ReportWire

Tag: road house

  • ‘Tron: Ares’ Star Arturo Castro Explains How the ‘Road House’ Trailer Landed Him a Dream Job

    [ad_1]

    Within a few minutes of meeting Arturo Castro, you can immediately tell why he’s had such a prolific career in comedy. Oddly enough, my first impression of him was for his poignant dramatic work on the under-appreciated Apple TV series, Mr. Corman, but it was comedy that opened the door to Tron: Ares in particular. 

    Tron: Ares’ production was waylaid by the SAG-AFTRA strike in the middle of 2023, and by the time it was finally able to launch in early 2024, post-strike schedules had shifted to such a point where certain roles needed recasting, including that of Seth Flores. He’s the playful right hand to Greta Lee’s Eve Kim, who now leads ENCOM, the tech company that was once run by Jeff Bridges’ franchise linchpin, Kevin Flynn. Fortunately for Castro, someone at the top of the Hollywood food chain was looking out for him.

    Hot off the press at the time, the trailer for the Jake Gyllenhaal-led Road House reboot happened to include Castro’s candid biker gang character, Moe. His comic relief popped to such a degree that Gyllenhaal’s WME agent, Brent Morley, recommended him to his other client, Jared Leto, who serves as Tron: Ares’ title character and producer. From there, Leto threw Castro’s name into the mix for Seth and advocated for him until director Joachim Rønning and the rest of the Tron threequel’s brain trust officially cast him.

    But it all started with Morley’s recommendation, and knowing that he’s an agency power player who’s day-to-day is concerned with the likes of Gyllenhaal, Keanu Reeves, Matthew McConaughey, Cailee Spaeny and Oscar Isaac, Castro is grateful for the unexpected recognition.

    “[Morley] went to Jared and said, ‘Check out this trailer for Road House. I think you guys will want to see this guy.’ And it meant the world to me for various reasons. He had nothing to gain from it, honestly. I was already at William Morris, and he’s not my agent,” Castro tells The Hollywood Reporter. “But he saw somebody that worked really hard to make an impression on Road House, and he thought it was worth giving me a shot.”

    The Guatemalan actor’s improvisational skills have served him well over the years, especially on his 25 episodes of Broad City. The funniest joke in Tron: Ares also originated from his off-the-cuff instincts. In an effort to give Ares (Leto’s “program” character) a more permanent and benevolent place in the real world, Eve (Lee) and Seth (Castro) need to find a code on one of Flynn’s archaic servers. So they access ENCOM’s museum-like setup of Flynn’s old-school office, and Ares quickly takes note of Flynn’s first-generation computer, which Seth refers to as a “piece of garbage.” But upon noticing that Ares doesn’t appreciate the crack, he, through Catro’s improv, adds, “That was super insensitive to your ancestors, and I’m so sorry.”

    “I just couldn’t believe that line made it into the movie. Greta Lee told me ahead of time. She saw it before I did, and I was so stoked,” Castro says.

    Castro is bursting at the seams with excitement over his upcoming slate, as well as his fast-approaching nuptials. He proposed to filmmaker Lauren Hoover while shooting the latest Mattel toy-based film, Matchbox, from Extraction director, Sam Hargrave. He also has a role in A Place in Hell, Chloe Domont’s next prestige thriller opposite Daisy Edgar-Jones and Michelle Williams.

    “I got to have scenes with Daisy Edgar-Jones and Michelle Williams at the same time. It was an out-of-body experience, and I was like, ‘Oh, shit. I should say my line now.’ I got caught up in watching these people,” Castro admits. “These five [most recent] projects, starting with Tron, were all amazing experiences in a variety of genres, and I just can’t believe that it’s happening to me, man. I feel like my chest is going to explode from gratitude.”

    Below, during a recent conversation with THR, Castro also looks back at his time on the sets of The Menu, Narcos and Mr. Corman, before previewing the rest of his upcoming work.

    ***

    Considering the two shutdowns in the last five years, you’ve still managed to do a ton of work in that time. I counted at least 35 credits since 2020.

    Whoa, that’s crazy. I think people are confusing me with George Lopez and giving me his roles, so thank you, Mr. Lopez. (Laughs.) It’s funny, because, for a long time, all I wanted to do was get back to 2019’s rhythm of work. And in hoping for that, I failed to realize that, even though my life and career are different than they were in 2019, they’re much better in some ways. I got really lucky that The Menu was the first thing I did after the pandemic, and the first thing I did after the strike was Tron: Ares. I don’t want to get too woo-woo about it, but I switched my mindset. Instead of thinking that work is consistent, I’ve realized what a one-in-a-million chance it is to have this job. So I’ve started leading with a lot of gratitude, and that more positive outlook has changed my career. 

    You’re among a select few working actors who began their life in Guatemala. Are you always conscious of what your example means to young dreamers back home?

    I do my best to keep that in mind. When I first moved to the States, I wanted to assimilate so hard that you separate yourself from where you come from a little bit. I just wanted to be seen as an actor regardless of where I was born or what I look like. And maybe five years into my journey in New York, I met a group of Guatemalans that were a hundred percent Guatemalans and a hundred percent New Yorkers. I didn’t know you could be both, and that changed my life. That made me realize that where I come from could be my superpower. Nobody grew up climbing volcanoes like I did while living in the magical realism of Latin America. I then really started to feel that Guatemalan pride, and as I got older, I sort of became the older brother figure to some of these actors who were starting off in Guatemala. So I am so conscious of the choices I make and how I speak about us and what I want for the future, and it’s because of them. 

    Arturo Castro as Seth Flores and Greta Lee as Eve Kim in Tron: Ares.

    Leah Gallo/Disney

    The aforementioned strike put Tron: Ares in a very precarious spot, but production was finally able to start in early 2024. You weren’t a part of the pre-strike cast?

    Yeah, that’s another one of those moments of extreme gratitude. They already had the cast, and I was able to join because of scheduling conflicts after the strikes. I’d done Road House already, and Jared Leto and Jake Gyllenhaal share an agent, Brent Morley. So he went to Jared and said, “Check out this trailer for Road House. I think you guys will want to see this guy.” And it meant the world to me for various reasons. He had nothing to gain from it, honestly. I was already at William Morris, and he’s not my agent. But he saw somebody that worked really hard to make an impression on Road House, and he thought it was worth giving me a shot. So that’s what kicked off the real gratitude moment of me entering Tron and feeling like it was serendipitous. 

    I treated every day on set as if it was the greatest possible gift. Pre-pandemic and pre-strike, I know that my attitude would have been like, “Well, this is cool. Great set. Anyway, let’s move on.” But with Tron, I was just like, “Man, screw it. Who is going to care if I’m really excited? This is incredible. I can’t believe you built this set. How did you do this?” I felt like a 1920s newsboy. I was like, “We’re in Tron, everybody! Have you heard!? We’re in Tron!” And they’re like, “Yeah, we heard. We hired you.” (Laughs.) So the serendipity of that moment added to my level of gratitude to be on the project.

    Have you worked with many method actors over the years? Or was Jared the exception?

    I’ve worked with at least a couple over the years, and from the first one, I realized that I had misconceptions about what it was. I thought that you had to subscribe to their process in a way, and I realized, as far as Jared is concerned, that he’s not imposing his process on you. He decides to stay in character and be referred to as his character, and it’s just part of his process in a very non-intrusive way. So I’ve found that, more often than not, there’s nothing different about working with method actors than anybody else who takes their job seriously. So I admire that, and while it’s not my process, I always find it fun to see how it manifests.

    Greta Lee, Jared Leto and Arturo Castro in Tron: Ares.

    Leah Gallo/Disney

    The best joke in the movie is when you, as Seth, apologize to Ares (Leto) for the comment about his “ancestors.”

    That might’ve been my only improv line that I managed to get in there. The script was so good and so tight. But I just couldn’t believe that line made it into the movie. Greta Lee told me ahead of time. She saw it before I did, and I was so stoked.

    You have a sequence set inside an office museum of sorts for Jeff Bridges’ character, Kevin Flynn. Did you ever cross paths with Jeff at all off set? 

    Yeah, I just went to meet him because he’s The Dude. I’ve admired his work for so long. Jeff always seems like he’s just got done with the most satisfying swim in the ocean. Or it’s like he’s just descended from a hammock. He has this wonderful, relaxed energy that is so different from my bouncing-off-the-wall energy. The guy that gave me my first break was Ben Gazzara, and he played Jackie Treehorn in The Big Lebowski. So I was so looking forward to meeting him to share stories about Ben. 

    Did the original Tron movie ever reach you in Guatemala?

    It obviously came out before my time, but I’m a huge arcade geek, man. I’ve been a gamer my entire life, so Tron has been in my periphery my entire life. So I might’ve been nine or ten years old when I first watched it, and I thought it was so cool. 

    I then got to work with Garrett Hedlund on an Ang Lee movie [Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk], and he told me about [his time on] Tron: Legacy. I am also a huge Daft Punk fan. So I have always been so impressed and stoked about this world. My imagination has always been so overactive, and I get so immersed in this visceral, vivid world. So I couldn’t believe that I got to be in this new one.

    I didn’t know anybody when I moved here from Guatemala. My English was good, but I had a thick accent. And the only thing that kept me going for many years was this feeling that moments like this existed. So being at the premiere with my fiancée and my mom was the physical manifestation of those dreams coming true. It’s really surreal, man.

    If Disney couldn’t coax Daft Punk out of retirement, then Nine Inch Nails is quite literally the next best option. When in the process did you find out they were scoring the film?

    I believe it was halfway through filming. [Producer] Justin Springer told me about it, and I freaked out. I’m such a fan of Nine Inch Nails as a band and also of [Trent] Reznor and [Atticus] Ross’ scoring since The Social Network. So it was one of those moments where you’re at crafty and you’re already shooting the movie of your dreams, and then somebody comes to tell you that the Tooth Fairy does exist.

    Arturo Castro as Seth Flores and Greta Lee as Eve Kim in Tron: Ares

    Leah Gallo/Disney

    Tron: Ares is about the upside and downside of AI, so do you think our present-day civilization can wield this tool responsibly? 

    I think technology is neither bad nor good; it’s just the way you use it. I did a couple episodes of Silicon Valley, and those guys told me some stories. They said that these guys from the actual place would come up to them and be like, “Oh my God, I just created this crazy facial recognition software that can see you from anywhere.” And when they would then ask, “Okay, but what if it’s used for nefarious purposes?” they could apparently see in their faces that it never occurred to them. 

    So there’s a risk in assuming that there’s somebody guarding the gates and that the technology will only go so far. I keep hearing, “Well, they’ll never let that happen,” but I’m like, “Who’s they?” It’s up to us as moral or, at least, thoughtful beings to keep in mind that this technology needs safeguards. It could be used to bring benefits and advance fields like medicine, but we need to assume that people will use it irresponsibly. Otherwise, I just don’t see it ever ending in a positive way for humankind when we’re building it at such a breakneck speed.

    Besides Tron, the reason why I wanted to do this interview is because of Joe Gordon Levitt’s show, Mr. Corman. I really liked your character on that show as well as your showcase episode. Was that a meaningful experience despite being just one season?

    Oh, it was the most meaningful experience. That show took me out of the pandemic. We started shooting it in L.A. before the shutdown, and then Joe called me one day and was like, “Hey, we can keep shooting this in New Zealand.” I got to play a three-dimensional character in Victor Morales on this really well-written show opposite this really wonderful human being in Joe. I also got to take a break from the year-long stress of the pandemic by being in such a beautiful place like New Zealand. One of the first things I did after quarantine was go to a concert with 35,000 people, and while it’s hard to grasp what that means now, it was like stepping into a different world at the time.

    So that role will always, always mean something to me. There’s obviously a pain that comes with the fact that it didn’t get more eyes on it, but God, I’ve learned to release the result as an actor and as an artist. What I take with me are the memories and the lessons, and that was a pivotal one for me. So thank you for watching it, man. I’m always stoked when I meet somebody that watched Mr. Corman. Honestly, it means the world to me.

    Before you were turned into a human s’more, how much investigation was there into what Ralph Fiennes whispered in Nick Hoult’s ear on the set of The Menu? [Writer’s Note: Castro played one of the bread-obsessed tech bros.]

    Oh, man. I was very curious, but Nick never told any of us what Ralph whispered. Apparently, it was different every time. The beauty about that movie was that even on the days you didn’t have lines, you were still in the restaurant. So I got a front row seat to watch Ralph and John Leguizamo and Nick and all these incredible actors do their thing. There’s a part where John’s character stands up to try to defend us all [to Ralph’s character], and it goes horribly wrong. So they did a couple takes, and then they started improvising at each other two feet away from me. If you had told me during acting school back in 2006 that I was going to get the chance to watch these two guys go at it, I wouldn’t have believed you.

    Arturo Castro and Hong Chau in The Menu

    Searchlight Pictures

    I’ve seen every Narcos series there is to see. Those shows dramatized real events, certainly, but they also strived for authenticity when possible by filming at some of the real-life locations. Was it ever eerie to know that you were retracing the steps of such harrowing events? 

    Hugely. We filmed at this mansion that we thought was standing in for Pacho Herrera’s mansion, and the director was like, “Yeah, this is his actual mansion. The government confiscated it, and we’re renting it to shoot in it.” That put us right there in terms of authenticity. 

    There’s a piece of my innocence that I’ll never get back from researching people in the Cali Cartel. I would watch footage of sicarios saying that they killed somebody, and they would say it with the same ease as if they told you that they took a shower. But if the audience gives you their time and their money to watch you in a theater or through a streaming subscription, the least that you owe them is to leave a little blood in the water. So I’m okay with a little piece of my innocence never coming back to me because I got to share this cautionary tale. 

    I didn’t see Narcos as glorifying drug dealing. Being a Latino, that was the moral question I had for myself. And, to me, by showing these people as they were, it takes away the luster. None of them wind up well. Everybody winds up dead or in jail or somehow worse. So it was definitely harrowing at times, but that shoot was also one of the best experiences of my life. I got to speak Spanish for the first time in so long, and the entire cast was very fatherly towards me for eight months in Colombia. I lost my father when I was 17, and to spend time with these older Latino male father figures who were also into art and acting and the beauty of theater, it was incredibly meaningful to me.

    I do love that your take on Pablo Escobar in Weird: The Al Yankovic Story gave you a completely opposite tonal companion. 

    (Laughs.) I love parodying that culture. In the same way that Narcos’ cautionary tale took away the luster, parodying it also takes away any luster from it. I’ve been a huge fan of Weird Al Yankovic my entire life. But, God, to be able to play a Pablo Escobar who was just petty and wanted friends, there was something so stupid and so hilarious about that to me. So I jumped at the chance, and it premiered at TIFF within two days of The Menu. You can imagine what that experience was like for me.

    The trailer you referenced earlier features it, but I think the best scene in Road House is that opening slapping fight. Was Doug Liman as advertised?

    Man, it was so cool once I learned the language of his shooting style. He doesn’t use a shot list. He’s really a genius. He just picks the shot [on the day] and  knows exactly what he wants. He also cares so much about what’s happening in the background. That’s how authentic he is. But I was very lucky in the sense that they wrote me into another scene after the table read. 

    By the time I got to set, I just felt from Doug that I was able to improv or add as much or as little as I wanted. I thought it was going to be a more color-within-the-lines set, and I wasn’t expecting to have that freedom. It was then fun to see that the character really resonated. I love being a character that’s the audience’s perspective and has to answer questions honestly no matter what you ask him. I love being a character who has really petty needs in a heightened situation. So I’m really lucky that Doug let me run away with a character who just wanted to join a motorcycle club.

    When I premiered The Menu and Weird at TIFF, I was shooting Road House, so I got to go back to the Dominican Republic afterwards. That was an awesome couple of months.

    You’ve got some cool work coming up with Sam Hargrave’s Matchbox, Chloe Domont’s A Place in Hell and BenDavid Grabinski’s Mike & Nick & Nick & Alice. How would you sum up those experiences?

    Man, Matchbox is incredibly close to my heart. I got engaged during that shoot.

    Congrats.

    Thank you. The Matchbox cast and I were rehearsing in Budapest for one of the scenes. We were all on the floor of a carpeted office, and we were pretending to be in this massive vehicle during a precarious situation. And Jessica Biel turned to all of us and said, “Can you guys believe that this is our job? Can you believe that we do this for a living?” And I was like, “You’ve been doing this as long as you have, and you still have that wonder?” So that’s the type of people I want to be with on set. Everybody on Matchbox was really alley-ooping each other for the best line and the best punchline. 

    With Chloe Domont, I never thought I’d be in such a cool prestige project so soon. As dramatic and intense as [A Place in Hell] is, it also has a lot of humor. The way she’s able to weave genres was something I’ve never seen before. And talk about having a front row seat, I got to have scenes with Daisy Edgar-Jones and Michelle Williams at the same time. It was an out-of-body experience, and I was like, “Oh, shit. I should say my line now.” I got caught up in watching these people. 

    BenDavid Grabinski has also become a great friend, and his movie, Mike & Nick & Nick & Alice was honestly one of the funniest scripts I’ve ever read. It’s the same with El Tigre and Tom Segura. Tom is one of the most genuine, caring human beings I’ve ever met, and he’s also incredibly hilarious. 

    So I know that I keep saying this and that it sounds cliché, but it’s not a canned answer. These five projects, starting with Tron, were all amazing experiences in a variety of genres, and I just can’t believe that it’s happening to me, man. I feel like my chest is going to explode from gratitude. It makes me emotional, honestly.

    What’s the most impactful note you’ve received from a director?

    Ang Lee once said, “Arturo, less love, more volume.”

    What do you think he meant by that?

    I still don’t know to this day. (Laughs.) God, I remember another note, but I forget who it was that told me this. I tend to associate being natural with very free body movement, and my center of gravity is kind of bouncy. So it might’ve been in theater, but a director was like, “What if you allowed your body to be still? See where that energy transfers to once you’re not letting it go with all this movement.” 

    And what I realized is that for characters who are really passionate about what they’re saying, it gives you such power to not give that energy away, physically. You just plant yourself and speak your truth in the moment. So that director’s note changed my life, and it changed the way I approach acting. Whether it’s a comedy or a drama, I ask myself, “Where is this character’s power coming from?” 

    Out of all the philosophical notes I’ve ever received, I love that this one is a very practical, physical thing that I can hold onto when I’m trying not to get too caught up in the weeds of the why and the obstacle. So that note that a director gave me about my physicality really changed the game for me.

    The podcast market is so saturated that it’s wise to do something niche, and your podcast, Greatest Escapes, is certainly that. Is it coming back at a certain point?

    Yes, I’m elated that we just got nominated for a Signal Award [Most Innovative Audio Experience]. FilmNation came to me and asked, “Would you ever consider exploring this space?” And I just love history. I love little moments in history that affect bigger moments down the line. One such example is how cheap bananas almost ended the world. So I jumped at the chance to tell my friends about these types of moments on a podcast. We’re coming back with even more exciting guests, and we’re going to look at the stupidity throughout history. There will hopefully be some good lessons on how not to repeat it.

    ***
    Tron: Ares is now playing in movie theaters nationwide.

    [ad_2]

    Brian Davids

    Source link

  • What to Watch at SXSW 2024

    What to Watch at SXSW 2024

    [ad_1]

    All the cool film girlies just came back from Berlin. Specifically, they are fresh from the 74th Berlin International Film Festival, and they still smell like cigarettes to prove it. Between anecdotes about how Berghain is ruined, they’re telling me how they watched Cillian Murphy (my father, emotionally) give another masterful, award-worthy performance in the Enda Walsh adaptation of Claire Keegan’s novel Small Things Like These. This is apropos of nothing, except that I was not in Berlin, so I will have to wait alongside everyone else to see one of my favorite books on screen later this year.

    But how can I be bitter? This week, half of Los Angeles will flock to Texas for South By Southwest in Austin, and I’ll be delightfully distracted by a whole new slate of upcoming releases premiering at this year’s festival. There are so many new films to be excited about premiering at the festival — even without Cillian Murphy’s cheekbones.

    Let’s get into it.


    What is SXSW?

    I’m in for a week of acronyms: SXSW in ATX FTW – LFG!! South By Southwest (aka SXSW or SX or South By) is a film festival, music festival, and industry conference all rolled into one. Fueled by Texas BBQ and Torchy’s Tacos, creative people in the tech, film, music, education, and culture industries swarm from theater to concert hall and conference room networking (allegedly), writing pretentious reviews about the future of culture (guilty), and being menaces to the residents of Austin by causing even worse traffic jams than the city is used to— and I can’t wait.

    When is SXSW 2024?

    SXSW 2024 will be held from March 8 – 16 2024. Highly anticipated events include Rolling Stone’s Future of Music Series (my artists to watch are Flo Milli and Faye Webster), and the SXSW Music Festival (which, this year, includes The Black Keys, Bootsy Collins, and many more). Of course, the highlight is the insane 2024 SXSW movie lineup. I can’t wait to laugh, cry, and contemplate my very existence while staring up at a screen at SXSW. In the words of Nicole Kidman, “We come to this place to dream.” And this week, the dreamers are all in Austin, Texas.

    Here are the films at SXSW 2024 we’re most excited about – starring an assortment of all our favorite actors (even though Cilian won’t be making an appearance). Still, we’re excited to see new performances from faves like Ayo Edebiri, Jake Gyllenhaal, Ryan Gosling, Aaron Taylor Johnson, Jonathan Groff, Hunter Schafer, Rachel Zegler, Anne Hathaway, Nicholas Galitzine, and a whole lot more.

    SXSW 2024 Official Opening Night Selection

    Road House

    This is not Patrick Swayze’s Road House (1989) — but by the time Jake Gyllenhaal is done with you, you’ll love it as much as the original. Gyllenhaal stars as an ex-UFC fighter-turned-bouncer at a Florida Keys roadhouse, owned by Frankie (Jessica Williams). Facing threats from a criminal gang led by Brandt (Billy Magnussen), Dalton’s violent past emerges. When he is confronted by Knox (Conor McGregor), a lethal gun-for-hire, the escalating brawls and bloodshed become more dangerous than his days in the Octagon. Fans of real-life, ex-UFC fighter Conor McGregor are excited to see him in this film, even if he is the villain. Road House is coming to Prime Video on March 21st.

    SXSW 2024 Official Closing Night Selection

    ​The Idea of You

    This film is like if your mom stole your Wattpad moment. Created by two-time SXSW Audience Award Winner Michael Showalter, it’s his great return to SXSW and it’s sure to be a riot. Allegedly based on Harry Styles (and a little bit of Prince Harry, too), The Idea of You is the salacious story of a 40-year-old single mom who begins an unexpected romance with her daughter’s favorite popstar. She goes from begrudgingly chaperoning her daughter to Coachella to meeting, and falling for, 24-year-old Hayes Campbell, the lead singer of a band based on One Direction. This odd couple romance promises to be more than meets the eye. The couple is played by Red White & Royal Blue’s Nicholas Galitzine alongside Anne Hathaway so I am ready and willing to go on this ride. I’m expecting something that feels like a mix of After, A Star is Born, and How Stella Got Her Groove Back. Watch the trailer HERE. And listen to the first song from the Original Soundtrack by fictional boy band August Moon HERE.

    Other films to watch at SXSW 2024

    ​I Wish You All The Best

    I am unspeakably excited for Tommy Dorfman’s queer coming-of-age drama. Written and directed by Dorfman and starring Corey Fogelmanis, Miles Gutierrez-Riley, Alexandra Daddario, Cole Sprouse, Lena Dunham, Amy Landecker, Lexi Underwood, and more (wow!) it’s an adaptation of Mason Deaver’s novel of the same name. A queer tale of chosen family, it follows Ben DeBacker, a non-binary teen who is thrown out of their house and forced to move in with their estranged older sister, Hannah, and her husband, Thomas. Struggling with anxiety, they come out only to Hannah, Thomas, and their art teacher, Ms. Lyons, while trying to keep a low profile at their new school. Ben’s attempts to survive junior year unnoticed are thwarted when Nathan, a funny and charismatic student, decides to take Ben under his wing. With the help of Nathan, and his friends Sophie and Mel, Ben discovers themselves, and what started as a disastrous turn of events looks like it might just be a chance to start a happier new life.

    ​A Nice Indian Boy

    A Nice Indian Boy

    I’ll watch Jonathan Groff in anything — and this original odd-couple comedic drama would have taken me no convincing anyway. Self-effacing doctor Naveen Gavaskar meets Jay Kurundkar, a white man adopted by two Indian parents, when Jay takes his picture at the hospital. Despite initial skepticism on Naveen’s part, the two quickly fall in love. Naveen avoids telling his traditional family—parents Megha & Archit and sister Arundhathi—who accepted his sexuality years earlier and are close to him but increasingly don’t know much about his life. Eventually, inevitably, Jay, with no family of his own, has to meet the Gavaskars, who have never met a boyfriend of Naveen’s.

    ​The Fall Guy

    The Fall Guy

    Don’t fret, Barbie fever is over, but Ryan Gosling will be back on your screens soon enough with this comedic action blockbuster. Ryan Gosling stars as Colt, a stuntman who, after a near-career-ending accident, is drafted back into service when the star of a mega-budget movie—being directed by his ex, Jody (Emily Blunt)—goes missing. Now, this working-class hero has to solve a conspiracy and try to win back the love of his life while still doing his day job. Certified heartthrob Aaron Taylor Johnson is also in this — giving me something to look forward to as I wait patiently for his role in Kraven: The Hunter later this year. I’m sat.

    ​Omni Loop

    Omni Loop

    The more Ayo Edebiri in the zeitgeist, the better. Alongside Mary Louise Parker, Steven Maier, Eddie Cahill, and more, she stars in this existential sci-fi feature. Zoya Lowe, a 55 year old woman from Miami, FL, has been diagnosed with a black hole inside her chest and given a week to live. But what the doctors and her family don’t know is that she has already lived this week before. She’s lived it so many times, in fact, that she doesn’t even know how long it’s been. Until one day she meets Paula, a young woman studying time at a lab in the local university, and together they decide to try and solve time travel so Zoya can actually go back— back into her past, back to a time before she settled, back to when her whole future was still wide open in front of her—back so she can do it all over again, and finally be the person she always wanted to be. It’s this year’s Everything Everywhere All At Once so I have high hopes.

    The Greatest Hits

    The Greatest Hits

    Harriet (Lucy Boynton) finds art imitating life when she discovers certain songs can transport her back in time – literally. While she relives the past through romantic memories of her former boyfriend (David Corenswet), her time-traveling collides with a burgeoning new love interest in the present (Justin H. Min). As she takes her journey through the hypnotic connection between music and memory, she wonders if she can change the past. Think Yesterday, but … no, pretty much just exactly Yesterday.

    Y2K

    Y2K A24 Movie

    ​The children are our future! This A24 disaster comedy, Y2K, stars Rachel Zegler, Jaeden Martell, Julian Dennison, Lachlan Watson, Daniel Zolghadri, Mason Gooding, The Kid Laroi (yes, from that Justin Bieber song), and more as high schoolers who crash a NYE party in 1999 and end up fighting for their lives. But doesn’t all high school feel like that?

    ​I Love You Forever

    I Love You Forever

    Directed and written by Cazzie David and Elisa Kalani and starring Sofia Black-D’Elia, Ray Nicholson, Jon Rudnitsky, Cazzie David, and Raymond Cham Jr, this film portrays the sad reality of the dating landscape. It follows Mackenzie, a disillusioned 25-year old law student tired of the apps — because who isn’t. When she has a “real life meet-cute” with a charming journalist who makes her believe true love may actually exist. Ultimately, it starts to go left and Mackenzie finds herself trapped in a tumultuous and depleting cycle of emotional abuse.

    Doin It

    Doin It

    Starring internet sensation-turned-host-turned-actor Lilly Singh, Doin It is a comedy of errors about an Indian woman trying to lose her virginity. Fans of Never Have I Ever, which also starts with that premise, should flock to this film. After teenage Maya is caught in a sexually compromising position, her mom moves the family back to India so Maya can learn proper discipline. Years later, she returns to the US to find funding for her teen-focused app, and gets a job as a substitute high school teacher so she can research her target demo. But when the principal assigns her to teach sex ed, Maya —who’s still a virgin— sets out on a quest with her best friend to make up for the high school experience she lost out on. It also stars Ana Gasteyer, Sabrina Jalees, Stephanie Beatriz, Mary Holland, Utkarsh Ambudkar, and Sonia Dhillon Tully.

    ​Civil War

    Civil War

    No, not the Marvel film. Much more chilling and dystopian — especially since it’s set in a plausible, near-future. It stars Kirsten Dunst, Wagner Moura, Cailee Spaeny, Stephen McKinley Henderson, Sonoya Mizuno, and Nick Offerman taking us on an adrenaline-fueled thrill ride through a fractured America balanced on the razor’s edge, going through a civil war.

    ​Birdeater

    Birdeater

    A bride-to-be is invited to join her own fiancé’s bachelor party on a remote property in the Australian outback. But as the festivities spiral into beer-soaked chaos, uncomfortable details about their relationship are exposed, and the celebration soon becomes a feral nightmare. I’m imagining part Saltburn and part Get Out from this feature debut.

    Babes

    Babes

    After becoming pregnant from a one-night stand, Eden leans on her married best friend and mother of two, Dawn, to guide her through gestation and beyond. Starring lana Glazer, Michelle Buteau, John Carroll Lynch, and Hasan Minhaj, this comedy about friendship and motherhood is sure to be both belly-busting and heartwarming

    ​Musica

    Musica

    Based on writer, director and star Rudy Mancuso, Música is a coming-of-age love story that follows an aspiring creator with synesthesia, who must come to terms with an uncertain future, while navigating the pressures of love, family and his Brazilian culture. Alongside Mancuso are Camila Mendes, Francesca Reale, Maria Mancuso, and J.B. Smoove.

    ​Freaknik: The Wildest Party Never Told

    Freaknik: The Wildest Party Never Told

    If anyone else has heard about Freaknik endlessly without hearing about Freaknik, your time has come. This documentary feature is a celebratory exploration of the boisterous times of Freaknik, the iconic Atlanta street party that drew hundreds of thousands of people in the 80s and 90s, helping put Atlanta on the map culturally. At its height, Freaknik was a traffic-stopping, city-shuttering, juggernaut that has since become a cult classic. This documentary will, too.

    ​The Black Sea

    The Black Sea

    Immersive and inspired by Derrick B. Harden’s travels to Bulgaria, The Black Sea details the transformative journey of a man who finds unexpected connections in a small coastal Eastern European town even as he finds himself to be the only black person around.

    ​Pet Shop Days

    Pet Shop Days

    I love a very serious thriller with a whimsical title. Starring Jack Irv, Darío Yazeb Bernal, Willem Dafoe, Peter Sarsgaard, and more, you know this one’s going to be good. In an act of desperation, impulsive black sheep Alejandro flees his home in Mexico. On the run from his unforgiving father, Alejandro finds himself in New York City where he meets Jack, a college age pet store employee with similar parental baggage. Together the two enter a whirlwind romance sending them down the rabbit hole of drugs and depravity in Manhattan’s underworld.

    ​Toll

    Toll

    This Brazilian feature is definitely going to chill me to my core, I’m calling it now. Suellen, a Brazilian toll booth attendant and mother, falls in with a gang of thieves in an attempt to keep her family afloat. In doing so, she realizes she can use her job to raise some extra money illegally for a so-called noble cause: to send her son to an expensive gay conversion workshop led by a renowned foreign priest.

    ​My Dead Friend Zoe

    My Dead Friend Zoe

    My Dead Friend Zoe follows the journey of Merit, a U.S. Army Afghanistan veteran who is at odds with her family thanks to the presence of Zoe, her dead best friend from the Army. Despite the persistence of her VA group counselor, the tough love of her mother and the levity of an unexpected love interest, Merit’s cozy-dysfunctional friendship with Zoe keeps the duo insulated from the world. That is until Merit’s estranged grandfather—holed up at the family’s ancestral lake house—begins to lose his way and is in need of the one thing he refuses… help. It stars Sonequa Martin-Green, Natalie Morales, Ed Harris, Morgan Freeman, Utkarsh Ambudkar, and Gloria Reuben.

    A House Is Not a Disco

    A House Is Not a Disco

    Directed by Brian J. Smith, this documentary shows a year-in-the-life in the world’s most iconic “homo-normative” community: Fire Island Pines. Situated fifty miles from New York City, this storied queer beach town finds itself in the midst of a renaissance as a new generation of Millennial homeowners reimagine The Pines for a new, more inclusive era. Filmed like a Wiseman movie on magic mushrooms, a large cast of unforgettable eccentrics, activists, drifters, and first-timers reflect on the legacy of The Pines while preparing their beloved village for the biggest challenge it has faced since the AIDS crisis: rising seas caused by climate change.

    Brandy Hellville & the Cult of Fast Fashion

    Brandy Hellville & the Cult of Fast Fashion

    My eighth-grade self, experiencing all the stages of grief in the Brandy Melville changing room, is ready for this expose. It examines how Brandy Melville developed a cult-like following despite its controversial “one size fits all” tagline. Hiding behind its shiny Instagram façade is a shockingly toxic world, a reflection of the global fast fashion industry. Fast fashion isn’t all glitz and glamor – it’s a business that sacrifices humanity and pollutes the planet for the sake of profit.

    [ad_2]

    LKC

    Source link

  • Footage From Jake Gyllenhaal’s ‘Road House’ Remake Hits The Internet

    Footage From Jake Gyllenhaal’s ‘Road House’ Remake Hits The Internet

    [ad_1]

    Jake Gyllenhaal channels the late Patrick Swayze in a remake of “Road House,” but the new version takes a detour to the UFC octagon. Cameras were out to capture a staged fight featuring Gyllenhaal’s character amid bouts of a real UFC event in Las Vegas on Saturday. (Watch the videos below.)

    In reviving Swayze’s bar bouncer who tried to keep the peace but couldn’t resist kicking ass, Gyllenhaal traded blows in a scene with former UFC fighter Jay Hieron.

    The scripted battle featured Gyllenhaal’s character leveling Hieron with a flying knee.

    It’s unclear whether the Zen-like mien of Swayze’s Dalton will make it into the reimagined movie, but we know his chiseled physique will. Gyllenhaal looked absolutely shredded in another go-round as a combat-sport athlete. Remember his boxer in 2015′s “Southpaw”?

    Gyllenhaal also had a tense weigh-in scene, in which he trash-talks and strikes his opponent, the Los Angeles Times reported.

    “I can’t even believe I trained six weeks for this shit, to fight this piece of shit,” Gyllenhaal says in the staged altercation. “Just gimme the belt now. Come on, motherfucker, let’s go!”

    He also took in the love of the crowd as his character entered the octagon.

    UFC great Conor McGregor makes his acting debut in the Amazon Prime Video movie, which does not have a release date yet.

    But it does have expectations.

    “‘Road House’ is a home run for us,” Jennifer Salke, head of Amazon Studios, said last year. “Not only is it a nod to fans of the original, but it is also a big, fun, broad audience movie.”

    Check out photos of the cinematic slugfest, and a moment in the crowd with Gyllenhaal and McGregor watching the real action:

    Jake Gyllenhaal looks on while filming a scene for an upcoming remake of the 1989 movie “Road House.”
    Actor Jake Gyllenhaal knocks down actor Jay Hieron in the much buzzed-about remake of the 1989 movie "Road House."
    Actor Jake Gyllenhaal knocks down actor Jay Hieron in the much buzzed-about remake of the 1989 movie “Road House.”
    Actor Jake Gyllenhaal is restrained by the referee in a staged scene of the "Road House" remake.
    Actor Jake Gyllenhaal is restrained by the referee in a staged scene of the “Road House” remake.
    "Road House" co-stars Jake Gyllenhaal and Conor McGregor enjoy a light moment during the UFC 285 event at T-Mobile Arena on Saturday.
    “Road House” co-stars Jake Gyllenhaal and Conor McGregor enjoy a light moment during the UFC 285 event at T-Mobile Arena on Saturday.

    Chris Unger via Getty Images

    [ad_2]

    Source link