DRACULA – Review

French director Luc Besson’s English-language DRACULA transforms Bram Stoker’s gothic horror novel into a sort of fairy tale-like gothic romantic fantasy, about a 15th century prince cursed by God for renouncing him after the death of his beloved wife, who is doomed to an eternal life searching for his lost love. Besson, know for LA FEMME NIKITA and THE FIFTH ELEMENT, also wrote the screenplay for DRACULA and certainly knows how to create thriller entertainment. With a score by Danny Elfman and Christoph Waltz in a supporting role, the film is silly fun, although it has some unevenness in tone.

However, this Dracula tale is not for everyone, certainly not purists, and so some people are likely to hate it while others find it amusing. The original title, apparently, was DRACULA A LOVE STORY, so that’s a tip off. It mixes brooding gothic romance with action sequences and some bloody, while sprinkling in dark humor and references to other Dracula movies. It’s not particularly horror and, reportedly, it was created by Besson less out of a fascination with the Dracula novel and more out of a wish to work again with Caleb Landry Jones, with whom the director/writer worked in his 2023 film DOGMAN.

In 15th century Wallachia, in the Carpathian Mountains, Prince Vlad II (Caleb Landry Jones), also known as Count Dracula, is madly in love with his princess Elisabeta (Zoe Bleu), but is pulled away from their bedroom romps by the arrival of the Ottoman Turks on the border. Worried for the princess, he sends her off to another castle for safety but just to be sure, he threatens his bishop, to extract a guarantee: Since the prince is going to be God’s defender of the faith, then bishop must make God promise that his princess will not be killed.

The princess never makes it to the other castle and, heartbroken and enraged, denounces God. As a punishment, God condemns Vlad to eternal life, as a vampire. The rest of the film follows the grieving immortal prince across the centuries, as he searches for the reincarnation of his lost princess. His search takes him across centuries and to the royal courts of Europe (in a series of visually lush scenes) until he decides to send out minion vampires instead to search for this princess.

Besson does get around to including part of Bram Stoker’s novel, although things are turned on their head in this version. Four hundred years later after the death of Princess Elisabeta, Jonathan Harker (Ewens Abid), a Parisian lawyer in this version, comes to visit Count Dracula in his decaying Romanian castle, with an offer to buy one of the Count’s real estate holdings. That visit is how Vlad spots a photo in a locket, of Harker’s fiancee Mina, who looks exactly like the princess. Locking up Harker, Vlad sets off for Victorian-era Paris.

This Dracula’s quest is for the lost Elisabeta rather than fresh victims, but still, a vampire’s gotta eat. He has to fuel up and restore his good looks before he meets her, but Vlad has found a clever way to ensure an endless supply of fresh blood, by creating an irresistible perfume that draws women to him. Silly stuff, of course, but delivered with a winking sense of fun.

In Paris, things get lively, with Matilda De Angelis chewing up some scenery among other things as Vlad’s servant vampire Maria. Maria is lock up in an asylum after attacking a priest, where she is tended by Dr. Dumont (Guillaume de Tonquedec) who calls in a specialist, a priest/detective (Christoph Waltz) from the Vatican, to solve the case. We also meet Maria’s unsuspecting nobleman fiance Henry Spencer (David Shields) and, of course, Mina (Zoe Bleu again).

Plenty of other vampire movies get referenced along the way, with a good measure of tongue in cheek. This certainly isn’t the first Dracula comedy, or even the first Dracula romance. Christoph Waltz is a standout, in a kind of van Helsing role as the droll, clever, unconventional priest/detective, who is called in to treat Maria, played by a very entertaining Matilda De Angelis.

Waltz gets plenty of scenes and provides a lot of the fun in this film, and gets the best lines, but Caleb Landry Jones as Prince Vlad is the star. This Dracula is less a figure of pure evil than a cursed, violent man filled with regrets and grief. Jones varies between grieving widower and a coolly clever vampire with penchant for swiftly violence. There are plenty of fight scenes, both sword battles and martial arts fights, as many as there are blood-sucking ones. There is some blood but less gore than you might expect.

Again, all pretty silly but entertaining, and Landry Jones often plays it with a winking smugness. His looks vary too, going from handsome medieval prince or Victorian hand-kisser to a crumbling pale thing in an enormous white wig. Caleb Landry Jones is a good choice for this part, as his looks are unconventional enough that he can play romantically handsome in some scenes or just weird-looking in others.

Although the film is in English, everyone sports some kind of accent, which often makes the dialog difficult to discern. Danny Elfman’s score adds a bit of fun, and reminds us not to get to serious here. While the film has nice costumes and sets, scenery is more variable, from some well-done, even beautiful CGI scenes but others using cheesy low-budget backdrops.

Luc Besson’s DRACULA is no Dracula classic. But, despite it’s flaws and silliness, it is kind of fun to watch, if you don’t take it seriously and can get past the violence it does to Bram Stoker’s novel.

DRACULA opens in theaters on Friday, Feb. 6, 2026.

RATING: 2.5 out of 4 stars

FRANKENSTEIN – Review

(L to R) Mia Goth as Elizabeth and Oscar Isaac as Victor Frankenstein in FRANKENSTEIN. Photo Credit: Ken Woroner/Netflix © 2025. Courtesy of Netflix

Director Guillermo del Toro’s FRANKENSTEIN does a startling thing: it goes back to the original Gothic novel written by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley in 1818, “Frankenstein, or The Modern Prometheus.” While there have been seeming endless numbers of screen versions of the Frankenstein story, generally in some form all are based in James Whale’s classic 1931 film and its sequel, THE BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN. Whale’s film has thrilled countless film fans and inspired many future filmmakers, including Guillermo del Toro. but the story the 1931 movie tells departs greatly from Mary Shelley’s terrifying but more philosophical novel about the hubris of a man playing God.

Now, to be clear, del Toro’s FRANKENSTEIN is not a faithful screen adaptation of the novel, but something more based on it. or in parts even, “inspired by” it. In truth, the director of Oscar-winning films PAN’S LABYRINTH and THE SHAPE OF WATER makes this story his own, stamping it with his own unique signature style, using the parts of the original novel that suit his purpose in building his own creation. That creation includes plenty of references to various Frankenstein versions.

Still, this return to Shelley’s Gothic tale makes the film much more strikingly unusual, in a gripping way that other Frankensteins iterations have not. And the director takes full advantage of that fresh approach to what could otherwise be overly familiar.

Like the book, the film starts at the end of the story, with Dr. Victor Frankenstein (Oscar Isaac) in an Arctic wasteland. He tells his tale, in this case, to the captain of a ship searching for the North Pole. How the doctor got there and why is part of his story. But del Toro then does something else startling in this film: after we see and hear Dr. Frankenstein’s story, the director turns things around and allows the Creature (Jacob Elordi) to tell his version. Yes, the Creature in this one, like the original novel, is intelligent and articulate, although not at first.

FRANKENSTEIN is Guillermo del Toro’s dream project, long planned. The film has the director’s distinct style and many of the same themes that run through other del Toro films, such as man as the real monster, sympathy for the creature, father and son issues, and good versus evil. Visually, the film is very much in the director’s bold style, color-drenched, creepy, and filled with striking cinematic images. The dramatic creation moment, when the creature comes to life, takes place in a huge, strange, foreboding building, one that looks like it was built as some kind of waterworks or water-driven factory, but with echoes of James Whale’s 1931 film. The reference to the link between water and life is inescapable, while the imposing structure itself, visually, is dramatically gothic.

Instead of the frenetic Dr. Frankenstein of James Whale’s classic, Oscar Isaac plays the doctor obsessed with building a man as a brooding, cold, dark, and even heartless fellow, with a huge ego and few ethics constrains. The social commentary on unlimited ambition and power is there.

Mia Goth plays Elizabeth, but in this telling she is not the fiancee of Victor but his younger, sunnier brother William (Felix Kammerer). Elizabeth is both beautiful and intelligent, with a keen interest in science and nature. She is very close to her wealthy uncle (Christoph Waltz), who offers to fund Victor’s experiments in reanimating dead tissue with the aim of creating life. The uncle gives no reason for this decision but hints that he does have an agenda in mind.

Although inspired by the novel, del Toro still references various versions of the the Frankenstein story, in movies and even comics. including the 1931 classic film that so riveted the director as a young child. Those references are sprinkled throughout the film, and it even has a glancing reference to ROCKY HORROR, a kind of Frankenstein tale, in the early appearance of the Creature himself but without the camp.

The cast all turn in fine performances, although the story and its vivid telling is the really strength of the film. Oscar Isaac plays Dr. Frankenstein as a very dark, hard character, an unlikable person who becomes less appealing as we see what he does. The story begins with his childhood to help us understand the character, in a brooding, gothic tale in a world of with funeral black and winter white, splashed with dramatic touches of blood red. The doctor makes himself the hero of his own story but we will hear another version next. The Creature is like a newborn in a grown body at first but grows up quickly, with his innocence turning to resentment and more toward his “father.”

The director caused some uproar by casting handsome Jacob Elordi as the Frankenstein;s creation, but it is worth noting that in the original novel the creation has more the appearance of a man, albeit a large one, than Karloff’s monster. Del Toro doesn’t quite do that, as the creature is a patchwork of sewn-together skin but, like in the book and others versions, of monstrous strength, if not size.

Speaking of monsters, director del Toro makes it clear at the very start of the film who the “monster” is, and it is not the creature. The creation here has more the enormous strength than size, which allows us to see him as a young man, even a big child at the start, the son of the doctor who built him.

Art direction is one of the real stars of this film. The visual side is eye-popping and very effective in creating a sense of awe and terror. The set, costumes and visual effects are all bold, often color-drenched and sometimes massive, a Gothic look on steroids which feels perfect for this film.

One of the most striking sequences is the one where the Creature is brought to life, a process that involves lightning like the 1931 classic film, but taking place in a weird, water-themed building of tile and smooth spouts, ducts, and channels, set on the edge of a cliff plunging into the sea.

Although Guillermo del Toro’s FRANKENSTEIN is not a faithful adaptation of the original novel, going back to that groundbreaking book, and some of its themes, does open the door for some other filmmaker to do that full adaptation. Hopefully that will happen, but until then we have this wonderfully creative new retelling of Mary Shelley’s classic novel.

FRANKENSTEIN opens Friday, Oct. 24, in theaters.

RATING: 4 out of 4 stars

Lucy Liu, Cooper Hoffman And Christoph Waltz Star In The Trailer For The Hit-Man Comedy OLD GUY

An aging hitman (Christoph Waltz) is forced to train a young prodigy (Cooper Hoffman) when his employer moves to replace the old guard. But when they learn they are being betrayed, the unlikely pair turns into a lethal team – with their double-crossing bosses in their sights. Lucy Liu also stars in this action-packed comedy.

From director Simon West (CON AIR, LARA CROFT: TOMB RAIDER and THE EXPENDABLES 2), catch the new trailer for OLD GUY.

The film premiered at the Newport Beach Film Festival on October.

OLD GUY opens in Select Theaters and On Digital February 21, 2025.

R for violence, language and some drug use

Photo courtesy of The Avenue

Guillermo Del Toro’s FRANKENSTEIN Coming To Netflix And Stars Oscar Isaac, Christoph Waltz And Mia Goth

Netflix is bringing FRANKENSTEIN to the popular streaming service.

Oscar-winning director Guillermo del Toro will adapt Mary Shelley’s classic tale of Victor Frankenstein, a brilliant but egotistical scientist who brings a creature to life in a monstrous experiment that ultimately leads to the undoing of both the creator and his tragic creation.

Jacob Elordi (Priscilla, Saltburn), Christoph Waltz (Django Unchained) and Felix Kammerer (All Quiet on the Western Front) join Oscar Isaac and Mia Goth in FRANKENSTEIN. Lars Mikkelsen (The Witcher), David Bradley (Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio) and Christian Convery (Sweet Tooth) also join the ensemble.

FRANKENSTEIN continues Netflix’s partnership with del Toro, including the Oscar winner for Best Animated Feature Film, Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio, the anthology series Guillermo del Toro’s Cabinet of Curiosities, and the animated films Trollhunters: Rise of the Titans and Trollhunters: Tales of Arcadia.

Catch A First Look At Christoph Waltz In OLD GUY

photo credit Peter Marley

Highland Film Group announced today that it has locked distribution deals in key international territories in all media for the action comedy OLD GUY starring two-time Academy Award winner Christoph Waltz (No Time to Die, Big Eyes, Inglourious Basterds), Lucy Liu (Strange World, Shazam! Fury of the Gods) and Cooper Hoffman (Paul Thomas Anderson’s Licorice Pizza).

Directed by Simon West (The Expendables 2, Lara Croft: Tomb Raider, The Mechanic) and written by Greg Johnson (The Last Son), Highland Film Group has sold the rights to OLD GUY to SND Films for France, Square One Entertainment GmbH for Germany, Vertigo Releasing and Lumiere Ventures for the UK, YouPlanet Pictures for Spain, Blue Swan Entertainment for Italy, Spentzos Film for Greece, NOS Lusomundo Audiovisuais for Portugal, SF Studios for Scandinavia, Vertical Entertainment for Eastern Europe, Aqua Group for Turkey, Falcon Films for the Middle East, Forum Film for Israel, California Filmes for Latin America, MovieCloud for Taiwan, Filmfinity for South Africa and Village Road Show for Australia and New Zealand.

Aging contract killer Danny Dolinski (Christoph Waltz) still believes he’s the best at what he does. Stuck at a dead end but vying for the love of club manager Anata (Lucy Liu), Danny is thrilled when The Company pulls him back in the field, but only to train Gen Z newcomer Wihlborg (Cooper Hoffman), a prodigy assassin with an attitude. The mismatched pair is asked to eliminate top members of a competing crime syndicate and, in the process, uncover their employer’s true motive: removing the old guard in a full takeover. However, The Company didn’t anticipate that Danny’s experience coupled with the kid’s brilliance would create such an unlikely bond between the two, enabling them, with crucial help from Anata, to turn it all back on The Company.

The film is produced by Jib Polhemus (The Last Son, The Expendables 2), Martin Brennan (One Way, Zone 414), West and R.U. Robot Studio’s Petr Jákl (Medieval, The Last Full Measure). Hal Sadoff (The Nice Guys, Orphan: First Kill) and Norman Golightly (Lord of War, Ghost Rider) will produce on behalf of Dark Castle Entertainment. The film is executive produced by R.U. Robot Studio’s Martin J. Barab, Blue Rider Pictures’ Walter Josten (Around the World in 80 Days, Holes) and Aperture Media Partners’ Jared Underwood, Andrew Robinson and Dan Mandel. Hannah Leader and Frank DeMartini serve on the production legal team.

Production recently wrapped in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Highland Film Group is co-financing the action comedy and handling worldwide rights. OLD GUY was filmed on location in Northern Ireland with support from Northern Ireland Screen.

“We are delighted to be working with such talented actors as two-time Academy Award winner Christoph Waltz, rising talent Cooper Hoffman and Lucy Liu in this fantastic action-packed comedy,” said Highland Film Group’s CEO Arianne Fraser. “With the help of our wonderful international partners, we look forward to introducing global audiences to this phenomenal project led by director Simon West,”added COO Delphine Perrier.

Prime Video Releases First-Look Teaser for New Christoph Waltz Thriller, THE CONSULTANT

Today, Prime Video debuted the first-look teaser and episodic images for the highly anticipated, Christoph Waltz-led series, The Consultant. Prime Video announced that the series will premiere all eight episodes exclusively on February 24 in more than 240 countries and territories worldwide.

The series stars Christoph Waltz as Regus Patoff, Nat Wolff as Craig,  Brittany O’Grady as Elaine, and Aimee Carreroas Patti. 

Based on Bentley Little’s 2015 novel of the same name, the  characters and story in this thrilling new series unfold in new and unexpected ways. The Consultant is a twisted, comedic-thriller series that explores the sinister relationship between boss and employee.

When a new consultant, Regus Patoff (Christoph Waltz), is hired to improve the business at the App-based gaming company CompWare, employees experience new demands and challenges that put everything into question … including their lives.

Creator, showrunner, and executive producer Tony Basgallop is joined by executive producer and pilot director Matt Shakman, and executive producers Christoph Waltz, Steve Stark, and Andrew Mittman, alongside producer Kai Dolbashian. 

The Consultant is from MGM Television and Amazon Studios.

GUILLERMO DEL TORO’S PINOCCHIO – Review

Aside from the serious somber Oscar contenders, and a few action blockbusters, the end-of-the-year holidays see the release of many family-friendly animated fantasies. And this pre-Thanksgiving weekend delivers a new version of a familiar children’s classic. Of course, some of that familiarity may come from its having a “new take” just a few months ago. Now, this spin is a bit more “low-tech”, as the former was a mix of live-action and “motion capture” magic, this one is done with stop-motion animation (fittingly often called “puppet animation”). Plus it adheres much more closely to the somewhat “dark” nature of the book. Which is a good match with its co-director/producer. who has helmed many a sinister fantasy fable. And just to drive that point home, his name is in the title, GUILLERMO DEL TORO’S PINOCCHIO, to make sure we know this “ain’t” your Uncle Walt’s lil’ “wooden boy”.


Now it begins in a setting we somewhat recall, An affable insect, Sebastian J, Cricket (voice of Ewan McGregor) guides us into a quaint, quiet Italian village. Then he tells us of the town’s elderly widower, woodcarver Geppetto (David Bradley) who shares his shop/home with his young son Carlo. Life is sweet until the boy is killed by a bomb accidentally dropped by the many planes that fly over. Oh, so this is not set in the pre-flight 1800s, eh? Yes, it’s happening during the 1930s reign of Mussolini. Well, a distraught, boozing Geppetto decides to recreate his boy as a wooden puppet and chops down the tree where Sebastian abides. Late that night, after the carving is complete, Geppetto “sleeps it off” as the magical wood sprites merge into an enchantress (Tilda Swinton) who bestows life onto the toy. The next morning he introduces himself to his startled, scared papa. Pinocchio (Gregory Mann) is more than a “handful”, spewing endless questions and wrecking the work area. The decision to send the lad off to school causes panic among his neighbors who treat the lad as an unholy monster. But Pinocchio catches the attention of the monkey Spazzatura (Cate Blanchett), who takes him to his master, Count Volpe (Christoph Waltz). He decides to make the boy his star attraction in his failing traveling carnival show. Later, when it’s known that Pinocchio is almost immortal, he’s drafted into the army by the town government liaison, Podesta (Ron Perlman), befriends his son Candlewick (Finn Wolfhard), and even performs for “Il Duce” before rescuing his pop from a ravenous sea monster.

Well, this is loads of fun, though it has a real somber “edge” to it, so it’s perhaps not ideal for the wee ones. Knowing the title director, some sinister imagery is expected…and delivered. As I hinted earlier, death plays a big role, from Geppetto’s early loss to the title hero, who pops out of a coffin several times, much to the chagrin of some shiny black-clad bunnies who’s rather be playing poker. And that’s part of the black humor of the piece, from flying cutlery to the steady punishment of the narrator who’s flattened frequently over the last act. Perhaps most surprising is the subtle political themes, as fascism almost swallows the hero (before the sea beast gets a chance). But then this harkens back to the filmmaker’s earlier masterwork PAN’S LABYRINTH, but this time mixed with a touch of the Frankenstein mythos (another obsession for Mr. del Toro). Mind you, the storybook look is there, gloriously rendered in stop-motion much as with the Rankin/Bass TV specials and the recent work from the Laika Studios (CORALINE). Much credit is due to the talented roster of artists, spearheaded by the co-director, stop motion maestro Mark Gustafson. But it would be merely pretty images (no, it’s beautiful) without the witty, often caustic script/adaptation by del Toro, Patrick McHale, and Matthew Robbins which had me chuckling throughout. The icing on the cake might be the delightful, toe-tapping songs from composer Alexandre Desplat which are propelled by stellar vocal talents. Who knew that Waltz was such a crooner, nearly as good as McGregor? But delivering most of the songs is Mann, who never goes for the maudlin, and instead makes the title hero are real hellion, menacing his papa as he engages in a dance of destruction. I’ll admit that I was one of the few critics that didn’t eviscerate the recent Disney remake, but this is one incredibly surprising spin on the oft-told tale, Perhaps not for the entire family, but the movie present for older, and more dark-humored fantasy fans, is GUILLERMO DEL TORO’S PINOCCHIO. And I’m not gonna’ “knock on wood” when praising it.

3.5 Out of 4

GUILLERMO DEL TORO’S PINOCCHIO is now playing in select theatres

Ewan McGregor’s “Cricket” Narrates Netflix’s GUILLERMO DEL TORO’S PINOCCHIO’s Teaser… And It’s Truly Magical

Academy Award®-winning filmmaker Guillermo del Toro reinvents Carlo Collodi’s classic tale of the wooden marionette who is magically brought to life in order to mend the heart of a grieving woodcarver named Geppetto. This whimsical, stop-motion musical directed by Guillermo del Toro and Mark Gustafson follows the mischievous and disobedient adventures of Pinocchio in his pursuit of a place in the world.

In select theaters in November and on Netflix in December, and lifelong passion project of del Toro, check out the brand new trailer.

Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio – (Pictured) Sebastian J. Cricket (voiced by Ewan McGregor). Cr: Netflix © 2022

Netflix announced in August of 2020 the cast of Academy Award winner Guillermo del Toro’s upcoming stop-motion animated musical feature. Newcomer Gregory Mann will star as Pinocchio with Ewan McGregor as Cricket and David Bradley (Harry Potter franchise, Game of Thrones) as Geppetto. Other cast includes Academy Award® winner Tilda Swinton, Academy Award® winner Christoph Waltz, Finn Wolfhard (Stranger Things), Academy Award® winner Cate Blanchett, John Turturro (The Batman), Golden Globe winner Ron Perlman (Nightmare Alley), Tim Blake Nelson (Watchmen), Burn Gorman (Enola Holmes).

Drawing on the classic Carlo Collodi tale, this stop motion musical follows the extraordinary journey of a wooden boy magically brought to life by a father’s wish. Set during the rise of Fascism in Mussolini’s Italy, del Toro’s Pinocchio is a story of love and disobedience as Pinocchio struggles to live up to his father’s expectations.

Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio – (L-R) Gepetto (voiced by David Bradley) and Pinocchio (voiced by Gregory Mann). Cr: Netflix © 2022

The film is directed by del Toro and Mark Gustafson (Fantastic Mr. Fox). Del Toro and Patrick McHale wrote the script. The song lyrics are by del Toro and Katz, with music by Academy Award® winner Alexandre Desplat who will also write the score. Gris Grimly created the original design for the
Pinocchio character. The film’s puppets are being built by Mackinnon and Saunders (Corpse Bride). Pinocchio is produced by del Toro, The Jim Henson Company’s Lisa Henson, ShadowMachine’s Alex
Bulkley and Corey Campodonico, as well as Exile Entertainment’s Gary Ungar; it is co-produced by
Blanca Lista of The Jim Henson Company and Gris Grimly. Other credits include production supervisor
Melanie Coombs, co-production designers Guy Davis and Curt Enderle, animation supervisor Brian
Hansen, puppet supervisor Georgina Hayns, director of photography Frank Passingham, art director
Rob DeSue, and animatic editor Ken Schretzmann.

Principal photography began Fall 2019 at ShadowMachine’s Portland, Oregon studio, and production has continued uninterrupted during the pandemic.

“After years of pursuing this dream project, I found my perfect partner in Netflix. We have spent a long time curating a remarkable cast and crew and have been blessed by continuous support from Netflix to quietly and carefully soldier on, barely missing a beat. We all love and practice animation with great passion and believe it to be the ideal medium to retell this classic story in a completely new way,” says del Toro.

PINOCCHIO (Pictured) GUILLERMO DEL TORO. Cr. mandraketheblack.de/NETFLIX © 2020

Here’s the Long-Awaited Trailer for Woody Allen’s RIFKIN’S FESTIVAL – In U.S. Theaters January 28th

” I’d frankly prefer not die for anything. And that includes sickness, old days or choking on a bagel.”

Woody Allen’s latest work, RIFKIN’S FESTIVAL (which was shot in 2019 and premiered at last year’s Sebastian Film Festival), is now arriving in the U.S. in theaters and on digital platforms on January 28, 2022 from MPI Media Group.

Here’s the trailer:

RIFKIN’S FESTIVAL stars Elena Anaya, Louis Garrel, Gina Gershon, Sergi López, Wallace Shawn, and Christoph Waltz,

Mort Rifkin (Wallace Shawn – Manhattan, My Dinner with Andre), a retired film studies professor, accompanies his publicist wife Sue (Gina Gershon New Amsterdam, Killer Joe) to the San Sebastian Film Festival in Spain. He goes not for the films, but because he’s worried that Sue’s fascination with her young buzzed-about film director client, Philippe (Louis Garrel – Little Women, An Officer and a Spy), might be more than professional. In addition, Mort hopes the change of scenery will provide a respite from his struggle to write a first novel that lives up to his impossibly exacting standards. With Mort’s relentlessly dismissive opinions of Philippe, and Sue’s sharp focus on her career as well as Philippe, their already frayed relationship becomes more strained. Mort’s mood lightens when he meets Jo Rojas (Elena Anaya – The Skin I Live In), a kindred spirit whose marriage to tempestuous painter Paco (Sergi López – Pan’s Labyrinth) is causing her pain as well. While Mort’s personal tastes have sometimes pushed people away, Jo’s intellect and shared sensibility draw them together. While Sue spends her days with Philippe, Mort’s relationship with Jo deepens.

Here’s the Trailer For Christoph Waltz’s Directorial Debut GEORGETOWN – Debuting in Select Theaters May 14th and Available on Digital and On Demand May 18th

Christoph Waltz, Vanessa Redgrave and Annette Bening Star in Waltz’s Thrilling Directorial Debut GEORGETOWN. Available on Digital and On Demand May 18 and Debuting in Select Theaters May 14. Check out this great trailer:

GEORGETOWN stars Waltz, Academy Award® winner** Vanessa Redgrave (Julia) and Academy Award® nominee*** Annette Bening (American Beauty).  In this thrilling true crime story filled with twists, turns, and political turmoil Waltz stars as Ulrich Mott, an eccentric and smooth-talking social climber who seems to have everyone in Washington, D.C. wrapped around his finger. But when his wealthy, well-connected and much older wife (Redgrave) turns up dead in their home, her daughter Amanda (Bening) suspects Ulrich may not be all that he seems as the police investigation begins to uncover a larger deception that goes far deeper than anyone ever imagined.

The film will also be released in select theaters by Vertical Entertainment beginning May 14 and on Video-On-Demand and for purchase from Paramount Home Entertainment on Digital beginning May 18, 2021.