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  • Joker: Folie à Deux’s First Trailer Sends in the Clowns

    Joker: Folie à Deux’s First Trailer Sends in the Clowns

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    After what feels like years of waiting—mostly, because it has been—we finally have our first extended look at Joker: Folie à Deux in action, bringing laughs, sorrow, and music to Todd Phillips’s vision of the Batman’s most legendary foe.

    It stars Joaquin Phoenix, reprising his Oscar-winning role of Arthur Fleck, now fully transformed into the clown prince of crime known as the Joker after the events of the 2019 film. Folie à Deux—which, in a surprising turn, is a jukebox musical—also introduces pop-sensation-turned-actress Lady Gaga as another iconic DC character in Harleen Quinzel, aka Harley Quinn.

    Joker: Folie à Deux | Official Teaser Trailer

    Joker: Folie à Deux also stars Zazie Beetz, returning from the first film alongside Leigh Gill and Sharon Washington, as well as Brendan Gleeson, Catherine Keener, Jacob Lofland, Steve Coogan, Ken Leung, and Harry Lawtey. It’s set to hit theaters on October 4.


    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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    James Whitbrook

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  • Joker 2 Is Apparently Aiming to Be DC’s First Jukebox Musical

    Joker 2 Is Apparently Aiming to Be DC’s First Jukebox Musical

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    Image: DC Studios

    Get ready to see Todd Phillips send in the clowns in Joker: Folie à Deux—the jukebox musical! Though we’ve long heard the DC Studios film starring Lady Gaga as Harley Quinn and Joaquin Phoenix as the Joker will be a musical, we now know a bit more about the off-kilter romantic showdown.

    Variety cites insider sources as revealing Joker 2 will be “mostly a jukebox musical,” with at least 15 covers of “very well-known” songs with room for original music. I mean they have Lady Gaga so one would hope some original music will be in the mix. Composer Hildur Guðnadóttir, who won an Oscar for Best Original Score for 2019’s Joker, is also aboard the sequel, and Variety’s source notes her “haunting” musical cues will have a presence once more.

    Among the cover songs is “That’s Entertainment” from The Band Wagon, a 1953 musical starring Judy Garland (which just so happens to open with the lyric “A clown with his pants falling down”). We can imagine that the music will harken mostly to old Broadway showtunes as opposed to a broader playlist of classic and modern hits like Baz Luhrmann’s Moulin Rouge. There’s definitely an old Hollywood romance vibe to all the imagery we’ve seen of the duo in their dreamlike mad love story.

    Joker: Folie à Deux from DC Studios Elseworlds is set for release October 4.


    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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    Sabina Graves

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  • Ari Aster’s Working On His Next (Hopefully Bizarre) Film

    Ari Aster’s Working On His Next (Hopefully Bizarre) Film

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    Ari Aster’s at it again! The acclaimed director of Beau is Afraid, Midsommar, and Hereditary is working on his next film for A24—and it has a star-studded cast.

    Here’s everything we know about Eddington, Aster’s latest outing!

    Eddington plot

    As of this writing, plot details about Eddington haven’t been publicly released. However, we know that Eddington will be a western film about an ambitious sheriff in New Mexico.

    With a plot description like that, Eddington sounds pretty mundane. However, this is Ari Aster we’re talking about, so it’s likely that this film will be a pretty wild ride.

    After all, Aster doesn’t need a complicated story in order to spin a wild tale. Take Beau is Afraid, for example. Aster’s 2023 horror film starring Joaquin Phoenix is about an anxious middle-aged man who tries to go home after his mother’s sudden death. However, on the way, Beau (Phoenix) gets sucked into a surrealist odyssey filled with mayhem and chaos. Beau gets locked out of his apartment, hit by a car, picked up by a cheerful (yet sinister!) suburban family, and taken in by a troupe of forest actors before finally making it home to his mom’s house, where he receives an earth-shattering revelation.

    Will Eddington have the same dreamlike quality and dark humor as Aster’s other films? Here’s hoping.

    Eddington cast

    A full cast list hasn’t been released yet, but what we know so far is exciting.

    Joaquin Phoenix will be reuniting with Aster for Eddington. Will he play Eddington himself? Is Eddington even the sheriff’s name? Maybe Eddington is the name of a town or something. We don’t know yet. But I, personally, am down to watch Phoenix get weird in an Ari Aster film again.

    Emma Stone will also be starring in the new film. Stone has her own share of experience in weird roles, having just won an Oscar for her portrayal of Bella in Yorgos Lanthimos’ Poor Things.

    Pedro Pascal is also in the film. Grizzled cowboy, maybe? Now I’m just making stuff up.

    Austin Butler also plays an undisclosed role in the film. You can catch Butler in theaters right now, playing the murderous Feyd-Rautha in Dune: Part Two.

    Finally, Luke Grimes, Deirdre O’Connell, Micheal Ward and Clifton Collins Jr. will also appear in the film.

    Eddington release date

    So when is Eddington coming out? The movie just started filming, so there’s no release date yet. A release in late 2025 seems feasible, but that’s pure speculation. Stay tuned for more details!

    (featured image:

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    Julia Glassman

    Julia Glassman (she/her) holds an MFA from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, and has been covering feminism and media since 2007. As a staff writer for The Mary Sue, Julia covers Marvel movies, folk horror, sci fi and fantasy, film and TV, comics, and all things witchy. Under the pen name Asa West, she’s the author of the popular zine ‘Five Principles of Green Witchcraft’ (Gods & Radicals Press). You can check out more of her writing at <a href=”https://juliaglassman.carrd.co/”>https://juliaglassman.carrd.co/.</a>

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    Julia Glassman

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  • What to Watch on Streaming This Week: March 1-7

    What to Watch on Streaming This Week: March 1-7

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    Kate Winslet stars in The Regime. Photograph by Miya Mizuno/HBO

    From Oscar-nominated dramas to delightfully funny new series, streaming is overflowing with quality content this week. Whether you want to see Adam Sandler play introspective, Kate Winslet do her most absurd work or Joaquin Phoenix star in a historical epic, your A-list options are covered.

    What to watch on Netflix

    Spaceman 

    Adam Sandler stars in this sci-fi drama from the award-winning director of HBO’s Chernobyl. Spaceman sees Sandler play Jakub, an astronaut off on a solo mission that sees him exploring the furthest regions of our solar system. While he’s there, he realizes that he may never be able to return to the life he left back on Earth. How does he reconcile with this difficult emotional realization? Well, he talks to a strange spidery creature from the beginning of time (voiced by Paul Dano) that has taken up residence on his ship. Spaceman premieres Friday, March 1st.

    The Gentlemen

    Guy Ritchie has made a career out of snappy British crime movies, and now he’s bringing that talent to television. The Gentlemen stands as a spin-off of his film of the same name, with warring drug lords and mob bosses holding all of the power. Theo James stars as Eddie, a man who stands to inherit a massive estate from his father. However, that land belongs to one of the country’s biggest weed-growing operations, and it turns out it’s much sought-after by other members of the criminal underground. Kaya Scodelario, Daniel Ings, Joely Richardson, and Giancarlo Esposito also star. The Gentlemen premieres Thursday, March 7th.

    What to watch on Hulu

    The Favourite

    While Poor Things is on the road to racking up a few Academy Awards, it isn’t the first time that the likes of Yorgos Lanthimos, Emma Stone, and Tony McNamara have worked together to create cinematic greatness. That would be The Favourite, a deliciously dark period dramedy that revolves around the strange reign of Queen Anne. Olivia Colman stars as the monarch, a troubled and insecure woman who relies on the attention of her woman in waiting, Lady Sarah (Rachel Weisz). But when Sarah’s troubled cousin Abigail (Stone) enters the fray, it becomes a twisted love triangle for the ages. The Favourite streams starting Friday, March 1st.

    What to watch on Amazon Prime

    Ricky Stanicky

    The newest movie from comedy whiz Peter Farrelly, Ricky Stanicky revolves around a trio of best friends (Zac Efron, Jermaine Fowler, and Andrew Santino) who have come to rely on their imaginary friend Ricky well into their adulthood. Whenever something goes wrong and they need to explain it, well, it’s Ricky’s fault. But when these guys’ partners and families ask if they can actually meet the fabled friend, the men decide to hire a middling actor (John Cena) to take on the role. Naturally, the guy decides to go a bit method, meaning that Efron and co. get much more than they paid for. Ricky Stanicky premieres Thursday, March 7th.

    What to watch on Max

    The Regime

    A cutting political satire featuring an all-time great performance from Kate Winslet, The Regime is a devious and delightful new miniseries. Winslet stars as Chancellor Elena Vernham, the autocratic leader of an unnamed, vaguely Central European nation. She rules her country according to her own fleeting whims, until a strapping (and slightly unstable) former soldier comes into her life. Herbert (a hulking Matthias Schoenaerts) wins Elena and her policies over with his, er, rural charm, kicking off a political comedy of errors. Winslet is far and away the highlight of the show, serving up a fascinatingly funny performance. The Regime premieres Sunday, March 3rd. Read Observer’s review.

    What to watch on Apple TV+

    Napoleon 

    A historical drama of epic proportions, Napoleon goes big on everything. Ridley Scott boldly directs this dubiously accurate chronicle of the French ruler’s life, and it’s overflowing with action, horses and period details (it’s nominated for costume and production design at this year’s Oscars, after all). Joaquin Phoenix stars as Napoleon Bonaparte, imbuing the little corporal with his unique brand of moodiness. Vanessa Kirby plays Josephine, Napoleon’s all-but-doomed first wife who was there for his ascent to power. It’s a big, bombastic film with more than a few surprises up its sleeve. Napoleon premieres Friday, March 1st. Read Observer’s review.

    The Completely Made-Up Adventures of Dick Turpin

    British comedian Noel Fielding may be better known for his Bake Off hosting these days, but he returns to his oddball roots with The Completely Made-Up Adventures of Dick Turpin. The historical comedy series presents a fictional take on the life and times of infamous highway robber Dick Turpin. It’s sure to have the same wit and silliness as genre predecessors Blackadder and Monty Python, with good ol’ Dickie becoming the leader of a gang of outlaws despite being the least-skilled rogue of the bunch. The Completely Made-Up Adventures of Dick Turpin premieres Friday, March 1st.


    What to Watch is a regular endorsement of movies and TV worth your streaming time.

    What to Watch on Streaming This Week: March 1-7

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    Laura Babiak

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  • Best of 2023: Outstanding Horror Movie Performances

    Best of 2023: Outstanding Horror Movie Performances

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    Not only was it a fine year for horror movies, but it was also punctuated by a variety of intriguing, interesting, enticing, and downright mesmerizing performances in them.

    From scenery-chewing villains to heartbreaking characters of tragedy, here are some of the best horror movie performances of 2023.

    Alyssa Sutherland (Ellie in Evil Dead Rise)

    Credit: New Line Cinema

    The Evil Dead franchise is notable for two things. Ash Williams and Deadites. If one isn’t there, then it sure as hell needs a hefty showing from the other.

    Evil Dead Rise features no Ash, so it leans heavily on its Deadite action, and Alyssa Sutherland performs like, well…a woman possessed.

    Sutherland’s ”maggot mommy” is a mixture of Evil Dead Deadite old and new. Mischievous wise-cracking is there to a degree but with the nasty streak of Fede Alvarez’s 2013 movie.

    Mary Woodvine (The Volunteer in Enys Men)

    Enys Men is a difficult watch. Its discordant sound, grainy visuals, and repetitious story beats all serve a worthy purpose, but I can see how people might struggle with it.

    Anchoring the increasingly swimmy tale of a remote lighthouse is Mary Woodvine. Her protagonist, known only as The Volunteer, serves as a vessel for our feelings on the strange turn of events depicted on screen whilst going on a narrative voyage of her own.

    A lot of her performance has to come from facial expressions, and Woodvine conveys the dismay, worry, and horror of the story beautifully.

    Heather Graham (Dr. Elizabeth Derby in Suitable Flesh)

    Heather Graham’s expressive face just works wonders with Suitable Flesh. Joe Lynch’s cosmic horror madness works so well because Graham is at the heart of its body-swapping tale and conveys each of her personalities with fluid ease and no small amount of glee.

    More Heather Graham in horror movies, please.

    Larry Fessenden (Lt Col. Clive Hockstatter in Brooklyn 45)

    I really enjoyed Ted Geogahn’s World War II chamber piece because its ensemble of characters pulled the tale in all sorts of fascinating directions, but its catalyst is undoubtedly Lt. Col. Clive Hockstatter played by genre stalwart Larry Fessenden.

    Fessenden’s manic, heartbroken turn as a grieving army man sets the supernatural events of Brooklyn 45 in motion, and he continues to play a disturbing part of proceedings throughout.

    Mia Goth (Gabi Bauer in Infinity Pool)

    Mia Goth is a supreme weirdo, and we should be oh-so grateful she does horror movies. Case in point, her turn as Gabi Bauer in David Cronenberg’s unsettling and surreal latest Infinity Pool.

    Goth’s Gabi is enchanting and alluring in a slightly dangerous way at first, but as we delve deeper into the film’s story, she reveals her sadistic, manipulative ways and her frankly deranged glee in tormenting Alexander Skarsgaard.

    After the 1-2 punch of X and Pearl, Goth is on her way to becoming a genre icon.

    Sophia Wilde (Mia in Talk to Me)

    Talk to Me was one of the surprise hits of the year, thrusting its creators, Danny and Michael Phillipou, into the limelight. Its unique take on possession sees it used as a drug. And like any drug, the consequences can be devastating. Which Talk to Me emphatically shows us.

    Central to that is the tortured protagonist Mia, played by Sophia Wilde. She enters the story already grieving, and when the possession game appears to offer some closure, she carelessly pursues it, with a horrendous impact on the lives of those around her.

    Wilde’s complicated character is believable and sympathetic, and yet that doesn’t stop us from watching in abject horror as she goes down a self-destructive path.

    Justin Long (Mayor Henry Waters in It’s a Wonderful Knife)

    This was a toss-up between Long and his younger co-stars Jane Widdop and Jess McLeod who delivered a warm-hearted Christmas romance story in the bitter cold of a slasher movie. But Long perhaps best encapsulates what director Tyler MacIntyre and writer Michael Kennedy were going for.

    Long’s almost cartoonishly evil Mayor is very much a throwback to the kind of boo-hiss baddie of a certain Frank Capra Christmas classic but with the more obvious murderous edge. Justin Long’s likable qualities convert well to playing utter pricks, and Mayor Henry Waters is a fine example of that.

    Kaitlyn Dever (Brynn in No One Will Save You)

    Kaitlyn Dever in No One Will Save You
    Photo Credit: 20th Century Studios / Hulu

    Brian Duffield’s follow-up to the superb Spontaneous blends alien invasion with home invasion to tremendous effect. It’s near-wordless, but that doesn’t stop its star from shining bright.

    Kaitlyn Dever’s performance as the troubled recluse Brynn relies heavily on movement and expression to convey her character’s somewhat self-imposed isolation. Brynn’s struggles, both internal and external, come across on screen without a word being said, and Dever communicates them with a natural ability.

    Joaquin Phoenix (Beau Wassermann in Beau is Afraid)

    Ari Aster’s Beau is Afraid hops genres constantly, sometimes to its detriment, but Beau himself is living in a personal horror movie, and as such, Joaquin Phoenix’s performance as the titular character is a notable horror performance.

    That’s most readily apparent in the opening, where Aster and Phoenix put on a masterclass in ratcheting up anxiety-ridden uncomfortable tension. Beau utters every word like he believes the world will punish him for it.

    Phoenix absolutely delivers on the title’s sentiment because Beau is afraid, always, in so many different and uncomfortably relatable ways.

    Judy Reyes (Celie Morales in Birth/Rebirth)

    A female-centric modern-day spin on the Frankenstein story, Birth/Rebirth focuses on womanhood and the ability to bring life into this world and the tragedy found within that. Both leads in Laura Moss’ superb horror represent that in quite different ways, to begin with, but common ground unites them in a horrifyingly twisted vision.

    Judy Reyes may don the scrubs once more, but her character Celie Morales couldn’t be further removed from that sitcom variant. It’s a tough call to pick between the performances of Reyes and Marin Ireland in Birth/Rebirth, but the tragedy at the center of Celie’s story and the lengths she ends up going to in trying to reverse it make for a heartbreaking and shocking journey.

    Amie Donald/Jenna Davis (M3GAN in M3GAN)

    Both Amie Donald and Jenna Davis need mentioning in the performance of murderous robot M3GAN because both the physical and vocal performance make the character what it is.

    The deadpan line delivery of Davis is as deliciously cutting as the unnerving physical delivery of Donald is deadly.Sure, you could say the film’s always angling to make M3GAN a bonafide modern horror icon, but the attempt wouldn’t have been successful without the two actors involved.

    Russell Crowe (Father Gabriele Amorth in The Pope’s Exorcist)

    The Pope's Exorcist 2: Sequel in Development for Russell Crowe Movie

    The Pope’s Exorcist is a terrible movie. It’s the most cliche-ridden exorcism/demonic possession nonsense you’ll see wrapped into a single film.

    But here comes Father Gabriele Amorth, riding in on his scooter and chugging caffeinated beverages whilst kicking demon arse with a tongue sharper than a butcher’s knife. Russell Crowe drags the film kicking and screaming into relevance with a wonderfully outlandish performance.

    It’s the kind of role that feels like it should somehow allow Crowe to make a dozen more of these films. All technically terrible, but used as the perfect scaffolding for Amorth to strut his stuff again and again.

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    Neil Bolt

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  • Todd Phillips Gifts New ‘Joker: Folie à Deux’ Photos With Joaquin Phoenix, Lady Gaga

    Todd Phillips Gifts New ‘Joker: Folie à Deux’ Photos With Joaquin Phoenix, Lady Gaga

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    To celebrate the holiday season and new year, Todd Phillips gave fans new photos from the forthcoming Joker: Folie à Deux.

    The sequel to 2019’s Joker, starring Joaquin Phoenix and Lady Gaga, is set to be released from Warner Bros. on Oct. 4, 2024.

    The filmmaker released two photos on Instagram, and in the first one, Phoenix’s Arthur Fleck can be seen through what appears to be a prison cell window with the number “E258” written above it. The second image shows Gaga’s Harley Quinn wearing plain clothes, looking at Phoenix’s character in his iconic Joker makeup.

    Phillips followed the photos with the caption: “Wishing everyone a happy holiday and a beautiful new year. Oct 2024 #Joker2.”

    Though most of the film has been kept under wraps, the director has continued to tease fans throughout the year. In April, to celebrate filming wrapping, Phillips shared photos of Phoenix and Gaga in character. The A Star is Born actress was also photographed earlier this year during what appeared to be a New York City shoot for Joker: Folie à Deux.

    Gaga’s Harley Quinn first debuted in February when Phillips shared a first-look image on Instagram of the star holding Phoenix’s face. He wrote in the caption at the time, “Happy Valentine’s Day.”

    Joker, which grossed $1 billion, followed Arthur Fleck, a failed stand-up comedian battling mental health issues, who turns to crime and chaos.

    Joker: Folie à Deux will be one of the DC Elseworlds titles, along with Matt Reeves’ The Batman sequel, which is set to exist separate from DC Studios bosses James Gunn and Peter Safran’s slate.

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    Carly Thomas

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  • Quel Choc: Napoleon Falls Short

    Quel Choc: Napoleon Falls Short

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    Of all the numerous and controversial French political figures, it is Napoleon Bonaparte who remains foremost in the minds of the French and non-French alike. A(Bona)part(e) from Marie Antoinette, there is no other icon in French history who still continues to fascinate so enduringly on a “pop” level. To that end, the opening to Ridley Scott’s latest historical drama (spoiler alert: The Last Duel was much better), Napoleon, fittingly combines the two polarizing leaders in a scene that overtly foreshadows what will become of Monsieur Bonaparte after his own ascent. 

    And yet, watching Antoinette’s head get decapitated in front of a salivating mob doesn’t appear to be enough of an indelible image to quell Napoleon’s (played impressionistically by Joaquin Phoenix) ever-mounting hubris. Indeed, one might say that the only “message” ever established in Napoleon shines through in this lone (and entirely fabricated) scene foretelling of how powerful people are always taken down by this quintessential deadly sin. Napoleon, of course, assumes he is nothing like the monarchs guillotined as the pièce de résistance of the French Revolution. For a start, he’s a Corsican, which automatically makes him a “mutt brute” in the eyes of “real” French people/nobility. After all, it was only one year after Napoleon’s birth that the Republic of Genoa ceded the island to France, with the latter conquering it the year Napoleon was born, 1769. Which made his commitment to France later on so ironic. For he was fundamentally Italian. After all, not only was Corsica originally “possessed” by Italy before France, but any “blue blood” he had stemmed from being descended from Italian nobility (hence, his true last name: Buonaparte). Ergo, another fallacy of Scott’s film via making the tagline so posturing and oversimplifying as to be: “He came from nothing. He conquered everything.”

    In any event, perhaps this perception of himself as a “royal” is why he saw his “ownership” of France as some kind of “divine right,” in the end. For even despite “supporting the ideals” of the French Revolution that led to the abolition of the monarchy, Napoleon still couldn’t resist the temptation and seduction of “ultimate power.” No more than he could resist the charms of Joséphine de Beauharnais (played here by Vanessa Kirby, though the role was originally intended for Jodie Comer, who also starred in The Last Duel). A woman who many a man (both then and now) would readily call a “slut.” Indeed, that’s the word used by Napoleon in the film after he’s confronted by The Directory over his “desertion” during the Battle of Egypt upon hearing news of Joséphine’s affair with Hippolyte Charles (Jannis Niewöhner). At which time, he gives them a long spiel about how, if anything, they’re the ones who have deserted France, while Napoleon has returned to restore it to its natural state of glory. This includes, naturally, another coup, with Napoleon and his coterie of co-conspirators, Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand (Paul Rhys), Joseph Fouché (John Hodgkinson), Emmanuel Joseph Sieyès (Julian Rhind-Tutt) and Roger Ducos (Benedict Martin), taking over by force when their “whim to rule” isn’t met with unanimous acceptance. So it is that Napoleon repeats the same cycle of oppression that the French revolutionaries vowed never to tolerate again after toppling the monarchy. 

    Turns out, Napoleon seemed to think the word “emperor” instead of “king” somehow made his imposed rule more “palatable,” even going so far as to impudently crown himself at the coronation. An emperor willing to “get his hands dirty,” as it were. Of course, this is just one of the many “flourishes” (picked up from a legend surrounding the coronation) that Scott has added to the tale of Napoleon as told through a “Hollywood lens,” one that has been deemed as patently anti-French and pro-British. Scott did little to quash that assessment when he said, in response to negative French reviews of the film, “The French don’t even like themselves.” However, if Napoleon was any indication to be held up as a benchmark, that’s simply not true at all. And it’s perhaps because they hold themselves and their history in such high regard that this film is particularly offensive, namely as Americans speak in attempts at a French accent. This, in turn, also adding to the overall absurdity of the storytelling (also present in House of Gucci when Americans were speaking with “Italian” accents, Lady Gaga being among the worst of the offenders). 

    Scott stated at the outset of his announcement to direct a film about the emperor, ​​“He came out of nowhere to rule everything—but all the while he was waging a romantic war with his adulterous wife Joséphine. He conquered the world to try to win her love, and when he couldn’t, he conquered it to destroy her, and destroyed himself in the process.” Absolutely none of that comes across in the choppy, disjointedness of Napoleon, which wants so badly to cover such a multitude of themes and grounds that it ends up saying little at all. It is merely a “retelling.” And one with many historical inaccuracies at that (this being another primary complaint about the movie). Not least of which, of course, is the fact that Napoleon wasn’t present at Antoinette’s beheading. 

    Written by David Scarpa (who also penned the script for Scott’s All the Money in the World and his upcoming sequel to Gladiator), the lack of focus on any one aspect of the vast entity that is Napoleon often causes issues in terms of structure and “meaning.” More often than not, it feels as though things are “just happening” without any buildup to it, let alone a sense of cause and effect. 

    Funnily enough, Scott’s first feature film, The Duellists (released in 1977), is centered around the Napoleonic Wars and homes in on two rival French officers named Gabriel Feraud (Harvey Keitel), a devoted Bonapartist, and Armand d’Hubert (Keith Carradine), an aristocrat. Spanning twenty years, the film manages to come in well under two hours and covers far more ground than Napoleon can seem to. For it suffers from the same problem as its eponymous dictator: it’s too ambitious and, ultimately, can’t make its mind up about what it wants to achieve. This is likely a result of the script not being based on any specific source material. Whereas Scott seems to be at his best when he works with a script that’s based on an adapted screenplay. This, it should go without saying, does not apply to the odious House of Gucci. In fact, the latter movie and Napoleon suffer from many of the same issues, including, but not limited to: 1) things “just happen” for no reason, thereby making plot and character development all but nil and 2) Scott has become somewhat notorious for letting other cultures tell stories that don’t belong to them. Because, obviously, if any culture should get to tell the story of Maurizio Gucci and Patrizia Reggiani or Napoleon and Joséphine, it should goddamn well be the Italians and the French, respectively. To that end, the real Napoleon biopic to see is 1927’s Napoléon. Not so coincidentally, the film was slated for another restoration and rerelease this year—as though the French wanted to remind a Brit like Scott that it’s absolutely galling to presume to tell the story of their emperor. 

    As for someone like Marie Antoinette, who has been fixated upon in cinema repeatedly by all manner of nationalities, it was Sofia Coppola (via Kirsten Dunst) who claimed the most memorable ownership over her in recent years. This achieved by fully “pop-ifying” both her personage and the script and soundtrack. Opting to contain the narrative with far more dexterity than Scott is able to with Napoleon. In point of fact, one wonders if this film might not have been better off if Scott and Scarpa had chosen to go full-tilt camp with it (alas, that’s not really something two straight men are capable of, which means casting Peter Dinklage in the lead role would have been out of the question). For there are slight “glimmers” of such campiness in Napoleon’s lecherous exchanges with Joséphine (e.g., Jo opening her legs in front of “Boney” and saying, “If you look down here you’ll see a present, and once you see it you’ll always want it” or Napoleon making animalistic noises at her after she’s just had her hair “set,” finally prompting her to give in to his sexual desires). In truth, the entire movie should have simply had one focus: Napoleon and Joséphine (likely earning it the same straightforward title). That way, there would have been a firmer anchor to the film as opposed to this sense of being “all over the place” (though it is literally that as well, with Scott showing us the far-reaching backdrops of Napoleon’s various famed battles). And, again, with no real “lead up” to anything. Case in point, the sudden decision to include Tsar Alexander’s (Édouard Philipponnat) romantic overtures to Joséphine after her divorce from Napoleon. Overtures that were more likely politically motivated than genuinely romantic.

    But such is to be expected from a film fraught with embellishments. Including the much-praised battle scenes themselves, accused by Foreign Policy’s Franz-Stefan Gady of being nothing more than “a Hollywood mishmash of medieval melees, meaningless cannonades, and World War I-style infantry advances.” Adding, “For all of Scott’s fixation on Napoleon’s battles, he seems curiously disinterested in how the real Napoleon fought them.”

    Nonetheless, to any condemnation of his seemingly flagrant disregard for accuracy, Scott snapped (in an article for The New Yorker), “Get a life.” For some, though, Napoleon/Napoleonic history is their life. While, for others, quality cinema is. On both counts, Napoleon cannot quite deliver. Falling shorter than the man it pays homage to.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Inside Vanessa Kirby’s Mercurial, Darkly Funny Take on Napoleon’s Joséphine

    Inside Vanessa Kirby’s Mercurial, Darkly Funny Take on Napoleon’s Joséphine

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    The strangest thing about watching Napoleon, particularly the scenes between the eponymous French emperor and his first wife, Joséphine de Beauharnais, is that you quickly realize you’re watching a very dark comedy. That’s in part a credit to director Ridley Scott, who brings an absurdist sensibility to the bizarre power dynamics between one of history’s most notorious war commanders and his mercurial empress. But the tone is ultimately sold by the chaotic, boiling chemistry between their portrayers, Joaquin Phoenix and Vanessa Kirby.

    Kirby especially goes in directions you don’t expect. Her performance is impossible to pin down, a marvel of emotional contradictions and compelling resoluteness. In her unyielding stare and poise, it’s easy to understand how she’s slowly driving the world’s most powerful man completely mad. And in the relationship’s more intense, painful, and even traumatic moments, Kirby imbues Joséphine with a subtle empathy, a lifetime of experiences registering across a nervous flicker in the eye.

    With Napoleon in theaters this Thanksgiving weekend, the Oscar- and Emmy-nominated Kirby (Pieces of a Woman, The Crown) joined Little Gold Men for an in-depth conversation about building the most enigmatic character of her screen career. Read on below, and stay tuned for Thursday’s episode.

    Aidan Monaghan

    Vanity Fair: There’s a fascinating power differential between Napoleon and Joséphine. When you go into a movie called Napoleon, about Napoleon, you’re expecting this epic portrait of this brutal war general, and instead, in your scenes, you get this portrait of this really resolute woman and this very insecure, at times very strange man. How did you approach it?

    Vanessa Kirby: We both felt it was one of the most fascinating, contradictory, and complex relationships we’d ever come across. [Laughs] I urge anyone to go in and explore it more. His letters, for example, even as a starting point—it’s unbelievable that you have this, as you say, military general who’s out there on the battlefield, instigating war and conquering land, and then rushing back to his tent to write these letters, which almost feel adolescent in their obsessive-compulsive nature. He wrote to her nearly every day, and she didn’t write him back in the early days at all.

    Looking at their decades-long relationship—how dependent they were on each other; codependent, really—we felt the power shifts within it, the need to possess, [less] a maturing and more a fusing with each other and a need. In any relationship where there’s extreme need and there’s something unhealed in them as individuals when they come together, there’s inevitably going to be something that’s naturally volatile.

    You’ve talked about the openness you had with Joaquin to let loose and go off from what was on the script. I believe the slap in the movie, for instance, was improvised. How did that dynamic between you as actors develop?

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    David Canfield

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  • ‘Napoleon’ Director Ridley Scott Dismisses Critics: “The French Don’t Even Like Themselves’

    ‘Napoleon’ Director Ridley Scott Dismisses Critics: “The French Don’t Even Like Themselves’

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    Ridley Scott has been typically dismissive of critics taking issue with his forthcoming movie Napoleon, particularly French ones.

    While his big-screen epic, starring Joaquin Phoenix as the embattled French emperor with Vanessa Kirby as his wife Josephine, has earned the veteran director plaudits in the UK, French critics have been less gushing, with Le Figaro saying the film could have been called “Barbie and Ken under the Empire,” French GQ calling the film “deeply clumsy, unnatural and unintentionally clumsy” and Le Point magazine quoting biographer Patrice Gueniffey calling the film “very anti-French and pro-British.”

    Asked by the BBC to respond, Scott replied with customary swagger:

    “The French don’t even like themselves. The audience that I showed it to in Paris, they loved it.”

    The film’s world premiere took place in the French capital this week.

    Scott added he would say to historians questioning the accuracy of his storytelling:

    “Were you there? Oh you weren’t there. Then how do you know?”

    The film, with the story spread over six different but equally huge battle scenes, was shot in an impressive 61 days, and comes in at 2 hours 38 minutes, Scott told the BBC he wanted to keep the running time below 3 hours:

    “When you start to go ‘oh my God’ and then you say ‘Christ, we can’t eat for another hour,’ it’s too long.”

    Scott, a veteran of big screen hits from Alien to Gladiator and Black Hawk Down, said he couldn’t resist telling the story of Napoloeon: “He’s so fascinating. Revered, hated, loved… more famous than any man or leader or politician in history. How could you not want to go there?”

    And his star Joaquin Phoenix, who first worked for Scott 23 years ago in Gladiator, shared that he was excited to team up again with a director he still felt gratitude towards:

    “The studio did not want me for Gladiator. In fact, Ridley was given an ultimatum and he fought for me and it was just this extraordinary experience.”

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    Caroline Frost

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  • Ridley Scott’s ‘Napoleon’ Has a Few Shortcomings

    Ridley Scott’s ‘Napoleon’ Has a Few Shortcomings

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    It’s 1812 in the winter hell of Russia. Thousands of French troops (and their allies) are making an agonizing retreat toward Poland, the victims of weather more than their opposing forces. (Though the Tsar’s army has certainly done its damage.) The leader of these beleaguered men, Napoleon Bonaparte (Joaquin Phoenix), walks among them. “We’re winning!” he says. Lol.

    Ridley Scott’s Napoleon (in theaters November 22) is a study of such stubbornness, perhaps particularly of the male variety. The film, written by David Scarpa, takes one of the most studied figures in history and turns him into an avatar of a ruinous human impulse: the unyielding pursuit of more renown, more glory, more power. Megalomaniacs like Napoleon have emerged throughout our species’s timeline, laying waste to so much around them and, eventually, to themselves. Perhaps Scott and Scarpa see some pertinence there, some relevance to our own era. Is, say, Donald Trump a Napoleonic figure, short fingers swapped in for a general diminutiveness? Is he any number of the other strong men who have recently risen to power over the last decade or so? Maybe.

    Though the jokes about Napoleon’s height are sparing, there is plenty of other comedy in the film. Napoleon’s version of this infamous and strangely revered emperor is a ridiculous, petulant figure—not quite to the “terribly vexed” extremes of Phoenix’s character in Scott’s Gladiator, but certainly in the same family. Phoenix has always been good at depicting this kind of pathetic tyranny, deftly (and swiftly) shifting from bratty, toothless insouciance to genuine menace. The actor seems to get both the joke and the seriousness of the film, though I wish Scott were better at communicating that tone to the audience.

    One can only vaguely infer the ultimate intent of Napoleon. It’s part bracing, if repetitive, war film. It is also a wry survey of dangerous male ego. (Scott did it better in 2021’s The Last Duel.) And then there is its sideways love story, between Napoleon and his one-time wife, Josephine (Vanessa Kirby). In the early, promising portion of that narrative, the film seems to be heading into the territory of Phantom Thread, a look at a vainglorious albeit talented man nearly undone by a romantic equal. Kirby, as she is so often, is a slinky and intelligent delight, fixing steely gazes flecked with genuine hurt at this bizarre little man she maybe comes to love. Or she’s only in love with his power. Or they’re the same thing. 

    Napoleon is a demanding and abusive husband, one who expects total devotion from his wife. But he also keeps crawling back, craving more of whatever mysterious power Josephine herself possesses. Again, though, one has to strain to really extract any theme out of all this push and pull. Scott keeps the film awfully stiff; we don’t even get a big final scene before Josephine’s death from diphtheria. “Yeah, yeah, here’s that stuff,” Scott seems to say, before yet again turning to another enormous art-of-war battle scene.

    Those, of course, are a forte of the director’s, as he has shown from Gladiator to his jumbled but interesting Kingdom of Heaven and his pleasingly moody take on Robin Hood. Here, Scott trades arrows for cannon balls, whizzing and booming across fields of the Continent (and, in one grimly amusing scene of wanton destruction, into the Great Pyramids of Giza). Horses and men alike are felled in grizzly fashion. (The animal wrangling and safekeeping budget on this production must have been massive.) The Austerlitz sequence is especially effective, a horror of snowy combat that sees Napoleon’s enemies fleeing, in terrible futility, across a frozen lake. If these are what gets Scott’s blood up, then so be it. Maybe he can do the American Revolution next.

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    Richard Lawson

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  • Napoleon Clip: Joaquin Phoenix Orchestrates a Brutal Icy Trap for His Enemies

    Napoleon Clip: Joaquin Phoenix Orchestrates a Brutal Icy Trap for His Enemies

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    A new Napoleon clip for Sony Pictures’ forthcoming epic war drama has been revealed, featuring Oscar winner Joaquin Phoenix as the titular French leader.

    The video shows the controversial historical figure as he displays his military prowess and intelligence by coming up with an ingenious plan to defeat their enemies. It highlights the Battle of Austerlitz, where Napoleon lures opposing forces into a brutal icy trap. The film premieres on November 22.

    Check out the Napoleon clip below (watch more trailers):

    What to expect in Napoleon?

    Ridley Scott is directing from a screenplay written by David Scarpa. This marks Phoenix and Scott’s latest collaboration together after previously working together in the acclaimed 2000 epic drama Gladiator. Joining Phoenix are Vanessa Kirby, Tahar Rahim, Ben Miles, Ludivine Sagnier, Matthew Needham, Youssef Kerkour, Phil Cornwell, and more.

    “Napoleon is a spectacle-filled action epic that details the checkered rise and fall of the iconic French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte,” reads the synopsis. “Against a stunning backdrop of large-scale filmmaking orchestrated by legendary director Ridley Scott, the film captures Bonaparte’s relentless journey to power through the prism of his addictive, volatile relationship with his one true love, Josephine, showcasing his visionary military and political tactics against some of the most dynamic practical battle sequences ever filmed.”

    Napoleon is produced by Scott and Kevin Walsh for Scott Free. As Scott prepares for the movie’s upcoming release this year, he is also currently busy working on his long-awaited Gladiator sequel, which will be led by Oscar nominee Paul Mescal.

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    Maggie Dela Paz

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  • Joaquin Phoenix Shows off His Napoleon Complex in New ‘Napoleon’ Trailer

    Joaquin Phoenix Shows off His Napoleon Complex in New ‘Napoleon’ Trailer

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    Ridley Scott’s epic historical drama on Napoleon Bonaparte recently received its second trailer as its release date quickly approaches. While Scott is most well-known for his sci-fi films, such as Alien, Blade Runner, and The Martian, his other specialty is historical and period dramas. Often, he blends the genres of historical drama and action, such as with Gladiator and The Duellists. Hence, his upcoming film, Napoleon, should encompass the elements of historical filmmaking that he is best at.

    Additionally, the legacy of Napoleon Bonaparte is one of the most intriguing and complicated in French history. Bonaparte is considered one of the greatest military leaders of all time, having first risen through the ranks of the French army before eventually naming himself Emperor of France. Through his skilled military tactics, he succeeded in forming the First French Empire and attaining control of a good portion of Europe. He is remembered for having embraced the ideas of the French Revolution during his career and having advocated to uphold them during his reign. Ultimately, his empire fell after he led a disastrous invasion of Russia, leaving the former Emperor to live out his remaining days in exile.

    Bonaparte’s legacy remains mixed. On the one hand, he is remembered for forming the First French Empire and attempting to solidify the rights the French Revolution fought for with his Napoleonic Code. On the other hand, he is also remembered for reinstating slavery in the French colonies and being so power-hungry that he cared little for the estimated millions of lives lost during the Napoleonic Wars. Capturing the scope of his military career, French rule, and the polarizing legacy he left behind is bound to be complicated but fascinating if Scott can pull it off.

    Napoleon‘s second trailer delves into Bonaparte’s ego

    Napoleon is set to release in theaters on November 22, and with just a month left before its premiere, Sony dropped the second official trailer. Sony is collaborating with Apple Original Films on Napoleon, and it will also be available to stream on Apple TV+ at an undisclosed later date.

    The trailer, which fittingly plays to the backdrop of Black Sabbath’s “War Pigs,” delves into the scope of Napoleon and Bonaparte’s infamous ego. It starts with Bonaparte (Joaquin Phoenix) looking on stoically during what appears to be the Battle of Austerlitz as he tricks the opposing army onto the ice while mercilessly firing canons upon them. Additionally, through most of the trailer, we hear Bonaparte describing himself as being built differently, comparing himself to Alexander the Great and Caesar, and declaring that he is “destined for greatness.” He comes across as a man truly obsessed with being great and how people perceive him. Besides delving into his personality, the second Napoleon trailer gives many clips of brutal, epic, and realistic battles.

    The first trailer, released on July 10, also showed snippets of the Battle of Austerlitz, as well as a more noble side of Bonaparte, who expressed wanting to prevent France from falling or failing.

    We also see the support he had when crowning himself Emperor. However, doubts and dissent are also shown over his egotism and relentless pursuit of power.

    Joaquin Phoenix stars as Bonaparte in Napoleon

    Joaquin Phoenix as Napoleon Bonaparte in Napoleon
    (Sony Pictures Releasing/Apple Original Films)

    Phoenix is set to lead Napoleon in the lead role of Bonaparte. Phoenix is the award-winning actor best known for his roles in Joker, Gladiator, and Beau is Afraid. He’s no stranger to portraying larger-than-life figures, as he once portrayed Johnny Cash, and he has a knack for exceedingly complex characters. It’s anticipated his role as Bonaparte could land him another Academy Award nomination for Best Actor. Also expected to be a shoo-in for the Oscars is Phoenix’s co-star, Vanessa Kirby, who will portray Bonaparte’s first wife, Empress Joséphine. Kirby is best known for her role in The Crown, and she is captivating in Napoleon‘s trailer as the bold, feisty, and fierce woman declaring Bonaparte is nothing without her.

    The Prophet‘s Tahar Rahim will star as Paul Barras, a corrupt and powerful politician who aided in Bonaparte’s rise to power and set him up with Joséphine, while Sanditon‘s Matthew Needham will portray Bonaparte’s brother, Lucien Bonaparte. Another star from The Crown, Ben Miles, will appear in Napoleon as Caulaincourt, Bonaparte’s advisor. Ludivine Sagnier will also appear as Theresa Cabarrus, the Princess of Chimay. Other royalty appearing in Napoleon include Édouard Philipponnat as Alexander I, the Tsar of Russia, Rupert Everett as Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington, and Catherine Walker as Marie-Antoinette.

    Rounding out the cast of Napoleon are Paul Rhys as Talleyrand, Mark Bonnar as Jean-Andoche Junot, Youssef Kerkour as General Davout, Sam Crane as Jacques-Louis David, and Phil Cornwell as Sanson ‘The Borreau.’

    What will Napoleon focus on?

    Joaquin Phoenix as Napoleon Bonaparte on a horse in Napoleon
    (Sony Pictures Releasing/Apple Original Films)

    Given how expansive and controversial Bonaparte’s history is, viewers may be wondering what part of his story Napoleon will focus most on. The official synopsis for the film reads:

    “Napoleon is a spectacle-filled action epic that details the checkered rise and fall of the iconic French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte. Against a stunning backdrop of large-scale filmmaking orchestrated by legendary director Ridley Scott, the film captures Bonaparte’s relentless journey to power through the prism of his addictive, volatile relationship with his one true love, Josephine, showcasing his visionary military and political tactics against some of the most dynamic practical battle sequences ever filmed.”

    Hence, it appears the film will focus mainly on the years of Bonaparte’s rule, which lasted from 1804-1814, as well as the military career that preceded his rise to the throne. Additionally, while Bonaparte had two wives and many mistresses during his lifetime, the film will focus on his marriage to Joséphine. Joséphine is often considered Bonaparte’s “one true love,” although they divorced due to Bonaparte’s desire for an heir. It will be interesting to explore Bonaparte’s personal life, as his history is too often explored only in relation to his rule and military skill. With a grand scale, impressive cast, and deep dive into the tumultuous years of Bonaparte’s rule, Napoleon has the potential to be quite the historical epic.

    This piece was written during the 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike. Without the labor of the actors currently on strike, the work being covered here wouldn’t exist.

    (featured image: Sony Pictures Releasing/Apple Original Films )

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

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    Rachel Ulatowski

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  • Ridley Scott’s ‘Napolean’ Trailer Released

    Ridley Scott’s ‘Napolean’ Trailer Released

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    Movies about Napoleon are nothing new. Kubrick tried to do one back in the day. Fortunately, this one appears to be nearly finished. Ridley Scott’s vision of the rise of the French emperor stars Joaquin Phoenix, perhaps one of the most revered actors right now.

    Scott describes the film as:

    Napoleon Bonaparte’s relentless journey to power through the prism of his addictive, volatile relationship with his one true love, Josephine (Vanessa Kirby), showcasing his visionary military and political tactics against some of the most dynamic practical battle sequences ever filmed.”

    Back in 2021, Scott spoke with Deadlineexplaining what interested him about the story and why he knew it was only Phoenix who could pull the role off.

    “Napoleon is a man I’ve always been fascinated by, came out of nowhere to rule everything — but all the while he was waging a romantic war with his adulterous wife Josephine. He conquered the world to try to win her love, and when he couldn’t, he conquered it to destroy her, and destroyed himself in the process. No actor could ever embody Napoleon like Joaquin,” Scott said. “He created one of movie history’s most complex Emperors in Gladiator, and we’ll create another with his Napoleon. It’s a brilliant script written by David Scarpa, and today there’s no better partner than Apple to bring a story like this to a global audience.”

    The trailer hints at a grand epic. It depicts a war waging within one man, as it leaks out into the world around him. Unfortunately, in the end, he wouldn’t win either one. The film will be released theatrically on Nov. 20. Some time afterward, it’ll be available to stream on Apple TV+.

    You can watch the trailer for Napoleon below:

    ‘Napoleon’ Official Trailer – Watch

    The Best Movies of 2023 So Far

    Through the first half of the year, here are the movies you have to see.

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    Cody Mcintosh

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  • Video: ‘Beau Is Afraid’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    Video: ‘Beau Is Afraid’ | Anatomy of a Scene

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    Film directors walk viewers through one scene of their movies, showing the magic, motives and the mistakes from behind the camera.

    Film directors walk viewers through one scene of their movies, showing the magic, motives and the mistakes from behind the camera.

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    Mekado Murphy

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  • Don’t Be Afraid of Beau Is Afraid—Unless the Overbearing Jewish Mother Trope Is Your Worst Nightmare

    Don’t Be Afraid of Beau Is Afraid—Unless the Overbearing Jewish Mother Trope Is Your Worst Nightmare

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    As one of those movies that has so much psychological buildup surrounding it before one even goes into the theater (or rather, if one goes into the theater at all to watch movies), Beau Is Afraid has as many things working against garnering audience attention as it does attracting it. In the latter column, of course, is that it’s directed by Ari Aster, the writer-director slowly but steadily being groomed into a modern auteur by A24. Then there is the cast, an impressive coterie of actors, including Patti LuPone, Nathan Lane, Amy Ryan and Parker Posey, led by Joaquin Phoenix. But there in the “repelling” column is that the movie comes across as “weird”—deliberately “off-putting.” Especially to the layperson. This, of course, is compounded by the two hour and fifty-nine-minute runtime of the film. In effect, Aster is saying, “This movie is not about people-pleasing.” Some would be hard-pressed to see it as being about anything at all. Those people have perhaps never suffered from the crippling anxiety and paranoia involved in simply leaving the (semi-)safety of their abode. In that sense, one can look at the first portion of Beau Is Afraid as being like What About Bob? on steroids, complete with Bob’s (Bill Murray) extreme phobia of leaving the apartment. Except that, in Beau’s case, that fear is entirely merited.

    Living in the fictional city of Corrina, CR, it reads visually like a combination of New York and San Francisco (and yes, SF gets far more flak for its violent, erratic homeless population than NY—though perhaps NY simply has a greater number of ass-kissers at its PR disposal). Beau’s apartment building is situated next to a sex shop called Erectus Ejectus and across the street from the Cheapo Depot, a bodega run by a take-no-prisoners proprietor who isn’t liable to give you any kind of discount when you happen to be short on the amount just because you’re a regular. After all, he can’t afford such niceties in a hostile climate like this. One that, in the end, seems entirely manufactured by Mona Wasserman (Patti LuPone), Beau’s corporate maven of a mother. The type of woman who far exceeds a cutesy, demeaning term like “girlboss.” This is a woman who puts all previous known masterminds and manipulators to shame. To this end, Aster, born into a Jewish family, can now easily be characterized by this film as the proverbial self-hating Jew. No longer a title that Woody Allen alone can claim as a result of his affirmed cancellation in the film industry (essentially capitulating to that cancellation by admitting his next movie would be his last…until backpedaling on that statement soon after).

    As such, Aster’s presentation of a Jewish mother as so overbearing and controlling that she would go to such lengths to hyper-manage her only son’s life definitely one-ups any self-hating depictions Allen ever offered (see: Annie Hall, Deconstructing Harry). Or Allen’s nemesis, for that matter: Philip Roth. And yes, there are plenty of Portnoy’s Complaint elements in the mix here (chief among them the giant penis locked in the attic intended to represent Beau’s father).

    It would also make one remiss in their cinephilic tendencies to overlook The Truman Show as a major influence on this particular work. With that “I’m being watched” kind of revelation occurring in Part Two of the movie, as Beau finds himself in the “care” of a sinister couple of means named Grace (Amy Ryan) and Roger (Nathan Lane) after being mowed down by their truck while in the midst of running through the street outside his apartment naked. This occurring as a result of the homeless population outside finding their way in as a roundabout result of Beau’s keys being stolen from his door. After they party all night with Beau watching from some scaffolding outside, he awakens the next morning to find his apartment empty. Or so he thinks. However, upon taking a bath after learning of his mother’s death from a UPS guy (voiced and briefly cameo’d by Bill Hader), the sight of another crazed “unhoused” person clinging to the ceiling above him ultimately sends him running outside in his birthday suit. Oh yes, and there’s also an errant serial killer in the neighborhood called Birthday Boy Stab Man, likely dubbed as such because he “operates” in his birthday suit. And, of course, he ends up stabbing Beau a few times after he’s rendered immobile and barely conscious due to the truck hitting him. Therefore, all of Beau’s worst fears and anxieties are realized—and then some.

    It’s not a coincidence that all those fears and anxieties start to reach a crescendo after Beau has “rejected” his mother by telling her he’s not going to make it to the airport in time for their scheduled visit because someone stole his keys and he doesn’t feel comfortable heading out until the locks have been changed. But Mona has her ways and her machinations for coaxing Beau into an Odyssean journey to make it back as soon as possible so that her funeral can proceed. Because, that’s right, she’s faked her own death to inflict the amount of guilt she thinks he feels deserving of (and here, the trope of a Jewish mother’s guilt is on full blast). Per Mona’s lawyer, “Dr.” Cohen, she’s stipulated in her will that the ceremony cannot take place without him. Unfortunately for Beau’s guilt quotient, it gets upped by the fact that Jewish law dictates that a body must be buried right away. So it is that Beau is both a bad son and a bad Jew. A fate that seems irreversible to all male Jews, if we’re to go by literature and film. Grace and Roger, the epitome of a white-bread Christian couple, could never know Beau’s torment, even as they conspire to be a part of it. It’s not as clear whether their surviving teenage daughter, Toni (Kylie Rogers), is as “in on it” as her parents, who have been trying to fill the void left in the absence of their dead son, Nathan, a soldier that died in combat. Caring for his fellow battalion member, Jeeves (Denis Ménochet), an unhinged man requiring many meds, is the obvious way for them to “make up” for the loss of Nathan. But with the arrival of Beau comes a new opportunity to “nurture.” Even if it’s as smothering and oppressive as Mona’s version of “nurturing.”

    Early on in the movie, some would immediately say the world Beau inhabits is cartoonish and absurdist—at one point literally becoming animated as he imagines himself as the protagonist of a play he’s watching. Or that all of his fears are a result of the kind of hyper-neurotic nature that Jews are frequently stereotyped as having (of course, who can blame them with anti-Semitism alive and well even after the extermination of six million of their kind?). But, in the end, the one fear he doesn’t think to have is actually not so far-fetched: being monitored constantly. For it’s not hard to believe that someone (especially someone with enough money) could track, record and/or film your every move, and then use it against you when they finally want to render you totally paralyzed by the paranoia you thought you had overcome. Worse still, use it to play into all your worst senses of guilt. After all, it’s no coincidence that the billboard outside Beau’s building bears the Big Brother-y tagline, “Jesus Sees Your Abominations.” More like Mona does.

    And, talking of taglines, Beau has been part of Mona’s advertising campaigns for most of his life. She being the head of a multi-faceted conglomerate that has its hand in everything from pharmaceuticals to film production. With Mona’s company name for the latter being Mommy Knows Best. An eerie assertion from a woman who has her eye in every possible surveillance pie. This going hand in hand with “security,” for which MW (which stands for Mona Wasserman) also has a tagline: “Your security has been our priority for forty years.” Beau’s own age is forty-eight (same as Joaquin Phoenix’s) as we come to find at the end, when a god-like voice (Dr. Cohen’s) announces his date of birth as May 10, 1975. So perhaps the key root of all Beau’s issues is that he’s a Taurus. But no, it’s being born to a Jewish mother, if Aster would have us convinced of anything. It’s also a very deliberate word choice for Mona to use the phrase “claw your way out of me” to Beau during their ultimate showdown in what can be called Part Four of the film. For it is with that “clawing” out of her womb that Beau Is Afraid begins, with the audience seeing his birth from Beau’s perspective.

    From the first moments of his existence, anxiety permeates everything as his mother frantically demands to know about the state and health of her child, who appears not to be breathing normally. But with a requisite slap on the ass, Beau is prompted to cry. This slapping cue turning more metaphorical as his repressed life wears on. For every time he is lashed in one way or another by his mother’s various cues, Beau snaps to attention and grudgingly “performs.” His life is not his own—it belongs to his mother. And this is made no more apparent than in her financial control over him. Indeed, Beau’s credit card is “mysteriously” deactivated after he tells Mona he can’t make his flight. Whether or not Beau was as willing a participant in his own infantilization as Mona is up to the viewer to decide. However, those with parents who have infantilized them are likely aware that being irrevocably handicapped by the crushing weight of “safety and security” eventually feels like an unavoidable fate rather than something that can be fought against. Surrender Dorothy, as it is said. Or, in this case, Surrender Beau. That’s what Mona, in the Wicked Witch of the West’s stead is undeniably saying. And she’s saying it because she knows she has all the resources necessary to take him down and debilitate him.

    In this regard, Jacobin’s take on Mona as a cold capitalist machine that it would be impossible to receive any unconditional or pure love from is right on the money (no pun intended). Jacobin, too, points out certain similarities between Citizen Kane and Beau Is Afraid in that it’s “a character study of a boy whose ‘parents were a bank.’” Or, for Beau, “parent.” And what kind of love can really be received from someone who has to be clinical and cold enough to be able to make millions (or billions) of dollars? It bears noting that Jacobin’s critique of the film isn’t favorable, writing Beau off as the product of a writer who gets off on “trauma tourism”—but if he had really suffered from that much genuine trauma, Beau/Aster wouldn’t have the luxury of portraying it at all. Maybe, to a certain extent, this is a fair assessment. The people given a megaphone to talk about trauma still tend to be people who grew up middle-class, white and male. Read: Aster. And yet, as Bob Dylan said, “I’m helpless, like a rich man’s child.” This simile is not without its value in considering a being such as Beau, given a surfeit of tangible tools as a result of having a rich progenitor, but no real ones he could actually use to cope in a life outside of “the nest.”

    And what could “real life” possibly be to a boy who ostensibly grew up in a fishbowl town called Wasserton (named after his mother), anyway? This, again, channels The Truman Show vibes, when it’s not also smacking of something pulled from the mind of fellow Jewish auteur Charlie Kaufman (think: Synecdoche, New York). And, like Kaufman, Aster is concerned with the futility of attempting to alter one’s preordained fate. Because no matter how we try to fight it or “rewrite” it (as the artist so often does in their work), in the end, “it is written.” That much is made obvious when we see Beau fast-forward through the surveillance footage of himself at Grace and Roger’s to the final scene in the movie. The final scene is his life. One that will be quite full-circle in terms of comparing it to the opening scene: his birth.  

    As for the mother-son dynamic that serves as the central anchor of the narrative, the classic Oedipus story is also constantly in motion, with Mona clearly wanting to keep her son’s love and desire all to herself—hence, the urban legend she scares him into believing about his father that keeps Beau as well beyond a forty-year-old virgin. With the epididymitis to prove it. That means huge, swollen balls, to the unmedically trained. Ironically, of course, Beau’s “big balls” don’t translate to the idiomatic version of that phrase inferring bravery and “chutzpah.” Quite the opposite as he spends most of the movie quivering and cowering in fear (the movie title is there for a reason). Not just of what could happen, but what has happened already. Which is where Aster’s knack for horror melds seamlessly with the psychological trauma of memory, and remembering. That’s all Beau does, as we seem to see him existing in multiple planes of time via perpetual reflection (such is the luxury of not having a job apart from existence itself).

    In this way, viewers will be allowed to question how much of what happens is “just in his head” versus how much is “reality.” Which, as most know, is totally subjective. This being a large part of why Mona can manipulate Beau’s “reality” for her own controlling ends. Ends that appear to be more sadistic than altruistic, as she would like to tell herself. For example, when he’s born and arrives out of the womb in silence, her demand is: “Why isn’t he crying?” In other words, doesn’t he know how painful it is to exist (nay, for Mona to bring him into existence) and what the according reaction should be? This later translates to another question she asks of Beau: “Is he afraid enough of the world?” No? Well then Mona—rich Mona—will make it so. With this in mind, although Beau is firmly Gen X, we have an undeniable commentary on millennial-baby boomer relations contained in Beau Is Afraid as well. For was it not the boomers who wanted to give their millennial spawn the pristine, protected childhood that they never got? Resulting in the manufacture of a generation consisting mostly of scared, confused man-children just like Beau.

    Initially billed by Aster as a “nightmare comedy” (like something in the spirit of Martin Scorsese’s After Hours in which all the protagonist wants to do is go home, but his prewritten destiny has other tortures in mind), how the genre of Beau Is Afraid comes across is more about how the viewer themselves sees life: as a comedy or tragedy. Here, too, it’s hard not to think of “Jewish representative” Woody Allen, who based an entire movie on this premise—the subpar Melinda and Melinda.

    For the seasoned neurotic and those accustomed to even the most basic of tasks in life being herculean to achieve without incident, the accurate takeaway is that it’s an absurdist tragicomedy. And so it goes without saying that any Marvel-loving gentile normies likely won’t bother with wandering into this film at all. And if they do, the criticism and balking is to be expected.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Joaquin Phoenix Says You Shouldn’t Take This Hallucinogen Before ‘Beau Is Afraid’

    Joaquin Phoenix Says You Shouldn’t Take This Hallucinogen Before ‘Beau Is Afraid’

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    Joaquin Phoenix warned moviegoers not to take mushrooms before seeing his new film “Beau is Afraid.”

    The A24-distributed film, directed by Ari Aster, follows a “mild-mannered but anxiety-ridden” man named Beau Wasserman who finds himself on a Kafkaesque odyssey back home in the wake of his mother’s death, according to IMDB.

    In an interview with Fandango published Friday, Phoenix advised against having mushrooms before watching the dark comedy horror movie from the “Midsommar” filmmaker.

    “I was told from someone in college that there was this college thread amongst friends, a challenge they were going to take mushrooms and go see this movie. And I just wanted to make a public service announcement and say, do not take mushrooms and go see this fucking movie,” Phoenix told the publication.

    He later quipped: “But if you do it, film yourself. But don’t do it!”

    Phoenix, who recommended seeing the film in IMAX, told Fandango that he was “definitely squirming” in his seat while watching himself in the movie for the first time. He said the film is one “that you feel.”

    “First of all, I’m just laughing about the entire fucking movie,” Phoenix said. “There’s a couple of sequences where I’m just squirming – I mean, stuff that [Aster] did with the sound design, it was really great.”

    “It’s such a rich world, and there’s so many details to see in it. It is a hundred percent a movie that you feel. There’s so many rich, complex themes in this film, but it’s such a visceral experience to watch it. Then you leave, and when that feeling subsides, you start thinking about it.”

    Phoenix shared more about how he prepped for a tough scene in an interview on A24’s podcast. His solution: a sudden scream on set before they started.

    “I just started screaming, just the most intense guttural pain scream that I could before we were shooting sitting there because I had to just fully humiliate myself,” he said. “And then just go like, okay, well once that’s happened, you can’t look any more stupid than you do now.

    Check out HuffPost’s Candice Frederick’s take on the film here.

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  • Q&A: Ari Aster, Joaquin Phoenix try to discuss ‘Beau is Afraid’

    Q&A: Ari Aster, Joaquin Phoenix try to discuss ‘Beau is Afraid’

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    In Ari Aster’s new film “ Beau is Afraid,” Joaquin Phoenix plays an anxious man in a rotten world who goes on a wildly weird journey, both Homeric and Oedipal, to his mother’s home.

    It’s theatrical and depraved and perhaps best left largely unexplained, at least until audiences get a chance to enter the debate. But on the eve of the film’s wide release Friday, Aster and Phoenix attempt to shed some light on “whatever this is,” male pattern baldness and things better left unsaid.

    Remarks have been edited for clarity and brevity.

    AP: What gave you the confidence to make “Beau” now?

    ASTER: I’ve wanted to make it for a long time. I think I just felt that maybe I might actually be granted the green light now. And I was, which is still a surprise. I also just wanted to make something funny and sad.

    AP: Joaquin, your schedule was already quite busy with Todd Phillips’ “Joker” sequel and Ridley Scott’s “Napoleon” — why did you want to make time for this?

    PHOENIX: That’s what I do. You always work it out. And I didn’t know what it would be, but in having conversations with Ari, I kept just being curious and I enjoyed talking to him. At some point it was like let’s just start shooting and see what happens. But I didn’t really have any expectations other than I thought that it would be challenging.

    AP: I’m always reticent to ask about process, especially in a movie like this where maybe it’s better not to know.

    PHOENIX: I don’t know the f——-g process either. It’s a mystery to me, but you just start. I mean, one of the first things that Ari and I did, we talked a great length about the hair. That was just our way in for whatever reason. So months in advance, like, like six months or something, Ari was in L.A. and we worked with someone in the hair department and we kind of just started playing with what look might work. Then we get into costumes and Ari had this great idea that Beau should have oversize clothing. And I just thought that was a great idea. I love things that are tactile that I can feel and put on. That starts having an effect on things. And then, I don’t know, we just talk endlessly. I don’t even remember what we talked about. Probably a lot about balding.

    ASTER: Yeah.

    PHOENIX. And testicles.

    ASTER: Well, yeah … We knew there was male pattern baldness. We just didn’t know to what extent. Like, is he, totally bald? What was the color of the hair, you know, if there is any.

    AP: Who is Beau to you?

    PHOENIX: He’s somebody who’s constantly being tested. It’s really about identifying his nature, like who he was because everything about the world is trying to get him to react. And there’s something so good about him in some way, and it’s something that’s not jaded. But he also doesn’t realize how absurd this world is. And what was really important to us is that I played it as straight as possible. These things, this danger really does exist. And he doesn’t ever really stop and say, hold on a sec, this is f——-g crazy. Something is going on, right? I just think that was really important in getting to what his true nature is, which is kind of what (his mother) Mona is trying to do. She kind of fears that genetically he has something … or, should I not?

    ASTER: I guess maybe?

    PHOENIX: I’ll just stop.

    ASTER: No, no, no. Well, maybe.

    PHOENIX: You’re right, never mind.

    ASTER: It was very important that Beau be very, very real and whatever he is experiencing be very, very real. It’s a very heightened performance, but it’s also very grounded. That was really necessary because the world is so arch and almost cartoonishly malign. The world of Beau is supposed to be a mirror of this world, like it’s horrible in all the same ways but with the dial turned up. I think that would have been unbearable, especially at this length, if you didn’t have somebody that you could kind of hold onto somebody who is a very effective surrogate whoever the audience is. A lot of the conversations were about just making this guy real enough. How do we have this guy be of this world and at the same time be (five-second pause) uh, real and authentic.

    PHOENIX: You see what I’m saying? This is what it was for a month leading up to shooting.

    ASTER: Only, you know, mercifully no cameras for posterity.

    AP: The world around Beau is wild, especially in the nightmarish city where he lives full of incredible vulgarity and depravity, from the graffiti to the store signs. I read Ari was the architect of a lot of those details.

    PHOENIX: It’s very easy for him.

    ASTER: That was just happening on automatic. Just bring a notepad, you know what I mean?

    PHOENIX: Just talking, giving direction and then just, like, writing the most putrid thoughts.

    ASTER: Because the world was invented, it gave me license to throw in things that make me laugh.

    AP: People have made a big deal about this being the most expensive film A24 has made, which makes it seem like it’s some $200 million superhero movie when it’s really much more modest than that according to the reported numbers.

    ASTER: What are the reported numbers?

    AP: I read $35 million.

    ASTER: That is right. It was my biggest budget. “Midsommar” was $10 million and “Hereditary” was $5 million. But this was a much, much bigger film. In some ways it kind of felt like we had the same kinds of resources for what we were trying to do, which means that, you know, we had to stretch every dollar. And if ever we fell behind on one day, it was very, very stressful because we would have to make up for another day, which was already packed with stuff we had to do. There were a lot of limitations. But those can be good. It puts you into problem solving mode. It’s hardest on the crew.

    PHOENIX: You work on weekends, you work through lunches. There’s something in some way that’s great about it because it forces you to constantly focus on work. There’s no fat. There is no time to just relax. It probably creates an energy that the film captures.

    AP: Before “Hereditary.” you said were feeling a little cynical about Hollywood. Has your perspective changed after your successes?

    ASTER: I’m not sure what I said about Hollywood. Hollywood is …

    PHOENIX: Hollywood is great.

    ASTER: Yeah. Wait, Hollywood is hell on earth, what are we talking about? It’s the worst place in the world. But no, I love it. I’ve been very fortunate in that right out of the gate I had this relationship with A24. That’s been a really wonderful thing in my life. The fact that I was able to make whatever this thing is right now is pretty wonderful. I have no complaints. Was that a good answer?

    PHOENIX: It was interesting.

    ASTER: Thanks.

    ___

    Follow AP Film Writer Lindsey Bahr: www.twitter.com/ldbahr.

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  • ‘Joker 2’ Wraps With New Image of Lady Gaga’s Harley Quinn

    ‘Joker 2’ Wraps With New Image of Lady Gaga’s Harley Quinn

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    As filming wraps on the long-awaited Joker: Folie à Deux, more set photos have been released. An Instagram post made by director Todd Phillips features Lady Gaga as Harley Quinn, and Joaquin Phoenix as Arthur Fleck. While some people have been taking a measured approach to expectations with this one, the excitement is everywhere. At first, some were caught off-guard by the fact that its a musical, but a risk like that could have a serious payoff if it goes over well. Especially after Gaga’s performance in A Star Is Born.

    It’s unclear how exactly the movie could really even exist given the ending of 2019’s Jokerbut there are a few ways to get around that. In the last film, we only really saw the beginning of Fleck’s career. Then, there’s also the fact that he hallucinated an entire relationship. Could he not hallucinate a life outside the walls of an asylum just as easily? Or a relationship with Gaga’s character?

    Phillips’ post revealed two new images of Gaga and Phoenix in costume as their DC characters.

    READ MORE: DC Announces New Universe of Movies and Shows

    Todd Phillips captioned the post with the following text:

    That’s a wrap. Thanks to these two (+ the entire cast) and the BEST crew that the film industry has to offer. From top to bottom. Gonna crawl into a cave now (edit room) and put it all together.

    This sequel will exist in an interesting new space for DC. It’s being branded an Elseworlds title, which essentially means that it isn’t canon to any other kind of shared universe. Matt Reeves‘ The Batman also exists in the same kind of liminal space.

    The New DC Universe of Movies and Shows

    All the projects announced by DC Studios as the start of “Chapter 1” of the company’s new universe of movies and shows.

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    Cody Mcintosh

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  • Paul Mescal Will Star in Ridley Scott’s Long-Awaited ‘Gladiator’ Sequel

    Paul Mescal Will Star in Ridley Scott’s Long-Awaited ‘Gladiator’ Sequel

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    Paul Mescal is headed into the arena. More than 20 years after the original Gladiator made over $460 million worldwide and won best picture at the Oscars, a sequel directed by Ridley Scott and starring Mescal is coming, a rep for the filmmaker confirms to Vanity Fair.

    Scott will produce the follow-up, which is penned by David Scarpa (All the Money in the World), with costume designer Jenny Yates and production designer Arthur Max returning to their roles from the 2002 film. According to Deadline, Mescal was the first actor to meet with Scott about the lead role shortly after the script’s final draft was completed in November. Although the director continued to meet with other stars, “Mescal clearly was Scott’s top choice following a fantastic meeting,” the outlet reports.

    The 26-year-old actor, who earned an Emmy nomination for Hulu’s Normal People and is currently garnering Oscar buzz in Charlotte WellsAftersun, will play Lucious, the grown son of Connie Nielsen’s Lucilla. That solves the central problem of a Gladiator sequel—what is there left to explore after (spoiler alert) Russell Crowe’s Maximus dies saving Lucilla and her son from the villainous Commodus (Joaquin Phoenix), who also happens to be Lucious’ uncle?

    Getting to more swords and sandals has been somewhat of a Colosseum-worthy battle. In 2018, the BBC delved into this outlandish development history, branding Gladiator’s the “strangest sequel never made.” In the years after the film’s smash success, both Scott and Crowe, who won the Academy Award for best actor, commissioned dueling concepts for a sequel. Scott reportedly enlisted John Logan, one of Gladiator’s writers for a follow-up without Crowe or gladiators themselves. Meanwhile, Crowe recruited singer-songwriter Nick Cave to write a script that his character could be in, cinematic death be damned. The supernatural final product featured Maximus in the afterlife and unsurprisingly died on the vine. “I enjoyed writing it very much because I knew on every level that it was never going to get made,” Cave would later admit.

    Plans more recently got underway in 2018, when it was reported that Peter Craig (Top Gun: Maverick, The Batman) would pen the script. That iteration was seemingly scrapped in favor of the current vision, which Scott teased to Empire in 2021. “I’m already having [the next] Gladiator written now,” he said before referencing his upcoming Napoleon Bonaparte biopic starring Joaquin Phoenix. “So when I’ve done Napoleon, Gladiator will be ready to go.”

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    Savannah Walsh

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