TWINLESS – Review

Now this new film would be tough to categorize for anyone trying to recommend it to other moviegoers, let alone the writers for theatre chain websites. And that’s a good thing, since the multiplex really needs to have some fare that can’t be “pigeonholed” into a select “by-the-numbers” genre. Though many might not enjoy that, I really get a kick out of stories that throw me a “curve” or just keep me “off balance”. As a movie “Mulligan’s stew”, this dramedy/mystery/romantic character study with some sexy “spice” makes a tasty meal as you find out just what is the meaning of its provocative title, TWINLESS.

We’re “clued in” early on in this story when we hear some noise (tires screeching, a thud) from a fatal accident on a busy urban street, just “off camera”. From there, we’re taken to a graveside funeral service for a young man in his late twenties named Rocky. The mourners are stunned to see the departed’s twin brother in attendance, Roman (Dylan O’Brien), next to his mother, Lisa (Lauren Graham). Back at Rocky’s apartment, the two clash while going through his things before she heads back home. Roman remains in the city, and to calm his anger issues, attends a meeting of a support group for people who have lost their identical twin. There, he strikes up a conversation with Dennis (James Sweeney). During their talk, Dennis tosses out a casual joke about his sexuality (he’s gay). Straight Roman tells him that his brother Rocky was “out and proud”. The two exchange numbers after going to a nearby diner. Although they’re quite different (Dennis is much more cultured, but less confident), Roman reaches out to him, and the two become “hang buddies”, even grocery shopping together (not being alone in the store is a great comfort to Roman). The story pivots to show us that Dennis did actually know Rocky, one of many secrets withheld from Roman. Things get even more complicated when he begins dating the bubbly receptionist at Dennis’ work, Marcie (Aisling Franciosi). Can Dennis continue keeping Roman in the dark, or will Marcie somehow “spill the beans”? And what about his growing attraction for the “unattainable” twinless sibling?

The story’s dense plot works due to the considerable talents of the film’s two lead actors. Perhaps the tad more complex one is anchored by the superb rising star O’Brien (so good as Dan Ackroyd in last year’s SATURDAY NIGHT). He’s tasked with making us invested in the often volatile Roman, who is sweet as a “dems’ and dose'” bro, but can’t quite stop his fist when rage takes over. And yet, O’Brien brings lots of vulnerability to him, as Roman flails about, feeling lost without his twin, Rocky. And yes, we get to see O’Brien in a completely different persona in the flashback scenes of the departed sibling (distinctly different vocal delivery and body language). But that’s not to say that the gifted Sweeney is “treading water” around O’Brien. He also gets us cautiously on Dennis’ side, even as we know that the truth must be revealed. Sweeny shows us that he’s also more than a bit broken by his obsession and yearning for connection, while hiding behind an aloof attitude. Franciosi is the sweet, nurturing “counter-balance” to the duo as she does her best to be a cheerleader for Dennis even as her feelings for Roman emerge. But Franciosi makes her more than “the girlfriend” or even a “third wheel,” as she shows us the “steel” interior around Marcie’s candy-coated exterior. Big kudos to Ms. Graham for her work in just a couple of scenes as the “walking wounded” mother who seems to be sidelined by her all-consuming grief.

Oh, I was surprised to see that aside from co-starring, Sweeney also directed the film from his own script (his second solo feature). And he does a splendid job in twisting the narrative almost into knots, even making us wait nearly twenty minutes to see the title and opening credits. He also deftly shifts the focus from Roman (who dominates the prologue) to the quirky Dennis, who we see doing mental gymnastics to try and disguise his deceptions (love the impromptu British accent). Sweeney injects suspense into the narrative, as we wait for the big reveal and wonder about the character’s reactions. In his direction, Sweeney makes some interesting visual choices, best shown in his clever staging (split screens) of a big Halloween party sequence at Marcie’s and later in a revealing trip into a “day-glo” adult amusement center, which throws the main trio off-kilter. He also disorients us with some early graphic sex scenes before slowing the pace for more emotional intimate interactions, broken up by an “out-of-nowhere” bit of street violence. So for more adventurous filmgoers, this is a movie with strong characters, and an unpredictable script told with surprising visual confidence. That and a terrific young cast makes TWINLESS a true original.

3 Out of 4

TWINLESS is now playing in select theatres

SATURDAY NIGHT – Review

Gilda Radner (Ella Hunt), Jane Curtain (Kim Matula), Dick Ebersol (Cooper Hoffman), Rosie Shuster (Rachel Sennott), Garrett Morris (Lamorne Morris), Alan Zweibel (Josh Brener) and Lorne Michaels (Gabriel LaBelle) in SATURDAY NIGHT.

Ah, the weekend, a time to kick back and relax after the drudgery of the nine-to-fives grind. Well, that’s the case for most of us. For the folks working at “30 Rock” in the “Big Apple” it’s truly “crunch time” Most weeks, that is. And it all started exactly 49 years ago. That’s when one of the “big three” networks (in those “prehistoric’ times before cable and streaming), the National Broadcasting Company decided to gamble on a risky concept, one that was once the “norm” nearly twenty years prior. Back in the 1950s almost everything on the tube (other than creaky old movies) was aired live. But with the advent of video tape, most of the entertainment or “variety shows” shows were run free of glitches and goof-ups thanks to meticulous editing of the “pre-recorded” content. Due to pressure from “the king of late night” NBC wanted something new and off beat, a show that could appeal to the coveted 18 to 34 demographic that sponsors love, to run rather than repeats of “The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson”. After corraling a motley team of eager energetic twenty-somethings, a ninety minute original comedy and music “revue” would air at the weekend’s “epicenter”. And this new film tells the backstage story of that fateful night. To paraphrase one of the show’s many “catchphrases”, “Filmed In New York (and Georgia), it’s SATURDAY NIGHT!”. And thank you, Don Pardo…

The film takes place in the ninety minutes prior to the premiere on October 11, 1975. It’s 10 pm and a frustrated NBC page (Finn Wolfhard) can’t even give away free audience passes to the new show. His “spiel” is interrupted by the program’s creator/producer Lorne Michaels (Gabrielle LaBelle) as he greets a “featured performer” Andy Kaufman (Nicholas Braun), who has been dropped off by his parents. After getting past the security team, they two take the elevator to the “nerve center” on the eighth floor. Lorne is quickly approached by the NBC VP of late-night programming Dick Ebersol (Cooper Hoffman) who is his “sounding board” and advisor. Priority one is the on-air talent. Chicago Second City vet John Belushi (Matt Wood) balks at wearing the bee costumes and avoids signing his contract. Garrett Morris (Lamorne Morris) questions his place in the show. As does the “classicly-trained” actress Jane Curtin (Kim Matula). Dan Ackroyd (Dylan O’Brien) doesn’t like his props while Gilda Radner (Ella Hunt) fears being typecast as everybody’s “kid sister”. And Laraine Newman (Emily Fairn) wants to change costumes quicker. Towering over them all is the snarky, confident Chevy Chase (Cory Michael Smith). The loudest complainer may be the host, counter-culture stand-up comedy icon George Carlin (Matthew Rhys), while the softest may be Muppet master Jim Henson (Braun again). And as the sets are still being built, Lorne is getting “pitches” from his writing staff led by the acerbic dark-humored Michael O’Donogue (Tommy Dewey) and Lorne’s soon-to-be ex-wife Rosie Shuster (Rachel Sennott). And if that weren’t enough, the NBC talent relations exec David Tebet (Willem Dafoe) has brought in a horde of middle-aged NBC station affiliate owners and the network’s first “superstar”, Milton Berle (J.K. Simmons), who act more like sharks that just smelled blood in the water. Tebet has a big reel-to-reel videotape of Carson ready to go. Will Lorne’s “dream” be scrapped before it’s even aired? Well, we know the answer to that…

But it’s still a fun, exhilarating ride thanks to this superb cast led by LaBelle who follows up his lead role in THE FABELMANS by playing another media icon. Sure, he often resembles a “deer caught in headlights” as everything appears on the verge of self-destruction, but LaBelle imbues Michaels with a steely determination and a strong backbone when the “suits’ encircle him. He’s got to put on a brave face, but lets the mask slip away with his two biggest “back-ups”. One is Shuster given a smart and sassy air by the engaging Sennott. She’s truly walking a tightrope as she tries to bolster Michaels just enough without leading him to think that their marriage will be “patched up” while engaging in some flirty banter with O’Brien’s Ackroyd. Plus she’s also the “Belushi-whisperer” as hers is the only voice that seems to calm his “savage beast”. The other person in Michaels’ “corner” is Ebersol played with great energy and empathy by Hoffman who cares about the project but isn’t afraid to “lay it on the line” to the frazzled producer (and his “product placement” rant is pretty funny). The story’s “villain”, other than the clicking countdown to air, might be Dafoe, at his most reptilian (and that’s saying a lot) as the sinister Tebet, a blow-dried Lucifer dangling stardom in front of Chase, while cooly pushing Michaels to “try for next week” in a passive-aggressive whisper. Almost matching him is Simmons whose “Uncle Milty” swings his “BDE” as he clings to his past glories. While they aren’t “perfect doppelgangers” for the original “Not Ready for Prime Time Players”, all of the ensemble can suggest them via subtle voice inflection and gestures especially the aforementioned O’Brien who captures the aggressive super-focused nerdiness of Ackroyd as he rattles off the specs of a pistol in one breath along with Morris who conveys the inner-conflict and turmoil inside Garrett as he fears that all of his schoolings may be in service of TV “tokenism” (“I’m an opera singer, now I’m a pimp?”). Kudos also to Robert Wuhl as bemused journeyman director Dave Wilson and Tracy Letts as grizzled comedy guru Herb Sargent, who outlines Chevy’s future (Smith’s terrific as the swaggering comic “alpha”). But the MVP may be Braun doing delicious “double-duty” as the strange Kaufman and the quietly eccentric Henson.


And who’s the talented filmmaker that imbues a vibrant vitality to a tale so familiar to TV fans and historians? Why, it’s none other than Jason Reitman, who himself is part of a comedy dynasty that mixed with many SNL vets ( he and his late father directed Ghostbuster flicks with Ackroyd). He also co-wrote the film with Gil Kenan, and sure some of it is probably “dramatically-altered” embellishments to the legends (certainly no live show would bring in the audience with only minutes to spare as the set floor was still being built), but it’s a movie, not a TV mini-series (which would be pretty cool, too). More important than 100% accuracy is the immediacy Reitman gives this fable, which at times seems to be a fever dream from Michaels who is constantly “spinning plates”. This takes the “walk and talk” trope of Aaron Sorkin to dizzying heights as the always-in-motion- producer is cornered by questioners from the left and right (30 Rock has some long hallways). Several bits from much later sketches are referenced (did these comic ideas gestate for years), but it adds to the manic footloose frenzy. It’s all given a gritty smoke-filled haze (so much chain-smoking) thanks to the 16mm cinematography by Eric Steelberg and accented by the score from Jon Batiste, who doubles as “musical guest” Billy Preston. And let’s give ‘props” to the prop department along with the art and design teams and the funky period costuming of Danny Glicker. Yes, the pace is a bit overwhelming at times, but this film takes its place amongst the great films set around classic TV shows both real (BEING THE RICARDOS) and fictional (MY FAVORITE YEAR) as it balances the emergence of the new “raised by the tube” creators and the zeal of the Judy and Mickey “let’s put on a show” flicks. Best of all it reminds us of that magic time hanging out with your school pals hunkered around the TV (not too loud since the folks are in bed) waiting for the clock to hit 11:30 (10:30 central) to finish the big lazy day with some laughs and music on SATURDAY NIGHT.

4 Out of 4

SATURDAY NIGHT is now playing exclusively in theatres everywhere

Max Original Film CADDO LAKE, From Producer M. Night Shyamalan, Debuts October 10 – See The New Trailer

Photograph by Courtesy of Max

The Max Original film CADDO LAKE, from producer M. Night Shyamalan and writer-directors Celine Held and Logan George, debuts Thursday, October 10, on MAX.

The cast includes Dylan O’Brien, Eliza Scanlen, Diana Hopper, Caroline Falk, Sam Hennings, with Eric Lange and Lauren Ambrose.

Here’s a look at the brand new trailer.

The inspiration for CADDO LAKE was sparked after filmmakers Celine Held and Logan George came across a photograph of the real Caddo Lake online, leading to many visits to the cypress forest that rests on the border of Texas and Louisiana. The film was shot in late 2021 and 2022 in and around Karnak, Texas.

CADDO LAKE is written and directed by Celine Held & Logan George; produced by M. Night Shyamalan, Ashwin Rajan, Kara Durrett and Josh Godfrey; executive producers Kimberly Steward, Harrison Huffman, and Will Greenfield.

Check Out The Trailer For Jason Reitman’s SATURDAY NIGHT

Sony Pictures has released the first trailer for SATURDAY NIGHT from director Jason Reitman..

At 11:30pm on October 11, 1975, a ferocious troupe of young comedians and writers changed television – and culture – forever. Directed by Jason Reitman and written by Gil Kenan & Reitman, Saturday Night is based on the true story of what happened behind the scenes in the 90 minutes leading up to the first broadcast of Saturday Night Live. Full of humor, chaos, and the magic of a revolution that almost wasn’t, we count down the minutes in real time until we hear those famous words…

The film stars (in order of appearance): Gabriel LaBelle, Rachel Sennott, Cory Michael Smith, Ella Hunt, Dylan O’Brien, Emily Fairn, Matt Wood, Lamorne Morris, Kim Matula, Finn Wolfhard, Nicholas Braun, Cooper Hoffman, Andrew Barth Feldman, Kaia Gerber, Tommy Dewey, Willem Dafoe, Matthew Rhys and J.K. Simmons. Also rounding out the ensemble cast are Jon Batiste and Naomi McPherson.

Here are some trivia facts about the first episode of Saturday Night Live (SNL):

  • Host: George Carlin, a legendary comedian, hosted the first episode. He performed stand-up, introduced musical guests, and led the goodnight segment. However, according to the book Live from New York, Carlin didn’t participate in any sketches because he was stoned.
  • Musical guests: Billy Preston and Janis Ian, both of whom had recent hits on the Billboard Hot 100, were the first musical guests on SNL.
  • Chevy Chase: Chevy Chase, who became a breakout star in the first season, was the first person to say “Live From New York, It’s Saturday Night!” while wearing a headset.
  • Don Pardo: Announcer Don Pardo made a mistake in the opening credits, calling the Not Ready for Primetime Players “the Not for Ready Primetime Players”.

Written by Gil Kenan & Jason Reitman, SATURDAY NIGHT opens on October 11, 2024.

Jane Curtin (Kim Matula), Laraine Newman (Emily Fairn), Lorne Michaels (Gabriel LaBelle), Rosie Shuster (Rachel Sennott), and John Belushi (Matt Wood) in the Makeup Room in SATURDAY NIGHT. © 2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Watch Mark Rylance And Dylan O’Brien In First Trailer For THE OUTFIT

Zoey Deutch (left) stars as “Mable” and Mark Rylance (right) stars as “Leonard” in director Graham Moore’s THE OUTFIT, a Focus Features release. Courtesy of Nick Wall / Focus Features

Here’s the first trailer for the drama THE OUTFIT starring Mark Rylance, Zoey Deutch, Johnny Flynn, Dylan O’Brien, Nikki Amuka-Bird, and Simon Russell Beale.

Focus Features will release THE OUTFIT in theaters on February 25, 2022

From the Academy Award-winning writer of The Imitation Game (Graham Moore) comes THE OUTFIR, a gripping and masterful thriller in which an expert tailor (Academy Award winner Mark Rylance) must outwit a dangerous group of mobsters in order to survive a fateful night.

Visit the official site: https://www.focusfeatures.com/the-outfit

Mark Rylance stars as “Leonard” in director Graham Moore’s THE OUTFIT, a Focus Features release. Courtesy of Nick Wall / Focus Features
Dylan O’Brien (left) stars as “Richie” and Zoey Deutch (right) stars as “Mable” in director Graham Moore’s THE OUTFIT, a Focus Features release. Courtesy of Nick Wall / Focus Features

LOVE AND MONSTERS Arrives on 4K, Blu-ray and DVD January 5th

LOVE AND MONSTERS arrives on 4K Ultra HD, Blu-ray & DVD January 5, 2021 from Paramount Home Entertainment.

Check out this thrilling trailer:

Seven years after the Monsterpocalypse, Joel Dawson (Dylan O’Brien), along with the rest of humanity, has been living underground ever since giant creatures took control of the land. After reconnecting over radio with his high school girlfriend Aimee (Jessica Henwick), who is now 80 miles away at a coastal colony, Joel begins to fall for her again. As Joel realizes that there’s nothing left for him underground, he decides to venture out to Aimee, despite all the dangerous monsters that stand in his way. The fun-filled and action-packed adventure also stars Dan Ewing, Michael Rooker and Ariana Greenblatt.

Dylan O’Brien stars in this wildly imaginative, post-apocalyptic adventure that’s filled with LOVE AND MONSTERS.

The film was a critical and audience hit following its theatrical and Premium Video-On-Demand debut, with a 91% critic score and 88% audience score on Rotten Tomatoes.*

The Blu-ray includes the following bonus content:
•Deleted scenes
•Bottom of the Food Chain: The Cast of LOVE AND MONSTERS
•It’s a Monster’s World: Creating a Post-Apocalyptic Landscape

MAZE RUNNER: THE DEATH CURE – Review

 

It’s kind of a slow month at the movies, so join me in a cinema experiment (cue Kenneth Strickfaden’s sparking, buzzing Frankenstein lab equipment). That’s because this weekend’s new flick is a real rarity for this time of year: a franchise entry. To be more precise, it’s the third part of a trilogy based upon (oh oh) a popular series of young adult novels (that sends a chill up my spine, only matched by the name “Nicholas Sparks”). And its setting is a most familiar backdrop for such stories, a dystopian future. The first one came out in 2014, followed a year later by the middle entry. But why the nearly three-year wait? Being “heavy” on the action stunts, the leading man was injured on the set, forcing a lengthy shut down. Will this derail its momentum? Well, generally January is the “multiplex graveyard” where franchise flicks come to die. So what is the experiment I mentioned? Well, I’ve not seen the two previous films in this series, so we’ll see if I can jump in cold. Most film fans believe that reading the novel a film is based on, should not be required for an adaptation. The same is said with film series or franchises. Is it necessary to see all the Marvel Studios movies before seeing next month’s BLACK PANTHER? Shouldn’t be, it should stand on its own. You could say the same for Bond (and that’s over 20 films). All right, time for me to jump off the diving board, into the dark, unseen pool that is MAZE RUNNER: THE DEATH CURE.

 

As I mentioned earlier, it’s sometime in the not so distant future (maybe around the corner from Fury Road). Roaring out of the desert comes a beat-up jeep/dune buggy hybrid driven by Jorge (Giancarlo Esposito) and Brenda (Rosa Salazar). They (part of a rebel group called the Gladers) are trying to intercept a train (owned by the evil corporation WCKD) that’s carrying kids (teens and pre-teens) that are immune to the disease that wiped out most of Earth, the ‘Flare’, a plague similar to the ‘Rage’ from 28 DAYS LATER that turns folks into rapid-running maniac killers (think WORLD WAR Z), though the infected have brief moments of calm when they can converse. WCKD’s gonna’ experiment on these captured kids in order to find a cure. Of course the two are outnumbered, until two more Gladers arrive in the nick of time (a repeated plot device). It’s the adult Vince (Barry Pepper) and twenty-something Thomas (Dylan O’Brien), who hopes to rescue his buddy Minho (Ki Hong Lee) from the train. Alas, after a furious fight, Minoh is not in the boxcar they separate from the train. Returning to the Glade HQ camp, they decide to send a small group to the fortress city on a rescue mission. After a near fatal encounter with a cave full of “Cranks” ( the infected, not the family from the holiday movie classic), they finally arrive outside the city where desperate mobs hope to get past the machine gun drones and tower cannons. A former friend/ foe they thought was dead, Gally (Will Pouter), takes Thomas and his crew to the underground kingpin, the Flare-ravaged Lawrence (Walton Goggins), who offers help by way of a secret passage into the gleaming city. There they make their way to the imposing tower that is the home of WCKD. Inside Minho is a guinea pig in the lab headed by Ava Paige (Patrick Clarkson) who is assisted by former Glader (and I’m guessing former paramour of Thomas), Teresa (Kaya Scodelario). Does Thomas and his band of Gladers stand a chance against the WCKD forces headed by enforcer/ hitman Janson (Aidan Gillen)? And what will happen when he sees Teresa once more? The fate of the planet seems to rest on the young man’s shoulders.

 

 

Whew, with all the narrow escapes this flick feels like one of those Golden Age movie serials. with all fifteen of its chapters smushed into one feature. But not in a good way, like RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK. The actors are almost like chess pieces, being moved from one action sequence-square to the next. As for the cast newcomers (those still passing for teens), O’Brien is a competent leading man, all earnest determination. He’s not given much of a chance to reconnect with Scodelario’s Teresa, though she ably conveys the character’s torment over switching sides (I’m guessing that happened in the previous entry). Thomas Brodie-Sangster as Glader Newt has a nice tragic arc as he realizes that the Flare may consume him before they finish the mission. Salazar has an appealing “tough chick” vibe as the no-nonsense Brenda who doesn’t hesitate when facing any danger. Poulter, coming off his very, very bad cop role in DETROIT, continues to impress as the “wild card’ ally who may have other motives. All for the screen vets, Esposito and Pepper are regulated to adult mentors/ cheerleaders. Saddled with some constricting make-up (Lon Chaney’s Eric meets the Red Skull), Goggins seems muzzled as the big boss of the under, underworld. Clarkson is all cool menace as the passive aggressive Paige, a power-mad mean, mean mama. The only actor that seems to be having a bit of fun is Gillen as the cackling, unrelenting killer king (if he had a mustache I’m sure he’d be twirling it as he boasts about terminating Thomas).

 

At a rump-numbing 142 minutes, this flick from director Wes Ball (who helmed the previous two) feels as though it’s an attempt to tie up the many loose ends, while satisfying the novel’s fans. Since Ball is an effects artists, all the scenes of the glistening metropolis are impressive. Unfortunately the characters are no more than action figures in a super-deluxe play set. They run down endless corridors (enough for several Aaron Sorkin TV shows), nearly running into clumps of bad guys who shoot as well as the stormtroopers in the middle Star Wars trilogy (lousy). In the next scene they’re defying gravity with stunts that fans wouldn’t buy in a Superman movie (a bus and helicopter, take a guess). And like many action blockbusters, we get countless endings, until things mercifully grind to a halt, and the whole thing lands with a big thud. As I mentioned at the start, this is my first exposure to this series. And I can safely say MAZE RUNNER: THE DEATH CURE will certainly be the last.

 

1/2 Out of 5

 

Check Out The First Trailer For MAZE RUNNER: THE DEATH CURE


Photo credit: Courtesy Twentieth Century Fox

Opening in theaters on January 26, 2018 is 20th Century Fox’s MAZE RUNNER: THE DEATH CURE, the final installment of the trilogy from director Wes Ball.

In the epic finale to the Maze Runner saga, Thomas leads his group of escaped Gladers on their final and most dangerous mission yet.

Watch the first trailer now.

To save their friends, they must break into the legendary Last City, a WCKD-controlled labyrinth that may turn out to be the deadliest maze of all. Anyone who makes it out alive will get answers to the questions the Gladers have been asking since they first arrived in the maze.

Based upon the novel “THE DEATH CURE” by James Dashner.

Visit the official site: http://www.foxmovies.com/movies/maze-runner-the-death-cure

(L-R) Thomas (Dylan O’Brien), Jorge (Giancarlo Esposito), Frypan (Dexter Darden), Newt (Thomas Brodie-Sangster) and Brenda (Rosa Salazar) are in search of answers.
Photo credit: Joe Alblas

The group decides on their next move. (L-R) Sonya (Katherine McNamara), Harriet (Nathalie Emmanuel), Aris (Jacob Lofland, back to camera), Newt (Thomas Brodie-Sangster), Thomas (Dylan O’Brien), Brenda (Rosa Salazar), and Frypan (Dexter Darden).
Photo credit: Joe Alblas

AMERICAN ASSASSIN Trailer And New Poster Plus Soundtrack Listing For Steven Price Score

Check out Dylan O’Brien in the action-packed “Get it Done” trailer for the highly anticipated AMERICAN ASSASSIN.

Starring Dylan O’Brien, Michael Keaton, Sanaa Lathan, Shiva Negar, Taylor Kitsch, Scott Adkins, David Suchet, and Navid Negahban, AMERICAN ASSASSIN is directed by Michael Cuesta.

Based on the American Assassin novel in the Mitch Rapp series by Vince Flynn.

AMERICAN ASSASSIN follows the rise of Mitch Rapp (Dylan O’Brien), a CIA black ops recruit under the instruction of Cold War veteran Stan Hurley (Michael Keaton). The pair is then enlisted by CIA Deputy Director Irene Kennedy (Sanaa Lathan) to investigate a wave of apparently random attacks on both military and civilian targets. Together the three discover a pattern in the violence leading them to a joint mission with a lethal Turkish agent (Shiva Negar) to stop a mysterious operative (Taylor Kitsch) intent on starting a World War.

The score is composed by Academy Award winner Steven Price (Gravity, Suicide Squad, Fury, Baby Driver, The World’s End). The soundtrack will be released on September 15, 2017 by Varese Sarabande and may be pre-ordered on Amazon.

1. The Proposal (4:00)
2. Mitch Rapp (4:14)
3. Under Surveillance (2:29)
4. Hurley (2:22)
5. Plutonium (1:45)
6. AR Training (2:19)
7. Mission Aborted (3:21)
8. The Dogs (3:16)
9. Annika’s Identity (2:07)
10. I Trusted You (4:13)
11. I Knew Your Family (3:28)
12. Animal Spirits (9:45)
13. Brace For Impact (3:44)
14. Katrina (4:33)

Rated R

CBS Films and Lionsgate will release AMERICAN ASSASSIN in theaters September 15, 2017.

https://www.facebook.com/AmericanAssassin/

Dylan O’Brien as Mitch Rapp in AMERICAN ASSASSIN to be released by CBS Films and Lionsgate.

Watch Michael Keaton, Sanaa Lathan And Taylor Kitsch In AMERICAN ASSASSIN Red Band Trailer

Assassins aren’t born, they’re made.

CBS Films and Lionsgate will release AMERICAN ASSASSIN in theaters September 15, 2017.

Watch this heart-pounding Official Red Band Trailer for Director Michael Cuesta’s adaptation of the #1 New York Times Bestseller by Vince Flynn. AMERICAN ASSASSIN starring Dylan O’Brien, Michael Keaton, Sanaa Lathan, Shiva Negar, Scott Adkins and Taylor Kitsch

AMERICAN ASSASSIN follows the rise of Mitch Rapp (Dylan O’Brien), a CIA black ops recruit under the instruction of Cold War veteran Stan Hurley (Michael Keaton). The pair is then enlisted by CIA Deputy Director Irene Kennedy (Sanaa Lathan) to investigate a wave of apparently random attacks on both military and civilian targets. Together the three discover a pattern in the violence leading them to a joint mission with a lethal Turkish agent (Shiva Negar) to stop a mysterious operative (Taylor Kitsch) intent on starting a World War.

For more info:

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