To become the queen, she needed to find her voice.
Academy Award® Winner Jennifer Hudson is Aretha Franklin. Watch the new trailer now, and don’t miss RESPECT in theaters this August.
Director Liesl Tommy makes her feature film debut with Respect. Tommy is the first Black woman ever nominated for a Tony Award® for Best Direction of a Play in 2016 for Eclipsed, and is an Associate Artist at the Berkeley Rep and an Artist Trustee with the Sundance Institute’s Board of Trustees.
With a story by Callie Khouri (Oscar® winner for Writing, Thelma & Louise) and Tracey Scott Wilson, and screenplay written by Tracey Scott Wilson. Wilson and Tommy have worked together creatively since the 2009 play The Good Negro written by Wilson, directed by Tommy at The Public Theatre. Wilson was a writer on FX’s The Americans which garnered her a Peabody Award as well as Emmy® and WGA Award nominations.
The cast includes Jennifer Hudson, Forest Whitaker, Marlon Wayans, Audra McDonald, Marc Maron, Tituss Burgess, Kimberly Scott, Saycon Sengbloh, Hailey Kilgore, Heather Headley, Skye Dakota Turner, Tate Donovan and Mary J. Blige.
Hudson debuted the trailer on Good Morning America. Listen to what her favorite Aretha Franklin song is.
Some secrets just won’t stay buried — and City of Lies reveals all when it arrives on Blu-ray (plus Digital) and DVD on June 8 from Saban Films.
City of Lies is currently available on Digital and on Demand, and stars Academy Award nominee and Golden Globe Award winner Johnny Depp (Academy Award: 2007, Best Actor in a Leading Role, Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street; Golden Globe: 2008, Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Musical/Comedy, Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street), Academy Award, Golden Globe Award, and Primetime Emmy Award winner Forest Whitaker (Academy Award: 2007, Best Actor in a Leading Role, The Last King of Scotland; Golden Globe: 2007, Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama, The Last King of Scotland; Primetime Emmy: 2003, Co-Executive Producer, Outstanding Television Movie, Door to Door), and Rockmond Dunbar (TV’s “Sons of Anarchy,” “9-1-1,” “Prison Break”).
City of Lies will be available on Blu-ray (plus Digital) and DVD for the suggested retail price of $21.99 and $19.98, respectively.
What is worse, the crime or the cover-up? Based on the book, LAbyrinth, by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Randall Sullivan, this compelling crime-thriller follows the investigation into the infamous murder of iconic rap artist Christopher Wallace aka The Notorious B.I.G. Oscar® nominee Johnny Depp stars as determined LAPD detective Russell Poole, who spent nearly 20 years trying to solve the murder, and Oscar® and Primetime Emmy® winner Forest Whitaker as Jack Jackson, a journalist who teams up with Poole in search of the elusive truth. Together they explore why the case remains cold — and why a secretive division of the LAPD is seemingly set on keeping it that way.
BONUS MATERIALS:
7 Deleted Scenes
Crafting the Characters in City of Lies
Audio Commentary with Director Brad Furman and Author Randall Sullivan
CAST & CREW
Directed by: Brad Furman
Screenplay by: Christian Contreras
Cast:
Johnny Depp Pirates of the Caribbean franchise, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Black Mass
Forest Whitaker Black Panther, Lee Daniels’ The Butler, The Last King of Scotland
Rockmond Dunbar TV’s “Sons of Anarchy,” “9-1-1,” “Prison Break”
SPECS
Blu-ray:
Feature: 1080p High Definition, 16×9 (2.39:1)
Audio: English 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio™
Subtitles: Spanish, English SDH
DVD:
Feature: 16×9 (2.39:1)
Audio: English 5.1 Dolby Digital Audio
Subtitles: Spanish, English SDH
Run Time: 112 Minutes
Rating: Rated R for language throughout, some violence and drug use
Following the rise of Aretha Franklin’s career from a child singing in her father’s church’s choir to her international superstardom, RESPECT is the remarkable true story of the music icon’s journey to find her voice.
Director Liesl Tommy makes her feature film debut with Respect. Tommy is the first Black woman ever nominated for a Tony award for Best Direction of a Play in 2016 for Eclipsed, and is anAssociate Artist at the Berkeley Rep and an Artist Trustee with the Sundance Institute’s Board of Trustees.
Check out the first trailer starring Jennifer Hudson, Forest Whitaker, Marlon Wayans, Audra McDonald, Marc Maron, Tituss Burgess, Saycon Sengbloh, Hailey Kilgore, Skye Dakota Turner, Tate Donovan, and Mary J. Blige. See the film this December.
This is going to be fantastic! Jennifer Hudson has previously won a Best Supporting Actress Academy Award for DREAMGIRLS! She was also awarded a Golden Globe, BAFTA Award, and Screen Actors Guild Award for her role as Effie White in the film.
Time for the two-time Grammy award winner to clear a space for another Oscar Statuette.
This is sure to be an Oscar contender next year. Bet on Academy Award nominations for Best Picture, Hudson (Best Actress), Mary J. Blige (Supporting Actress), Forest Whitaker (Supporting Actor) and hopefully for director Liesl Tommy, and possibly cinematography, production design, costume and hair & makeup.
With a story by Callie Khouri (Oscar ® winner for Thelma & Louise) and Tracey Scott Wilson, and screenplay written by Tracey Scott Wilson. Wilson and Tommy have worked together creatively since the 2009 play The Good Negro written by Wilson, directed by Tommy at The Public Theatre. Wilson was a writer on FX’s The Americans which garnered her a Peabody Award as well as Emmy and WGA Award nominations.
(l-r) Usher Raymond and Garrett Hedlund, in BURDEN. Photo: Mark Hill/101 Studios
In this strange but true story, Garrett Hedlund plays a young white man is persecuted after leaving the Ku Klux Klan he was raised in but finds shelter with a forgiving black reverend (Forest Whitaker) in BURDEN.
The title hints at various meanings,
although it is also the last name of the person at the center of this
inspiring drama. A strong, nuanced performance by Garrett Hedlund
adds greatly to director Andrew Heckler’s true story-inspired drama
about redemption and compassion, In fact, the film benefits in many
ways from an impressive cast, including Forest Whitaker, Tom
Wilkinson, Andrea Riseborough and Usher Raymond, each of whom give
affecting performances in this tale of human transformation.
Garrett plays Mike Burden, a young man
abandoned by his abusive parents and raised by Tom Griffin (Tom
Wilkinson), the powerful leader of a branch of the KKK in a small
Southern town in the 1990s. Mike is intensely loyal to Griffin, who
regards Mike as a son, and Mike becomes Griffin’s right hand man as
he rises to the position of Grand Dragon in the Klan. Tom Griffin is
also Mike’s employer, in his repo business for a local rent-to-own
shop.
When Tom Griffin buys the local
shuttered movie theater, he transforms the space into a museum
dedicated to the KKK, with an attached gift shop of Klan and
Confederate merchandise called the Redneck Shop. Appalled by
Griffin’s boldness of opening this racist establishment, the town’s
activist African American preacher Rev. David Kennedy (Whitaker)
organizes protests outside the Redneck shop.
Mike is right there at Griffin’s side but in his work as a repo man, he meets both two people who change the direction of his life. One a brave young single mother, Judy (Andrea Riseborough), with whom he falls in love, and the other is a former childhood friend, a black man named Clarence (Usher Raymond).
The film does a nice job of capturing a
sense of time and place, and Hedlund and Riseborough add some nice
believable touches to their impoverished rural characters.
Reconnecting with Clarence and falling in love with Judy sets Mike on
a new path. When they first meet, Judy is unaware of Mike’s Klan ,
and balks when she finds out, as her son’s best friend is Clarence’s
son. Torn between his love of Judy and loyalty to Griffin, Mike is
forced to take a hard look at his violent life and his long-held
racist beliefs.
When Mike finally decides to leave the
Klan, the Klan retaliate. He and Judy suddenly find themselves
homeless and unemployed, reduced to begging, when Rev. Kennedy
encounters them. He buys them a meal, and then brings them home, much
to the horror of his own wife and son. The situation puts them all in
danger and sets them on path of confrontation with Tom Griffin and
the Klan.
Dramatically, not everything works in
this story, but the fine performances of all the cast elevate the
film over its flaws. Hedlund brings out layers and complexities in
the character that help make this drama more than the heart-tugging,
inspiring message film it is at heart. Hedlund’s fine performance
take us inside the head of this young man, grateful to the man who
virtually adopted him and showed him the affection his parents did
not, while indoctrinating him into the Klan’s culture of hate. The
actor peels back Mike’s hard armored shell, as we see him changed by
the power of love and kindness. A moving scene gives insight into the
evolution of the character, when he encounters a curious young deer,
and then talks with Judy about his memories of his brutal father
speaks volumes about the forces that made him into the violent thug
he seemed at first, while revealing the potential for human warmth
underneath
At the same time, Hedlund is aided by
strong performances by all the cast. Forest Whitaker’s reverend is a
man who almost has a compulsion for kindness, sometimes neglecting
his own family in his commitment to his work, while still giving the
character a sincerity and personal warmth the way Whitaker always
does so well. Tom Wilkinson is likewise excellent, as the charismatic
but violent Griffin, charming and manipulating Mike into joining him
in his hatreds. Andrea Riseborough delivers a nice performance as a
young woman beaten down in life but refusing to give up on hope.
Usher Raymond, in the smaller role of Clarence, exudes an air of
human warmth and serves as a voice of reason and normalcy that
steadies the volatile Mike.
The true story is inspiring but it is the powerful acting that makes the film so affecting. The film ends with footage of the real people behind this unusually tale, and an update on the aftermath.
Who shot Biggie? Today would have been The Notorious B.I.G’s 46th Birthday….
Based on the true story of one of the most notorious and unsolved cases in recent time, CITY OF LIES is a provocative thriller revealing a never-before-seen look at the infamous murder of The Notorious B.I.G. shortly following the death of Tupac.
Watch the trailer now and see CITY OF LIES in theaters everywhere September 7th.
Written by Christian Contreras, the film is based on the novel by Randall Sullivan.
L.A.P.D. detective Russell Poole (Johnny Depp) has spent years trying to solve his biggest case, but after two decades, the investigation remains open. “Jack” Jackson (Forest Whitaker), a reporter desperate to save his reputation and career, is determined to find out why. In search of the truth, the two team up and unravel a growing web of institutional corruption and lies. Relentless in their hunt, these two determined men threaten to uncover the conspiracy and crack the foundation of the L.A.P.D. and an entire city.
The intense thriller THE FORGIVEN comes to Blu-ray (plus Digital) and DVD on May 15 from Lionsgate. Follow Forest Whitaker and Eric Bana in a tale about a murderer seeking redemption from an Archbishop. Based on real events.
Two highly decorated actors go head-to-head when The Forgiven arrives on Blu-ray™ (plus Digital), DVD, and Digital May 15 from Lionsgate. Based on real events, and directed by Academy Award nominee Roland Joffé (1986, Best Director, The Mission; 1984, Best Director, The Killing Fields), The Forgiven tells the story of Archbishop Desmond Tutu’s meeting with a brutal murderer who is suddenly seeking redemption. Starring Academy Award® winner Forest Whitaker (2006, Best Actor,The Last King of Scotland) and Eric Bana, The Forgiven will be available on Blu-ray and DVD for the suggested retail price of $21.99 and $19.98, respectively.
Forest Whitaker and Eric Bana deliver riveting performances in this tense thriller based on real events. When Archbishop Desmond Tutu (Whitaker) is appointed to head a nationwide investigation, he’s summoned to a maximum-security prison by a notorious murderer seeking clemency (Bana). Inside the brutal prison’s walls, Tutu is drawn into a dangerous, life-changing battle with the cunning criminal in this captivating film from director Roland Joffé.
CAST
Forest Whitaker Platoon, The Last King of Scotland, TV’s “Empire”
What’s all the commotion rolling out of the hallways down at the multiplex? Could it be a celebration? Well definitely, since it’s the first new Marvel Studios release of this year, a much earlier release than ever, just a touch over six weeks into the new year (a long way from the first weekend of May, usually considered the start of the Summer movie season). That’s sure to bring a smile to theater owners, who know that this is the start of Marvel Studios’ tenth year. In 2008 IRON MAN blasted out of that old white and red logo to usher in a new age of superhero spectaculars. And which one of their beloved characters is leading the big 2018 parade? Those trumpet blasts can only mean one thing: royalty. Not content to repeat themselves (although Marvel’s the new leader in tent pole franchises), they’re branching into different genres and settings. ANT-MAN was a buddy heist comedy, while DOCTOR STRANGE delved into magic by leading us through lots of weird, “trippy” dimensions. And those “a-holes”, the GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY, expanded the Marvel Universe even further by taking us on a pop-tuned filled adventure in the cosmos. Well, we’re not reaching for the stars this time, but we’re exploring a fantastic land hidden from the rest of planet Earth. And our hero is indeed royalty, a man we met as a supporting player nearly two years ago. Next stop on the Marvel movie express: Wakanda, a country governed and protected by T’Challa…the BLACK PANTHER.
The story begins with a father telling a story, one thousands of years old. The land of Wakanda in Africa is fought over by four feuding tribes until a meteor crash lands. At its core is the mysterious substance known as Vibrainium a source of technological wonders. The rock affects a local plant which produces a serum that gives the enhanced abilities of the panther. The head of the royal family drinks the serum and becomes the land’s guardian, the Black Panther, who brings peace to the different tribes. The Panther role is passed on, generation to generation, over the centuries. The story jumps forward, not to today, but to Stockton, California, USA circa 1992. An angry young Wakandan, N’Jobu (Sterling K. Brown) is amassing an arsenal in his run-down apartment, with help from his friend James (Denzel Whitaker). A flash of light and suddenly the current Black Panther, T’Chaka, along with two of his elite security guards, known as the Dora Milaje, face the stunned duo. This tragic confrontation will have repercussions in the present day. Speaking of which, we’re back in the present as the new Black Panther, T”Challa (Chadwick Boseman) is on a secret midnight mission with the leader of the Milaje, Okoye (Danai Gurira). Their cloaked flying battleship is tracking a truck convoy filled with kidnapped Wakandan women. But one of the taken is a highly trained spy, Nakia (Lupita Nyong’o), who’s also a former flame of T”Challa. This occupies his thoughts along with the recent death of his father T’Chaka at the hands of master terrorist Zemo (which put events in motion that played out in 2016’s CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR). At the mission’s end they return to Wakanda for the ceremony that will crown T’Challa the new king.
The first appearance of the Black Panther from Fantastic Four #52, 1966
Across the globe, in a London museum, Erik Killmonger (Michael B. Jordan) is causing a scene at a display of tribal items from Africa. This distraction is put of an elaborate robbery by Ulysses Klau (Andy Serkis) and company (you may recall his painful encounter with Ultron in the second Avengers epic). They escape with a hammer head made of Vibranium. Word gets back to T’challa, and soon he, along with Okoye and Nakia, is headed to Korea to stop the piece’s purchase and bring Klau to justice. At a shady casino they encounter undercover CIA agent Everett Ross (Martin Freeman), who insists that T’challa’s team stand down (Ross had met him two years ago). Klau arrives, mayhem ensues, and, after a wild chase through the streets, the criminal is captured. But not for long. Turns out that Killmonger was using Klau to achieve a more lofty goal. The young master assassin is on his way to Wakanda to challenge T’Challa for the throne. Despite his skill, can T’Challa defeat the American mercenary and retain his title?
Boseman, finally getting to play a fictional film hero (Jackie Robinson, James Brown, and Thurgood Marshall comprise a terrific trio), brings a sense of humanity to the protector king. T’Challa has changed quite a bit from the grieving son thirsting for the blood of the Winter Soldier, maturing into a leader seeking justice rather than revenge. Boseman handles his action sequences with great agility and a dancer’s grace. But his king is a man much like all of us. He stammers around his former love and agonizes over his homeland’s role in the world. Nyong’o is dazzling as that rekindled love who’s a skilled champion in her own right. Her ultimate goal isn’t sharing the throne with T’Challa, rather she wishes to explore and right wrongs. Her Nakia has a sly sense of humor that enhances her compassion. Plus she’s a terrific partner not only to T’Challa, but also to Gurira’s Okoye whose retorts are nearly as sharp and deadly as her teched-out spear. While leading the Dora Milaje, she a most fearsome force of nature. Though she spends most of her time in the lab, the most essential woman in support of the king may be his younger sibling Shuri played with charm and energy by the scene-stealing Letitia Wright. She’s up for any challenge, always enthusiastic about some new gadget she’s crafted from the multi-purpose Vibrainium (Flubber’s got nothing on it). And her scenes with Boseman truly crackle with good humor. It’s as if James Bond’s tech wiz was his teasing kid sister, who beams with pride as she delights in “taking the piss” out of him. As for the other members of “Team Wakanda”, Angela Bassett projects a noble dignity as widowed Queen Ramonda, while Forest Whitaker is a most patient sage advisor as Zuri, uncle and consul to the king. GET OUT’s Daniel Kaluuya is impressive as W’Kabi another aid to T’Challa (and husband to Okoye), who doesn’t always see eye to eye with old childhood friend.
Opposing T’Challa and his team is Jordan as the menacing Eric Killmonger, full of swagger who strikes out unexpectedly like a springing poisonous snake. His casual air, boasting like ambitious rap star, masks his lofty aspirations and hides the pains of his past. When his dead-eyed stare erupts into a snarl, Jordan makes a villain worthy to challenge the hero. Although he doesn’t appear to be having quite as much fun as Serkis as the gleeful poaching pirate Klaus. He’s a party animal out for profit, destroying anything in his way via the sonic Vibranium cannon that replaced his left arm. They guy just seems to love his work, especially as he thumbs his nose at those who would stop him. Aside from T’Challa that’s mainly the always wonderful Freeman as the prickly, exasperated Ross, a by the book lawman who’s irked by these super-folk. Later on, he proves a valuable ally and a good audience stand-in as he gasps at the wonders of this hidden high-tech paradise. Speaking of surprising allies, kudos to Winston Duke as the imposing and hilarious leader of the “ape tribe”, M’Baku.
Director and co-screenwriter (working with Joe Robert Cole) Ryan Coogler has crafted an action-packed thrill ride fantasy, that, as the best of the Marvel Studios movies, has a lot to say about our modern world. The film’s hero is determined and more than a tad conflicted. Should his land join the planet or remain hidden, their achievements only benefitting its citizens rather than saving lives outside its holographic walls?Isolationism isn’t generally a theme in popcorn superhero flicks, which adds to this story’s emotional heft. And it doesn’t detract from the spectacular stunt work and bracing battle scenes. I was surprised to feel so uneasy during the last act “throw-down” because I truly cared about the people of this fictitous country, they weren’t merely toys to be tossed about the jungle. In addition to the superb cast, script, and director, the many artists that created this world deserve a lion’s share of laurels. Unlike the dark and murky films from another super-hero studio (the “Distinguished Competition” as Stan Lee would say), the visuals here truly dazzle the senses, the colorful costuming gives new meaning to “eye candy” (it may have sparked a new hybrid, “Afro-futuristic”). I can imagine pausing the eventual Blu-ray to savor all the gowns and sparkling jewelry. And the towering cities of the country are as awe-inspiring as any part of glorious Asgard from the Thor series. Wakanda now joins Shanga-La and Middle Earth as cinematic “dream destinations”. Though it’s early in the movie year, I can’t imagine the production team not getting a well-earned Oscar nomination for their inspired work that’s a great tribute to the art of comics co-creator Jack “King” Kirby. Along with a majestic soaring music score from Ludwig Goransson, the newest Marvel entry shows the studio moving forward, never content to merely rest on their impressive previous hits. And from the trailer for the next Avengers extravaganza, looks like we’ll have to wait just months rather than years for another adventure in the astounding world of Wakanda and its ruler, the BLACK PANTHER.
Opening in theaters February 16, 2018 is Marvel Studios’ BLACK PANTHER.
AND
INVITE YOU TO ATTEND
THE ST. LOUIS 3D ADVANCE SCREENING OF
Screening is on Monday, February 12th, 7pm.
For the chance to win TWO (2) seats to the advance screening of Black Panther ENTER YOUR NAME AND EMAIL IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION BELOW.
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. LIMIT TWO (2) ADMIT-ONE PASSES PER PERSON. THIS FILM IS RATED PG-13. MUST BE 13 YEARS OF AGE TO RECEIVE PASSES. EMPLOYEES OF ALL PROMOTIONAL PARTNERS AND THEIR AGENCIES ARE NOT ELIGIBLE. VOID WHERE PROHIBITED.
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Marvel Studios’ “Black Panther” follows T’Challa who, after the death of his father, the King of Wakanda, returns home to the isolated, technologically advanced African nation to succeed to the throne and take his rightful place as king. But when a powerful old enemy reappears, T’Challa’s mettle as king—and Black Panther—is tested when he is drawn into a formidable conflict that puts the fate of Wakanda and the entire world at risk. Faced with treachery and danger, the young king must rally his allies and release the full power of Black Panther to defeat his foes and secure the safety of his people and their way of life.
“Black Panther” stars Chadwick Boseman, Michael B. Jordan, Lupita Nyong’o, Danai Gurira, Martin Freeman, Daniel Kaluuya, Letitia Wright, Winston Duke, with Angela Bassett, with Forest Whitaker, and Andy Serkis.
The film is directed by Ryan Coogler and produced by Kevin Feige with Louis D’Esposito, Victoria Alonso, Nate Moore, Jeffrey Chernov and Stan Lee serving as executive producers. Ryan Coogler & Joe Robert Cole wrote the screenplay.
Chadwick Boseman takes a look at Black Panther’s ascension to king and his newfound responsibilities in “Good to Be King,” a new, action-packed video featurette
Marvel Studios’ BLACK PANTHER hits U.S. theaters on February 16, 2018.
Marvel Studios’ BLACK PANTHER follows T’Challa who, after the death of his father, the King of Wakanda, returns home to the isolated, technologically advanced African nation to succeed to the throne and take his rightful place as king. But when a powerful old enemy reappears, T’Challa’s mettle as king—and Black Panther—is tested when he is drawn into a formidable conflict that puts the fate of Wakanda and the entire world at risk. Faced with treachery and danger, the young king must rally his allies and release the full power of Black Panther to defeat his foes and secure the safety of his people and their way of life.
BLACK PANTHER stars Chadwick Boseman, Michael B. Jordan, Lupita Nyong’o, Danai Gurira, Martin Freeman, Daniel Kaluuya, Letitia Wright, Winston Duke, with Angela Bassett, with Forest Whitaker, and Andy Serkis.
The film is directed by Ryan Coogler and produced by Kevin Feige with Louis D’Esposito, Victoria Alonso, Nate Moore, Jeffrey Chernov and Stan Lee serving as executive producers. Ryan Coogler & Joe Robert Cole wrote the screenplay.
Tonight, during the 2018 National Championship Game, fans got a special, brand-new look at Marvel Studios’ BLACK PANTHER.
Tickets are now on sale and available wherever tickets are sold.
Marvel Studios’ BLACK PANTHER hits U.S. theaters on February 16, 2018.
Marvel Studios’ BLACK PANTHER follows T’Challa who, after the death of his father, the King of Wakanda, returns home to the isolated, technologically advanced African nation to succeed to the throne and take his rightful place as king. But when a powerful old enemy reappears, T’Challa’s mettle as king—and Black Panther—is tested when he is drawn into a formidable conflict that puts the fate of Wakanda and the entire world at risk.
Faced with treachery and danger, the young king must rally his allies and release the full power of Black Panther to defeat his foes and secure the safety of his people and their way of life.
BLACK PANTHER stars Chadwick Boseman, Michael B. Jordan, Lupita Nyong’o, Danai Gurira, Martin Freeman, Daniel Kaluuya, Letitia Wright, Winston Duke, with Angela Bassett, with Forest Whitaker, and Andy Serkis.
The film is directed by Ryan Coogler and produced by Kevin Feige with Louis D’Esposito, Victoria Alonso, Nate Moore, Jeffrey Chernov and Stan Lee serving as executive producers. Ryan Coogler & Joe Robert Cole wrote the screenplay.