ReportWire

Tag: magic mike

  • Magic Mike’s Last Dance Takes A Pretty Woman Route (With More Sexist Implications)

    Magic Mike’s Last Dance Takes A Pretty Woman Route (With More Sexist Implications)

    [ad_1]

    Just when you thought you had seen the last of “Michael Jeffrey Lane” (Channing Tatum), he comes along and decides to surprise you. As perhaps only a male stripper can. Even if a “retired” one. Indeed, Mike is rather easily lured out of his retirement with a few mere words from a “wild card” of a socialite named Maxandra Mendoza (Salma Hayek Pinault—since we must add that last part to her name now). A woman Mike encounters at a party where he’s tending bar. Just another in a series of gigs that he’s been forced to take on in the wake of his furniture company closing. For, per our as-of-yet unknown narrator, a global pandemic isn’t very conducive to one’s business. And, considering the last time we saw Magic Mike was in the pre-apocalypse era (2015), things are looking even bleaker for the “ex” stripper than they did in Magic Mike XXL (which features, among other presently fallen stars, Amber Heard and Stephen “tWitch” Boss).

    So it is that our narrator also informs us, “Like many forty-year-old millennial white males, Mike Lane found himself alone and adrift in an ocean of failed relationships and unrealized dreams.” Because, no, fulfilling drink orders was not his “dream.” Though, in some ways, bartending isn’t unlike stripping. You’re still performing a series of acrobatic maneuvers ultimately aimed at pleasing people. As Mike seems to almost immediately please Maxandra by disarming her during their first interaction via the question, “You gettin’ what you want?” When she does a double take at this, he clarifies, “With the fundraiser. It looks like it’s going all right.” Something in her shifts, as though a light has gone on—especially after Mike mentions, “People like to look at what they can’t have.” Hearing from a party guest that Mike used to be a stripper (/maybe more), Maxandra is emboldened to invite him into her house after the party is over.

    When Mike insists he doesn’t do “that” anymore, and that the price to make him would be sixty thousand dollars, Maxandra offers six thousand. And so begins “the dance.” Lucky Daye’s “Careful” plays over the speakers of her living room as Mike delivers a seduction that borders the fine line between sexy and comedic (as most seductions are fundamentally absurd). It’s already at this early juncture that we can see the parallels that align Pretty Woman with this particular installment of the Magic Mike series. For in no other Magic Mike movie was there any older, well-to-do “patron” offering cash in exchange for no sex. At first anyway. For on that initial night when Vivian Ward (Julia Roberts) is picked up by Edward Lewis (Richard Gere) and taken to the Regent Beverly Wilshire, she’s all about securing the bag. Until she realizes that, for Edward, the encounter isn’t really about sex—though, again, not until later. When Vivian tells him in the car on the way, “I never joke about money,” Edward replies, “Neither do I.” They seem like a perfect fit right out the gate. The same goes for Mike and Maxandra, the latter, in her Edward role, challenging Mike to make more of himself. To actually pursue his true passion. This is broached when she inquires, “Do you like bartending?” Mike shrugs, “Sure, uh, it’s not really what I do, but yeah. Why not?”

    Vivian essentially feels the same way about prostitution, but clearly makes the most of it (this includes calling herself a “safety girl” when she shows Edward an array of condoms from the selection contained within her thigh-high boot). Edward, however, can already see that she’s so much more—finding out just that when he catches her with dental floss in her hand, as opposed to the illicit drug he assumes it must be (stereotyping sex workers as usual, but, hey, it was the 90s). Increasingly charmed with Viv throughout the night, the two finally “seal the deal” to the background of an I Love Lucy episode, of all things. The following day, just as Maxandra will ask of Mike, Edward proposes they spend a much larger block of time together (one week to Mike and Maxandra’s one month). As Edward puts it, “I will pay you to be at my beck and call.”

    As will Maxandra for Mike, promising him the original sixty thousand dollars he suggested if he accompanies her to London. Cajoled into going, despite having no idea what the “job” he’s being offered actually is, Mike finds out that Maxandra believes in his talent and potential so much that she’s enlisted him to be the new director/choreographer of a play she wants to revamp called Isabel Ascendant—which means they’re keeping the first scene from said play and turning it into, essentially, a Chippendales act.

    The “May-December” romance that continues to blossom throughout this period of collaboration is astutely observed by Maxandra’s daughter, Zadie (Jemelia George)—she being the one who has been intermittently inserting her narrations this whole time. While Salma Hayek Pinault is fifty-six, Julia Roberts—ergo, Vivian Ward—was twenty-three in 1990, when Pretty Woman came out. A vast difference compared to Mike’s forty (Tatum himself is actually forty-two). Roughly the age Richard Gere was in 1990. The gap between Gere and Roberts was obviously larger in part because it was (and is) so commonplace for men to pursue younger women without half as much judgment as older women opting for younger men. This is made patent when Maxandra’s husband, Roger Rattigan (Alan Cox), who seems to be some faint foil for Hayek’s own rich husband in real life, cuts her down by saying, “I know when you’re being used. Don’t you see that? Darling, I know we’re all getting old, but I didn’t know you were so desperate.” No one would ever dare say such a thing to Edward about his younger woman choice—instead only making mention that she’s a hooker as a point of contention.

    The power and age dynamics at play in both Pretty Woman and Magic Mike’s Last Dance are what make the tension (primarily sexual) in both feel so palpable at any given moment. And while both Edward and Maxandra could have “chosen” any non-“for pay” companion, each thought they were going to spare themselves from emotional attachment if it was under the guise of a “business proposition” instead.

    In the famous final scene of Pretty Woman, Edward asks Vivian, “So what happened after he climbed the tower and rescued her?” Vivian replies, “She rescues him right back.” The same goes for Mike and Maxandra, even if the latter does have to abandon “her” fortune in order to be with Mike. Because, naturally, the fortune belonged to her husband, who, quelle surprise, has an utterly strangling series of prenup clauses that makes it impossible to live freely without just abandoning the cash altogether. But at least Maxandra can acknowledge the unfairness of being in an Edward role without actually being an Edward. This by telling her driver/butler, Victor (Ayub Khan Din)—the requisite Barney (Héctor Elizondo) of the movie—“[Mike] believes in me, and I have to go tell him that our show about empowering women is dead because I’m so fucking powerless.” Nonetheless, Mike will not let her give up all they worked toward during their last few weeks together. Which is why Maxandra’s power, in the end, is still delivered by the presence/swooping in of a man. Making her little better, “station in life-wise” than Vivian.

    [ad_2]

    Genna Rivieccio

    Source link

  • Salma Hayek had ‘phobia of marriage’, did not know she was getting married to husband Francois-Henri Pinault

    Salma Hayek had ‘phobia of marriage’, did not know she was getting married to husband Francois-Henri Pinault

    [ad_1]

    Salma Hayek just opened up about her marriage with husband Francois-Henri Pinault. The Magic Mike’s Last Dance actress spoke at length about how she did not know that she was getting married to Pinault. She further revealed that she had a ‘phobia of marriage’.

    Salma Hayek on her courtroom wedding with husband Francois-Henri Pinault

    Talking to Glamour magazine, Salma Hayek opened up about her courtroom wedding with Pinault for the first time. The actress shared that she was unaware of the fact that she was getting married that day. She termed the incident an ‘intervention’  by her parents and her brother, and claimed that they all ganged up on her and took her to the court. “I had a phobia of the marriage thing,” she said. She also explained why she got married in the court. “The reason why it was a courthouse wedding was because they dragged me there. I was nervous. And then after, there was a lunch at his parents’ house. My mother-in-law, who’s the most tasteful person when it comes to entertaining, had already been doing the lunch. I had no choice,” Salma Hayek said.

    Salma Hayek in Magic Mike’s Last Dance

    Salma Hayek will be soon seen in Magic Mike’s Last Dance which also features Channing Tatum in the lead role. Apart from them, the movie also stars Ayub Khan Din, Jemelia George, Juliette Motamed, Vicki Pepperdine, Gavin Spokes, Catilin Gerard, Christopher Bencomo, and Nas Ganev, among others. Directed by Steven Soderbergh, the film is set to release in theatres on February 10, 2023.

    Salma revealed that she bonded with her Magic Mike co-star Channing Tatum because of the fact that both of them got a ‘big bump’ in their careers because of doing a strip dance in movies. “So in that way, (Channing and I] were kindred spirits. I’m like, ‘Hey bro, I get you,’” she said.

    ALSO READ: Here’s why Channing Tatum almost turned down Magic Mike 3; Find out

    [ad_2]

    1108742

    Source link

  • Channing Tatum Reveals If He’ll Ever Tell His Daughter He Used To Be A Stripper

    Channing Tatum Reveals If He’ll Ever Tell His Daughter He Used To Be A Stripper

    [ad_1]

    Channing Tatum is getting candid about whether he’ll tell his daughter about his past as a stripper one day.

    In an interview published Wednesday, the “Magic Mike’s Last Dance” star told Entertainment Tonight that when his 9-year-old daughter, Everly, is “old enough” to watch the explicit film, “we’ll have that conversation.”

    “There’s no version of me not having the conversation of ‘Dad didn’t just do them in movies, I was an actual stripper,’” he said. “I’m not gonna lie to her.”

    Tatum’s “Magic Mike” character, Mike Lane, is loosely inspired by the actor’s own brief stint as an 18-year-old male performer in Tampa, Florida, before he found success in Hollywood.

    The actor told the Hollywood Reporter in 2014 that he made “150 bucks … on a good night” as a stripper. “On a bad night, 70 bucks — even 50 at times … Not as good as you think.”

    Tatum, who is currently dating actor Zoë Kravitz, wed his “Step Up” co-star Jenna Dewan in 2009, and the couple welcomed Everly in 2013 before finalizing their divorce in 2019.

    The first “Magic Mike” was a surprise hit, grossing $167 million at the box office and leading to the follow-up release of the 2015 sequel, “Magic Mike XXL.”

    “Magic Mike’s Last Dance” marks the third and final installment in the cinematic franchise.

    Directed by Steven Soderbergh, the steamy film also stars Ayub Khan-Din, Gavin Spokes, Caitlin Gerard, Juliette Motamed, Jemelia Georg and Vicki Pepperdine.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • The 26 Most Anticipated Movies of 2023

    The 26 Most Anticipated Movies of 2023

    [ad_1]

    This past year, Hollywood gave us enough true highs to make sitting next to random strangers a thing again. In 2023, directors Martin Scorsese, Christopher Nolan, Greta Gerwig, and Denis Villeneuve will lure us back into the dark. Two dolls, Barbie and M3gan, will burst to life, one of whom, from a distance, seems a lot more friendly than the other. Even the sequels look unusually appetizing this year: Indiana Jones will go treasure-hunting again, possibly for the last time. Adonis Creed will get back in the ring. John Wick will get annoyed and kill a bunch of people. Here are the movies we’re looking forward to most. 

    M3GAN

    January 6 (Blumhouse/Universal) 

    It would appear that everyone, including us, is just dying to meet M3gan, the new It girl. In the new movie, the title of which is styled M3GAN, a scientist (Allison Williams) creates a life-size, AI-enabled doll to comfort her recently orphaned niece (Violet McGraw), but this doll from hell does so much more. She’s supersmart and adaptable! She dances! She…kills? M3GAN promises to be a slasher film for the American Girl doll generation, and we can’t wait to play. —Kase Wickman

    Missing 

    January 20 (Sony)  

    A follow-up to the innovative 2018 film Searching, Missing stars Storm Reid as a young woman whose mother disappears while on vacation in Colombia with her new boyfriend. Once again, the mystery thriller is told via computer screens, and we’re hoping that, like the first time around, the gimmick never outshines the twisty storytelling and unexpected resolution. —Rebecca Ford 

    Claudette Barius

    Magic Mike’s Last Dance 

    February 10 (Warner Bros.) 

    The final installment in the Channing Tatum–stripper trilogy, Magic Mike’s Last Dance takes the titular character to London, where—backed by a rich investor and also love interest played by Salma Hayek—he’s creating a new show that aims to make every woman feel “she can have whatever she wants whenever she wants.” Steven Soderbergh, who helmed the 2012 original film, returns to direct and we expect the ab-showcasing costumes and sexy dance numbers will be back and better than ever as well. —R.F.

    Cocaine Bear  

    February 24 (Universal Pictures)

    “A bear did cocaine” is a line uttered in this comedy thriller inspired by a real-life bear who was found dead in the ’80s next to a duffel bag of coke. (Really). Directed by Elizabeth Banks and produced by Phil Lord and Christopher Miller (The Lego Movie and 22 Jump Street), the film depicts the bear going on a murderous, drug-fueled rampage that locals must stop. (The actual bear died after ingesting the cocaine, which had been dropped by a convicted drug smuggler parachuting in Georgia.) The movie stars Keri Russell, O’Shea Jackson Jr., and Ray Liotta in one of his final roles. —Julie Miller 

    John Wick: Chapter 4

    March 24 (Lionsgate)   

    There’s something irresistible about the sorrowful, existentially confused face that Keanu Reeves makes as John Wick—it’s like he’s asking his victims, Why are you making me kill you? And, seriously, how good do I look in this suit? The balletic-action franchise now finds the hit man of legend traveling the world, rooting out underworld kingpins, and coming to terms with his late wife, who gave him that puppy that time. “I’m going to need a gun,” Wick says in the trailer. To say the least. —Jeff Giles

    The Super Mario Bros. Movie

    April 7 (Universal)

    Yes, we’re as worried about Chris Pratt playing Mario as you are. But otherwise, we’re very curious about The Super Mario Bros. Movie. Nintendo is incredibly stingy about licensing its video game properties to film studios, so maybe we can assume there is something especially worthy about this project. If nothing else, the film will tide us over until the next Mario game is released. Once that arrives, we’ll be too busy chasing moons or stars or whatever it is this time to care much about Pratt’s Italian-ish accent. —Richard Lawson.  

    Are You There God? It’s Me Margaret 

    April 28 (Lionsgate)

    [ad_2]

    Vanity Fair

    Source link

  • Channing Tatum Dusts Off His G-String In ‘Magic Mike’s Last Dance’ Trailer

    Channing Tatum Dusts Off His G-String In ‘Magic Mike’s Last Dance’ Trailer

    [ad_1]

    Thanksgiving is still more than a week away, but Channing Tatum and director Steven Soderbergh delivered a feast for the eyes Tuesday by unveiling the trailer for the third and final installment of the “Magic Mike” franchise.

    “Magic Mike’s Last Dance” marks Tatum’s cinematic farewell to his hunky male stripper persona. According to press notes, the new movie finds Mike Lane (played by Tatum) taking the leap from Miami to London in pursuit of “one last hurrah” after a Florida business deal goes bust. He’s accompanied by a wealthy socialite (Salma Hayek Pinault), who “lures him with an offer he can’t refuse … and an agenda all her own.”

    Of course, viewers who flock to “Magic Mike’s Last Dance” hoping to see chiseled men in various stages of undress won’t be disappointed. The clip offers several glimpses of a shirtless Tatum leading a sinewy dance troupe through a highly acrobatic routine set to Donna Summer’s 1978 disco classic “Last Dance.”

    Watch the trailer for “Magic Mike’s Last Dance” below.

    The original “Magic Mike” was loosely based on Tatum’s real-life experiences as a stripper. In addition to Tatum, the 2012 movie starred Matt Bomer, Joe Manganiello and Matthew McConaughey, and was both a critical and commercial success.

    A sequel, “Magic Mike XXL,” was released three years later to mixed reviews, but was nonetheless a hit with audiences. Together, the two movies raked in a reported $300 million at the box office worldwide. The franchise has also spawned an HBO reality series, “Finding Magic Mike,” and a stage adaptation, “Magic Mike Live.”

    Channing Tatum (left) and Salma Hayek Pinault in “Magic Mike’s Last Dance,” due out Feb. 10, 2023.

    Last year, Tatum confirmed that a third “Magic Mike” movie was in the works, with Soderbergh set to direct once again. “I haven’t danced in years,” he wrote on his Instagram story at the time. “And dance has moved on so much since then. I decided to document the exploration so I could see it.”

    Appearing on “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” in February, Tatum hinted that “Magic Mike’s Last Dance” would differ visually from its predecessors in a very specific way, too.

    “We are going to change with the times, and I am not gonna do the whole waxing thing,” he told Kimmel. “I think I’m just gonna go natural.”

    Fans can find out whether Tatum stayed true to his word when “Magic Mike’s Last Dance” hits theaters Feb. 10, 2023.

    [ad_2]

    Source link