SHARP CORNER – Review

While the halls of the multiplex are filled with the sounds of battling superheroes and video game icons and even some 1930s bloodsuckers, here comes a film that “identifies” as a thriller, though it’s really an insightful character study set during a family crisis. Plus, it’s a compelling showcase for one of our most gifted actors, who often brings “more to the plate’ in many recent action flicks. Oh, and he’s paired with an actress who’s best known for her work in a long-running TV sitcom. But she’s not eliciting laughs here as a young mother dealing with the slowly eroding sanity of her spouse, triggered by the purchase of their dream house that borders a road’s very dangerous SHARP CORNER.

In the story’s opening moments, the McCall family, Papa Josh (Ben Foster), Mama Rachel (Cobie Smulders), and their adorable “moppet”, seven-year-old Max (William Kosovic) arrive at their new home. It’s a sprawling track-house just off the curve of a two-lane road. After the unpacking, dinner, and putting Max to bed, the adults decide to officially “christen” the place with some quiet lovemaking in the living room. But the erotic calm ends abruptly when an automobile tire comes smashing through the huge bay front window. A drunken teen lost control of his car on the curve and crashed head-on into the big tree in the front yard. The authorities arrive too late, which unlocks an idea in Josh, which distracts him at his online tech job the next day (he needs to be on the ball since his old trainee is now his boss). And then another accident occurs. Josh rushes to the scene but doesn’t know what to do during the seemingly endless wait for the EMTs. His sensitive son is having nightmares, which prompts Rachel to insist that they move from this “death trap”. Josh reacts much differently. He begins taking a course in life-saving skills, and even orders a deluxe CPR manikin, all while keeping this a secret from his wife. Soon, Josh is “working from home” to be with Max, while really hoping another crash happens in order to use his new “talents”. When Rachel learns of his obsession, can they hold the family together as Josh assumes the role of “roadside protector”?

As I mentioned earlier, this story gives an opportunity for two talented actors to really “stretch’ and work outside their “comfort zones”. In that aspect, this is an excellent showcase for Foster, who, in a string of action/suspense flicks, has been the quiet, calculating, cold-blooded menace, always coiled to strike at any second. But Josh is a real “piece of work”, a repressed, awkward enigma who only seems to spark when playing with his kid. Foster plays him as a modern day “milquetoast” (I sound ancient), a nondescript passive-aggressive “blip” who has no desire for advancement at his hated job, killing time until he can shuffle about from room to room until he stops at that front window to gaze…and hope for disaster. There’s also a “sing song” 50’s sitcom dad cadence that Foster adopts while trying to “blend into the scenery”. This makes us wonder how in the world Josh landed the sparkling Rachel. Smulders did some dramatic ‘lifting” during her tenure in the MCU, but here she’s a bubbly, strong-willed mother who is fighting to keep the family together after the constant auto carnage just feet from her doorstep. Her Rachel is seeing a side of her hubby that baffles her, until his barrage of silly lies finally breaks her spirit. Both of them shine in the scenes they share with the very unmannered, sensitive Kosovic as the sweet, confused young Max.

In his sophomore feature effort, director Jason Buxton, who also wrote the screenplay adaptation of Russell Wangersky’s short story, imbues the everyday quiet suburban Canadian settings with an undercurrent of dread and depression. This adds considerable dramatic heft to the “demolition derby” in the front yard of Casa McCall. The sudden savagery jars the viewer as we see it slowly erode the family dynamic (though it doesn’t reach the “horror heights of Cronenberg’s CRASH, nor those old 16mm safety shiorts shown in schools for decades). There’s even some echoes of a superhero “origin” story with “mild-mannerd” Josh training to be “CPR-Man”, though that may trivialize the character’s mental “unraveling”.Ultimately, he frustrates us as he squanders an idyllic homestead, spiraling into self-destruction. It’s surprisingly powerful, weakened a bit by a convoluted and morally conflicted finale. Still, the stellar work of Foster and Smulders makes SHARP CORNER quite a ride. I wonder if they considered using Jan and Dean’s “Dead Man’s Curve” for the end credits…

2.5 Out of 4

SHARP CORNER is now playing in select theatres

EMANCIPATION – Review

Will Smith and Ben Foster in “Emancipation,” now streaming on Apple TV+. Courtesy of Apple Studios

An unrecognizable Will Smith stars as an enslaved man in Civil War era Louisiana, who decides upon hearing about Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation to escape from a labor camp through the bayou in an attempt to reach Union forces in Baton Rouge, in Antoine Fuqua’s EMANCIPATION. Will Smith’s character was inspired by a real person, the man with the heavily scarred back in the famous Civil War photo, who really did escape slavery to reach an Union encampment. The photo, known as “Whipped Peter” or “the Scourged Back,” was widely circulated during the Civil War and was instrumental in convincing Northerners of the truth of the brutality of slavery.

EMANCIPATION is a true-story inspired tale of the Civil War South without the mint juleps and “Gone with the Wind” fantasy. As the film opens, we see enslaved blacksmith Peter (Will Smith) living a hard life on the plantation of Captain John Lyons (Jayson Warner Smith), along with his wife Dodienne (Charmaine Bingwa) and their children. It is two years into the Civil war when Confederate forces arrive to conscript him and other enslaved men to work building a railroad track, much to the dismay of the plantation owner. In an emotional scene, Peter is taken from his family and shipped off with others in a prison cart. Arriving at the muddy labor camp, he and other enslaved people are worked until they drop, with bodies thrown into a common grave. All the time, they are under the watchful eye of a renowned slave-catcher named Fassel (Ben Foster) and his two employees, one of whom is a former slave, and the camp is encircled by hanged bodies and heads on pikes as warnings of the risks of escape. Rumors about Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation are overheard and, when an opportunity arises, Peter and three others, Gordon (Gilbert Owuor), Tomas (Jabbar Lewis), and John (Michael Luwoye) escape to cross the treacherous bayou in a bid to reach the Union forces fighting at Baton Rouge.

That chase makes up the bulk of the film, as the escapees are pursued by Fassel and his henchmen. One of the escapees is killed and the others decide to split up, making Smith’s character a man alone in a dangerous wilderness of swamp, venous snakes and alligators, pursued by a blood-thirsty fanatic, giving the film a propulsive thriller urgency, as it races towards its moving, inspiring conclusion.

Not a lot is known about the real man in the photo but director Antoine Fuqua and scriptwriter William N. Collage have taken what is known and crafted an inspiring story of determination to reach freedom amid the violence of slavery. It is also a violent story, as Fuqua does not blink in showing the true brutality of slavery, nor the relentlessness and cruelty of slave-catchers. The film is shot in a highly-desaturated color, so much so that at times it appears to be black and white, a visual choice that tamps down the visceral effect of the violence. Many on the characters in the film are based on real people, including Peter and his ruthless pursuer Fassel (in a chilling portrayal by Ben Foster), the plantation owner Captain Lyons, and a Black officer Captain Andre Cailloux (an excellent Mustafa Shakir), a legendary heroic figure of the Civil War.

The story is admirable and the film is inspiring and heroic, but it is not a film without flaws. The desaturated color tends to come and go scene to scene, which proves more distracting than if it was consistent. Smith’s character and his wife speak with Caribbean accents, sometimes in French creole, and other enslaved people have those accents too, and although there is some historic basis (some French plantation owners fled the Haitian Revolution for Louisiana), the accents seem likely to puzzle at least some audience members, raising questions that go unanswered. As said earlier, Smith is nearly-unrecognizable with his face covered in a beard and his stoic character also damps down his unusual on-screen charm. Scenes are often very dark, which is appropriate to the tone, but in the low light of the swamp, it makes it difficult to discern nuances of expression on Smith’s face. The character’s steely demeanor also limits the range of expression, although Smith does a fine job with what the director allows.

It is a great subject for a film but the film tries perhaps a bit too hard to fill in the blanks of the little-known actual person in the famous photo, which raises questions the film doesn’t answer. In many ways, the film feels like a bold Oscar bait reach and while it has admirable aspects, Will Smith feels miscast. Following up his Best Actor Oscar win for “King Richard” and all the uproar around “the slap,” Will Smith seems determined to take another bite at that apple with a dramatic role. But while his role in “King Richard” allowed him to show some of the charm that had made him an audience favorite, this role does not. Smith’s Peter is determined to be free and committed to his faith and the family he loves, but he is a rather steely, remote character, inspiring and determined rather than likable or warm. It doesn’t feel like the right character for Will Smith, although as noted he does as a fine job as possible with it.

This inspiring story has a lot of potential, enough that one can’t help wanting it to succeed, but the inconsistent desaturated color, puzzling details that go unexplained, and Smith’s iron-jawed character work against it. It is not as strong as cinema or as successful narratively as 12 YEARS A SLAVE. Still, it is beautifully shot and deserves credit as a heroic story that is far different from most Civil War tales.

EMANCIPATION opens Friday, Dec. 9, in theaters.

RATING: 3 out of 4 stars

THE CONTRACTOR (2022) – Review

Just a few weeks after the release of the armed forces “dramedy” DOG, Hollywood calls upon another of its “hunkiest” action stars/leading men to don the “camo” and “gear up”. Now there’s no specially trained canines to chase after in this film, but like Channing Tatum’s Briggs, this movie’s focus wants desperately to get “back in” and rejoin his “band of brothers” in the current “hot spot”. If only he was given a road trip/mission like Briggs. That’s the main reason his “title” changes. He’s not “the soldier”, but rather THE CONTRACTOR.


That “warrior” is named James (Chris Pine), who is still considered “wounded”. We first see him in his early morning routine in order to get his body back into fighting shape after taking a bullet to his right knee in his last tour of duty. But the jogging and the weightlifting “reps’ at his cabin “sanctuary” deep in the woods aren’t enough, prompting a few “injection enhancements. Unfortunately, the “docs” at the local military camp are able to detect his “juicing” and Jim is officially discharged from Special Forces. So how will he be able to keep the home he shares with nursing student/wife Brianne (Gillian Jacobs) and their pre-teen son Jack (Sander Thomas)? As the “past due” notices pile up and debt collectors fill their answering machine, James is enticed by a visit with his old “grunt buddy” Mike (Ben Foster). Seems that Mike has been earning loads of cash by offering his “special skills” as a military contractor, who “slips in under the radar”. He puts James in contact with the director of the contracting company, another vet named Rusty (Keifer Sutherland), who offers a nice “gig”. Despite Brianne’s pleading, James gets his gear in working order and joins Mike in an undercover assignment in Berlin. They’ve got to ‘scoop up” a radical scientist that’s creating biological weapons. And though the plan is simple, several things go “sideways’ as James is separated from the team and becomes a “loose end” to be “severed”, As his wound acts up can James keep himself alive and somehow make it back to the states?


Taking a break from the twin “tentpole” franchises that are WONDER WOMAN and STAR TREK, Pine proves that he can get “down and dirty” as a “working Joe”/action hero carrying (he may be in every scene) this grim “grabbed from the headline” dramatic thriller. James is no “super-soldier” as he winces in pain pushing his battered body in the opening “getting back in shape” sequence. But that’s merely a prelude to the agony to come. First up is humiliation and frustration as his military “home” pushes him aside adding extra tension to his actual home as Pine shows us the worry closing in on James as forces “pick him clean”, making him to grasp at any lifeline, no matter how shady. And when the “payday” goes awry PIne shows us how James tries to ignore his old and new wounds while holding on to his moral code which further complicates his survival. As usual Foster is solid as the old cohort Mike who may not be completely open about their new “C.O.” and recruiters. Sutherland slathers on the “fatherly charm” and “gung ho” encouragement as he binds James with a promise of quick moola with little risk. Jacobs is a welcome addition to the story, but her Brianne is later regulated to the cliched “spouse on the phone” when the story shifts into “chase and elude mode”. Though introduced close to the big finale, Eddie Marsan is a welcome supporting player as the mysterious Virgil who comes to the aid of the battered James.

The script from J.P. Davis switches gears from domestic drama to globetrotting thriller, a detour carefully executed by director Tarik Saleh, who knows when to concentrate on character and when to “amp up” the tension and plunge us, alongside James, into the “danger zone”. He makes excellent use of the overseas locales as James and Mike stalk their “target”, then slowly lets us in on the “truth”. The “hand-to-hand” throwdowns are staged and shot effectively, while the “fire fights’ are filled with moments of chaos and calamity. Unfortunately, the real villains and motivations fall “into place” too cleanly and the last act denouncements and showdowns seem too rushed, letting the story seem too familiar to any number of military action “potboilers”. The first-rate cast can’t quite elevate the “plot beats” making THE CONTRACTOR an intermittingly engaging but quickly forgettable modern-day “shoot em up”.

2 Out of 4

THE CONTRACTOR opens in select theatres and is available as a video-on-demand beginning on Friday, April 1, 2022

Check Out the Exciting Trailer for THE CONTRACTOR Starring Chris Pine – In Theaters, On Digital and On Demand April 1st

THE CONTRACTOR stars an ensemble cast of Chris Pine (Star Trek, Wonder Woman), who also executive produced the film, Ben Foster (Lone Survivor, Hell or High Water), Gillian Jacobs (Come Play, “Community”), Eddie Marsan (The Gentlemen, “Ray Donovan”), JD Pardo (F9: The Fast Saga, “Mayans M.C.”), Florian Munteanu (Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten RingsCreed II) and Kiefer Sutherland (“Designated Survivor”, “24”). The film is directed by Tarik Saleh (The Nile Hilton Incident – 2017 Sundance film festival winner for World Cinema Grand Jury Prize -Dramatic) and written by J.P. Davis. TEH CONTRACTOR opens In Theaters, On Digital and On Demand April 1st

Here’s the trailer:

Chris Pine stars in the action-packed thriller as Special Forces Sergeant James Harper, who is involuntarily discharged from the Army and cut-off from his pension. In debt, out of options and desperate to provide for his family, Harper contracts with a private underground military force. When the very first assignment goes awry, the elite soldier finds himself hunted and on the run, caught in a dangerous conspiracy and fighting to stay alive long enough to get home and uncover the true motives of those who betrayed him. Also starring Kiefer Sutherland, Ben Foster, Gillian Jacobs and Eddie Marsan.

WAMG Giveaway – Win GALVESTON Starring Ben Foster and Elle Fanning on DVD


RLJE Films will release the thriller/drama film GALVESTON on DVD, Blu-ray and 4K UHD/Blu-ray combo on December 11, 2018.  Based on the novel by the creator of “True Detective,” GALVESTON features an all-star cast including Ben Foster (Hell or High Water), Elle Fanning (The Beguiled), Beau Bridges (The Mountain Between Us), Lili Reinhart (“Riverdale”), and Robert Aramayo (Nocturnal Animals). The film made its world premiere at the 2018 SXSW Film Festival and was directed by Mélanie Laurent (Inglourious Basterds) from a script by Jim Hammett. RLJE Films will release GALVESTON on DVD for an SRP of $29.96; on Blu-ray for an SRP of $29.97; and on 4K UHD/Blu-ray combo for an SRP of $35.97.


Now you can win the GALVESTON  DVD. We Are Movie Geeks has thre copies to give away. All you have to do is leave a comment answering this question: What is your favorite movie with Elle Fanning in it? (mine is NEON DEMON!). It’s so easy!

1. YOU MUST BE A US RESIDENT. PRIZE WILL ONLY BE SHIPPED TO US ADDRESSES.  NO P.O. BOXES.  NO DUPLICATE ADDRESSES.

2. WINNER WILL BE CHOSEN FROM ALL QUALIFYING ENTRIES.


In GALVESTON, Roy (Foster) is a heavy-drinking criminal enforcer and mob hit man whose boss set him up in a double-cross scheme. After killing his would-be assassins before they could kill him, Roy discovers Rocky (Fanning), a young woman being held captive, and reluctantly takes her with him on his escape. Determined to find safety and sanctuary in Galveston, Roy must find a way to stop his boss from pursuing them while trying to outrun the demons from his and Rocky’s pasts.


The GALVESTON DVD, Blu-ray and 4K UHD/Blu-ray combo include the following bonus features:

  • The Making of Galveston

Ben Foster Set To Star In MEDIEVAL

J.B.J Film and Elevated Films announced today that acclaimed actor Ben Foster has been cast as the lead in director Petr Jákl’s historical action drama MEDIEVAL. Jákl wrote the screenplay and will produce alongside Cassian Elwes. The film will be produced with the support of private investors and many Czech state institutions and regions, including the Czech Film Fund, the Prague Film Fund, Creative Europe – Media and others. Principal photography is scheduled to begin this fall in Prague and the surrounding Czech countryside.

The film is inspired by the origin story of the legendary 14th century warlord Jan Zizka of Trocnov (Foster), who along with his band of mercenaries became entangled with an heiress and battled a rival King in a struggle for equality for the Czech people.

Foster is best known for his roles in HELL OR HIGH WATER, 3:10 TO YUMA, THE MESSENGER and ALPHA DOG. He can be seen in the acclaimed film LEAVE NO TRACE earning him rave reviews.

“I actually loved this script and loved Petr’s first two movies. I think he‘s going to do a fantastic job on this film. And I couldn‘t be more excited to work with Ben Foster again, after my experience with him on Ain‘t Them Bodies Saints. He‘s one of the greatest young actors working right now,” said Elwes.

Additional support includes the Middle Bohemia Region; the Capital city of Prague and the President of the Senate of Parliament of the Czech Republic.

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Chelsea Lauren/Deadline/REX/Shutterstock
Ben Foster

Ben Foster is an actor well-known to audiences for two decades of notable dramatic portrayals. In 2017, he won an Independent Spirit Award, also earning him a Critics Choice nomination for his performance opposite Chris Pine and Jeff Bridges in Hell or High Water, written by Taylor Sheridan and directed by David Mackenzie; the film was nominated for four Academy Awards including Best Picture.

He can currently be seen in Debra Granik’s drama Leave No Trace. The film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and was released by Bleeker Street. The film tells the story of a father (Foster) suffering from PTSD, raising his daughter off the grid. The Atlantic calls his performance” career-best work from Foster”, “Exceptional” by the LA TIMES,

He was last seen on stage starred in Benedict Andrews’ staging of Tennessee Williams’ classic A Streetcar Named Desire, opposite Gillian Anderson and Vanessa Kirby, at St. Ann’s Warehouse in Brooklyn; the production originated at London’s Young Vic Theatre. He had previously made his Broadway debut in a revival of Lyle Kessler’s Orphans, opposite Alec Baldwin and Tom Sturridge, directed by Daniel Sullivan.

Mr. Foster made his film debut starring in the lead role of Barry Levinson’s 1950s-set Liberty Heights. Since then, his movies have included James Mangold’s hit Western 3:10 to Yuma, for which he shared with the ensemble a Screen Actors Guild Award nomination for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture; Nick Cassavetes’ Alpha Dog; Braden King’s Here; Fernando Meirelles’ 360; Baltasar Kormákur’s Contraband; David Lowery’s Ain’t Them Bodies Saints; John Krokidas’ Kill Your Darlings, in which he portrayed poet William Burroughs; Peter Berg’s Lone Survivor; Craig Gillespie’s The Finest Hours; Ron Howard’s Inferno; Scott Cooper’s Hostiles; and Stephen Frears’ The Program, in which he starred as Lance Armstrong. He starred opposite Woody Harrelson in Oren Moverman’s The Messenger and reunited with the duo for Rampart, on which Mr. Foster stepped into a new role, as producer.

He memorably recurred on the classic television series Six Feet Under, sharing with his fellow actors a Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series. Mr. Foster won a Daytime Emmy Award for his performance in the drama about teen bullying, Bang Bang You’re Dead, directed by Guy Ferland and scripted by William Mastrosimone.

He will next be seen starring on-screen in Mélanie Laurent’s Galveston, opposite Elle Fanning, which world-premiered at the 2018 SXSW Film Festival.

LEAVE NO TRACE – Review


Writer/director Debra Granik, whose 2010 art-house hit WINTER’S BONE introduced us to Jennifer Lawrence, has far less success with her follow-up LEAVE NO TRACE, a plodding and forgettable war-at-home  drama. Ben Foster stars as Will, an Iraq vet who’s given up on a conventional lifestyle and lives in the woods, away from the burdens of civilization. Though the audience is given few details about his past, it’s clear Will and his other forest-dwelling friends suffer from PTSD and just want to be left alone. The problem is Will has his 15-year old daughter Tom (Thomasin Harcourt McKenzie) living out there with him, and though he may want to raise his daughter his own way, the authorities have other ideas. Will is a decent teacher for his daughter, teaching Tom to fend for herself in the wild and she is being educated, but what she’s lacking is any peer companionship. Another problem is that they’re living in Forest Park, a wilderness preserve near Portland, Oregon, so he’s not as far off the grid as he needs to be, making it fairly easy for the police to track them down. The pair is placed in ‘society’, with structure and responsibility and everything suddenly changes for Tom. They find housing on a Christmas Tree farm but it’s not an adjustment that Will can make and he decides, for both, to leave the security and resume their former life, but that plan stalls when he suffers a serious injury.  Tom is taken in by a commune of strangers and while her dad recovers, she is embraced by the simple life and affection of its members.

Based on the novel My Abandonment by Peter Rock, LEAVE NO TRACE has been made with obvious devotion and sincerity, but I found it overly-familiar and meandering. Granik gives her actors and story more than enough room to breathe by adopting a calm, observational shooting style and allowing scenes to run naturally and find their feet. It’s just that they never do. It takes two-thirds of the film for any scene of real emotional truth or power to emerge – and by then, I’d lost interest. I never felt any true father-daughter chemistry between the two leads, or the strong feeling of trust and affection that illustrate the love of a parent and child. Ben Foster excels at playing these tightly-wound combustible types, but his Will is given little dialog so the actor must express himself through pursed lips and haunted eyes. This works for a while, but eventually Will emerges as a rather one-note character. Ms McKenzie has received a lot of praise for her performance here, but to me Tom is just another of the type of overly-wise youth we too often see in film. The actress is fine but the script is weak and the character doesn’t ring true. LEAVE NO TRACE is a well-meaning film that never quite pulls itself together and I can’t recommend it.

2 of 5 Stars

Win Passes To The St. Louis Screening Of HOSTILES Starring Christian Bale


Set in 1892, HOSTILES tells the story of a legendary Army Captain (Christian Bale), who after stern resistance, reluctantly agrees to escort a dying Cheyenne war chief (Wes Studi) and his family back to tribal lands. Making the harrowing and perilous journey from Fort Berringer, an isolated Army outpost in New Mexico, to the grasslands of Montana, the former rivals encounter a young widow (Rosamund Pike), whose family was murdered on the plains. Together, they must join forces to overcome the punishing landscape, hostile Comanche and vicious outliers that they encounter along the way. Hostiles is directed by Scott Cooper (Black Mass, Out of the Furnace, Crazy Heart) and produced by John Lesher (Black Mass, Birdman, Fury) and Ken Kao (The Nice Guys, Knight of Cups). The film stars: Christian Bale (The Big Short, American Hustle, The Dark Knight) Rosamund Pike (Gone Girl, Jack Reacher), Wes Studi (Avatar, Heat, Geronimo), Adam Beach (Suicide Squad, Flags of Our Fathers), Ben Foster (Hell or High Water, 3:10 to Yuma), Q’orianka Kilcher (Unnatural), Tanaya Beatty (Twilight), Jonathan Majors (Do Not Disturb), Rory Cochrane (Black Mass, Argo), Jesse Plemons (Black Mass, Bridge of Spies), Timothée Chalamet (Love the Coopers, Interstellar), Paul Anderson (The Revenant, Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows), Ryan Bingham (Crazy Heart), David Midthunder (Comanche Moon), John Benjamin Hickey (Get on Up, Pitch Perfect), Stephen Lang (Avatar, The Nut Job), Bill Camp (12 years a Slave, Birdman).


For the chance to win TWO (2) seats to the advance screening of HOSTILES on January 17 at 7:00 pm in St. Louis, leave a message with your email address in the comments section below.

OFFICIAL RULES:

1. YOU MUST BE IN THE ST. LOUIS AREA THE DAY OF THE SCREENING.

2. No purchase necessary. A pass does not guarantee a seat at a screening. Seating is on a first-come, first served basis. The theater is overbooked to assure a full house.

INFERNO Starring Tom Hanks Debuts on Digital, 4K Ultra HD, Blu-ray & DVD January 24th

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The Da Vinci Code and Angels & Demons were just the beginning and now with INFERNO, two-time Academy Award winner Tom Hanks (Best Actor: Forrest Gump, 1994; Philadelphia, 1993), two-time Academy Award winner Ron Howard (Best Director & Best Picture, A Beautiful Mind, 2001) and bestselling author Dan Brown are reunited for the latest intense thriller in this billion-dollar franchise. After waking up in a hospital room in Florence, Italy, with no memory of what has occurred for the last few days, Robert Langdon (Hanks) suddenly finds himself the target of a manhunt while solving the most intricate riddle he’s ever faced. Joining the international adventure are Felicity Jones (Rogue One: A Star Wars Story), Irrfan Khan (Jurassic World), Omar Sy (X-Men: Days of Future Past), Ben Foster (Hell or High Water) and Sidse Babett Knudsen (“Westworld”). INFERNO debuts on digital,4K Ultra HD™, Blu-ray™ and DVD January 24 from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment.

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The INFERNO Blu-ray, DVD and digital releases are loaded with exciting and never-before-seen bonus content, including deleted scenes and six intriguing behind-the-scenes featurettes. Director Ron Howard shares his process for bringing to life the iconic imagery described in Dante’s Divine Comedy and the powerful themes that the classic story infuses into the film in “Visions of Hell,” while in “Ron Howard, A Director’s Journal,” viewers follow the acclaimed auteur as he returns to the world of Robert Langdon and documents his journey via social media. “Inferno Around the World,” highlights the stellar international cast involved in the film and the crew’s unprecedented access to stunning locations across the globe. Novelist Dan Brown, Director Ron Howard, Screenwriter David Koepp and Tom Hanks explore the evolution of Robert Langdon across the franchise and the new insights discovered about the hero in “A Look at Langdon.” Felicity Jones is front and center in “This Is Sienna Brooks,” which shines a light on one of the film’s most complex characters and the precision with which the Oscar® nominated actress (Best Actress, The Theory of Everything, 2014) brings her to life, while Ben Foster’s character gets the spotlight in “The Billionaire Villain: Bertrand Zobrist,” where viewers go inside the mind of the brilliant but dangerous villain and hear from Foster and the filmmakers about crafting this terrifying character.

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Synopsis:
In this contemporary action thriller, the famous symbologist Robert Langdon (Tom Hanks) wakes up in an Italian hospital with amnesia and finds himself the target of a manhunt. Langdon teams up with Sienna Brooks (Felicity Jones), a doctor he hopes will help him recover his memories. Together, they race across Europe and against the clock to stop a virus that would wipe out half of the world’s population.

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Directed by Ron Howard with a screenplay by David Koepp, INFERNO is based upon the novel by Dan Brown. The film is produced by Brian Grazer and Ron Howard with David Householter, Dan Brown, William M. Connor, Anna Culp and Ben Waisbren as Executive Producers.

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Blu-ray, DVD & Digital Bonus Materials Include:
Deleted and Extended Scenes
Six Featurettes:
“Ron Howard, A Director’s Journal”
“A Look at Langdon”
“The Billionaire Villain: Bertrand Zobrist”
“This Is Sienna Brooks”
“Inferno Around the World”
“Visions of Hell”
INFERNO has a run time of approximately 121 minutes and is rated PG-13 for sequences of action and violence, disturbing images, some language, thematic elements and brief sensuality.

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Jeff Bridges in HELL OR HIGH WATER Arriving on Blu-ray and DVD November 22

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Academy Award® winner Jeff Bridges (Best Actor, Crazy Heart, 2009), Chris Pine (Star Trek), and Ben Foster (Lone Survivor) star in the acclaimed action thriller Hell or High Water arriving on Digital HD November 8 and Blu-ray Combo Pack (plus DVD and Digital HD), DVD (plus Digital) and On Demand November 22 from Lionsgate and CBS Films. From the writer of Sicario, Hell or High Wateris a modern western about two brothers who turn to crime in order to save their family farm from the clutches of the bank. Hailed as one of the year’s best films since it premiered at the Cannes Film Festival, the film has since gone on to garner a stellar 98% “Certified Fresh” critics’ score, and equally impressive 91% audience score on Rotten Tomatoes.

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When a desperate father (Pine) learns that the bank is going to take his family’s land, he and his ex-con brother (Foster) are left with no choice. They decide to rob the bank’s branches, putting themselves in the crosshairs of an aging Texas Ranger (Bridges) in a riveting story of crime, punishment, and brotherly love.

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The Hell or High Water home entertainment release’s special features include three all-new featurettes including “Enemies Forever” which provides an intimate look at the characters of the film; “Visualizing the Heart of America” which tells the story of the film’s setting and how filmmakers utilized real locations to bring the story to life; and “Damaged Heroes” an exploration of the outstanding cast performances. The home entertainment release also includes a Filmmaker Q&A, and exclusive footage from the Hell or High Water premiere. Hell or High Water will be available on Blu-ray and DVD for the suggested retail price of $39.99 and $29.95, respectively.

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BLU-RAY/DVD/DIGITAL HD SPECIAL FEATURES

  • “Enemies Forever: The Characters of Hell or High Water” Featurette
  • “Visualizing the Heart of America” Featurette
  • “Damaged Heroes: The Performances of Hell or High Water” Featurette
  • Red Carpet Premiere
  • Filmmaker Q&A

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