Inspired by the true story of four best friends living life to the fullest when they take a wild trip to the 2017 Super Bowl LI to see their hero Tom Brady play.
Starring Academy Award® nominee Lily Tomlin, Academy Award® winner Jane Fonda, Academy Award® winner Rita Moreno and Academy Award® winner Sally Field, with 7-time Super Bowl Champion and producer Tom Brady, 80 FOR BRADY is in-theatres February 3, 2023.
Advance Screening is Wed, February 1st 7pm @ Marcus Des Peres 14 Cine.
The screening will be filled on a first come first served basis, so we encourage you to arrive early. Seats will not be guaranteed.
Tom Brady on the set of 80 For Brady from Paramount Pictures.Billy Porter plays Gugu, Rita Moreno plays Maura, Jane Fonda plays Trish and Lily Tomlin plays Lou in 80 For Brady from Paramount Pictures.
Watch the trailer for Billy Porter’s directorial debut, ANYTHING’S POSSIBLE, starring Eva Reign and Abubakr Ali, With Reneé Elise Goldsberry.
ANYTHING’S POSSIBLE is a delightfully modern Gen Z coming-of-age story that follows Kelsa, a confident high school girl who is trans, as she navigates through senior year. When her classmate Khal gets a crush on her, he musters up the courage to ask her out, despite the drama he knows it could cause. What transpires is a romance that showcases the joy, tenderness, and pain of young love.
This looks super cute and the perfect movie for a summer release!
See the uplifting coming-of-age romance directed by Billy Porter and written by Ximena García Lecuona when ANYTHING’S POSSIBLE launches globally on July 22 exclusively on Prime Video.
Rating PG-13 for strong language, thematic material, sexual material, and brief teen drinking.
Amazon Studios will release CINDERELLA exclusively on Prime Video September 3rd, 2021 and we’ve got your first look at the brand new trailer.
From Kay Cannon (Pitch Perfect), Cinderella is a modern musical with a bold take on the story you grew up with. Our ambitious heroine (Camilla Cabello) has big dreams and with the help of her Fab G, she perseveres to make them come true. Cinderella has an all-star cast including Idina Menzel, Minnie Driver, James Corden, Nicholas Galitzine, Billy Porter and Pierce Brosnan.
The film, rated PG, looks “Bibbidi-Bobbidi-Boo” delightful and will be a fun way to spend the upcoming Labor Day weekend!
Camilla Cabello stars in CINDERELLA
Photo: Christopher Raphael
Camilla Cabello stars in CINDERELLA
Photo: Christopher Raphael
Kay Cannon’s Cinderella featuring an all-star cast including Grammy nominated singer/songwriter Camila Cabello, Idina Menzel and Billy Porter, will launch exclusively around the world in over 240 countries and territories on Prime Video this September. The highly anticipated musical incorporates pop songs from contemporary global artists and original songs by Camila Cabello and Idina Menzel.
“Cinderella is a classic we all know and love, but this time with a modern unique twist and starring the sensational Camila Cabello and an all-star cast. Producer James Corden and the filmmaking team have taken this beloved fairytale and revamped it with a fresh, empowering perspective that will resonate with audiences and families around the world. We couldn’t be more excited for our global customers to sing and dance along to director Kay Cannon’s reimagination of this classic story,” said Jennifer Salke, Head of Amazon Studios.
Camilla Cabello stars in CINDERELLA
Photo: Kerry Brown
Cinderella is a musically-driven bold new take on the traditional story you grew up with. Our heroine (Cabello) is an ambitious young woman, whose dreams are bigger than the world will allow, but with the help of her Fab G (Billy Porter), she is able to persevere and make her dreams come true.
Written for the screen and directed by Kay Cannon with covers of songs written by some of the top-selling musical artists of all time, Cinderella has an all-star cast that includes Idina Menzel, Minnie Driver, Nicholas Galitzine, with Billy Porter and Pierce Brosnan. Producers are Leo Pearlman, James Corden, Jonathan Kadin and Shannon McIntosh, and executive producers are Louise Rosner and Josephine Rose.
In the last couple of weeks we’ve welcomed a new year and a new decade, so let’s continue the festivities down at the multiplex with a new flick that celebrates friendship. Now we know that those “bad boys” will be back next week, so we’re being treated to a rarity, a female “buddy” comedy. Yes, there were a few of these attempts last year. THE HUSTLE and CHARLIE’S ANGELS flopped, while BOOK SMART soared with it’s two devoted high school heroines. In some ways, this new flicks expands on the latter film, namely what happens to these two lifelong BFFs as they continue on well past their academic years and begin a business together. Plus, in a refreshing change from the studio norm, there are no messy romantic entanglements to come between them (perhaps we’re past the cliche of “fighting over the same guy”). Still, there are lots of bumps in this tale, since one of the pals feels that she’s got to step things “up” and conduct herself more LIKE A BOSS.
During the film’s opening titles, candid photos and news clippings get us “up to speed” on the long friendship Of Mel (Rose Byrne) and Mia (Tiffany Haddish). Well, more like “sisterhood” since Mel’s drug-addled mom skipped town and Mia’s family embraced her during those teenage years. That’s when the ladies began their co-careers as they created and sold cosmetics in Mia’s garage. Cut to Atlanta today as the two share that old family two-story, brush their teeth in the side by side bathroom sinks, and carpool in a far from new “economy compact” to their “side-street” storefront salon/shop. They’ve got a couple of employees: an eccentric craftsman, Barrett (Billy Porter) who whips up their one-of-a-kind shades of lipstick and beauty products, and Sydney (Jennifer Coolidge), the daffy much-married clerk who also applies those said items to those in need of a “touch-up”. Things seem to be going well, but Mel, who handles the bookwork, is worried about the massive several hundred thousand dollar debt hanging over them. And all their old school chums seem to be married and raising babies in luxury. Then the answer to Mel’s worries walks through the door. Josh Tinker (Karan Soni) the assistant to the owner of a worldwide cosmetics brand informs them that his boss is impressed with their ideas, especially a tiny bag of mini-make-ups called the “one night stand” kit, and wants to meet with them. The next day at the opulent HQ, the famous cosmetics mogul Claire Luna (Salma Hayek) offers to buy a controlling (51%) interest in the ladies’ brand. Mel wants to jump on it, but Mia doesn’t want to give up all control. They suggest Luna takes (49%), and she begrudgingly accepts. After the duo leaves, Luna tells Tinker that she’ll destroy Mel and Mia’s friendship, then swoop in and gobble up their company. But there’s no way these two “besties” will ever break up, not over money, right? Right?
Watch out, this trailer is “not safe for work”!
The film’s momentum is propelled by the energetic, “no holds barred” comedic “force of nature’ that is Ms. Haddish. Her every scene crackles, whether she’s clashing with Mel, lending a friendly assist to a make-up model, or cavorting in the kitchen for a “post passion” pancake feast prepared by her much-younger “booty call” played by Jacob Latimore. She’s counter-balanced by the more restrained, awkward performance by Byrne whose Mel, unlike Mia, doesn’t want to “break bread” with her own “sleep-over stud”. She’s more timid, leading to the conflict as she desperately tries to appease her new investor (or financial rescuer). And as she did in the NEIGHBORS flick, Byrne is a deft physical comic, especially as she tries to blend in and chat with some college ladies (mostly to gather consumer intel). But these two different personas combine to become a terrifically funny team with their meshed spirits (and lots of “weed”) needed to face off against the diminutive locomotive, ready to roll over anyone, played by the fiesty Hayek. She’s clearly having a great time as the cartoonish (Mia even calls her Jessica Rabbit) Luna whether she menacingly twirls a gold (naturally) golf club or hops atop a bright red footstool to lord over her throngs. Kudos for making this lady villainess just as..well maybe more…ruthless as any male menace. And the trio is given great support by several comedy veterans. Soni is a superb smirking sycophant as ‘toadie” Tinker. Coolidge (a great part of “mockumentaries”, but forever “Stifler’s Mom”) keeps every scene she’s in a bit off balance with her unpredictable line delivery. Plus she’s a great partner with Porter who says so much with an eyelid at “half-mast” or a curled lip. And his “emotional exit” from a really awful Lunch is a flamboyant farce. Another unexpected but terrific teaming is that of Ryan Hansen and Jimmy O. Yang as a couple of sexist “bros” who somehow create their own line of cosmetics and become another weapon for Luna’s attack on the double “M’s”. All these actors can really “Bring the funny” and deliver big laughs.
Unfortunately, the script (which had three scribes) doesn’t give these comedy crusaders enough ammo to last the near 85 minutes of runtime. Director Miguel Artega keeps the pace taut in the film’s first half as characters are introduced and the big conflict is set-up. But then that lull after the first hour sets in (a problem for so many big-screen comedies), and the flick just can’t pick up steam once more. Perhaps that’s because some big “comic sequences” don’t have much of a pay-off. Case in point: a birthday party cooking class looked to mimic the BRIDESMAIDS digestion at the dress shop scene just fizzles out after much screeching and gross food foolishness. Perhaps the producers thought all could be saved by a big final minutes group song and dance number (sorry, nobody can cover an iconic Tina Turner tune), a cute cameo (it did make me smile for a bit), and a final plea for “girl power” togetherness. It’s a real shame because the cast is so talented, but LIKE A BOSS needed another few runs through the writers’ room. Cause you know what they say about putting lipstick on a …