ReportWire

Tag: harrison ford

  • Anthony Mackie Reveals The 6 Words From Harrison Ford That Put Everyone At Ease

    Anthony Mackie Reveals The 6 Words From Harrison Ford That Put Everyone At Ease

    [ad_1]

    Anthony Mackie said it was “intimidating” to have screen legend Harrison Ford join the cast of the upcoming film “Captain America: Brave New World.”

    “I was so fucking nervous I couldn’t remember my lines. He’s Harrison fucking Ford,” Mackie, who plays the title role in the flick, told IndieWire.

    But Ford’s wit put everyone at ease.

    “There is this aura about him. But he dispels that really quickly because he’s such a cool guy,” Mackie said. “He’s everything a movie star should be. He would say, ‘Let’s shoot this piece of shit.’ And everybody was like, ‘Yeah, let’s shoot this shit.’”

    Ford is joining the Marvel Cinematic Universe as Thaddeus “Thunderbolt” Ross, a character previously portrayed by William Hurt, who died last year at the age of 71.

    Mackie said he worked closely with Ford.

    “We spent a good bit of time together,” he told IndieWire. “Ross and Cap have always had that relationship, where they were friends and they respected each other, but they always bumped heads. That’s their relationship in the storyline.”

    Ford will continue in the role within the MCU, as he’s also set to appear as Ross in “Thunderbolts.”

    Ford, who turns 81 next week, is currently appearing on the big screen in “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny,” the fifth and final film in the franchise, and is likely to nab at least one and possibly two Emmy nominations later this month for his roles on “Shrinking” and “1923.”

    “Captain America: Brave New World” is set for release next summer, while “Thunderbolts” will hit the big screen in December 2024.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Anthony Mackie Admits It Felt ‘So Intimidating’ To Work With ‘Captain America’ Co-Star Harrison Ford Until He Said, ‘Let’s Shoot This Piece of S**t’

    Anthony Mackie Admits It Felt ‘So Intimidating’ To Work With ‘Captain America’ Co-Star Harrison Ford Until He Said, ‘Let’s Shoot This Piece of S**t’

    [ad_1]

    By Brent Furdyk.

    When Anthony Mackie makes his big-screen debut as Captain America in the upcoming “Captain America: Brave New World”, he’ll be joined by Marvel newcomer Harrison Ford.

    Ford is stepping into the role of General Thaddeus “Thunderbolt” Ross, played by the late William Hurt in previous MCU features.

    Speaking with Inverse, Mackie admitted that working with the 80-year-old screen icon was a nerve-racking experience — until Ford set him at ease.

    “The first day was so intimidating,” Mackie recalled.

    “I was so f**king nervous I couldn’t remember my lines. He’s Harrison f**king Ford. There is this aura about him,” he continued.

    “But he dispels that really quickly because he’s such a cool guy. He’s everything a movie star should be,” Mackie added. “He would say, ‘Let’s shoot this piece of shit.’ And everybody was like, ‘Yeah, let’s shoot this shit.’”

    While plot details for the upcoming Marvel feature are being kept top secret as usual, Marvel has confirmed that Ford’s character is president of the United States.

    “We spent a good bit of time together,” Mackie explained of the dynamic between the characters. “Ross and Cap have always had that relationship, where they were friends and they respected each other, but they always bumped heads. That’s their relationship in the storyline.”

    “Captain America: Brave New World” is scheduled to hit theatres on May 3, 2024.

    [ad_2]

    Brent Furdyk

    Source link

  • Karen Allen on one last hurrah as Marion Ravenwood in ‘Indiana Jones: Dial of Destiny’

    Karen Allen on one last hurrah as Marion Ravenwood in ‘Indiana Jones: Dial of Destiny’

    [ad_1]

    NEW YORK (AP) — Indiana Jones. Karen Allen always knew he’d come walking back through her door.

    Since 1981’s “Raiders of the Lost Ark,” Allen has been only a sporadic presence in the subsequent sequels. But the glow of the freckled, big-eyed actor who so memorably played Marion Ravenwood has only grown stronger over time.

    Indiana Jones may be one of the movies’ most iconic characters, but he’s always needed a good foil. It was Kate Capshaw and Ke Huy Quan in “Temple of Doom” and Sean Connery in “The Last Crusade.” Yet none could top, or out drink, Allen’s Marion, a wisecracking, naturalistic beauty and swashbuckling heir to screwball legends like Katharine Hepburn and Irene Dunne.

    Allen’s place in the latest and last “Indiana Jones,” the just-released “Dial of Destiny,” has long been a mystery. Now that the movie is in theaters — spoiler alert — we can finally let the cat out of the bag. Allen returns. And while her role isn’t large — tragedy has driven Marion and Indiana apart — it’s extremely poignant in how she figures into Harrison Ford’s swan song as Indiana Jones.

    “Secrets,” Allen chuckled in a recent interview, “are not my specialty.”

    Allen, 71, was a magnetic presence in some memorable 1970s and ‘80s films, including 1978’s “Animal House” (the performance that caught Steven Spielberg’s eye), 1984’s “Starman” and 1988’s “Scrooged.” But while she’s steadily worked ever since, the era’s male-dominated Hollywood often seemed to squander her talent. Allen has lived for decades in the Berkshires, where she opened a textiles and clothing boutique and has frequently performed at Tanglewood.

    Allen also returned to Marion in 2008’s “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.” But as much as “Dial of Destiny” signifies the end of Ford’s run as Indy, it’s also Allen’s goodbye to her most beloved character. This time, Indiana’s sidekick went to Phoebe Waller-Bridge, the “Fleabag” creator and star. Allen, praising Waller-Bridge as a strong woman, approves.

    “If it wasn’t going to be me,” said Allen, “I’m glad it was her.”

    ___

    AP: Did Spielberg or “Dial of Destiny” director James Mangold reach out to you about returning as Marion?

    ALLEN: There was a period of time when Steven was going to direct the film. It was my understanding — although I never read any of those scripts — that it was being developed very much as a still-ongoing Marion-and-Indy story. When Steven decided to step down and James took over and brought in new writers, I knew it was going into a different direction. Having not even known what it was before, it was even more mysterious after they took it over. So I really didn’t know anything for a long period of time until they had a script. And I have to confess, I was a bit disappointed that she wasn’t more woven throughout the story and didn’t have more of an ongoing trajectory. However, the way in which she does come back into the story was very satisfying. I just thought, “OK, I’m just going to embrace this.” I certainly would have been wildly disappointed had Marion just sort of vanished into the ether.

    AP: Did you always think Marion and Indiana were destined for each other? You don’t exactly get a sense of permanence between them in “Raiders.”

    ALLEN: It’s funny. When I first started working on it, I just decided that Indy was the love of her life. I just decided to make a deep commitment to that and to play through “Raiders of the Lost Ark” with the feeling they’re soulmates. When we end up married in “Crystal Skull,” I wept when I read that script.

    AP: “Indiana Jones” could be a boys world but you were such a spirited force of nature.

    ALLEN: Well, Steven and George had this experience as young boys with these Saturday afternoon matinee serial films. They were just a little bit older than I am, so I kind of missed that. I don’t have a reference point for that. So I don’t think that I necessarily understood the genre of film we were making. I thought we were making “Casablanca.” I really, truly did. So I sort of defined my character in that sort of genre — which I think weirdly enough works quite well for the film. I never imagined Marion as a damsel in distress in any sort of way. I was always pushing back against that, and in the end, Steven was supportive of that.

    AP: Do you ever wish you had gotten the chance to star in more Hollywood films?

    ALLEN: I make movies all the time, although I have tended in the last 10 or 15 years to focus more on indie films. In truth, the kinds of roles I’m really hungry to play, particularly for someone my age, they’re written more in the indie world. People kind of think, “Where have you been?” There were times I was raising my son but I often do at least two films a year. They’re very satisfying, probably more satisfying than the sort of roles I would be offered. A lot of times I turned down things. There’s a lot of thankless roles for women in bigger budget films.

    AP: What has Marion meant to you?

    ALLEN: She’s sort of at the core of my growth as an actor and certainly my relationship to the world. As I move through the world, I’ve become very identified with that character. There was maybe a brief period of time where I found it annoying. But that passed and now it’s just this character that I love. I can’t imagine anything more satisfying to have had the chance in life to create a character that has some meaning for people.

    AP: What was it like to shoot your scenes with Ford in “Dial of Destiny”?

    ALLEN: It was fantastic. We shot it all in one day or maybe two days. To just imagine these two people that have been wrenched apart through grief and loss and then she’s coming back with this hope that they can move forward. When we played the scene, that was very, very affecting. We were both very affected by it and a little teary. And the crew was a little teary.

    AP: How has it been keeping your role in the film secret?

    ALLEN: It’s been excruciating. (Laughs) I never have to do anything like this again. People have come up to me and they’ve been so upset because they didn’t see my name on IMDb. People would be so mad I’d have to stand there and just be like, “What do I say? Do I say, ‘Yeah, isn’t that a drag?’ or ‘You never never know — wink, wink.’” I’ve had to say I just can’t answer any questions about “Indiana Jones” — which I feel like is sort of saying that I’m in the film. It’s a lose-lose situation. (Laughs)

    AP: Does playing Marion one last time cap anything for you?

    ALLEN: More so for Harrison than for me. He’s such a fully developed character and has done all five of these. With Marion, I’ve kind of come and gone. But she will always be a character that moves through life with me. I don’t know if I really have a sense of it being over. There always was a sense that one more would be done, even if it took 20 years. Now, they’ve been very clear that this is the last one. So it is a letting go.

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

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Calista Flockhart Goes Full-On Fashion Throwback At The ‘Indiana Jones’ Premiere

    Calista Flockhart Goes Full-On Fashion Throwback At The ‘Indiana Jones’ Premiere

    [ad_1]

    Much like husband Harrison Ford, Calista Flockhart is embracing her past.

    Flockhart attended the premiere of “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny,” starring Ford, in Los Angeles Wednesday wearing a yellow Ralph Lauren skirt and off-the-shoulder black top.

    Harrison Ford (left) and Calista Flockhart at the premiere of “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny” in Los Angeles.

    Jesse Grant via Getty Images

    Flockhart’s longtime stylist, Elizabeth Stewart, pointed out on Instagram that the actor originally wore the floor-length skirt to the 1999 Emmy Awards, where she was nominated for her starring role in “Ally McBeal.”

    “Cherish and rewear your clothes people!” Stewart wrote in the caption.

    Calista Flockhart at the 1999 Emmy Awards.
    Calista Flockhart at the 1999 Emmy Awards.

    Ron Galella via Getty Images

    When Flockhart first wore the skirt 24 years ago, she paired it with a white button-down shirt that was tied in a knot at her midriff. And though the actor didn’t take home an award that night for her performance, “Ally McBeal” won the Emmy for best comedy series.

    By Thursday afternoon, Stewart’s post had received more than 2,400 likes, while Flockhart’s look was praised by the likes of designer Rachel Roy and George Kotsiopoulos, a stylist and TV personality.

    Ford and Flockhart have been married since 2010.
    Ford and Flockhart have been married since 2010.

    Axelle/Bauer-Griffin via Getty Images

    Ford is making what he claims to be his final hurrah as the titular character in “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny,” which hits theaters June 30. He and Flockhart were married in 2010 after dating for about eight years. The couple share a 22-year-old son, Liam.

    As for Flockhart, she’s slated to return to television in “Feud: Capote’s Women” as Lee Radziwill, the younger sister of former first lady Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. A release date for the series, co-created and produced by Ryan Murphy, has not yet been announced.

    Alberto E. Rodriguez via Getty Images

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Ke Huy Quan Surprises Harrison Ford At The ‘Indiana Jones And The Dial Of Destiny’ Red Carpet Premiere

    Ke Huy Quan Surprises Harrison Ford At The ‘Indiana Jones And The Dial Of Destiny’ Red Carpet Premiere

    [ad_1]

    By Emerson Pearson.

    It was a reunion to remember.

    Nostalgia emanated across the red carpet of the LA premiere of “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny” on Wednesday night as leading lad Harrison Ford and his former co-star Ke Huy Quan embraced each other in a surprise reunion.

    Quan, 51, who recently won an Oscar earlier this year after a long Hollywood hiatus, surprised Ford, 80, at the premiere as the two affectionately hugged each other. 


    READ MORE:
    Michelle Yeoh Talks Reuniting With Ke Huy Quan In ‘American Born Chinese’: ‘He Still Calls Me His Big Wife’

    The “Everything Everywhere All at Once” star initially catapulted to stardom in 1984’s “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom” as a pre-teen alongside the adventurous archeologist, playing the character Short Round.

    While speaking with ET at the star-studded premiere of Goerge Lucas’ final film of the beloved franchise, Quan had glowing words for Ford, describing him as a “gracious man, such a humble man.”


    READ MORE:
    Ke Huy Quan Reacts To Fans’ Call For Return In ‘Indiana Jones 5’

    “And the reason why I love acting so much is because of him, because of that experience that we had on ‘Temple of Doom,” he continued. “So, here we are so many years later.”

    Ford was present for a pivotal moment in Quan’s career earlier this year when he awarded the cast of A24’s “Everything Everywhere All at Once” with Best Picture at the 2023 Oscars.

    “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny” swings into theatres on June 30.

    [ad_2]

    Emerson Pearson

    Source link

  • Harrison Ford Finally Settles ‘Is It OK To Punch A Nazi?’ Debate, Seals Legend Status

    Harrison Ford Finally Settles ‘Is It OK To Punch A Nazi?’ Debate, Seals Legend Status

    [ad_1]

    And he’s totally fine with it.

    In an interview this week, the actor said not only would his iconic character Indiana Jones — famed for smacking down fascists ― be happy with the real-life hitting of Nazis, he’d actually be first in line.

    Jones, who for years has inspired a Nazi-punching meme, would “push ’em out of the way to get in the first punch,” Ford told Yahoo’s Kevin Polowy while promoting “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny,” the fifth and final film in the franchise.

    “As well he should,” he continued.

    “That was a black-and-white world and its evil presented itself to the world,” Ford said. “I mean, it’s incalculable that this vision of evil not be confronted.”

    Watch the interview here:

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Harrison Ford Reveals Why He Told ‘Indiana Jones 5’ Stunt Guys To ‘Leave Me The F**k Alone’

    Harrison Ford Reveals Why He Told ‘Indiana Jones 5’ Stunt Guys To ‘Leave Me The F**k Alone’

    [ad_1]

    By Brent Furdyk.

    Harrison Ford makes his fifth and final appearance as swashbuckling archeologist Indiana Jones in “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny”.

    In a new interview with Esquire, the actor — who turns 81 in July — explains why his insistence on displaying his character’s age onscreen led him to clash with members of the movie’s stunt team.

    “I wanted an ambitious movie to be the last one,” Ford said. “And I don’t mean that we didn’t make ambitious movies before — they were ambitious in many different ways. But not necessarily as ambitious with the character as I wanted the last one to be.”


    READ MORE:
    Harrison Ford Told He’s ‘Still Very Hot’ By Reporter At Cannes Film Festival: ‘Thanks For Noticing’

    Arguably one of the most ambitious scenes in “Dial of Destiny” features Indy riding a horse in NYC, in the midst of a ticker-tape parade celebrating the 1969 moon landing.

    As Ford recalled, as he finished filming, he suddenly found himself surrounded by “stunt guys” helping to dismount the horse.

    “I thought, ‘What the f**k?’ Like I was being attacked by gropers,” Ford quipped.

    “I look down and there’s three stunt guys there making sure I didn’t fall off the stirrup,” Ford recalled. “They said, ‘Oh, we were just afraid because we thought, you know, and bah bah bah bah.’ And I said, ‘Leave me the f**k alone… Leave me alone, I’m an old man getting off a horse and I want it to look like that!”’


    READ MORE:
    Harrison Ford Says Forthcoming Indiana Jones Film Is ‘The Last Time I’ll Play The Character’

    “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny” hits theatres on June 30.

    [ad_2]

    Brent Furdyk

    Source link

  • CANNES PHOTOS: Harrison Ford and Indiana Jones fever sweep Cannes on festival’s 3rd day

    CANNES PHOTOS: Harrison Ford and Indiana Jones fever sweep Cannes on festival’s 3rd day

    [ad_1]

    Indiana Jones fever — and fervent love for its star, Harrison Ford — have swept through the Cannes Film Festival.

    Ford and his last film as the whip-cracking explorer held the spotlight Wednesday with a premiere that provided equal parts glamour and emotion. Ford walked the red carpet before the world premiere of “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny” with wife Calista Flockhart before entering a packed theater with adoring fans.

    An honorary Palme d’Or awaited Ford, who was clearly emotional after a clip reel of his career highlights was played.

    “I just saw my life flash before my eyes,” he told the crowd.

    It was a noticeable shift from the festival’s early days, which were dominated by attention on Johnny Depp and his comeback.

    Actor Tom Mercier did a handstand at a photo event for the film “Le Regne animal,” surprising co-star Billie Blain and losing his phone from his back pocket while upside down.

    Hinata Hiiragi and Soya Kurokawa, child actors in the Hirokazu Kore-eda film “Monster,” beamed as they attended a similar photo call for their film.

    The festival runs through May 27.

    ___

    For more coverage of this year’s Cannes Film Festival, visit: https://apnews.com/hub/cannes-film-festival

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • From Barbie to ‘Fast X,’ here’s what you’ll be heading to the theater for this summer

    From Barbie to ‘Fast X,’ here’s what you’ll be heading to the theater for this summer

    [ad_1]

    The stakes are always high in the summer movie season.

    But even in a schedule that has heavyweights like Indiana Jones, Ariel, Ethan Hunt and Dominic Toretto vying for box office supremacy, the biggest, funniest showdown is happening on July 21. On that fateful Friday, cinephiles will be faced with a difficult choice: Christopher Nolan’s “Oppenheimer” or Greta Gerwig’s “Barbie”?

    The “Barbieheimer” showdown is, naturally, a bit silly. First, it’s entirely possible to see two new movies in one weekend. Second, while opening weekends are important, they’re also not everything. In 2008, “The Dark Knight” debuted on the same weekend as “Mamma Mia!” and both went on to be major successes.

    But it has inspired the kind of feverish, half-serious, half-joking discourse online that no marketing can buy, with memes, jokes, bets and Highlander references galore every time either film drops a new advertisement. There were even a few hours in April when the internet panicked that the beach-off was canceled (it wasn’t). And before you go googling, the Highlander jokes are not about that film’s disastrous 1986 box office run, but instead the enduring “there can only be one” line.

    The summer movie season always begins before actual summer. This year it kicks off on May 5 with the release of Disney and Marvel’s “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3” and runs through Labor Day. Since “Jaws,” the summer season has been the most important for the moviemaking industry and typically accounts for around 40% of a year’s domestic box office, according to data from Comscore. Pre-pandemic, that usually meant more than $4 billion in ticket sales. Last year hit $3.4 billion.

    But the industry is feeling optimistic. Last summer, only 22 films released on over 2,000 screens. This year there are 42, the same as in 2019, spanning every genre. And, it seems, every studio has re-prioritized theatrical releases over direct-to-streaming.

    There are movies based on comic characters (“The Flash,” “Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse”), toys (“Transformers: Rise of the Beasts”), racing games (“Gran Turismo”) and theme park rides (“Haunted Mansion”); Action adventures (“Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny,” “Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning”); Family friendly fare (“Elemental,” “Harold and the Purple Crayon”); Documentaries (“Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie,” “Stephen Curry: Underrated”); And a starry Wes Anderson movie (“Asteroid City.”) (For a comprehensive guide to summer releases, visit: http://apne.ws/vfZSaqF )

    And it’s not just the superhero films getting wide releases and large format screens. Disney’s live-action “The Little Mermaid” will have a 3D IMAX version, a laser version and a Dolby one all available when it opens in theaters on May 26.

    Director Rob Marshall was no stranger to technically ambitious movie musicals but “The Little Mermaid,” starring Halle Bailey as the teenage dreamer, put him to the test trying to stage a photorealistic underwater musical.

    “As complicated as it as it was, my goal was never to let the technical part of it lead it,” said Marshall, who has been at work since 2018. “I really wanted to make sure that the story and the characters led it.”

    Even in the throes of the pandemic, Marshall was confident that “The Little Mermaid” was too big to end up as a streaming offering.

    “I’m actually glad that we waited until 2023 when officially the pandemic is over,” he said. “It feels like people are returning to the theaters.”

    On quite the opposite spectrum, indie darling Nicole Holofcener has in her three decades of directing movies grown used to getting smaller releases for her films. So it came as a surprise when A24 told her they wanted to go wide on Memorial Day weekend for “You Hurt My Feelings.”

    Her latest is an insightful New York-set comedy about what happens to a relationship when Julia Louis-Dreyfus’ character accidentally overhears her therapist husband (Tobias Menzies) confessing that he doesn’t like her book. It debuted to raves at Sundance earlier this year.

    “I think A24 felt like, ‘Oh, this could cross over. This doesn’t have to be an indie movie,’” Holofcener said. “But I’ve never had a movie release like that. I’m excited but also anxious. I hope it works out. You know, it’s safe when you release a movie in like six theaters.”

    A24 is also giving a wide release to another Sundance sensation, Celine Song’s wistful and romantic directorial debut “Past Lives,” starring Greta Lee as a woman considering the other path her life may have taken. It opens June 2.

    Big budget spectacles like “Fast X,” the penultimate movie in the $6 billion franchise led by Vin Diesel, are more typical summer fare. But even well-oiled vehicles like “Fast” run into their own problems and for this film, franchise veteran Justin Lin made the surprising decision to step away from directing while filming was already underway.

    French director Louis Leterrier had been talking to Universal about directing a “Fast” film for years, but he never expected his shot to come in the form of a 2 a.m. phone call.

    He got the script, read it twice before meeting with producers at 6 a.m. and later that day was on a plane to London to get “Fast X” back on track during a chaotic week where they’d lost a director and a location: Montenegro. Instinct kicked in and after a week, he’d found his rhythm. And he’s already signed on for the 11th.

    “No ‘Fast and Furious’ movie is the same, but this is quite different,” Leterrier said. “Because we’re nearing the end we’re able to take big swings with character and story. There will be some major changes. We’re going to have to say goodbye to characters we love. And Jason Momoa’s character is really an agent of chaos.”

    Closing out the summer, on Sept. 1, is Sony’s “The Equalizer 3,” which reunites director Antoine Fuqua with Denzel Washington and takes his character Robert McCall to Italy’s Amalfi coast.

    “It will be nice to see a man of color in a story that’s more international,” Fuqua said. “We normally see the James Bonds doing the international films. And there’s something about Denzel that feels right in Italy.

    Comedies are also back in a big way this summer, with films like “No Hard Feelings,” “About My Father,” “Strays” and “Joy Ride,” Adele Lim’s movie about four Asian American girlfriends on a trip to China, coming to theaters.

    Seth Rogen produced “Joy Ride,” which already has a 100% on Rotten Tomatoes going into its June 23 release.

    “There’s not a lot of people even aspiring necessarily to make a big, raucous, wild, crowd-pleasing R-rated comedy these days and it’s such a joyous experience when those things work,” Rogen said. “Some people would argue that big R-rated comedies don’t take the swings they used to anymore. I would tell them to go see this movie.”

    Rogen is also the driving engine behind a new animated Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles movie, “Mutant Mayhem” (Aug. 4) which he shepherded since the beginning as a producer, co-writer, voice actor and general Ninja Turtles enthusiast.

    Years ago he wrote a kind of joke tweet about how the “teenage” part of the mutant ninja turtles was the most interesting aspect of the characters and one that had been largely ignored by the movies. But it stuck in his head and eventually inspired this film which combines action-adventure and coming of age. The animation was even inspired by the “reckless energy” of scribbling in a notebook during school.

    Rogen cast himself as Bebop, opposite John Cena’s Rocksteady and called on a host of funny friends and actors to round out the cast. Ice Cube is Superfly. Ayo Edebiri is April. Paul Rudd is Mondo Gecko. Rose Byrne is Leatherhead, Hannibal Buress is Genghis Frog and Jackie Chan is Master Splinter.

    “What’s really cool is that we did pretty much all the recording sessions in big groups. We had some with eight people at the same time,” Rogen said. “It brings so much life and energy to it.”

    He’s also felt the gaze of the business returning to theaters.

    “Hollywood seems to be embracing this idea again, that movies can do well in theaters, but actually movies only do really well on a streaming service if they already were in the theater,” Rogen said. “The cultural cachet you get from being in a theater is irreplaceable.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Harrison Ford Reacts To Fans Thinking He Has Social Anxiety

    Harrison Ford Reacts To Fans Thinking He Has Social Anxiety

    [ad_1]

    Harrison Ford is setting the record straight.

    In a new interview with The Hollywood Reporter, the “Shrinking” star responded to fan theories that he suffers from social anxiety due to his perceived shyness at events and in interviews.

    “That sounds like something a psychiatrist would say, not a casual observer,” the 80-year-old actor told the outlet. “I don’t have a social anxiety disorder. I have an abhorrence of boring situations.”

    At this point, Ford said, “I know who the f**k I am.”

    Ford further clarified that in his early years as a stage actor, he did experience nerves.

    “I wasn’t shy, I was f***ing terrified” he recalled. “My knees would shake so badly, you could see it from the back of the theatre. But that’s not social anxiety. That’s being unfamiliar with the territory.”

    Ford continued, “I was able to talk myself through that and then enjoy the experience of being onstage and telling a story with collaborators.”

    While he doesn’t shy away from the spotlight these days, Ford did tell THR that he tries to “blend in” when he can.

    “I have a protective colouration. I try to blend in. That’s what I do. When I’m getting dressed, if people are going to be wearing a suit, I wear a suit,” he explained. “If people are wearing blue jeans, I’m wearing blue jeans. I’m comfortable in all kinds of company. I don’t know why people have an expectation of me. I come in all colours. I don’t know who’s going to show up. But it’s usually me — and it looks familiar.”

    He has no plans of slowing down either, with the “Yellowstone” prequel, “1923”, getting renewed for season 2 and the upcoming fifth instalment of the “Indiana Jones” franchise, “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny”, Ford said he’s still having a good time.

    “I’m still excited about the prospect of telling a story,” Ford gushed. “I like playing an old guy. If I wasn’t having a good time, I would stop doing it.”

    For more on the screen star, check out the video below.

    MORE FROM ET:

    Harrison Ford on ‘Indiana Jones’ Co-Star Ke Huy Quan’s Oscar Nom

    Harrison Ford and Jason Segel Break Rules in Apple TV+’s ‘Shrinking’

    Harrison Ford and Helen Mirren on How Their Marriages Helped ‘1923’

    [ad_2]

    Brent Furdyk

    Source link

  • Harrison Ford inspires cast in new comedy ‘Shrinking’

    Harrison Ford inspires cast in new comedy ‘Shrinking’

    [ad_1]

    By BROOKE LEFFERTS

    January 27, 2023 GMT

    NEW YORK (AP) — When Bill Lawrence was developing his new Apple TV+ comedy ”Shrinking,” he introduced one character in the pilot script as a “Harrison Ford-type” — but never dreamed he would get the real deal.

    Although the showrunner has had comedy success working with big names and executive-producing hits like “Scrubs,” “Cougar Town” and “Ted Lasso,” nabbing a huge movie star like Ford seemed unrealistic. But he decided to take a shot and send Ford the script.

    He was gobsmacked when the “Indiana Jones” actor liked the story and eventually agreed to play the part of a tough therapist who works with star Jason Segel in a mental health practice.

    “If he had not shown up on set, I would not have been shocked,” Lawrence told the Associated Press in a recent interview. “But he showed up. He’s lovely, he’s inspiring. He’s 80 years old and still challenging himself.”

    For “Shrinking” — which starts streaming Friday — Lawrence teamed with Segel and writer Brett Goldstein (also Roy Kent in “Ted Lasso” ) to help create and write the show. They had the lofty goal of making a comedy about grief, set it in an office shared by therapists and starring Segel, Ford, Jessica Williams, and Christa Miller.

    Segel plays a character whose wife dies suddenly, leaving the father of a teen daughter lost and willing to ignore his ethics to start telling his patients what he really thinks. Ford’s character is a curmudgeonly colleague and mentor who delivers zingers with restrained glee.

    Lawrence calls working with Ford a “career highlight,” and says there’s only one downside.

    “Everybody’s terrified of … telling him to do anything,” Lawrence said with a laugh. “But he’s so much fun to work with. Every scene gets ruined — at least one take — by me or one of the actors in the middle of it going ‘It’s Harrison Ford!’ It’s crazy.”

    Goldstein — who isn’t acting in this show but serves as another executive producer — describes Ford as “dream casting” and says they still don’t know how they got him.

    “He really loved the scripts and related to a lot of the aspects of the character,” Goldstein said. “We talked to him a lot about character, and it was so easy that … I feel like I should have had to complete a series of Herculean tasks to get him, you know what I mean?”

    Segel appreciated how Ford “breaks through the awe really quickly so that you can get down to work.”

    “One of the things that’s really cool about Harrison Ford is that he considers himself a tradesman, like a craftsman. He was a carpenter and now he’s an actor,” Segel said. “His job is to come in and build these scenes and you’re his partner in that.”

    Williams — who plays another therapist — shares witty banter with Ford in many scenes and says it was “surreal” to work with the acting legend she watched in movies as a kid. She says it took about a week to remain present and get used to his face staring at her.

    “He is delightful, charming, nice, giving. And he’s magic to watch, honestly.” Williams said. “You just watch him do some takes and … he’s got the glimmer in his eye. He’s got the thing. And it’s really inspiring to see someone that’s like over 80 hitting his marks and staying so sharp while also, you know, really caring about the work.”

    Goldstein agrees that Ford never made the cast feel like he needed special treatment.

    “He’s as wonderful and amazing as ever,” Goldstein said. “But he’s also a very generous actor and he is part of this ensemble. It’s not like he takes over. He fits into this world. He plays the character, he disappears into it. He’s a brilliant actor.”

    Williams says working on the show was fun because of the cast chemistry, and the license to ad lib at times to make scenes funnier felt “very fulfilling.”

    One of the secrets to a successful show, especially in comedy — according to Lawrence — is if the cast gets along and is friendly, even outside of the show: “We try to put together groups of people that have similar voices and that interact really well,” Lawrence said.

    “If you see a lack of chemistry behind the camera, even when the cameras aren’t rolling,” he said, “if it’s a show about a family or a dysfunctional family or people who are supposed to care about each other, it won’t work.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Harrison Ford on making the ordinary extraordinary

    Harrison Ford on making the ordinary extraordinary

    [ad_1]

    Harrison Ford on making the ordinary extraordinary – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    The 80-year-old isn’t slowing down; in fact, he’s been busier than ever, with two TV series (including the “Yellowstone” prequel “1923”), and a fifth Indiana Jones movie. Harrison Ford talks with Turner Classic Movies host Ben Mankiewicz about playing “ordinary” people; fame and the loss of anonymity; and the attraction of returning to his home in Wyoming.

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Indiana Jones 5 Title Meaning, Explained: What is the Dial of Destiny? | The Mary Sue

    Indiana Jones 5 Title Meaning, Explained: What is the Dial of Destiny? | The Mary Sue

    [ad_1]

    Nearly fifteen years since Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, and we’ve finally gotten our first glimpse of Harrison Ford back in action as Indy in the trailer for Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny. Also starring Phoebe Waller-Bridge, Mads Mikkelsen, and Antonio Banderas, the fifth film had already been announced and teased, but the last week’s trailer premiere marked the first proper glimpse fans got of the film – as well as its title.

    In keeping with tradition – the fifth Indiana Jones film follows previous naming conventions, and has a subtitle: like Raiders of the Lost Ark, Temple of Doom, and The Last Crusade. As we learned from last week’s trailer, the subtitle for Indy five is The Dial of Destiny – a mysterious-sounding title that seems to hint at the film’s possible plot, or at least its MacGuffin. But even with a trailer’s worth of footage to dissect, the question remains – what exactly is the Dial of Destiny?

    The bad news is, there’s no concrete answer quite yet. Given just how famous the Indiana Jones franchise is, most specific plot details (or at least, major spoilers) tend to be held under lock and key. That being said, though, between behind-the-scenes footage, trailer clips, and quotes from cast and crew, there are a few educated guesses that can be made as to what the Dial of Destiny is, and how it could be involved with the plot of Indiana Jones.

    Luckily for us, there’s an established precedent among the Indiana Jone franchise: the films don’t just invent artifacts for him to find. All of the previous entries in the franchise have featured historical artifacts and items that really existed (or at least, are speculated to have existed) – the Ark of the Covenant, the Holy Grail, and the faux mesoamerican Crystal Skulls are all MacGuffins based on items of interest to actual archeologists.

    As such, it’s worth speculating that the so-called Dial of Destiny could be an item that already existed – or at the very least, is an item that is speculated to have existed, and that could hold significance in existing mythologies and cultures. When it comes to which mythology that might come from though, it’s anyone’s guess, though we do have on major clue – the dial itself.

    Admittedly there isn’t 100% confirmation that the above item in question is the titular Dial of Destiny, it would certainly be a coincidence if the film’s first trailer featured Indiana Jones reverently clutching more than one dial-shaped item. So, assuming that the circular object in the trailer *is* the dial, that gives us a closer idea of what it might be based on. The item itself feature a series of what look like interlocking mechanical pieces and circular shapes engraved with lines and markings that seem to be representative of constellations.

    Though there are certainly plenty of historically significant sundials, an item that feels like the most likely candidate as the inspiration is the fabled Greek Antikythera Mechanism. The impressive piece of machinery has been referred to as the “first computer”, and was speculated to have been used to predict eclipses and track planetary movements: purposes that would’ve helped ancient Greeks keep track of time.

    The other major element to consider when speculating about the Dial of Destiny is the Dial’s role in the film’s plot – especially if rumors are true that time travel could play a significant role in the film. We know for sure that we’ll be seeing young Indy again – and though allegedly the de-aged Harrison Ford footage is just being used for the opening sequence, there’s still heavy speculation that time travel will feature in Indy 5.

    Also adding fuel to the fire of the time travel theory and how it could help discern what the Dial of Destiny is was a recent quote from Mads Mikkelsen. In an interview with Empire, Mikkelsen shared exclusive details about his character Voller: “He’s a man who would like to correct some of the mistakes of the past. There is something that could make the world a much better place to live in. He would love to get his hands on it. Indiana Jones wants to get his hands on it as well. And so, we have a story.”

    Between a dial that looks like the Ancient Greek way to keep track of time, a villain desperate to get his hands on the dial to correct the mistakes of his past, and heavy speculation that the plot could involve time travel, my best bet as of right now is that the Dial of Destiny is a modern interpretation of the Antikythera Mechanism that could allow Indy and the others to travel back in time. Of course, though, this is all just speculation – the only way to truly find out the secrets of the Dial of Destiny is to catch Indiana Jones 5 when it hits theaters next year.

    (images via Lucasfilm)

    The Mary Sue has a strict comment policy that forbids, but is not limited to, personal insults toward anyone, hate speech, and trolling.—

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

    [ad_2]

    Lauren Coates

    Source link

  • ‘Indiana Jones 5’ Features A De-Aged Harrison Ford

    ‘Indiana Jones 5’ Features A De-Aged Harrison Ford

    [ad_1]

    Every Indiana Jones needs to be a thrill ride right out of the gate… and apparently, the best way to achieve that for the upcoming fifth film was digitally de-aging Harrison Ford. The team behind the latest entry in the franchise was struggling to figure out what the next iconic opening sequence would be, and after much deliberation, they figured out their angle. Rumors of a de-aged Harrison Ford had been floating around following a photo of the actor wearing motion-capture dots on his face, but a recent report from Empire has officially confirmed it. Of course, this kind of tech isn’t without its detractors. A lot of people weren’t even sure if Ford would reprise his role in the first place, let alone go to these kinds of lengths for the production.

    Die-hard fans of the franchise have also been a little skeptical of the new entry because it’s the first without Steven Spielberg in the director’s chair. There’s also no involvement from George Lucas this time around. The director, James Mangold, has some big shoes to fill. Luckily, he has some solid experience and Spielberg is sticking around as a producer on the project.

    James Mangold recently spoke a bit with Empire, shedding a bit of light on his approach to the franchise.

    “I wanted the chance to dive into this kind of full-on George-and-Steven old picture and give the audience an adrenaline blast.” From there, he went on to describe a sequence featuring Indiana Jones in a Nazi castle back in 1944. He continues on to say: “And then we fall out, and you find yourself in 1969 so that the audience doesn’t experience the change between the ’40s and ’60s as an intellectual conceit, but literally experiences the buccaneering spirit of those early days… and then the beginning of now.”

    The technology itself is really inventive. It’s a new form of software that goes through old scans of footage featuring Harrison Ford as Indiana Jones and then matches it to footage shot specifically for the new sequences that were filmed. We’ll just have to wait and see how it actually looks, but Ford was pretty convinced. He said: “This is the first time I’ve seen it where I believe it. It’s a little spooky. I don’t think I even want to know how it works, but it works. Doesn’t make me want to be young, though. I’m glad to have earned my age.”

    Indiana Jones 5 is set to debut in theaters on June 30, 2023.

    Every Steven Spielberg Movie, Ranked

    [ad_2]

    Cody Mcintosh

    Source link

  • Kevin Costner: Returning ‘Yellowstone’ is a hit on own terms

    Kevin Costner: Returning ‘Yellowstone’ is a hit on own terms

    [ad_1]

    LOS ANGELES — While a healthy slice of America awaited Sunday’s return of the hit series “Yellowstone,” star Kevin Costner was in Moab, Utah, scouting locations for yet another Western epic, “Horizon.”

    Costner’s 60-some film credits, among them “Field of Dreams,” “The Bodyguard,” “JFK” and “Bull Durham,” are an eclectic mix of dramas, baseball-centric tales and the occasional comedy. But the West’s history and land have proven his creative bedrock.

    His breakout role came in 1985’s “Silverado,” followed by starring roles in “Dances with Wolves,” his Oscar-winning directorial debut; “Wyatt Earp,” and “Open Range,” which he also directed. He’s donning the actor-director Stetson again for “Horizon,” planned as a four-film saga about pre- and post-Civil War western migration.

    The Paramount Network’s contemporary “Yellowstone,” created by Taylor Sheridan (“Hell or High Water”), already has generated a successful prequel, “1883.” A second, “1923” (formerly titled “1932”), with Harrison Ford and Helen Mirren as its headliners, is set for a Dec. 18 release.

    In its fifth season, “Yellowstone” opens with Costner’s Montana rancher John Dutton awaiting the outcome of his reluctant run for governor — a big-swing effort to shield his family’s vast land and business against challenges from developers and empowered Native Americans.

    Dutton’s populist-style campaign promised to safeguard Montana values, or likely those that dovetail with the interests he’s gone to extremes to protect. Would Costner himself consider seeking office? “No, I don’t think so,” he said.

    In an interview with The Associated Press, he discussed why “Yellowstone” has gained a following, the series’ portrayal of Native Americans, and his long-held regard for the Western genre done right. Remarks have been edited for brevity and clarity.

    ———

    AP: When you joined Taylor Sheridan on the drama series, what made you think it could work?

    KEVIN COSTNER: I thought it had a chance to be relevant, in that this work is still going on in America and most people kind of take it for granted how stuff ends up at their dinner table. We intuitively know, and we don’t really know. The show is able to highlight at times the beauty of ranching, and it certainly talks about how difficult it is. We’re set in one of the most beautiful places in the world, and I think the idea of mountains and rivers captured people’s imagination. But it’s a working ranch. It’s how it’s still done. I think it spoke well of that, with its kind of heightened sense of drama.

    AP: While John Dutton says he’s no politician, he’s seeking power and there’s more than a suggestion he intends to use it for his own ends. How do you see the character?

    KEVIN COSTNER: He’s not naive. He’s no politician in the sense that he wants to collaborate. I think he’s capable of hearing the best idea, but he’s not looking for middle ground. It’s not how he’s conducted his life. What’s maybe good for his ranch might be good for all the rest of the ranches in Montana as well — the preservation of a way of life, less expansion. His ranch is highlighted, he says it out loud. But I think he sees this working for other ranchers.

    AP: ‘Yellowstone’ prominently includes Native Americans, as did ‘Dances with Wolves.’ How do you view the series approach to the characters?

    KEVIN COSTNER: I think they show it’s all complicated. For them, everything has been stripped away, and they’ve had this little niche called gambling and even that’s being nibbled at, being pawed over. Anytime there’s money, there’s going to be disputes no matter what culture you’re dealing with. So you see power plays inside the Native American community. You see ambition, you see selfishness. It’s really normal behavior. We might flinch at it, we might be embarrassed by it, but it exists on all levels. The political machinations of what happens on the rez (reservation) are equal to what happens on our national stage. There’s bitterness, there’s resentment. There’s good ideas, there’s bad ideas. So who gets left in the lurch? Generally speaking, it’s the people.

    AP: The series received a Screen Actors Guild nomination for best ensemble drama but has been largely overlooked by the Emmys. Could that reflect a bias against Westerns?

    KEVIN COSTNER: I’m not sure, because we’re a very verbal show. We’re not reduced to ‘yep’ and ‘nope.’ It’s very literate in its expression. You can be minimalized, you can be marginalized, you can be ignored. But we’ve been able to create a show that didn’t start out being popular but did it on its own terms.

    AP: You’ve said that watching the 1962 movie ‘How the West Was Won’ as a youngster made you a fan of the Western. What chord did it strike and why does the genre continue to resonate with you?

    KEVIN COSTNER: When it’s done well, you realize how vulnerable (people) were. We see freeways and cities now, but if you roll back about 120 years, you were out here by yourself. How you made it or didn’t would depend sometimes on your decisions and most of the time on just luck. There was no law, there was no army, we were taking away land from people that have lived there for thousands of years. I think to myself, ‘My God, what made people keep coming West?’ They sometimes didn’t share the same language, they were from different countries in Europe. When I see it in its rawest form, I’m inspired by it, I’m in awe of it. I realize that what made people cross the country was nothing but hope of something better than where they came from.

    ———

    This story corrects that the series is on the Paramount Network, not Paramount+.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Disney Wants to Make an ‘Indiana Jones’ TV Series

    Disney Wants to Make an ‘Indiana Jones’ TV Series

    [ad_1]

    Disney has already turned Marvel and Star Wars from movie franchises into Disney+ properties. Now, they’ve reportedly begun exploring the possibility of an Indiana Jones series. This news comes as the company is finishing a fifth Indiana Jones film, which was recently filmed; Harrison Ford is set to star in the latest sequel, which will presumably be his last outing in the character’s signature fedora.

    According to Variety, Disney and Lucasfilm “have specifically been bringing up the possibility of a streaming show set in the world of the globe trotting archaeologist in general meetings with writers of late.” That suggests the concept is in extremely early stages, so it is totally unclear whether this show would reboot the Indiana Jones concept, or be tied in some way to the upcoming Indiana Jones 5.

    This would not be the first Indiana Jones television series. George Lucas created The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles in 1992, which followed the adventures of young Indy at two different ages: As a young boy and as a teenager. The show lasted for two seasons of 28 episodes, plus a handful of television movies.

    James Mangold is directing Indiana Jones 5, and it would seem that he makes a great fit. He’s helmed a number of extremely successful films, including Logan3:10 to Yuma, and Walk the Line. George Lucas had actually worked on a potential fifth Indiana Jones prior to selling Lucasfilm to Disney, but nothing ever came of it. David Koepp and Jonathan Kasdan also jumped onto the project to write for a while, but that script was scrapped as well. The current version was penned by Jez Butterworth and John-Henry Butterworth. Technically, Steven Spielberg is the only director the series has ever had, but that ends with this entry. He vacated the director’s chair back in 2020, and instead took a producer role.

    Indiana Jones 5 is due for release in movie theaters on June 30, 2023.

    Great Disney+ Movies You Might Have Missed

    These excellent films are all waiting to be discovered on Disney+.

    [ad_2]

    Cody Mcintosh

    Source link

  • Actors Who Took the Longest Break Before Returning to Iconic Roles

    Actors Who Took the Longest Break Before Returning to Iconic Roles

    [ad_1]

    It’s hard to always predict which movies are going to live on as classics. While you might assume something like Star Wars was always destined for greatness, the truth is that you never really know which movies are bound to become pop culture touchstones. The actors in these movies don’t know, either — what starts off as a one-time movie deal might turn into a lucrative franchise run. In other cases, a movie sequel or reboot may lie dormant for several years, and when it finally does happen? Those actors prepare to return to a role they haven’t touched in decades.

    Since Hollywood can be so unpredictable, it’s never quite clear what the future holds for a movie franchise. In some situations, a franchise completely starts fresh with new characters. This creates the opportunity for the original actors to come back and make a cameo. There are some movies, however, where those original actors serve as the leads of that sequel — a good example would be Jim Carrey and Jeff Daniels as Harry and Lloyd in 2014’s Dumb and Dumber To. There’s something undeniably special about seeing an actor reappear as a certain character so many years — even though they may look a bit older, they still bring the same energy to the table.

    For some performers, one iconic role becomes the gift that keeps on giving. No matter how much time goes by, that character will always be a defining part of their career. These actors returned to their roles decades after their first appearance on screen.

    13 Actors Who Returned To Iconic Roles Decades Later

    What Happened To Your Favorite Child Actors After They Left Hollywood

    [ad_2]

    Claire Epting

    Source link

  • Harrison Ford Will Replace William Hurt as Thaddeus Ross

    Harrison Ford Will Replace William Hurt as Thaddeus Ross

    [ad_1]

    After the untimely passing of William Hurt as a result of stomach cancer, Thaddeus Ross will be portrayed by Harrison Ford instead. Hurt announced that he was diagnosed with the disease back in 2018, and passed away in March 2022. In addition to tons of incredible roles back in the day, he played Thaddeus Ross in a number of Marvel movies. Hurt’s list of Marvel credits is actually pretty long. He started with The Incredible Hulk, then appeared in Captain America: Civil War, followed by Avengers: Infinity WarAvengers: Endgameand Black Widow.

    Harrison Ford is a big get and with Thunderbolts on the way, it’s not actually going to be his first appearance in the MCU. At least according to reports, that would instead be the upcoming Captain America: New World Order. For those who aren’t familiar with the general plot of Thunderbolts, think something akin to Marvel’s version of Suicide Squad. Sometimes the Thunderbolts are rounded up by a government agency and sent on a mission, and in other iterations, they create a fake superhero team to slowly replace the Avengers.

    The film’s confirmed cast includes Sebastian Stan as Bucky Barnes, Hannah John-Kamen as Ghost, Wyatt Russell as U.S. Agent,  Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Valentina Allegra de Fontaine, Florence Pugh as Black Widow, David Harbour as Red Guardian, and Olga Kurylenko as Taskmaster.

    Despite his age, Harrison Ford has been extremely busy lately. In fact, he’s been filming a new Indiana Jones movie. We can’t say for sure what exactly the MCU holds for him in the future… but interestingly enough, in the comics, Thaddeus Ross ends up turning into a Red Hulk. Now, we aren’t saying that Harrison Ford is going to put on a mocap suit and portray a giant rampaging monster, but it would be pretty cool.

    Marvel’s Upcoming Phase Four, Five, and Six Movie and TV Lineup

    Here’s every movie and show Marvel currently has scheduled for release in Phase Four, Five, and Six of their cinematic universe.

    [ad_2]

    Cody Mcintosh

    Source link