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Tag: Christian Bale

  • Michael Mann’s ‘Heat 2’ Has Found Its Cast. And It Is Great for the Film Bros

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    The news that a Heat 2 was in the works delighted fans of Michael Mann’s original film. But then came the important question: What would a story for Heat 2 look like? Luckily, there’s a book for that!

    The novel, written by Mann and Meg Gardiner, is both a prequel and a sequel to the original film. Now though, the new film is starting to feel a lot more real with some pretty exciting casting. We don’t yet know how the novel will play into the film but we do know that both Leonardo DiCaprio and, reportedly, Christian Bale will join the Mann picture.

    Bale was speaking with journalist Jake Hamilton for the film The Bride when he gave some exciting information to Hamilton. “I’ll be back in Chicago soon for Heat 2!” Bale also spoke with Chalice Williams for Black Girl Nerds and hinted at his role in Heat 2. When he saw the posters she had hanging up on the wall behind her, he said “You know what’ll go great up there? Heat 2!”

    The original film is described as follows: “Master criminal Neil McCauley (Robert De Niro) is trying to control the rogue actions of one of his men, while also planning one last big heist before retiring. Meanwhile, Lieutenant Hanna (Al Pacino) attempts to track down McCauley as he deals with the chaos in his own life, including the infidelity of his wife (Diane Venora) and the mental health of his stepdaughter (Natalie Portman). McCauley and Hanna discover a mutual respect, even as they try to thwart each other’s plans.”

    We don’t yet know who DiCaprio and Bale would play respectively but there have also been rumors that Stephen Graham, of Adolescence fame, would play Neil McCauley in this new film.

    It feels great having Christian Bale back in the fold

    DiCaprio has been consistently working for most his life, with him releasing roughly one film a year for the last few years. Bale, on the other hand, takes a bit longer between projects. As someone who loves Bale’s work as I do, it is nice to see him working on projects more regularly now.

    With the release of The Bride and the release of Madden later this year, Bale is back in a way we haven’t seen in a while. For most of the 2000s and into the 2010s, Bale had multiple movies out a year. But in the last 6 years, the amount of films he’s been working on has shifted. The last release was Pale Blue Eyes on Netflix.

    So for someone like me, who grew up in the age of Christian Bale films, it is exciting to see him “back” and arguably better than ever.

    (featured image: MGM)

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    Rachel Leishman

    Editor in Chief

    Rachel Leishman (She/Her) is the Editor in Chief of the Mary Sue. She’s been a writer professionally since 2016 but was always obsessed with movies and television and writing about them growing up. A lover of Spider-Man and Wanda Maximoff’s biggest defender, she has interests in all things nerdy and a cat named Benjamin Wyatt the cat. If you want to talk classic rock music or all things Harrison Ford, she’s your girl but her interests span far and wide. Yes, she knows she looks like Florence Pugh. She has multiple podcasts, normally has opinions on any bit of pop culture, and can tell you can actors entire filmography off the top of her head. Her current obsession is Glen Powell’s dog, Brisket.

    Her work at the Mary Sue often includes Star Wars, Marvel, DC, movie reviews, and interviews.

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    Rachel Leishman

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  • How Music Helped Inspire the Not-Musical Stars of ‘The Bride!’

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    Despite what its trailers may have you think, The Bride! isn’t actually a musical. But it does have a lot of singing, though, and a playlist of singers that have helped shape its title character.

    Said playlist comes courtesy of star Jessie Buckley, who told Entertainment Weekly music was a “massive part” of her various roles in the film—she plays the title character, Ida, both pre- and post-death, as well as Frankenstein creator Mary Shelley, and she “needed it all.” Both director-writer Maggie Gyllenhaal and co-lead Christian Bale helped her out, and the three made a group chat where they’d “just send each other different songs. Christian and Maggie are complete music nuts.”

    Such songs ranged from “really dirty, naughty songs from the 1920s,” like Ma Rainey’s 1924 song “Shave ‘Em Dry,” to “Ladies and Gentleman” from the rock band Spiritualized. During the interview, Buckley also listed off “PJ Harvey, Sinead O’Connor, Björk, all these wild, incredible, punk-rock, 1920s tap music.” One specific song she listed off was Joni Mitchell’s “‘A Case of You,’” which she found representative of the love story between Ida and Frank.

    Speaking of Frank, Buckley says Bale based his character on Sid Vicious. Early on in production, Gyllenhaal said Bale sent her a video of the rocker doing Frank Sinatra’s “My Way,” and that’s when it was decided, “Okay, our Frankenstein is punk in that classic sort of 1981 London way. That’s great.”

    You can listen to some of the songs Buckley, Gyllenhaal, and Bale shared with each other in the “Bridezilla” playlist below. The Bride! sings (or not) its way into theaters on March 6.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Justin Carter

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  • After Shutting His Hedge Fund, Michael Burry Launches a Substack to Speak ‘Freely’ on the A.I. Bubble

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    Michael Burry attends “The Big Short” New York screening at the Ziegfeld Theater on Nov. 23, 2015 in New York City. Astrid Stawiarz/Getty Images

    Michael Burry, the famed “Big Short” investor who predicted the 2008 housing crash, is once again warning of an emerging market bubble. Nearly two decades later, the hedge fund manager is now sounding alarms about the sky-high valuations of A.I. companies and is voicing them on a modern forum: Substack.

    Yesterday (Nov. 23), Burry launched a newsletter on the platform that will focus on his bearish views on the technology, among other topics. “The current market environment is contentious and running hot. Lots to talk about,” he wrote in the description accompanying his new Substack, which has already amassed more than 35,000 subscribers. Access costs $379 annually or $39 per month.

    One of his first posts draws parallels between the lead-up to the dot-com crash of the early 2000s and today’s A.I. boom. Burry compared Nvidia—which recently became the first company to reach $5 trillion in market cap—to Cisco, the tech company whose stock soared and then collapsed during the dot-com era.

    In an X post announcing his Substack, Burry expanded on the idea that the A.I. market may be echoing past bubbles. He cited former Federal Reserve chair Alan Greenspan, who assured investors in 2005 that a housing bubble “does not appear likely.” Burry then pointed out that Jerome Powell, the Fed’s current chair, has described A.I. companies as “profitable” and “different” from previous speculative manias.

    Michael Burry’s mixed track record

    Burry rose to prominence after spotting the warning signs of the subprime mortgage crisis—a bet that made him $100 million personally and earned more than $700 million for his clients. His prescient move was immortalized in Michael LewisThe Big Short and the subsequent film starring Christian Bale. After the global financial crisis, Warren Buffett told Congress that Burry was acting as a “Cassandra,” referring to the Trojan princess cursed to deliver true prophecies no one believed. His new newsletter pays homage to this feat through its name, “Cassandra Unchained.”

    In recent years, Burry has made several market calls that didn’t pan out, but his latest warnings about A.I. have sparked fresh attention online. The buzz began in October, when he returned to X after a two-year hiatus to post: “Sometimes, we see bubbles. Sometimes, there is something to do about it. Sometimes, the only winning move is not to play.”

    Soon after, his hedge fund, Scion Asset Management, disclosed in regulatory filings that it had a short bet worth more than $1 billion against Nvidia and Palantir, another hot A.I. stock. Burry closed his hedge fund a few days later and returned capital to investors.

    In his Substack description, Burry said Scion’s closure was partially motivated by a desire to share investment ideas more freely. “Running money professionally came with regulatory and compliance restrictions that effectively muzzled my ability to communicate,” he wrote. “These constraints meant I could only share cryptic fragments publicly, if at all.”

    Burry told readers to expect one to two posts a week, along with occasional Q&As, videos and guest contributions. Rather than placing bets, he’ll be breaking down markets.

    “I am not retired,” said Burry. “There is still nothing I enjoy more than analyzing companies and markets each and every day.”

    After Shutting His Hedge Fund, Michael Burry Launches a Substack to Speak ‘Freely’ on the A.I. Bubble

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    Alexandra Tremayne-Pengelly

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  • ‘Big Shot’ Michael Burry’s AI bubble warning also extends to crypto: Expert

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    After popular investor and hedge fund manager Michael Burry warned a bubble is forming in the artificial intelligence (AI) sector, an AI entrepreneur has warned that the crypto market has entered a “casino reality.”

    Burry, popular for shorting the housing market bubble collapse in 2008, recently cautioned traders against an AI bubble and singled out, in particular, Nvidia (Nasdaq: NVDA), Meta (Nasdaq: META), Oracle (NYSE: ORCL), and Palantir Technologies (Nasdaq: PLTR).

    Related: Economist sends startling warning after ‘Big Short’s AI call

    The 2008 episode was the subject of the Hollywood film The Big Short (2015) in which actor Christian Bale played Burry. The legendary trader had shorted overvalued sectors earlier too, such as shorting the dot-com bubble burst in 2000.

    Michael Burry, former head of Scion Capital Group LLC, works in his office in Cupertino, California, U.S., on Monday, Sept. 6, 2010.

    But Burry has now deregistered his hedge fund, Scion Asset Management. He said:

    “My estimation of values in securities is not now, and has not been for some time, in sync with the markets.”

    Eric Balchunas, the senior ETF analyst at Bloomberg, responded to the development and said nobody, including those who get portrayed by Christian Bale, knows the future.

    Ahmad Shadid, founder of O Foundation, a Swiss-based AI research lab echoed similiar sentiments but about the rallying crypto market which has come to a halt.

    He told TheStreet Roundtable, the crypto market has gone from a more “traditional” run in 2024 — with altcoins and crypto projects with actual utility gaining traction and retail investment — to a “completely crumbled, degen, casino reality” — only meme coins and such tokens gaining the attention of crypto retail.

    Crypto retail traders have increasingly realized that they are the exit liquidity, said Shadid.

    There is “blatant” manipulation of charts and there are so many pump-and-dump coins, so traders don’t bother to go for the highest-valued coins to make 2x-5x maximum, he added.

    Both crypto retail traders and founders have realized that VCs and market makers are only milking them, Shadid opined.

    The market is now in an “almost nuclear winter” where some projects with little adoption raise exorbitant amounts of money, only to end up being “forgotten and unused,” he said.

    If a project doesn’t have a token with 500x potential, it doesn’t find any takers even if it has actual utility, he expressed his frustration.

    Shadid said a lot of projects, including his own, now view crypto as a “toxic space” in which nothing matters other than the token.

    The founder concurred with Burry’s view that we are in an AI bubble but said a bearish outlook on Nvidia isn’t substantiated enough. However, he said the company’s valuation is getting dangerous.

    In fact, he is of the view that if and when the AI bubble bursts, useless AI companies operating at the App layer would collapse first. This, in turn, would affect Nvidia.

    Nonetheless, Shadid didn’t contend the fact that there is no going back from the “AI-native world.”

    This story was originally reported by TheStreet on Nov 14, 2025, where it first appeared in the MARKETS section. Add TheStreet as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

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  • Billie Eilish Broke up With Her Boyfriend After Daydreaming About This Celebrity

    Billie Eilish Broke up With Her Boyfriend After Daydreaming About This Celebrity

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    Celebrities, they’re just like us! More specifically, Billie Eilish is just like me. The singer-songwriter was interviewed by Amelia Dimoldenberg (Chicken Shop Date), where she admitted to a celebrity crush that may or may not be the inspiration for “Ocean Eyes” but is the reason she broke up with an ex.

    “Ocean Eyes” is my favorite of Eilish’s songs and I have thought of many celebrities that could have inspired it. So when Dimoldenberg asked her if the song was about her fellow nominee, Cillian Murphy, Eilish admitted that it could have been. “I probably wrote it about Cillian, yeah. Big fan of Cillian’s eyes in Dunkirk,” she said before bringing up another Christopher Nolan film. “Batman is the one though.”

    Clearly, Eilish and I have the same taste in men. To be fair, my tag for Cillian Murphy on Letterboxd does say “Cillian Murphy got some blue eyes, damn.” More than that though, one of my favorite actors of all time is Christian Bale. So this response naturally made me want to be her best friend. Well, that and “What Was I Made For?” But hey, we could at least talk about American Psycho!

    Dimoldenberg then asked Eilish if Batman was her favorite superhero. Eilish admitted she didn’t know much about superheroes but loved The Dark Knight. Girl, if only you’d watch Batman Begins or The Dark Knight Rises! Then you’d get Bale AND Murphy in the same films!

    Eilish’s crush on Christian Bale inadvertently led her to a breakup, because she had a dream about Bale. Okay, but what happened in that dream though?

    Sorry to that man

    When talking with Dimoldenberg and her brother and writing partner, Finneas O’Connell, Eilish said that she had a dream where she was sitting with Bale at a restaurant. The dream was enough for her to realize that the relationship she was in just wasn’t working.

    “A couple years ago I had a dream about Christian Bale and it was at a little cafe in the sunlight,” she said, basically describing the end of The Dark Knight Rises where Bruce Wayne and Selina Kyle (Anne Hathaway) see Alfred (Sir Michael Caine) at the Italian cafe. “And it made me realize that I had to break up with my boyfriend at the time.” 

    Both Dimoldenberg and O’Connell were shocked by the news, but Eilish went on to clarify, saying “No, like genuinely. I woke up and I came to my senses,” she said. “It’s over.”

    The power that Christian Bale has is palpable, I say as a Newsies/Swing Kids super fan. But the fact that Eilish straight up ended a relationship because of Christian Bale? That is so me-coded I cannot even comprehend it and it does make Eilish that much more iconic to me.

    (featured image: Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic)

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    Rachel Leishman

    Rachel Leishman (She/Her) is an Assistant Editor at the Mary Sue. She’s been a writer professionally since 2016 but was always obsessed with movies and television and writing about them growing up. A lover of Spider-Man and Wanda Maximoff’s biggest defender, she has interests in all things nerdy and a cat named Benjamin Wyatt the cat. If you want to talk classic rock music or all things Harrison Ford, she’s your girl but her interests span far and wide. Yes, she knows she looks like Florence Pugh.

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    Rachel Leishman

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  • Revenge Is A Dish Best Served In Subterfuge: The Pale Blue Eye

    Revenge Is A Dish Best Served In Subterfuge: The Pale Blue Eye

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    It’s easy to forget about Edgar Allan Poe’s “lost months” at West Point. For any cursory knowledge of the author would never lead one to guess he was much of a military man (which he, of course, really wasn’t). And yet, so much of that brief time at the Academy was certain to solidify his confirmed identity as a “thinking man.” More specifically, a morbid thinking man. While Scott Cooper’s The Pale Blue Eye is entirely fictional (and based on Louis Bayard’s 2003 novel of the same name, which itself won an Edgar Allan Poe Award), the one fact it’s grounded in is Poe’s attendance at West Point circa 1830. Prior to that, it was in 1827 that Poe enlisted in the U.S. Army after struggling to pay for his education. So yes, it was a case of desperate times calling for desperate measures, and it didn’t take long for Poe to rally for being discharged and sent to the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, New York instead. It is perhaps this snowy, bleak setting (read: Upstate New York) that gives The Pale Blue Eye its Sleepy Hollow-esque quality. Except with far more seriousness than Tim Burton is usually wont to offer in his movies.

    Indeed, by commencing with a Poe quote from “The Premature Burial,” (“The boundaries which divide Life from Death are at best shadowy and vague. Who shall say where the one ends, and where the other begins?”), followed by the stark image of a man hanging from a tree, Cooper delves right into the macabre and doesn’t relent. For, going beyond just the one-trick pony note of “macabre” (as Burton also showed again in the softcore gloom of Wednesday), Cooper weaves the insidiousness of the murders of cadets that begin with that hanged man into a larger, more profound message about oppressive patriarchal institutions that churn out “Men” with The System’s seal of approval.

    But The Pale Blue Eye is hardly any kind of “stylized biopic” about Poe, for his character is but an auxiliary one to the lead: retired detective Augustus Landor (Christian Bale). Summoned to the Academy after Cadet Leroy Fry’s (Steven Maier) body is discovered at that tree, Landor is plucked out of said retirement by Captain Hitchcock (Simon McBurney) and Superintendent Thayer (the perpetually sour-faced Timothy Spall). The latter being known as the real-life “Father of West Point.” Detective Landor was a father once, too—though his daughter, Mathilde a.k.a. “Mattie” (Hadley Robinson), has been gone for some time, described as having “run off” somewhere. This would be lonely and heartbreaking for a father under any circumstances, but Detective Landor’s sentiments are made all the more pronounced by the fact that he has been a widower for the past two years. Granted, that hasn’t meant his bed has been cold, with a local barmaid named Patsy (Charlotte Gainsbourg, too underused in this role) often spending her nights in his cottage. It’s at the bar she works where Detective Landor makes further acquaintance with Poe (Harry Melling, in the part he was born to play), who previously advised him that the murderer he’s looking for is surely a poet.

    At the bar, Poe elaborates that because of the nature of the crime (a man’s heart being ripped out after his death), the man Landor is looking for simply has to be a poet for, “The heart is a symbol or it is nothing. Now take away the symbol and what do you have? It’s a fistful of muscle of no more aesthetic interest than a bladder. Now to remove a man’s heart is to traffic in symbol. And who better equipped for such labor than a poet?” Landor briefly indulges him before moving on in his search for a culprit, eventually deciding that Poe could be very useful to assisting in the case. For his soft-spoken, unimposing demeanor makes him ideal for hiding among the shadows and gathering intel about potential suspects. It is in this way that Cooper’s underlying theme about such institutions as the U.S. Military Academy gradually comes into the spotlight. For, soon enough, when Poe becomes a suspect himself, he laments to Landor, “If I were to kill every cadet who had abused me during my tenure here, I’m afraid you would find the Corps of Cadets reduced to less than a dozen. Now, if you must know, I’ve been a figure of fun from my very first day here. My manner, my age, my person. My…aesthetics. If I had a thousand lifetimes, I could not begin to address all the injuries that have been done to me.”

    Thus, we have a prime example of a “fraternalistic” institution established in the United States’ early history serving as one of the most germinal paragons of how patriarchy deliberately seeks to quash men like Poe. Those gentle, delicate spirits that the “desirable” meathead archetype can’t understand, therefore must mock and subdue. Fittingly enough, a review for the novel version of this tale from The New York Times commented of this oppressive landscape marking Poe’s earlier years, “The regimented, gloomy world of West Point, with all its staring eyes and missing hearts, forms a perfectly plausible back story to the real-life Poe’s penchant for tintinnabulation, morbidity and pale young women, first initial L.” That woman, in this instance, being Lea Marquis (Lucy Boynton, the Anya Taylor-Joy to Melling’s erstwhile Harry Beltik role in The Queen’s Gambit). A pale girl, to be sure, for she is afflicted with some mysterious illness that makes her cough a lot and go into arbitrary seizures that make her look decidedly “possessed by the devil.” Her brother, Cadet Artemus Marquis (Harry Lawtey), is of the meathead variety at the Academy. A real ringleader, of sorts—as Poe finds out after being invited to a secret society-type meeting by Artemus after curfew.

    The boys (posing as men) at this little gathering consist of people like Cadet Randy Ballinger (Fred Hechinger), parading an antagonistic air toward anyone perceived as weak, such as Poe. It is in moments like these that Landor’s contempt for an institution of West Point’s nature proves what he says to Captain Hitchcock when the latter demands, “Mr. Landor, do you harbor a latent hostility toward this Academy?” Landor replies, “I am risking my life on behalf of your precious institution. But yes. I do believe that the Academy takes away a young man’s will. It fences him with regulations and rules. Deprives him of reason. It makes him less human.” Hitchcock, offended, asks, “Are you implying the Academy is to blame for these deaths?” Landor assents, “Someone connected to the Academy, yes. Hence, the Academy itself.” Hitchcock decries, “Well that’s absurd. By your standard, every crime committed by a Christian will be a stain on Christ.” Landor confirms solemnly, “And so it is.”

    As we learn more about why Landor is so disgusted with how such an institution as the Academy does stamp out the will (and heart) of many a young man, turning them cold and unfeeling, we see Poe’s own heart growing fonder of Lea. But even she has her special machinations when it comes to stringing Poe along, never knowing that, in this alternate account of his history, she will be the true inspiration for “The Tell-Tale Heart.” Landor, in his own way, as well. In point of fact, this entire cutthroat milieu is what Cooper wants to reiterate helped to form Poe as an author. As Cooper himself remarked, “…it’s these events that occur in our film that shaped his worldview and helped him become the writer that he became—with the recurring themes that deal with the questions of death and the effects of decomposition and reanimation of the dead and mourning; all those are considered part of his dark romanticism.”

    His worldview was also undeniably shaped by having been subjected to the “frat boy fuckery” of both the U.S. Military and its West Point Academy, where, like Landor, Poe no doubt learned something about the cruelty of most men, ready to take their repressed urges and latent rage on someone else more powerless—in this case, an innocent girl.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • The Haunting of Harry Melling

    The Haunting of Harry Melling

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    Each of Melling’s characters share an intensity that few performers can muster, let alone replicate. “I think that comes from a place of exposing your inside, your inner life to people. And I don’t know if that’s where the haunted quality comes from,” he tells Vanity Fair. “I mean, my head goes to The Devil All the Time. Certainly there’s something that is definitely eating him away, and Poe to a certain extent as well.”

    He’s always striving for difference, so it becomes hard to see similarities. Melling admits he might just be too close to it. “A friend said this to me: ‘You always play restless characters. They’re always on edge in some way,’ which I thought was an interesting observation,” he says. “But it’s very hard to take a step back and to try and work out what is the thing that truly lights the fire in terms of finding a relationship between those performances.”

    There are other places you’ve seen Melling: He was the pharma villain Merrick in the Charlize Theron action film The Old Guard, Malcolm in the Denzel Washington version of The Tragedy of Macbeth, and Anya Taylor-Joy’s rival turned ally, Harry Beltik, in The Queen’s Gambit. 

    But there is one performance for which he is most widely known, although people tend not to recognize him unless it’s pointed out. He was Dudley Dursley, the no-good Muggle cousin in the Harry Potter films. And that role kind of haunts him too.

    It’s not that he’s ashamed of Dudley. Melling is proud of his work as Harry Potter’s spoiled bully, but he has worked so hard to escape that role, and yet…it’s the one everyone always brings up—as we’re doing now. 

    Asked if this part of every interview is a pain in the ass, Melling laughs. “No…I mean, the easy answer is yes, but that’s not the full answer,” he says. “I’m completely and overwhelmingly appreciative of being a part of something as brilliant as Harry Potter. I really am. I’m amazed at generationally how many people have been wrapped up in those stories. But it is amazing that something you did when you were 10 is still something that is very much a priority on the list of talking points. It’s just something that I’ve kind of got used to in a certain sense.”

    Also, he understands the curiosity. If he still looked the same, if he was playing similar dim-witted brutes, or just stopped acting completely, people wouldn’t be as thunderstruck when they see who he has become now. 

    “Part of the fascination is like when you talk about old schoolmates and, ‘Oh, they’re doing this now?’ It’s that same culture of being fascinated by, ‘Oh, you’ll never guess what so-and-so is doing,’” Melling says. “I completely get it, but it’s a mixed bag of both feeling extremely grateful, but naturally, you want to move on. You want to be talking about the work that you’re doing now.”

    That brings us back to Edgar Allan Poe. To look at Melling in The Pale Blue Eye is to see a face that looks eerily familiar. We’ve seen it staring forlornly from the textbooks and author bios about the “Raven” and “Fall of the House of Usher” writer since time immemorial. Even if he doesn’t have Poe’s mustache, or the lines from his full 40 years, evident in daguerreotypes from the end of his life, Melling has the eyes—and the sense of dread and sadness welled within them.

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    Anthony Breznican

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  • F Is For Fascism, Not Freedom: Amsterdam Shows That, When It Comes to the Many Incongruities of U.S. Politics, History Repeats

    F Is For Fascism, Not Freedom: Amsterdam Shows That, When It Comes to the Many Incongruities of U.S. Politics, History Repeats

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    Considering David O. Russell is the type of person who would write his college thesis on the United States intervention in Chile, his commitment to “being political” (when he’s not being philosophical) in the majority of his films is par for the course. What annoyed conservatives would call the usual “Hollywood liberal bullshit.” But Amsterdam is by far Russell’s most grandiose statement on American politics. Particularly as it pertains to the recent attempt at a coup on January 6, 2021. And this could likely be part of the reason why Americans seemed so averse to watching it, as the film has now notoriously bombed at the box office (costing the studio roughly one hundred million dollars in losses—but it’s not like they’re not good for it, right?).

    With a fresh release in Europe, however, perhaps the movie will have slightly better odds at attracting a more open and understanding audience. An ilk that can see the U.S. and its government objectively for what it is: positively villainous. And yes, for a movie called Amsterdam, very little of the plot actually takes place there. Most of the stage, in fact, is set in New York, where Russell opens the timeline in 1933—better known as: the height of the Great Depression. An economic circumstance that provided plenty of opportunity for demagogues around the world to take power (including, obviously, Hitler). As well as the rich financial backers who would want such a thing to occur in order to influence and control that power.

    Ah, but before all that, there was “the war to end all wars.” A real laugh of a tagline for World War I. But nonetheless, simps who trusted in their government went to battle without question for that war. Men like Burt Berendsen (Christian Bale) and Harold Woodsman (John David Washington). The former is a doctor essentially forced to use his skills overseas by his Park Avenue parents-in-law who think this is what will make him respectable in the eyes of their peers. The latter is among the many Black men forced to wear French uniforms while fighting against the enemy because the white men don’t want to be seen sharing the same fatigues, as they represent the “real” America. And oh, how they do with that “logic.” This blatant form of racism that the white soldiers still find time to employ despite being, you know, up against death every day is something that upsets General Bill Meekins (Ed Begley Jr.) greatly. And it’s part of why he asks Burt to step in as the doctor for the Black soldiers, being that he doesn’t seem too prone to discrimination a.k.a. just leaving them to bleed out because they’re Black.

    So it is that an unbreakable bond is formed between Burt and Harold. One that transmogrifies into a triangular bond with a nurse named Valerie (Margot Robbie), who takes care of both of them when they end up shrapnel-filled in her hospital. Shrapnel that, as she eventually shows them, she turns into art (one of the most charming and Wes Anderson meets Jean-Pierre Jeunet details of Amsterdam). This comes after also revealing that she’s not actually French, though she has been speaking it the entire time (for it’s easy to fool non-French speaking Americans of one’s “authenticity”). But that’s just one of the many “kooky quirks” of Valerie, in addition to her knowing a man who can help Burt pin down a decent glass eye—having lost his while “fighting for democracy,” or something.

    The British Paul Canterbury (Mike Meyers, who likes to play characters with “eye things,” if View From the Top is an indication) knows all about the nuances of the eye. Accordingly, he offers Burt a quality glass one for his trouble of coming all the way to Amsterdam, where Valerie has ferried him and Harold. In Paul’s company is an American named Henry Norcross (Michael Shannon), another man using glass eye manufacturing as a front for intelligence gathering. Valerie has done some of her own for them in the past, and knows that things work quid pro quo. That, one day, they’ll call upon the trio for something in return.

    But, for now, this period in Amsterdam is what Valerie calls “the dream.” Whatever comes after will be horrible, which is why she’s adamant to Burt that they shouldn’t break up their Bande à Part ways (not that she uses that term—since said movie wouldn’t come out until the 60s) just so he can go back home to his wife, Beatrice (Andrea Riseborough). A wife that so obviously doesn’t give a shit about him, especially not now that he’s “mangled.” Cast out of Park Avenue, Burt goes rogue on practicing medicine, specializing solely in the specific pains of veterans. Those who, in addition to the presence of his own constant physical pain, have inspired him to cook up various chemical compounds commonly referred to as “drugs.” Ones he says need to be created because what’s out there ain’t cuttin’ the mustard in terms of catering to the level of agony veterans have.

    This is back in the New York of 1933, when fifteen years have passed since that glorious Amsterdam blip that allowed Valerie and Harold to love each other freely, without the tarring and feathering of U.S. racism. Once Burt breaks up the triad, however, it all dismantles. For Valerie is asked by Harold to pull some strings with her mysterious, but powerful family—the one she ran away from—to get Burt out of jail. Because of course that’s where he would find himself for his ribald, experimental ways upon returning to the Land of the Subjugated and Repressed. Alas, once Valerie does that, it means her family will know where she is, and demand her return. So it is that she pulls the “I’ll leave you before you leave me” maneuver on Harold, departing from Amsterdam soon after she calls in the favor without forewarning him.

    With all of this packed into the first hour, Russell has already woven a complicated web to land us in “present-day” 1933, where we first encountered Burt, and where Bill Meekins’ daughter, Elizabeth (Taylor Swift), has enlisted the services of Harold and Burt to perform an autopsy on her father. Incidentally, that autopsy leads to a budding romance for Burt when he meets the attending medical examiner, Irma St. Clair (Zoe Saldaña). In any case, Liz doesn’t believe her dad simply “died”—she’s convinced he was murdered on his way back from Europe. On a side note, Swift herself might be deemed part of the box office bombing of Amsterdam, being that she’s somewhat illustrious for only acting in doomed projects (ahem, Cats). Indeed, it’s surprising that Swift agreed to be in the movie at all when taking into account her fixation with being “aboveboard” vis-à-vis her squeaky-clean persona. This includes not working with people who have been accused of sexual harassment or violence—a.k.a. David O. Russell and Christian Bale.

    Those critical of certain people’s continued ability to “separate the artist from the work” would likely accuse Swift and co. of “following the wrong god”—a phrase used throughout Amsterdam to refer to how Burt followed the wrong god home from the war. The god of false love. Other men, powerful men, continued to follow the god of power. Stopping at nothing to get more of it, sort of like Prescott Bush. But the Business Plot that Amsterdam centers its events around is not the core of the film. Ultimately, the crux of it is a simple message that has been repeated to deaf ears though the ages: love is more potent than hate. The latter always being the “wrong god.” Something that General Gil Dillenbeck (Robert De Niro) is particularly aware of with his vast experience in war.

    Of all the characters—and there are a great many—in Amsterdam, Dillenbeck is the only one based on a real person, specifically Smedley Butler. The man tapped by a cabal of rich businessmen to influence veterans to stage a coup against the “cripple” president, Franklin Roosevelt. Indeed, the eugenics “philosophy” that was very in vogue at the time (leading to the most extreme version of it in the form of concentration camps) also features prominently in Amsterdam.

    As for the statement Russell is making on the nefarious machinations of the “elite” (only deemed as such because of their endlessly deep pockets and not their character), it’s a resonant theme that has only become more pronounced in the twenty-first century. To boot, it seems no coincidence that one of Sinclair Lewis’ most famed novels, It Can’t Happen Here, was released in 1935—just two years after the Business Plot. Regardless of many still believing that Butler was either a quack or blowing the “plot” out of proportion, the fact remains that even a casual conversation among the rich about wanting to manufacture a government like one of their products is not to be taken lightly.

    Regarding the coterie of unique and memorable characters Russell came up with to weave a tapestry around this historical event, he described it best when he said, “For me as I think of this guy [that Bale plays], I always like outsiders. I always like people on the edges, on the fringes.” Thanks to Amsterdam, Russell might fully become that person in Hollywood. But maybe he’s not too bent out of shape about it, so long as the same Santa Monica diners where he thought up the script for Amsterdam with Bale allow him to keep coming. And dreaming. Those diners being almost like what Amsterdam was to the thick-as-thieves trio in the film. For it was only outside the diner, when the film was made and released, that the dream got crushed.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • First Look at The Pale Blue Eye: Christian Bale’s Sinister Edgar Allan Poe Drama

    First Look at The Pale Blue Eye: Christian Bale’s Sinister Edgar Allan Poe Drama

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    The Pale Blue Eye, which debuts Dec. 23rd in theaters and on Jan. 6th on Netflix, is Bale’s third collaboration with filmmaker Scott Cooper (Crazy Heart, Out of the Furnace), who has been developing this movie for nearly a decade. 

    “I thought, “Okay, I have an opportunity to do three things with this film: Fashion a whodunnit, a father and son love story, and then a Poe origin story,”  the screenwriter-director says. “Poe at this young age was quite warm and witty and humorous and very Southernly. The experiences that I’m putting forth in this film led him down the darker paths that we have come to know him for.”

    Bale’s 19th-century detective, Augustus Landor, has devoted his life to using modern forensics to expose wrongdoers and bring them to justice. He’s since ended his career and retired to the woods of upstate New York, but when men from the nearby military academy of West Point are found hanged—with their hearts cut from their bodies—he is recruited to solve the case.

    “He’s someone who is obviously accustomed to observing other people rather than being observed, due to the nature of his profession,” Bale says. “He’s successful at what he’s done, but has now completed that chapter of his life. He certainly has adopted a certain way of living, which isn’t really working for him anymore.”

    Then the murder case brings him into contact with Poe, who is also a cadet at the academy. “He dismisses him initially, but comes to find him to be the centerpiece of his life, which he would be quite embarrassed to admit, with his age and standing and everything,” Bale says. “He does find himself maybe learning new things, and is certainly reminded of things that he’d forgotten about life.”

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    Anthony Breznican

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  • ‘Amsterdam’ and ‘Lyle Lyle’ struggle, letting ‘Smile’ repeat

    ‘Amsterdam’ and ‘Lyle Lyle’ struggle, letting ‘Smile’ repeat

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    NEW YORK — David O. Russell’s star-studded 1930s mystery “Amsterdam” flopped and the children’s book adaptation “Lyle, Lyle, Crocodile” debuted softly, allowing the horror thriller “Smile” to repeat atop the box office in U.S. and Canada theaters, according to studio estimates Sunday.

    Neither new release caught fire with moviegoers but the disappointment was most acute for “Amsterdam,” a poorly reviewed $80 million screwball romp starring Christian Bale, Margot Robbie and John David Washington. The 20th Century Studios production, co-funded by New Regency and released by the Walt Disney Co., opened with just $6.5 million — a stinging rebuke for the decorated filmmaker of “Silver Linings Playbook” whose splashy ensemble also includes Chris Rock, Anya Taylor-Joy and Taylor Swift.

    Sony Pictures’ “Lyle, Lyle, Crocodile,” a musical based on Bernard Waber’s children’s book featuring Shawn Mendes as the voice of a computer-generated reptile, fared better, collecting $11.5 million in ticket sales. But that still was a relatively modest result, especially for the first major family movie to land in theaters since the summer. The film, which cost $50 million to make, could benefit from children being out of school for Monday’s Columbus Day and little kid-movie competition this month.

    A week after topping the charts with a $22-million launch, Paramount Pictures’ “Smile” remained No. 1 with $17.6 million at the box office — an impressive second week for the modestly budget horror flick. Horror films usually fall steeply in their second week of release but “Smile,” a creepy thriller about trauma and evil spirits, dropped just 22%. To keep the momentum, Paramount on Sunday announced a weeklong series of promotions, including discounted tickets and a “Smile” NFT giveaway for some ticket-buyers on Thursday.

    The best news for Hollywood over the weekend was a sign that adult audiences, after two pandemic-plagued seasons, may be eager to come out for the fall’s top awards contenders. Todd Field’s “Tár,” starring Cate Blanchett as a world-renown conductor, debuted with $160,000 in four New York and Los Angeles theaters, good for a stellar $40,000 per-theater average. After its premiere at the Venice Film Festival, Field’s first film since 2006’s “Little Children” has drawn raves from critics and Oscar nomination predictions for Blanchett.

    The promising start will encourage a long line of awards contenders coming in the next few weeks, including MGM’s Emmett Till drama “Till,” MUBI’s Park Chan-wook thriller “Decision to Leave” and Searchlight Pictures’ “The Banshees of Inisherin,” by writer-director Martin McDonagh.

    At the same time, a prolonged sluggish period in theaters may be coming to a close. Not since “Bullet Train” opened in early August has a film cleared $23 million, a downturn owed in part to a light release schedule. But next week, Universal Pictures debuts “Halloween Ends” both in theaters and on Peacock. The following weekend sees the release of Warner Bros.’ “Black Adam,” with Dwayne Johnson.

    Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Comscore. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.

    1. “Smile,” $17.6 million.

    2. “Lyle, Lyle, Crocodile,” $11.5 million.

    3. “Amsterdam,” $6.5 million.

    4. “The Woman King,” $5.3 million.

    5. “Don’t Worry Darling,” $3.5 million.

    6. “Avatar,” $2.6 million.

    7. “Barbarian,” $2.2 million.

    8. “Bros,” $2.2 million.

    9. “Ponniyin Selvan Part One,” $910,000.

    10. “Terrifier 2,” $825,000.

    ———

    Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP

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  • Christian Bale Confirms Defending Amy Adams During ‘American Hustle’ On-Set Drama

    Christian Bale Confirms Defending Amy Adams During ‘American Hustle’ On-Set Drama

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    Christian Bale says he had to act as a “mediator” between actor Amy Adams and director David O. Russell during filming of the 2013 movie “American Hustle.”

    In GQ’s November cover story, published Wednesday, Bale recalled trying to keep the peace between the two. Adams had previously said she butted heads with Russell on the film set.

    “If I can have some sense of understanding of where it’s coming from, then I do tend to attempt to be a mediator,” the Oscar-winning actor said about the friction between Adams and Russell. “That’s just in my nature, to try to say, ‘Hey, come on, let’s go and sit down and figure that out. There’s gotta be a way of making this all work.’”

    Adams and Bale filming a scene from “American Hustle” in 2013.

    Boston Herald via Getty Images

    In 2016, Adams told British GQ that the “Silver Linings Playbook” director made her cry during her time on “American Hustle.”

    Adams said she also learned through an email hack at Sony that she was being paid less than her male co-stars, including Bale, which added to her frustrations.

    “I was really just devastated on set,” Adams said to British GQ.

    The Sony hack also revealed that Russell “so abused Amy Adams that Christian Bale got in his face and told him to stop acting like an asshole” on the “American Hustle” set.

    Bale’s interviewer noted in his recent GQ profile that when he questioned Bale about standing up to Russell on Adams’ behalf, he responded by nodding “yes.”

    Adams, Bradley Cooper and David O. Russell at the Critics' Choice Awards in 2013.
    Adams, Bradley Cooper and David O. Russell at the Critics’ Choice Awards in 2013.

    Christopher Polk via Getty Images

    Bale, however, was careful with his choice of words while confirming that he stuck up for Adams, saying “there are gonna be upsets,” given the “crazy creative talent” of Adams and Russell.

    Adams is not the first actor to report having difficulty working with Russell.

    In 2004, a video from the set of “I Heart Huckabees” showed Russell yelling profanities at star Lily Tomlin and angrily throwing props. In 2015, TMZ reported that Russell and Jennifer Lawrence engaged in a heated conversation on the set of “Joy.” Lawrence did try to clear up “rumors” that they fought by releasing a statement that Russell “is one of my closest friends and we have an amazing collaborative working relationship.”

    Although Bale told GQ that he acted as a “mediator” on the set of “American Hustle,” he’s also been caught being far less composed on set.

    In 2009, a viral video seemed to show Bale viciously ripping into the director of photography on the set of “Terminator Salvation.” Shane Hurlbut received the profanity-filled tongue-lashing after he made the mistake of walking into Bale’s scene during a take.

    Bale later confirmed that he did have the on-set temper tantrum and apologized for his actions, calling his behavior “inexcusable” and admitting he “acted like a punk.”

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