’s Cinema Royale it’s all about Fast X, the final, fateful conclusion to the saga that Vin Diesel built!

I’m joined by my homie Chris Bumbray of Joblo.com to talk about all things Fast X, and we try our best to keep it spoiler free so you’re relatively safe. Mainly we spend a lot of time gushing about Jason Momoa who is absolutely wild in this.

Subscribe to Punch Drunk Critics on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@PunchDrunkCritics1

Follow Punch Drunk Critics on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/pdcmovies

Follow Punch Drunk Critics on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pdcmovies

Subscribe To Cinema Royale anywhere you get your podcasts!

Negasonic Teenage Warhead And Yukio Are Coming Back For ‘Deadpool 3’

A Deadpool movie wouldn’t be a Deadpool movie without Negasonic Teenage Warhead. And for a while it looked as if Deadpool 3 might happen without Brianna Hildebrand’s morose, absurdly powerful X-Man. Well, lucky us, because not only will she be back, but so will her purple-haired girlfriend, Yukio, played by Shioli Kutsuna.

Deadline confirms the news of Hildebrand and Kutsuna’s returns for Deadpool 3. Negasonic Teenage Warhead debuted in the first movie alongside Colossus, and was instantly a punchline for her disaffected demeanor and ridiculous nuclear explosive powers. Yukio arrived in the sequel as Negasonic’s deadly, but quite bubbly, new girlfriend.

They join Ryan Reynolds, Hugh Jackman, Morena Baccarin, Stefan Kapicic, Leslie Uggams, Karan Soni, and Rob Delaney, along with Emma Corrin and Mathew Macfadyen. Deadpool 3 opens on November 8th 2024, directed by Shawn Levy.

‘The Starling Girl’ Interviews: Lewis Pullman, Jimmi Simpson And Wrenn Schmidt Are Members Of The Eliza Scanlen Fan Club

They may play opposite Eliza Scanlen in The Starling Girl, one as her conservative and controlling mother, one as her checked-out and drunk father, and another as her much-older lover, but Wrenn Schmidt, Jimmi Simpson, and Lewis Pullman light up when they talk about their leading actress.

Eliza Scanlen stars as Jem, a seventeen-year-old dancer growing up in an extremely religious community. They judge the way the slight outline of her bra shows through her leotard. They push her towards marriage and courting and away from secular music. Her parents (Schmidt and Simpson) pile on the pressure and teeter between absent, overbearing, and kind. When the pastor’s son (Pullman) returns from a mission abroad to become the Youth Group Leader, Jem starts to question her faith, family, and sexuality.

I got to sit down with Scanlen’s amazing cast to talk about working with her and first-time writer/director Laurel Parmet. Each one talked about finding something to hold on to in order to portray their role. Lewis Pullman talked about his own connection to interpretive dance. Wrenn Schmidt shared that both she and Scanlen shared a love of Mark Rylance and would quote him on set. Jimmi Simpson shared how his character’s connection to music got him mentally prepared to play an evangelized former rocker.

The Starling Girl opens in theaters on May 19th.

 

 

 

Eddie Murphy Nears Inspector Clouseau Role In ‘The Pink Panther’ Reboot

The world is ready for a new bumbling detective Inspector Clouseau, and it appears Eddie Murphy is the guy. Variety reports that Murphy is in talks to star in MGM’s upcoming The Pink Panther reboot, taking over the role previously played by fellow comedy legends Peter Sellers and Steve Martin.

Clouseau debuted in Blake Edwards’ 1963 film The Pink Panther, with Sellers reprising the role in a sequel, A Shot in the Dark, followed by The Return of the Pink Panther, 1976′ The Pink Panther Strikes Again, and finally 1978’s Revenge of the Pink Panther. Two more films released after Sellers’ death used old footage of him as Clouseau, and they were terrible. Steve Martin played the character in two mildly successful comedies in 2006 and 2009. Roger Moore also played Clouseau in 1983’s Curse of the Pink Panther. Alan Arkin played him in 1968’s Inspector Clouseau.

So Murphy joins a deep comedy lineage here. The new film will be directed by Sonic the Hedgehog‘s Jeff Fowler, from a script by The Man from Toronto writer Chris Bremner.

Coming up next for Murphy is Netflix’s Beverly Hills Cop: Axel Foley, followed by a return as Donkey in a new Shrek movie.

‘Nimona’ Teaser Trailer: A New Hero Takes Shape In Netflix’s Animated Sci-Fi Fantasy Arriving Next Month

Netflix is going all-in on animation over the next couple of years, with nine major animated titles on the way. It can be argued that animation has been where Netflix has found the greatest critical acclaim, led of course by Guillermo Del Toro’s Pinocchio. The streamer’s next big hit could be Nimona, an adaptation of ND Stevenson’s award-winning graphic novel phenomenon set in a futuristic medieval world.

Riz Ahmed and Chloe Grace Moretz lead the voice cast in this story of a brave knight in a futuristic world who teams up with a mischievous, shapeshifting teen to clear his name of a crime he didn’t commit. Oh, and the two are basically mortal enemies, but must join together to do what’s right to save the kingdom.

The voice cast also includes Eugene Lee Yang, Frances Conroy, Lorraine Toussaint, Beck Bennett, Indya Moore, RuPaul Charles, Julio Torres, and Sarah Sherman.

Nick Burno and Troy Quane, known for 2019’s Spies in Disguise, team up as co-directors.

The film was originally set to open in 2020, but became a casualty of Fox’s acquisition by Disney, who balked at the film’s extensive LGBTQ themes. The release date kept getting pushed back until finally it was dropped altogether. Eventually, Annapurna Pictures swooped in for the rescue, and joined with Netflix to complete and distribute it, and based on this trailer we should all be grateful.

Nimona hits Netflix on June 30th.

When Ballister Boldheart, a knight in a futuristic medieval world, is framed for a crime he didn’t commit, the only one who can help him prove his innocence is Nimona, a mischievous teen with a taste for mayhem — who also happens to be a shapeshifting creature Ballister has been trained to destroy. But with the entire kingdom out to get him, Nimona’s the best (or technically the only) sidekick Ballister can hope for. And as the lines between heroes, villains, and monsters start to blur, the two of them set out to wreak serious havoc — for Ballister to clear his name once and for all, and for Nimona to…just wreak serious havoc.

 

‘Theater Camp’ Trailer: Molly Gordon And Ben Platt Guide Future Thespians In This Sundance Camp Comedy

THEATER CAMP-Just watch Todd Graff’s 2003 film Camp. It’s so much better, has more to say about drama kids, has better jokes, more talent on display, and it didn’t need a bunch of favors called in to friends who could be doing better things.

What happens when you gather a bunch of young, talented performers and aspiring actors/guidance counselors into a camp where they can hone their craft? Well, you get A LOT of drama and awkward hijinks. Theater Camp is the latest comedy set in a place for future thespians, and led by theater kids Molly Gordon, Nick Lieberman, and Noah Galvin it was one of the most buzzed-about films at Sundance.

Gordon and Lieberman directed and wrote the screenplay with Galvin, with Gordon and Galvin also starring in the mockumentary film set at a rundown drama camp in upstate New York. Gordon and Dear Evan Hansen‘s Ben Platt star as lifelong best friends who see their friendship tested when one finds success the other hasn’t, while the camp itself faces competition from an aggressive rival.

Also in the cast are Patti Harrison, Jimmy Tatro, Amy Sedaris, and The Bear breakout Ayo Edibiri.

I’m not gonna front here, we HATED this movie here. Both Cortland and I saw it at Sundance and I’m pretty sure we never laughed. Personally, I feel like every movie of this type fails to live up to Todd Graff’s far-superior 2002 film, Camp, and they should all stop trying. However, Searchlight Pictures swooped in and acquired Theater Camp in one of the biggest deals of the festival, so it pays to have important parents with lots of deep studio connections.

Theater Camp opens in theaters on July 14th.

Theater Camp follows the eccentric staff running a scrappy theater camp in upstate New York. After its indomitable and beloved founder falls into a coma, they must band together with her clueless “crypto-bro” son to keep the thespian paradise afloat.

 

New Teaser For Martin Scorsese’s ‘Killers Of The Flower Moon’ Ahead Of Its Cannes World Premiere

Finally, Martin Scorsese and Leonardo DiCaprio’s long-awaited Killers of the Flower Moon is set to have its world premiere at Cannes later this week. But before that happens, a new teaser has dropped for the true-crime film about one of the most notorious murder cases in history, and the investigation that became key to the formation of the FBI.

Adapted from David Grann’s book, which is fantastic by the way, the film centers on the mysterious murders of oil-rich Osaga Nation members in 1920s Oklahoma. The killings became known as the “Reign of Terror”, and launched an expansive investigation that put to the test J. Edgar Hoover’s newly-formed FBI.

DiCaprio leads the cast as Ernest Burkhart, with Robert De Niro as prominent local businessman William Hale, Lily Gladstone as Osage Nation member and potential target Mollie Burkhart, with Jesse Plemons as former Texas Ranger Tom White.

Killers of the Flower Moon will hit theaters on October 6th, with a wide release set for October 20th from Apple and Paramount.

In the 1920s, the richest people per capita in the world were members of the Osage Nation in Oklahoma. After oil was discovered beneath their land, the Osage rode in chauffeured automobiles, built mansions, and sent their children to study in Europe. Then, one by one, the Osage began to be killed off. The family of an Osage woman, Mollie Burkhart, became a prime target. One of her relatives was shot. Another was poisoned. And it was just the beginning, as more and more Osage were dying under mysterious circumstances, and many of those who dared to investigate the killings were themselves murdered. As the death toll rose, the newly created FBI took up the case, and the young director, J. Edgar Hoover, turned to a former Texas Ranger named Tom White to try to unravel the mystery. White put together an undercover team, including a Native American agent who infiltrated the region, and together with the Osage began to expose one of the most chilling conspiracies in American history.