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Tag: judi dench

  • Hey, Vin Diesel’s New Riddick Movie Is Really Happening

    Hey, Vin Diesel’s New Riddick Movie Is Really Happening

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    Riddick (2013)
    Image: Universal Pictures

    It’s been over a decade since we last caught up with Vin Diesel’s sci-fi antihero Richard B. Riddick—Diesel’s been spending most of his time voicing Marvel’s Groot and doing Fast & Furious movies—but it’s time to dig those goggles out of storage. The fourth film in the series, titled Riddick: Furya, is officially on the way.

    This isn’t the first time we’re hearing about Furya; over a year ago, it was reported that Diesel was planning to re-team with writer-director David Twohy, who co-wrote and directed 2000’s Pitch Black, and wrote and directed 2004’s The Chronicles of Riddick and 2013’s Riddick. At the time, a press release described the film as “a return to Riddick’s homeworld, where we finally get to explore Riddick’s genesis.”

    Today’s update, reported in Deadline, affirms it’s full speed ahead for the sci-fi sequel, which begins production in late August. The description remains virtually the same as the one we already knew: “In Riddick: Furya, Riddick finally returns to his home world, a place he barely remembers and one he fears might be left in ruins. But there he finds other Furyans fighting for their existence against a new monster. And some of these Furyans are more like Riddick than he could have ever imagined.”

    Are you looking forward to seeing Diesel return to the role of Riddick? Will there be anything as bonkers in Furya as Judi Dench’s cameo in The Chronicles of Riddick? Share your thoughts below.


    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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    Cheryl Eddy

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  • Judi Dench Stuns Radio Host With Mortifying FaceTime Moment Involving 007 Costar

    Judi Dench Stuns Radio Host With Mortifying FaceTime Moment Involving 007 Costar

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  • Judi Dench “Can’t See Much,” but Still Wants to Work “as Much as I Can”

    Judi Dench “Can’t See Much,” but Still Wants to Work “as Much as I Can”

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    At 88 years of age, Dame Judi Dench has no plans to retire from acting just yet—even if her deteriorating eyesight makes it exceedingly difficult to exercise her craft. The Oscar winner told The Daily Mirror’s Notebook magazine as much, saying that it feels “ghastly” to be “so dependent on people” to learn lines. Still, she added, she wants to work “as much as I can.”

    Dench was diagnosed with age-related macular degeneration (AMD), a degenerative eye condition, in 2012. Earlier this year, Dench shared that in the decade since her diagnosis, it has “become impossible” to learn her lines due to the condition. “I can’t see on a film set any more,” Dench told Notebook. “And I can’t see to read. So I can’t see much. But, you know, you just deal with it. Get on.” 

    Despite her vision problems, Dench has been able to work steadily in recent years, appearing in films including Blithe Spirit, Cats, and even earning an Oscar nomination as recently as 2022 for best supporting actress for her work in Belfast. (She won in 1999 for playing Queen Elizabeth I in Shakespeare in Love, despite famously having only about eight minutes of screen time in the film.) “It’s difficult for me if I have any length of a part,” Dench told Notebook. “I haven’t yet found a way. Because I have so many friends who will teach me the script. But I have a photographic memory.”

    While it’s evident that she has a community of friends and family willing to help her learn lines, Dench still feels it’s “ghastly” to have to rely so much on others. “It’s the most terrible shock to the system,” Dench said, of losing her eyesight. “It’s terrible to be so dependent on people.” Nevertheless, Dench, who received the IFTA Lifetime Achievement Award earlier this month, told the publication that she still intends to work “as much as I can.” 

    Luckily for us, Dench added, she has an “irrational fear of boredom,” and even got a tattoo that says “carpe diem,” or seize the day, on her wrist at the tender age of 81—proving that she’s got plenty more to give. “That’s why I now have this tattoo that says ‘carpe diem,’” said Dench. “That’s what we should live by.”

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    Chris Murphy

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  • Judi Dench and Helena Bonham Carter Celebrate Shakespeare With King Charles

    Judi Dench and Helena Bonham Carter Celebrate Shakespeare With King Charles

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    On Tuesday night, King Charles III and Queen Camilla hosted a star-studded event at Windsor Castle to honor another milestone during a celebratory year. 2023 marks the 400th year since the publication of the First Folio, a collection of works by William Shakespeare released seven years after his death that preserved plays for future generations. Events to mark the anniversary have been taking place all year, but this week, the librarians at Windsor Castle brought out their copy of the First and Second Folios so that a collection of British icons, including Dame Judi Dench, Dame Vanessa Redgrave, Helena Bonham Carter, Joely Richardson, and David Oyelowo could take a look. 

    Also representing the royal family at the event were Sophie, the Duchess of Edinburgh, and Birgitte, the Duchess of Gloucester. On social media, the palace shared footage of another highlight of the reception, a set of performances by Lucy Phelps, Ray Fearon, and Mark Quartley of the Royal Shakespeare Company. 

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    The actors have quite a bit of experience under their belts, but in the palace video, they admitted that it was a difficult performance. Fearon said that it was one of the “toughest audiences.” Phelps added, “When I saw the people who were on the guest list a creeping panic started to emerge.” 

    Afterward, Phelps told Hello! that the real issue was the acting royalty in the audience, not necessarily the Windsors. “I thought it was going to be a bit like Strictly [Come Dancing]  with Judi Dench holding up a card with a number seven on it,” she said. “Just with all those actors in the room with us who have played those parts, that was the thing.”

    In their post, the palace also pointed out the connection between the plays and the history of the royal family. “Well-known faces from @theRSC performed excerpts from some of the plays which would have been lost to us today had the folio not been published, and guests were able to view the First and Second Folios, which are preserved at Windsor,” it said. The post also explained a message left by one of the king’s ancestors, Charles I, who reigned from 1625 until he was executed in 1649. “Charles I read the Second Folio while imprisoned at Windsor Castle during the Civil War. Inside it he wrote ‘Dum Spiro Spero,’ Latin for ‘while I breathe, I hope.’” 


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    Erin Vanderhoof

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  • ‘The Crown’ returns to blur the line between royals, fiction

    ‘The Crown’ returns to blur the line between royals, fiction

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    LOS ANGELES — When “The Crown” returns Wednesday after a two-year absence, the splintering marriage of Charles and Diana and more woes for Queen Elizabeth II are in the drama’s elegant but intrusive spotlight.

    There’s swirling off-stage drama as well for the Netflix series that began with Elizabeth’s marriage in the late 1940s and, in its fifth season, takes on the British royal family’s turbulent 1990s. The queen famously labeled one stretch her “annus horribilis” — Latin for “horrible year.”

    The safe distance of history is gone in the 10 new episodes set within recent memory for many and whose stories, sight unseen, have been denounced. The death of Queen Elizabeth, 96, in September adds an uneasy dimension: We speculate freely about the famous before and after they’re gone, but is more owed a country’s beloved and longest-serving monarch?

    Among the prominent critics is Judi Dench, an Oscar-winner for her role as Elizabeth I in “Shakespeare in Love.” In a letter to The Times of London, the actor blasted elements of the drama as “cruelly unjust to the individuals and damaging to the institution they represent.”

    She called for each episode to carry a disclaimer labeling it as fiction. It’s a demand that Netflix has heard before and continues to resist, framing the series as drama inspired by historical events. Series creator Peter Morgan was unavailable for comment, Netflix said.

    Dench is not amused by the streaming service’s intransigence.

    “The time has come for Netflix to reconsider — for the sake of a family and a nation so recently bereaved, as a mark of respect to a sovereign who served her people so dutifully for 70 years,” she wrote.

    Her plea followed a rebuke of the series from former Prime Minister John Major, shown in the new season being lobbied by Prince Charles — now King Charles III — to help maneuver the queen’s abdication. A spokesman for Major labeled the scene as false and malicious.

    Cast members including Jonathan Pryce, who plays Elizabeth’s stalwart husband Prince Philip, beg to differ with the series’ detractors.

    “The queen is in no danger from ‘The Crown,’” Pryce told The Associated Press. He said critics are lambasting the new season despite ignorance of it, reminding him of what the British once termed “the Mary Whitehouse effect.”

    Whitehouse had “a huge following and she criticized programs she’d never seen,” he said. “I think a lot of the protests this time, people haven’t seen this series. They don’t know how these issues are treated. I have to say they’re treated with a great deal of integrity and a great deal of sensitivity.”

    Imelda Staunton, stepping in as the latest actor to play Elizabeth, defended the series, its award-winning creator and its viewers.

    “I think it’s underestimating the audience,” Staunton told AP. ”There have been four seasons where people know it’s been written by Peter Morgan and his team of writers.”

    Morgan, writer of the movie “The Queen” and play “The Audience,” both starring the Oscar- and Tony-winning Helen Mirren as Elizabeth II, has made royals a specialty. The recent criticism may suggest his winter of discontent is ahead, but Morgan has it easier than another writer who feasted on the British monarchs as material: William Shakespeare, who dramatized the reigns of seven kings.

    All were in the past, with Shakespeare treading lightly around the rulers of his time, Elizabeth I and James I.

    “We all imagine it being sort of sweetness and light, and we’ve all seen ‘Shakespeare in Love’ and everyone’s sitting around drinking. Actually, it was like Stalinist Russia in many ways,” Shakespearean expert Andrew Dickson said of the rigidly controlled society in which the bard worked circa 1585 to 1613.

    Plays were approved by the master of the revels, a sort of civil servant with the power of censorship, said Dickson, author of “Worlds Elsewhere: Journeys Around Shakespeare’s Globe” and “The Globe Guide to Shakespeare.” Authors could and were imprisoned, or worse, for transgressions, he said.

    “His very few representations of royals recent to his time were pretty flattering, and and early audiences even called them patriotic,” said Harvard teacher-scholar Jeffrey R. Wilson, author of “Shakespeare and Trump” and “Richard III’s Bodies.” Theater in general was viewed as illusory and deceptive, he said.

    “He told this politicized version that was flattering to the powers that were in his time,” Wilson said. It became the “dominant framework for telling English royal history all the way through the 18th and 19th centuries. It’s now called the ‘Tudor myth,’” he said, a reference to the House of Tudor that ruled for more than a century.

    It’s problematic if people similarly begin recounting the Netflix show’s “fictionalized version of history as fact,” he said.

    Lesley Manville, who plays the queen’s sibling Princess Margaret this season, said she defers to those in charge of “The Crown” on whether a disclaimer is or isn’t warranted.

    “For my part, I can only be crystal clear that what I’m doing is a drama,” Manville said. “We’ve never supported it to be anything other than a drama about a real family, a very world famous family.”

    Staunton said she’s grateful that the season addresses a period that was “quite tumultuous, and therefore that creates quite a good drama.” She traced the recent protests about the series directly to the queen’s death.

    “There’s no doubt that if we were releasing the series two years ago there wouldn’t be this amount of sensitivity, which again is absolutely understandable,” Staunton said. She found herself deeply affected by the queen’s death, which she learned of after a day of taping on the show’s sixth season.

    “’Why am I feeling so distraught?’” she recalled asking herself. “But of course I’d been living with her for two and a half years” of preparation and production.

    For Pryce, working on the series has provided a better understanding of the royal family.

    “They’ve always been a part of society and it looks like they’re going to continue for some time,” he said. “I’m looking forward to King Charles’ reign, and seeing what he can do to change things.”

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  • Judi Dench says ‘The Crown’ is ‘cruelly unjust,’ presses Netflix for disclaimer – National | Globalnews.ca

    Judi Dench says ‘The Crown’ is ‘cruelly unjust,’ presses Netflix for disclaimer – National | Globalnews.ca

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    Judi Dench has criticized Netflix for not adding a disclaimer to the popular series The Crown, which she claimed is “cruelly unjust” in its portrayal of the British Royal Family.

    In an open letter to The Times UK, the Oscar-winning actress wrote that the “fictionalised drama” presents “an inaccurate and hurtful account of history.”

    Read more:

    $500-million reno means King Charles won’t live in Buckingham Palace for 5 years

    The Crown follows the life and reign of Queen Elizabeth II, who died in September at the age of 96, having served 70 years on the throne. In the upcoming fifth season, the queen (now played by Imelda Staunton) approaches the 40th anniversary of her ascension to the throne amid troubling years for the Royal Family in the 1990s.

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    “Indeed, the closer the drama comes to our present times, the more freely it seems willing to blur the lines between historical accuracy and crude sensationalism,” wrote Dench, 87.

    While also praising the Netflix original as “brilliant,” Dench echoed grievances made by former British Prime Minister John Major.

    Major, represented as a character on Season 5 of The Crown, told The Mail on Sunday the series was “a barrel-load of malicious nonsense.”

    “Sir John has not co-operated in any way with The Crown. Nor has he ever been approached by them to fact-check any script material in this or any other series,” read a statement from his office.

    In the latest season of The Crown, Major (played by Jonny Lee Miller), is seen talking to Prince Charles (now King Charles) about the queen possibly abdicating.

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    “The Crown has always been presented as a drama based on historical events,” responded a Netflix spokesperson. “Series five is a fictional dramatisation, imagining what could have happened behind closed doors during a significant decade for the Royal Family – one that has already been scrutinised and well-documented by journalists, biographers and historians.”

    In her open letter, Dench wrote that Major is “not alone in his concerns.”

    Read more:

    Netflix delays Prince Harry and Meghan documentary as ‘The Crown’ comes under fire

    “I fear that a significant number of viewers, particularly overseas, may take (The Crown‘s) version of history as being wholly true,” she wrote.

    Dench insisted there should be a disclaimer at the beginning of every episode, despite the streaming giant’s earlier claims that they have no plan, and see no need, to add such a warning.

    “No one is a greater believer in artistic freedom than I, but this cannot go unchallenged,” Dench wrote.

    “The time has come for Netflix to reconsider – for the sake of a family and a nation so recently bereaved, as a mark of respect to a sovereign who served her people so dutifully for 70 years, and to preserve its reputation in the eyes of its British subscribers,” she concluded.

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    Read more:

    Why are people drawn to the Royal Family — and will it survive the queen’s death?

    Dench previously played Queen Elizabeth I in Shakespeare in Love (for which she won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress). She also portrayed Queen Victoria in Victoria & Abdul in 2017 and Mrs. Brown in 1997.

    Season 5 of The Crown premieres on Netflix on Nov. 9. The series recently paused production “out of respect” following the queen’s death.

    &copy 2022 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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    Sarah Do Couto

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  • Dame Judi Dench Accuses ‘The Crown’ of “Crude Sensationalism”

    Dame Judi Dench Accuses ‘The Crown’ of “Crude Sensationalism”

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    Once a royal always a royal. In an outspoken letter to the Times, Judi Dench has accused The Crown of “crude sensationalism” in its depiction of the royal family, calling Netflix’s Emmy-winning drama series “cruelly unjust.”   

    Dench’s letter comes ahead of the fifth-season premiere of The Crown, which follows the disintegration of Prince Charles and Princess Diana’s marriage in the late ’80s and the ’90s. Though Netflix has said the series will not depict the fatal accident that ended Diana’s life, season five has already garnered controversial headlines. John Major, former prime minister of Britain, called the series a “barrel-load of nonsense” after it was reported that season five contains a fictionalized scene in which the Prince of Wales propositions Major with a plan to get Charles’s mother, Queen Elizabeth II, to abdicate. 

    “Sir John Major is not alone in his concerns that the latest series of The Crown will present an inaccurate and hurtful account of history,” wrote Dench, lending her voice in support of Major. “Given some of the wounding suggestions apparently contained in the new series—that King Charles plotted for his mother to abdicate, for example, or once suggested his mother’s parenting was so deficient that she might have deserved a jail sentence—this is both cruelly unjust to the individuals and damaging to the institution they represent.”

    Dench is no stranger to the royal family, onscreen or off. She’s played two queens onscreen—Elizabeth I in Shakespeare in Love (1998), for which she won an Oscar for best supporting actress, and Victoria in both Mrs. Brown (1997) and Victoria & Abdul (2017). Offscreen, Dench has ascended the ranks of nobility as well over the course of her six-decade-plus career. Hailing from Heworth, York, Dench was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in 1970, made a dame in 1988, and appointed a Companion of Honour by Queen Elizabeth II in 2005. She’s also known to be a friend to Queen Consort Camila, visiting the Isle of Wight with Camilla in 2018. 

    By Chris Jackson/Getty Images. 

    “No one is a greater believer in artistic freedom than I, but this cannot go unchallenged,” wrote Dench. “Despite this week stating publicly that The Crown has always been a ‘fictionalized drama,’ the program makers have resisted all calls for them to carry a disclaimer at the start of each episode.”

    Dench closes the letter with a missive for Netflix, asking the streaming platform to “reconsider” The Crown, while invoking the memory of the late Queen Elizabeth II. “The time has come for Netflix to reconsider—for the sake of a family and a nation so recently bereaved, as a mark of respect to a sovereign who served her people so dutifully for 70 years, and to preserve its reputation in the eyes of its British subscribers,” she writes.

    Last month, The Crown creator Peter Morgan called the series “a love letter” to Queen Elizabeth II, and paused filming in September out of respect for her death. A spokesperson for The Crown said earlier this week: “The Crown has always been presented as a drama based on historical events. Series five is a fictional dramatization, imagining what could have happened behind closed doors during a significant decade for the royal family—one that has already been scrutinized and well-documented by journalists, biographers, and historians.”

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    Chris Murphy

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