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Tag: James McAvoy

  • ‘California Schemin” Review: James McAvoy’s Assured Directorial Debut Makes for an Engaging if Familiar Underdog Story

    Back in the early 2000s, a pair of blue-eyed Scottish lads with dreams of becoming the next Eminem — but dismissed as sounding like “the rapping Proclaimers” — proceeded to pass themselves off as Southern California hip-hoppers, remarkably managing to pull off a hoax that gets them signed by a major record label.

    It’s the stuff that episodes of VH1’s Behind the Music are made of, but in the talented hands of James McAvoy, making his directorial debut, those well-traveled, rise-and-fall tropes nevertheless make for an underdog dramatic comedy that proves hard to resist.

    California Schemin’

    The Bottom Line

    A thoughtful charmer.

    Venue: Toronto International Film Festival (Special Presentations)
    Cast: Seamus McLean Ross, Samuel Bottomley, Lucy Halliday, Rebekah Murrell, James McAvoy
    Director: James McAvoy
    Screenwriters: Archie Thomson, Elaine Gracie

    1 hour 47 minutes

    With a charismatic cast headed by Seamus McLean Ross and Samuel Bottomley, California Schemin’ is a nimbly paced yarn that may not have set out to reinvent the wheel, but makes for a buoyant excursion nonetheless. It wouldn’t be surprising for the film to emerge from TIFF, where it was handed its world premiere, securing a U.S. theatrical distribution deal.

    Finding it tricky to establish hip-hop street cred when you’re two baby-faced kids from Dundee, rap duo Billy Boyd (Bottomley) and Gavin Bain (Ross), better known as Silibil N’ Brains, have been occupying their waking hours spitting bars with a decidedly Scottish brogue. Realizing they’re going to need to up their game if they have a shot of making it into the big leagues, they grab a map of California and proceed to create a fake backstory for themselves: They claim to hail from Hemet (!) after their first answer, “the projects of Beverly Hills,” fails to fool a record exec (James Corden) and they cobble together a semblance of an American accent studying movies like Jerry Maguire and The Usual Suspects.

    “You actually sound American,” remarks Billy’s girlfriend, Mary (Lucy Halliday). “You sound, like, entitled!”

    They take the rebooted Silibil N’ Brains for a test run at a club, where they capture the attention of a talent scout (Rebekah Murrell) for Neotone Records in England. A hotshot producer (McAvoy) agrees to sign the boys to a recording contract.

    Initially the scheme is to drop their facade during a scheduled appearance on a popular MTV show where they would decry the industry’s “racism.” But Gavin, finding himself swept up by the more excessive trappings of their new lifestyle and growing resentful of Mary’s emotional tug on Billy, reneges on the deal, driving a widening wedge between them.

    Taking its cues from Bain’s 2010 tell-all, Straight Outta Scotland, which in turn inspired the 2013 BBC Four documentary, The Great Hip Hop Hoax, their story held understandable attraction for McAvoy, himself no stranger to the concepts of authenticity and remaining true to oneself. Despite his hailing from Glasgow, over the course of his 30 years as a film actor there have only been a handful of times when he’s actually played Scottish characters.

    Sharing a tangible feel for the characters and their working-class milieu, McAvoy demonstrates an unfussy sincerity in his directing approach, one that, especially before things take a darker turn in the second half, evokes the sort of easy charm found in the films of fellow Scotsman Bill Forsyth.

    Given that the Silibil N’ Brains story played fast and loose with the truth, it should come as no surprise that the screenplay by Elaine Gracie and Archie Thomson obviously takes its own dramatic license. For example, their record deal was actually with Sony Music UK and their break-up happened years before the hoax was revealed; it was not the cause of the split, as depicted in the film.

    At the end of the day, Bain and Boyd may have duped the public, but they didn’t have to hang their heads in Milli Vanilli shame. Fake accents aside, it was still their own voices doing the rapping. And while that 15-minutes-of-fame schematic might be an all-too-familiar tune, California Schemin’s ultimate success is all in the delivery.

    Michael Rechtshaffen

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  • Actor James McAvoy punched in Toronto bar: reports | Globalnews.ca

    Actor James McAvoy was reportedly punched at a Toronto bar on Monday evening.

    First reported by People magazine, the Scottish actor and director was apparently hit, unprovoked, by a patron at Charlotte’s Room, located on King Street West in the downtown area, mere blocks away from where the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) takes place.

    The Split star had attended the premiere of his directorial debut, California Schemin’, at TIFF with his wife Lisa Liberati on Saturday.


    James McAvoy and Lisa Liberati attend the premiere of ‘California Schemin” during the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival at TIFF Lightbox on Sept. 6, 2025 in Toronto.

    Olivia Wong / Getty Images

    McAvoy, 46, was reportedly having a couple of quiet drinks with his producers when the incident occurred.

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    Toronto police confirmed to Global News that no report was filed, and McAvoy just laughed off the incident, according to People.

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    Global News has reached out to TIFF and McAvoy’s talent agency for further comment.

    Charlotte’s Room did not respond to Global News’ request for a comment.

    The actor has appeared in dozens of movies, including several X-Men franchise films as Prof. Charles Xavier, The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe and Atonement.


    &copy 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

    Rachel Goodman

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  • How Quickly Did Joaquin Phoenix Split Up With Split?

    How Quickly Did Joaquin Phoenix Split Up With Split?

    Photo: Vittorio Zunino Celotto/Getty Images

    At least he’s consistent? Joaquin Phoenix is once again making headlines for allegedly leaving a movie on short notice. In a recent episode of Josh Horowitz’s Happy Sad Confused podcast, James McAvoy recounted the timeline of him replacing Phoenix as the lead in M. Night Shyamalan’s movie Split. We’ve known for a while that Phoenix left the project abruptly; The Guardian reported in 2017 that Phoenix had dropped out “at the 11th hour.” But what does that really mean? “I think he ditched it two weeks before they started shooting,” McAvoy told Horowitz. “It was really last minute. I had two weeks.” (Hey, it could’ve been worse — Phoenix reportedly quit a Todd Haynes gay romance movie just five days before filming was scheduled to start this year.)

    Split follows a man with dissociative identity disorder. Given the amount of time McAvoy had to prepare, he was understandably nervous for the first table read. “I’m sitting there like, God, I’ve got to do all these 15 characters and be judged by everybody in the room, including Universal studio executives, including Jason Blum and all that … and I haven’t even found some of the characters,” he recalled. “It just came on really, really quick.” Still, McAvoy doesn’t seem too disappointed with the way things went down. Noting that it can keep an actor from overthinking, he suggested, “Sometimes coming in last minute is the best way.” Hmm … [in our best PR voice] maybe Phoenix was just trying to help!

    Jennifer Zhan

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  • ‘Speak No Evil’ Collapses in Carnage

    ‘Speak No Evil’ Collapses in Carnage

    From start to finish, James McAvoy mesmerizes. Courtesy of Universal Pictures

    Remakes are odious, but Speak No Evil, while thoroughly unneeded and unasked for, is an Americanized remake of a 2022 thriller from Denmark that services its original material well, thanks mostly to a sprawling, contradictory and totally galvanizing centerpiece performance by James McAvoy. He’s the fine Scottish actor best known for his outstanding work in The Last King of Scotland and Atonement, not to mention his memorable Cyrano de Bergerac on the New York stage. In Speak No Evil, McAvoy plays the villain, over the top and all over the place, and he has such a blast doing it that you can’t take your eyes off him for a minute.


    SPEAK NO EVIL ★★★ (3/4 stars)
    Directed by: James Watkins
    Written by: James Watkins, Christian Tafdrup, Mads Tafdrup
    Starring: James McAvoy, Mackenzie Davis, Scoot McNairy, Alix West Lefler, Aisling Franciosi, Dan Hough
    Running time:  110 mins.


    Despite some updates by writer-director James Watkins and a lot of savage violence to make it more palatable for an American movie audience, the plot begins in basically the same way as it did two years ago: Louise and Ben Dalton (Mackenzie Davis and Scoot McNairy) are an American couple living in London with their daughter, Agnes (Alix West Lefler), who meet a friendly British family during a getaway in Italy. Paddy (McAvoy), his wife Ciara (Aisling Franciosi) and their mute son Ant (terrific young newcomer Dan Hough) are all so charming that the Daltons accept an invitation to visit them for a weekend at their rambling farm in the British countryside. Things begin oddly.

    Worried man and woman with their daughterWorried man and woman with their daughter
    Why don’t they just leave? They try. Courtesy of Universal Pictures

    Louise and Ben can’t hide their marital problems. Their daughter Agnes is almost 13 but still emotionally attached to a stuffed rabbit. Ben is an unemployed lawyer who feels emasculated by his inability to get a job in England. Paddy knows Ciara is a vegetarian but insists on feeding her a goose for dinner. Ciara pretends to perform oral sex on Paddy under the table. Louise is at first aghast by their role-playing, then annoyed when they lecture Agnes on how to behave publicly. Tensions turn to horror when Agnes and Ant, forced to share a bedroom, become intimate friends and the little boy confides in the little girl that the Daltons are not his parents at all, but two fiends who killed his real family, kidnapped him and cut out his tongue with a pair of scissors so he could never tell anyone the truth.

    Why don’t they just leave? They try. Horrified, the Americans plan to escape in the middle of the night and save Ant in the process, but somebody always does something stupid in horror flicks like this, so they all foolishly return to fetch Agnes’ stuffed rabbit. From here on, Speak No Evil loses its claim to reality and goes berserk in an assault on the senses that defies credibility and collapses in carnage. It’s all rather far-fetched and silly. The thrills are contrived but effective enough to make your hair stand on end. I had a good time watching it, against my better judgment. And I especially applaud the relentless one-man show that is James McAvoy, from start to finish. He’s mesmerizing.

    ‘Speak No Evil’ Collapses in Carnage

    Rex Reed

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  • 10 Sci-Fi and Horror Movies to Stream Before They Leave Netflix

    10 Sci-Fi and Horror Movies to Stream Before They Leave Netflix

    Silent Hill (2006) – Official Trailer (HD)

    Based on the popular video game franchise, the first live-action Silent Hill film—released in 2006 and starring Radha Mitchell as desperate mother Rose—vanishes into a supernatural dimension, or at least departs Netflix, on May 31. Watch on Netflix.

    Cheryl Eddy

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  • 'The Book Of Clarence' Exclusive: James McAvoy Sings LaKeith Stanfield's Praises

    'The Book Of Clarence' Exclusive: James McAvoy Sings LaKeith Stanfield's Praises

    The Book Of Clarence arrives in theaters Friday and critics and costars alike are praising LaKeith Stanfield’s performance.

    Source: Courtesy / Sony Pictures

    The film, which is director Jeymes Samuel’s take on the Hollywood Biblical epic, stars Stanfield as Clarence — a young Black man, struggling to make it in Jerusalem. He’s down bad, no money to his name, indebted to the brother of the woman he loves but isn’t worthy to be with. His twin is a disciple of Jesus, who is performing miracles left and right and has the people in awe. Clarence forges a plan with his friend Elijah to become a kind of Messiah himself, and after faking a few miracles and performing some actual good deeds, he slowly finds his way to betterment — until Pontius Pilate, portrayed by James McAvoy, intervenes. You might have an idea of how it all ends…

    In the clip below, McAvoy opens up about his admiration for Stanfield. It’s wonderful to watch.

    Check it out below:

    We really love how James sings LaKeith Stanfield’s praises. We definitely agree with his sentiments about how captivating Stanfield’s work is.

    The Book Of Clarence is in theaters January 12, 2024. Are you excited to see it?

    Janeé Bolden

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  • Jessica Chastain Reveals Her ‘Best Prank’. Her Victim – ‘Dark Phoenix’ Co-Star James McAvoy

    Jessica Chastain Reveals Her ‘Best Prank’. Her Victim – ‘Dark Phoenix’ Co-Star James McAvoy

    By Anita Tai.

    Jessica Chastain is revealing the victim of her best prank: James McAvoy.

    The two worked together on “Dark Phoenix” which released in 2019. It was also the perfect opportunity for Chastain to concoct her masterpiece of a prank.

    The actress, who has a bit of a wild side, spoke on “The Kelly Clarkson Show” about how important choosing the right target is for a joke.


    READ MORE:
    Jessica Chastain Confronts A Serial Killer In New Trailer For ‘The Good Nurse’

    “You gotta really plan who to prank,” she laughed. “I just also worked with Michael Shannon — probably not the guy to prank.”

    “Dark Phoenix” Director Simon Kinberg helped Chastain with her plan, coordinating it with the crew. It occurred during a stunt with McAvoy being lifted into the air with wires.

    “The director said, ‘Okay, final take, please do it again.’ So they lift him up and he’s acting, you know, like he’s being lifted by this magic,” she continued. “And all of a sudden, the ‘Macarena’ starts playing, and the guys who were holding the wires were having him dance the Macarena. There’s no topping it. I think it was the best.”


    READ MORE:
    Jessica Chastain Stands Up For Florence Pugh Over Her Headline-Grabbing Sheer Pink Dress

    McAvoy seemed to take it in good nature and even “leaned in” to the joke, she recalled, “At one point, ’cause he was at the top of the stairs, he grabbed me and lifted me off the ground.”

    That moment was the cue for Chastain to end the prank as she said, “And that’s when I was like, ‘Oh, yeah yeah, no no. We gotta stop ’cause I could now get hurt,’ He was good fun.”

    Anita Tai

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