HOW TO BUILD A GIRL WILL BEAVAILABLE IN SELECT THEATERS, DIGITAL AND CABLE VOD MAY 8TH
The critics love HOW TO BUILD A GIRL!
Beanie Feldstein is incandescent.”
Katey Rich, VANITY FAIR
“It’s a joyful thing to behold. As fun as a night in the mosh pit with your best mate”
Leslie Felperin,THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER
“A loving tribute to young women with overactive imaginations and a desire to reinvent themselves. Beanie Feldstein is as charming as ever.”
Anne Cohen, REFINERY29
Check Out the trailer:
Johanna Morrigan (Beanie Feldstein) is a bright, quirky, 16-year-old who uses her colorful imagination to regularly escape her humdrum life in Wolverhampton and live out her creative fantasies. Desperate to break free from the overcrowded flat she shares with her four brothers and eccentric parents, she submits an earnestly penned and off-beat music review to a group of self-important indie rock critics at a weekly magazine. Despite being brushed off initially, Johana clamors to the top of the 90s rock music scene by reinventing herself as Dolly Wilde – a venerable, impossible-to-please music critic with an insatiable lust for fame, fortune, and men. It isn’t long before the rapid pace at which Johana’s life is changing becomes overwhelming and she runs face-first into a devastatingly real, existential crisis: Is this the type of girl she wants to become? Or does she need to start over and build again from the ground up? Based on the best-selling novel by Caitlin Moran, How to Build a Girl is a sassy, sexy, and a profoundly touching coming-of-age comedy that traces the rocky road to womanhood through the lens of a unique and wildly hilarious protagonist. Co-starring Alfie Allen, Paddy Considine, Chris O’Dowd, and Emma Thompson.
About the director: Coky Giedroyc is a British, critically acclaimed director most recently celebrated for her work on Harlots, written by Moira Buffini for Monumental Television and Hulu. In 2016, she was awarded a BAFTA for best director of The Sound Of Music Live starring Kara Tointon and Alexander Armstrong. Coky set up the award-winning drama The Hour written by Abi Morgan and starring Dominic West, Ben Wishaw and Romola Garai which she was nominated for a Golden Globe and an Emmy. She was nominated for both an International Emmy and a BAFTA for the BBC Drama, The Virgin Queen, starring Anne Marie Duff and Tom Hardy. She directed Oliver Twist and Wuthering Heights, both of which also starred Hardy. Other credits include the four-part BBC1 series What Remains written by Tony Basgallop, Spies of Warsaw, an adaptation of Alan Furst’s novel and Nativity, a Canadian co-production starring Tatiana Maslany. Her work in the US has included: The Killing, Penny Dreadful with Eva Green and Rory Kinnear, Broad Squad, a pilot for ABC, Veena Sud’s series Seven Seconds and Gypsy, starring Naomi Watts and Billy Crudup. Coky served for four years on the board of Directors UK and is a mentor to young female film makers starting out in the industry.
Rose Byrne and Ethan Hawke in JULIET, NAKED. Photo courtesy of Roadside Attractions.
First off, there is no nudity in JULIET, NAKED nor is there anyone named Juliet. The title refers to an album by a long-vanished indie rock singer-songwriter. There is, however, a lot of humor, romantic conundrums, reflections on regrets and life mid-way, and of course, music, in this warmly entertaining adaptation of Nick Hornby’s novel of the same name.
Complicated romances, humor and music are the staples of Nick Hornby’s novels. The film JULIET, NAKED fits the mold but unlike HIGH FIDELITY, director Jesse Peretz’s take on that combination leans more humorous than romantic. Yet just when it seems to be settling into a standard romantic comedy mold, it takes an unexpected turn into the more serious and thoughtful. The people in this film are approaching middle age or already there, and are re-assessing their choices and dealing with their regrets. The film is about second chances but also about how messy real lives actually are.
Annie (Rose Byrne) feels stuck, living in the same small seaside English town where she grew up and running the local museum her father ran before her. She also feels stuck in her 15-year relationship with her boyfriend Duncan (Chris O’Dowd), a professor of film and television at a local college. Often, she feels like she’s is in a three-way relationship with Duncan and his true passion and obsession, an American singer-songwriter from the ’90s named Tucker Crowe (Ethan Hawke), who mysteriously disappeared just as he achieved modest fame.
Duncan runs a blog devoted to Tucker Crowe, where he posts about his works and discusses rumors about sightings and other details. Even though the musician hasn’t recorded anything in 25 years, there still is a small but devoted group of fans who, like Duncan, are convinced he was an unsung genius. Tucker’s sudden disappearance came shortly after the modest success of his one hit album, “Juliet,” about his failed love affair with a woman named Julie, a disappearance thought to be linked to his broken heart over the affair. This romantic tale keeps Duncan and followers on his website hungry for any tidbits about the elusive singer-songwriter or a comeback.
Although Duncan lectures on film and TV at the college and organizes academic seminars on film, his real passion is for Tucker Crowe. He is more an obsessive Tucker Crowe fan than obsessed with music generally. Duncan has turned a basement room in the home he shares with Annie into a kind of Tucker Crowe shrine, filled with posters, magazine covers and other memorabilia. Listening to Duncan ramble on about his passion, it begins to dawn on Annie how weary she is growing of Duncan’s self-absorption, his big ego, his academic pronouncements and especially Tucker Crowe. When Duncan gets an early demo version of Tucker’s hit, a track titled “Juliet, Naked,” from an anonymous sender, Duncan deems it brilliant. Annie is not impressed, dubbing it unpolished and far inferior to the final version. After arguing with Duncan, Annie posts an anonymous review on Duncan’s fan site, criticizing the demo, which leads to an email commenting on the post, agreeing with Anne’s assessment. She’s shocked when she sees it is signed Tucker Crowe.
Unsure if the sender is the real Tucker Crowe, Annie does not tell Duncan about the email. It is indeed the long-vanished Tucker, and they email back and forth for awhile, sharing their life stories. Annie finds she likes the real Tucker much more than the myth she’s been living with, and Tucker is charmed by this down-to-earth Brit who is unimpressed with his rock star past. Tucker’s correspondence with Annie gives both of them an outlet to air their feelings and regrets as they reconsidering their own life choices, and dream a bit about second chances.
Meanwhile, in the U.S., Tucker has had a messy life. Now is living in the garage behind his ex-wife’s house, the middle-aged, graying and scruffy Tucker long ago abandoned his interest in music and now cares for their 7-year-old son Jackson (Azhy Robertson). The boy is one of several Tucker has with various women, but the only one he’s really helped raise. Remorseful about his past failings as a parent, Tucker wants to make amends although he is not too good at it. He’d like to reconnect with his far-flung children but he is more leery of facing their disapproving mothers.
Circumstances bring Tucker to England, which gives the two a chance to meet face-to-face. Inevitably, Duncan is going to find out his potential romantic rival is his musical idol. The film plays with the farce comedy potential in that for a while and starts to look like it is going to take a conventional romantic comedy route. But then it takes an unexpected turn into the more serious.
A lot of the appeal in this film comes from its cast. The major focus of the film is turning points and second chances, and Annie is more the central character than either guy. Rose Byrne is a complete charmer as Annie, a woman longing to escape her rut and break free of her past of subverting her own dreams to serve others. Having raised her younger sister after her mother’s death, she then returned to her quaint little seaside village to care for her aging father, helping him at the museum, then taking over the job. Byrne’s Annie is a sweet long-suffering soul, everyone’s rock, and now catering to Duncan’s whims, but she is quirky and funny as well. Annie is ready for change but she’s not sure getting involved in Tucker’s messy life is the best choice.
Ethan Hawke is having a remarkable run, first with his strong performance as a flinty husband in last year’s MAUDIE and this year in searing dramatic performance as a grieving, guilt-ridden minister in FIRST REFORMED, and now this sweeter one about a man trying to straighten out his own messy life. Hawke’s Tucker is both charming and flawed, feeling like he wants to make things right in his life but not sure if he can. Tucker’s impulse to put things right is admirable but he also wants to run and hide when his past comes calling. There is one very funny scene that sums this up, in a hospital where his exes and children arrive one by one, creating noisy confusion and stress for the barely-competent ex-musician.
Chris O’Dowd presence as Duncan helps push the film in the comic direction but O’Dowd plays a somewhat different character than his usual lovable working-class slob. When he’s obsessing over his musical idol, he’s a total geek but in his role as an instructor, he is a jerk and a self-important snob, offering his students academic analysis of episodes of “The Wire” and organizing self- aggrandizing seminars, while dismissing opinions that differ from his own. O’Dowd tamps down his usual comic goofiness but the casting choice lends the character a little more softness, making him seem more foolish and a clueless idiot than simply a jerk.
None of these characters are young, and there is a freshness to a story about people in mid-life reconsidering their direction. It is a pretty rare thing particularly in a romantic comedy, The cast and director keep us interested in what surprises lurk around the next turn for these characters. Annie wants to break free of her rut but getting involved in Tucker’s messy life might not be what she needs or wants. Falling into yet another romantic relationship might not be what disorganized Tucker needs either, as much as sweet Annie tugs at his heart. They both have to figure it out.
JULIET, NAKED isn’t profound but it is far better, and far more thoughtful, than most romantic comedies, a film made particularly enjoyable by its excellent cast.
File under SHOCK! No press release, no advance warning, no screenings!
Netflix surprised fans of producer J.J. Abrams’ CLOVERFIELD (2008, directed by Matt Reeves) and 10 CLOVERFIELD LANE (2016, directed by Dan Trachtenberg) with a third chapter in the successful franchise for THE CLOVERFIELD PARADOX. A new trailer dropped during the Super Bowl and the film can be seen after the Big Game on Netflix.
In the near future, a group of international astronauts on a space station are working to solve a massive energy crisis on Earth. The experimental technology aboard the station has an unexpected result, leaving the team isolated and fighting for their survival.
The film is directed by Julius Onah and stars Gugu Mbatha-Raw, David Oyelowo, Daniel Brühl and Chris O’Dowd.
An Aaron Sorkin character is always the smartest man or woman in the room. He or she can spit out 150 words in 30 seconds or less and talk their way out of any corner. At this point in his writing career (now turned directing career) you’re either on board with his style or not. But even MOLLY’S GAME seems to double down on the Sorkin-style. Leave it to him to create a world of poker – a game where players are often rather private and rarely talk during games – that is filled with incessant chatter.
MOLLY’S GAME is based on the true story of Molly Bloom (Jessica Chastain), a former Olympic-class skier who is arrested in the middle of the night by the FBI. She turns to a reluctant criminal defense lawyer, Charlie Jaffey (Idris Elba), to oversee her case. In the process, we learn how she ran the world’s most exclusive high-stakes poker game in LA and then New York which included Hollywood actors, sports stars, billionaire businessmen, and the Russian mob.
In a story about addiction, Sorkin shows his hand and reveals he’s addicted to listening to himself talk (as if we didn’t already have this inkling). Every minute of the film is packed with statistics, literary references, and moral and political talking points. So much so, that even during the quiet moments, we have Chastain delivering narration. MOLLY’S GAME marks the feature directorial debut for Sorkin. While much of the film feels like a standard take on the material, Sorkin does show some finesse when it gets down to the actual games. There are a few hands where Sorkin successfully elevates the tension, even if the high-stakes game is centered around reckless husbands betting away life savings. When the chips start piling up, Sorkin does a good job placing the viewer in the heat of the situation.
Even if you aren’t a poker fan, the film still offers two of the most beautiful people in the world facing off against the FBI. While the film has a rotating door of money-hungry characters, it’s really Jessica Chastain and Idris Elba’s show. So much of the film rests heavily on Jessica Chastain’s shoulder and yet she seems completely unphased by the challenge. She’s a natural with Sorkin’s silver tongue dialogue, but Chastain gives Bloom just the right amount of sympathy as well. Sure, she’s a tough no-nonsense businesswoman, but Chastain also makes her a caring coach. She’s the one the players turn to when they are down on their luck, in turn, she becomes not just their banker, but also the voice of reason or the shoulder they can cry on – something that wasn’t given to her in her younger days of skiing with her dad.
The scenes with Kevin Costner as her dad feel a little gratuitous. We’re supposed to understand why Molly has the strength to keep fighting and going on, but these training scenes or dinner table scenes just relay that her strength stems from outsmarting or proving her dad wrong, which seems counterproductive to the overall message of the film. Mostly though, these scenes pad out an overlong game that already spends more than enough time showing Molly’s rise to power.
For a film with not a very complex plot, we have a 140 min runtime. Sorkin’s biggest strength becomes the film’s ultimate downfall. There’s simply too much of a good thing, and I can’t help but think a more experienced director might have tightened this up quite a bit. With a plot centered around high-stakes poker, Russian mobsters, hedge funds, and an FBI investigation, we should be on the edge of our seats. While Chastain is mesmerizing, she can only do so much to make this the searing drama that Sorkin thought he had in his hand.
Overall Score: 3 out of 5
MOLLY’S GAME is now playing in theaters everywhere
Idris Elba and Jessica Chastain star in MOLLY’S GAME
MOLLY’S GAME is based on the true story of Molly Bloom, an Olympic-class skier who ran the world’s most exclusive high-stakes poker game for a decade before being arrested in the middle of the night by 17 FBI agents wielding automatic weapons. Her players included Hollywood royalty, sports stars, business titans and finally, unbeknownst to her, the Russian mob. Her only ally was her criminal defense lawyer Charlie Jaffey, who learned that there was much more to Molly than the tabloids led us to believe.
Stars Jessica Chastain, Idris Elba, Kevin Costner, Chris O’Dowd, Michael Cera, Joe Keery, Rachel Skarsten, Graham Greene and Brian d’Arcy James. Directed by Aaron Sorkin with a screenplay by Aaron Sorkin. Based on the memoir by Molly Bloom.
In Select Theaters December 25, 2017 everywhere January 5th, 2018.
WAMG invites you to enter for the chance to win TWO (2) seats to the advance screening of MOLLY’S GAME on December 18 at 7:00 pm in the St. Louis area.
TO ENTER, ADD YOUR NAME AND EMAIL IN OUR 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.
The film stars Jessica Chastain, Idris Elba, Kevin Costner, Chris O’Dowd, Michael Cera, Joe Keery, Rachel Skarsten, Graham Greene and Brian d’Arcy James.
With a screenplay by Aaron Sorkin, based on the memoir by Molly Bloom, check out the first trailer for MOLLY’S GAME.
MOLLY’S GAME is based on the true story of Molly Bloom, an Olympic-class skier who ran the world’s most exclusive high-stakes poker game for a decade before being arrested in the middle of the night by 17 FBI agents wielding automatic weapons.
Her players included Hollywood royalty, sports stars, business titans and finally, unbeknownst to her, the Russian mob. Her only ally was her criminal defense lawyer Charlie Jaffey, who learned that there was much more to Molly than the tabloids led us to believe.
20th Century Fox has released a BRAND NEW trailer for MISS PEREGRINE’S HOME FOR PECULIAR CHILDREN
From visionary director Tim Burton, and based upon the best-selling novel, comes an unforgettable motion picture experience. When Jake discovers clues to a mystery that spans alternate realities and times, he uncovers a secret refuge known as Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children. As he learns about the residents and their unusual abilities, Jake realizes that safety is an illusion, and danger lurks in the form of powerful, hidden enemies. Jake must figure out who is real, who can be trusted, and who he really is.
MISS PEREGRINE’S HOME FOR PECULIAR CHILDREN hits theaters everywhere September 30, 2016.
From Academy Award nominated director Stephen Frears (The Queen, Philomena) and producers Working Title Films (The Theory Of Everything, Everest, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy), comes the true story of the meteoric rise and fall of one of the most celebrated and controversial men in recent history; Lance Armstrong, the world-renowned Tour de France champion.
The film will screen at the Toronto International Film Festival on Sept. 13.
The world needs heroes and Lance Armstrong was the ultimate sporting hero. Following a gruelling battle with cancer, Lance returned to his cycling career in 1999 more determined than ever and with his sights set firmly on winning the Tour de France. With the help of the infamous Italian physician Michele Ferrari and team director Johan Bruyneel, he developed the most sophisticated doping program in the history of the sport. This program allowed Lance and his American teammates to dominate the world of cycling, winning the Tour an unprecedented seven times.
However not everyone believed the fairytale…Sunday Times journalist, David Walsh, at first charmed by Lance’s charisma and talent, soon began to question whether the ‘world’s greatest athlete’ was ‘clean’. Walsh sought to unveil the truth, his ensuing battle with Armstrong risked his own career, ostracised him from the cycling community and cost his paper, The Sunday Times, hundreds of thousands in legal costs. But the indefatigable Walsh eventually uncovered the truth when a select few prepared to talk came forward, exposing one of the greatest deceptions of our time.
Inspired by the award winning book ‘Seven Deadly Sins’ by David Walsh, and featuring a stellar cast including Ben Foster (Lone Survivor), Chris O’Dowd (Calvary), Guillaume Canet (Tell No One) and Jesse Plemons (Breaking Bad), THE PROGRAM is a tense and suspenseful thriller.
Cycling fans loved his story of the comeback and his victory over cancer. After 7 Tour de France wins, Lance Armstrong thought he’d never get caught.
STUDIOCANAL and Working Title Films have released the first trailer for Academy Award nominated director Stephen Frears’ (PHILOMENA, THE QUEEN) film, THE PROGRAM.
The film stars Ben Foster, Chris O’Dowd, Lee Pace, Guillaume Canet, Jesse Plemons and Dustin Hoffman.
The film charts the thrilling rise of pro-cyclist Lance Armstrong through the 90s and early 2000s, battling cancer, as he and his fellow American teammates dominate and change the quintessentially European sport of cycling. Winning the Tour de France an unprecedented seven times, Lance retires as one of the great sporting heroes of our time, and worth millions of dollars.
David Walsh, sports writer, is at first charmed by Lance’s charisma and talent. Seven Tours later, and ostracised by the cycling community for speaking out, he believes the world is being sold a lie. A lone voice, it is several years before Lance is exposed.
Check out Alex Gibney’s absorbing documentary THE ARMSTRONG LIE (review)
Watch Armstrong’s 2013 interview Charlie Rose here.
THE PROGRAM is written by John Hodge (TRANCE), based on the book Seven Deadly Sins: My Pursuit of Lance Armstrong by Sunday Times journalist and Chief Sports Writer, David Walsh. The film was shot on location in the U.S., France and the UK.
The singular Bill Murray teams with first-time director/screenwriter Ted Melfi for ST. VINCENT, the story of a young boy who develops an unusual friendship with the cantankerous old guy next door.
Watch Murray and Melissa McCarthy in a clip from the film which is having its North American premiere today (Sept 5) at the Toronto Film Festival.
Maggie (Melissa McCarthy), a single mother, moves into a new home in Brooklyn with her 12-year old son, Oliver (Jaeden Lieberher). Forced to work long hours, she has no choice but to leave Oliver in the care of their new neighbor, Vincent (Bill Murray), a retired curmudgeon with a penchant for alcohol and gambling. An odd friendship soon blossoms between the improbable pair. Together with a pregnant stripper named Daka (Naomi Watts), Vincent brings Oliver along on all the stops that make up his daily routine – the race track, a strip club, and the local dive bar. Vincent helps Oliver grow to become a man, while Oliver begins to see in Vincent something that no one else is able to: a misunderstood man with a good heart.
Also starring Chris O’Dowd and Terrence Howard, ST. VINCENT is written, directed and produced by Ted Melfi, in his feature theatrical film debut.
The roots of the story of ST. VINCENT were inspired by a life-altering moment in writer/director/producer Ted Melfi’s own life. When his older brother passed away at the age of thirty-eight seven years ago, he went to the funeral and realized his eleven year-old niece had nowhere to go. Melfi and his wife quickly decided to adopt her and move her from a small, rural town in Tennessee to where they lived in Sherman Oaks, California.
Once enrolled in Notre Dame High School in Sherman Oaks, Melfi’s niece received a homework assignment with the following prompt: Find the Catholic saint that inspires you, and find someone in your real life that mimics the qualities of that saint. She picked St. William of Rochester, who is the Patron Saint of Adopted Children, and selected Melfi as the match. A very moved Melfi realized that it was the perfect idea for a movie. Instead of characters like himself and his niece though, he wanted to use an old curmudgeonly guy who’d lost his will to live and a young boy. Bill Murray seemed to be perfect for the role.
Recalls the filmmaker: “That’s the genesis of the story: this young boy moves in next to this cantankerous alcoholic played by Bill Murray, and they become best friends. This little adopted eleven year-old boy makes Bill Murray the saint in his assignment, and they both change each other’s lives. That’s how this whole project started – from a homework assignment.”
From Weinstein Films, ST. VINCENT opens in theaters October 24th.