LEE – Review

Andy Samberg as David E Scherman and Kate Winslet as Lee Miller, in LEE. Photo by Kimberley French. Courtesy of Roadside Attractions and Vertical.

The name Lee Miller may not be familiar but you have most likely seen her photos, some of the first and most iconic of Nazi concentration camps, taken immediately after the defeat of Nazi Germany. The photos show concentration camp survivors and the dead, which proved that the wartime rumors of the Holocaust were true. Lee Miller’s shocking, heartbreaking photos were published in an article titled “Believe It” in American Vogue, dispelling doubts about what had happened in Germany.

That a fashion magazine like Vogue would be the one that published them seems highly unlikely, yet so was the career and life of Lee Miller. Directed by acclaimed cinematographer Ellen Kura, making her feature film directorial debut, the stirring, inspirational drama LEE takes audiences from Lee Miller’s days as a New York fashion model-turned fashion photographer in Paris, who is living a life of pleasure among such important artistic figures as Picasso (Enrique Arce) and surrealist art photographer Man Ray (Samuel Barnett), who mentored her, to her years as a war correspondent and photographer in France and then post-war in Germany.

Kate Winslet gives a breathtaking performance, both as the older Lee Miller and the younger one in pre-war Paris, wartime London and France, and post-war Germany. The older Lee, chain-smoking and downing scotch, recounts her amazing career to a young interviewer (Josh O’Connor), in a framing device that brackets the historical tale.

LEE also features a host of stars, including Andy Samberg, Alexander Skarsgard, Andrea Riseborough, and Marion Cotillard, and a lot of famous names, in this true story.

Lee Miller started out as a fashion model in New York, achieving success in that field but Miller longed switch careers to photography, a life-long passion. Saying she was done with modeling, Lee moved to Paris, and the drama picks up Lee’s story there, where she is living a high-octane bohemian life, as part of a social circle that includes Pablo Picasso and surrealist photographer Man Ray, who was her mentor and lover. Lee is growing dissatisfied with that life when she meets British artist Roland Penrose (Alexander Skarsgard).

Persuaded to join Penrose in London, Miller escapes shortly before the Nazis invade France, trapping her old friends. In London, Miller gets the chance to break into photography, as a fashion photographer working for editor Audrey Withers (Andrea Riseborough) who also employs Cecil Beaton, the royal family’s favorite photographer, who snubs the model-turned-photog. As WWII sweeps across Europe, Lee Miller fights to be able to cover the war, finally returning to France and teaming up with Jewish American photographer David Scherman (Andy Samberg), who was working for Life magazine.

As the war ends, Miller and Scherman race to Germany to capture photographic evidence of Hitler’s evil. The bold, bohemian Lee Miller also finds Hitler’s now vacant apartment, where she and Scherman collaborate on a famous photo of a nude Miller in Hitler’s bath tub with her muddy boots from her visit to Dachau next to the tub, a shot taken just as Hitler committed suicide in his Berlin bunker.

Before Lee and Scherman leave post-war Paris for newly-fallen Germany, Lee finds one her French friends from her carefree pre-London days, Solange D’Ayen (played movingly by Marion Cotillard, in a heartbreaking performance), who hiding in a deserted Nazi command center. Solange has been shattered by the war, and her imprisonment by the Nazis, and now, post war, she waits for her missing husband to return. Lee also encounters other old friends, Paul Eluard (Vincent Colombre), a poet and French Jew, and his wife Nusch Eluard (Noemie Merlant).

Winslet transforms herself from the elegant, hedonistic model-turned-photographer into a fearless, hard-drinking, tough war correspondent Lee became during the war and post-war. It is a showcase performance but both Winslet and Samberg are wonderful in their scenes together, showing real chemistry between the actors. Samberg’s Scherman is steady and reliable but finally briefly breakdowns emotionally after Dachau, crying out about “his people” and Hitler’s evil, in a moving scene. Both Samberg’s Davy Scherman and Winslet’s Lee Miller are passionate about their work, willing to face danger in the field to tell this important story and record it for history. On the other hand, Alexander Skarsgard’s aristocratic Brit Roland Penrose remains a pacifist, who opposes Hitler but does not comprehend Lee’s fearless willingness to place herself in harm’s way.

First-time director Ellen Kura crafts inspiring, powerful film filled with dramatic photography as LEE tells the too-little known story of this fearless, feminist, one-of-a-kind woman who broke barriers for women war correspondents, as she and fellow American war photojournalist Davy Scherman (Andy Samberg) covered the war and then pushed on to post-war Germany. If the film has a flaw, it is in the somewhat awkward framing device, although at the drama’s end you learn why it was used. However, it is a small flaw in an otherwise outstanding film, featuring an outstanding performance from Winslet, playing a historical figure whose name should be better known. Lee Miller left a photographic record of the horrors of Hitler’s hate, and her famous, emotionally-powerful photos still appear in countless books and articles about the Holocaust.

LEE opens Friday, Sept. 27, at multiple area theaters.

RATING: 3.5 out of 4 stars



ANNETTE – Review

This weekend sees the release of a “follow-up” film to a delightful documentary I had the pleasure of reviewing about two months ago. Yes, you read that right. This can be called a “follow-up” rather than a sequel or even a “spin-off”. The previous feature doc in question was the adoring film “fan letter” from Edgar Wright all about the fifty-year-plus musical partnership of the Mael brothers, Ron and Russell, the duo behind the rock and roll band known as Sparks (that doc’s title was the fittingly-named THE SPARKS BROTHERS). The early part of that film told of the brothers’ love of film, as they delved into the “New Wave” classics of the 60s while in college, and made some “cinema” themselves. After their music success, they hoped to branch into the movies with proposed collaborations with (most famously) Jacques Tati and Tim Burton. To the Maels’ consternation, none of them materialized, and aside from their many music videos that were in near-constant rotation on MTV (yes, they ran music videos), their only feature film work was as themselves playing at an amusement park in the 70s Sensurround “potboiler” ROLLERCOASTER. But there was hope as the doc’s last minutes told of a movie musical that was going forward (they did both the songs and script). And here it is finally. That long-in-the-works Sparks-created flick is simply called ANNETTE.

Fittingly one of the first images we see is Ron and Russell in a recording studio as they lead the film’s opening song, which has the main characters and several minor ones singing and walking down the neon-lit nighttime streets of LA. They soon split up as the story unfolds. And, at its beginning, it’s a love story between two unlikely loves at the near-opposite ends of the entertainment industry. Ann (Marion Cotillard) is a celebrated operatic soprano, selling out orchestra halls and classical music venues all over the planet. Henry (Adam Driver) is a performance artist/stand-up comic, whose one-man show “The Ape of God” has a fervent following that packs the theatres nearly every night. And after he finishes his angry, often sick and twisted, rants he hops on his motorcycle and scoops up Ann, whisking her away from her “stage door” admirers, much to the delight of the “paparazzi and theTV show biz reports. Their passion leads to a secret wedding, and later to a daughter, Annette. But then things change, professionally at first. As Ann’s star continues to rise, Henry’s career begins a fast descent, as his fans reject his darker, more intimate screeds. A restorative vacation at sea ends in tragedy, which somehow inspires an unexpected, miraculous change in Annette. Could his daughter somehow inspire a new chapter in Henry’s life, or will Ann’s former accompanist, now an orchestra conductor (Simon Helberg) derail Henry’s plans for himself and his “uniquely gifted” baby girl?

Driver dominates this musical drama experiment as the glowering, mostly anti-social, angry all-the-time Henry, only managing a semi-smile when he’s around Ann or his infant. Luckily he possesses a strong singing voice, which helps in advancing the tale somewhat. And though he’s clearily a parody of the stadium-filling 1990s misogynistic mega-stars, his Henry never really commands the stage despite his turning his microphone into a nose-smashing bolo, Cotillard is a more serene, calming presence as Ana, though her singing voice doesn’t quite fill the cavernous venues we see her work, and often a considerable distance from the audience. And while she conveys well Ann’s explosion of erotic ecstasy, we can’t quite buy them as a domestic couple, as Henry looms over Ann at every other moment. Helberg lightens things up a bit as the never-named “conductor” (which Henry calls him in a song as “my conductor friend”), especially in his big solo number. As he details his unfulfilled passion for Ann, he tells us “Excuse me for a moment” as he whips a full orchestra (and a chorus) into a rousing crescendo.

Oh my, where to start. Yes, that opening group number is catchy, but the rest of the songs just evaporate as they drift past our ears. Now there are stretches of spoken dialogue, but the singing drops in at the oddest times, almost to the point of camp. Henry can warble a melody as he…well…performs his “husbandly duties” in one of many achingly awkward sex scenes. Ah, but Ann gets equal time as she tosses off a tune while smoking and “takin’ care a’ bizness'” while on the “throne”. Oh, about the smoking…yecch! Driver’s Henry puffs away while shadow-boxing and eating a banana (!) in prep for his concerts (he really chain-smokes through the whole darn thing). And when he does make his stage entrance he sputters and hacks as he complains about the cloud of stage smoke (ala solo singers) he walks through. And who knows why he tosses off the chorus of Tom Lehrer’s “National Brotherhood Week” (now there’s a classic song), much to the delight of his lemming-like fans, who along with a quartet of lady singers (a comic has backup singers) form a massive “Greek chorus”. This is one of many bizarre choices of director Leos Carax. A scene at sea has a rear projection backdrop that would be more at home in a 50s “B” picture. But I’m skirting around the “elephant in the room”, namely the title character of Annette. Though she’s hidden in the trailer, other media news outlets have let the “secret” out. It is a puppet, or to be more precise a marionette, one that looks to have hopped (or skittishly glided) out of an early 70s Gerry Anderson kids sci-fi show. When I came to the realization, I was stunned (I can imagine movie audiences with their mouths agape similar to the reaction to “Springtime for Hitler” in the 1967 THE PRODUCERS). A friend explained to me how a doll or puppet is a staple of stage operas. Well, this is a movie and it couldn’t be more distracting. Whew, glad I vented. But this is representative of the stilted script from the Maels brothers that combines elements of so many basic cable TV “marriage misery” films with, not joking here, the theme of the Chuck Jones Looney Tunes classic “One Froggy Evening” (sorry Mr. Jones and Michigan J.) This is pretentious “artsy-schmartzy” drek that aspires to be a scathing commentary on the times. I just hope that theatre owners make sure that their now spartan staff have plenty of “return” screening passes for patrons who can’t make it through all 140 excruciating minutes (it would be barely tolerable as an extended music video or an experimental short), I think the “Sparks brothers’ are talented music-makers, but…maybe Tati and Burton really wisely listened to their instincts. At least I can say that the scenes of LA at night, as Henry races down the Sunset Strip, are well done. But as for the drivel around those scenes, well, somebody please toss a net over ANNETTE (let me at least delight in a pun)! Hey Geppetto, come get yer’ kid!

One-Half Out of 4

ANNETTE is now playing in select theatres

Adam Driver and Marion Cotillard in ANNETTE Opens Friday at The Hi-Pointe Theatre in St. Louis

The Hi-Pointe Theater, at 1005 McCausland Ave in St. Louis, is the best place to see movies.Adam Driver and Marion Cotillard in ANNETTE opens this Friday August 6th at The Hi-Pointe. The Hi-Pointe’s site can be found HERE

Henry (Adam Driver) is a stand-up comedian with a fierce sense of humor who falls in love with Ann (Marion Cotillard), a world-renowned opera singer. Under the spotlight, they form a passionate and glamorous couple. The birth of their first child, Annette, a mysterious little girl with an exceptional destiny, will turn their lives upside down.  This original musical is journey of passion, love & fame.

New Trailer For ANNETTE Stars Adam Driver And Marion Cotillard – Opening Film At 74th Cannes Film Festival, In theaters August 6 And August 20 On Prime Video

Los Angeles, today. Henry (Adam Driver) is a stand-up comedian with a fierce sense of humor who falls in love with Ann (Marion Cotillard), a world-renowned opera singer. Under the spotlight, they form a passionate and glamorous couple. The birth of their first child, Annette, a mysterious little girl with an exceptional destiny, will turn their lives upside down.

A film by visionary director Leos Carax (Holy Motors), with Story & music by Ron & Russel Mael of The Sparks, this original musical is journey of passion, love & fame.

ANNETTE opens in theaters August 6 and debuts August 20 on Prime Video. It is also opening the 74th Cannes Film Festival.

ANNETTE also stars Simon Helberg and is written by Ron Mael and Russell Mael.

Interesting fact: Nine years after HOLY MOTORS, presented in Competition, Leos Carax will unveil in Cannes his new feature.

ASSASSIN’S CREED – Review

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In the last remaining days of 2016, Hollywood turns, once more, to a popular source for another box office blockbuster. This isn’t a prequel, sequel, spin-off, or reboot. And this new release isn’t an adaptation of a stage show like FENCES, or a TV show, nor a comic book (or a prose best seller). Once again the studios roll the dice on another try at launching a big franchise based on a video game (or in this case a series of games). This past summer, movie audiences were largely indifferent to THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE (based on an “app” game) and WARCRAFT (except in China, where it was a massive hit). Like the latter, this new flick’s inspiration as been on the gaming shelves for a good long time, nearly ten years. But unlike that earlier movie, this sports a very prestigious international cast. Oddly enough, the leading lady and man teamed with this director last year at this time for a new big screen version of the classic stage work MAC… (whoops, guess I’d better be cautious and say “the Scottish play”). It’s a big jump from Shakespeare to ASSASSIN’S CREED.

The story starts with a flashback (way, way back) to the end of the 15th century, in Spain, as a new member joins the society of assassins. We follow an eagle soaring from there all the way to California in the late 1980’s (and boy, are his wings tired). Eight year-old Cal Lynch pedals his bike to his home in a dusty desert town, just in time to find his mortally wounded mother. Oh, and his pop is in this weird hooded outfit, just like the assassins from the opening. It looks like a dagger from a strange glove/gauntlet he’s wearing took her out. No time for explanations as the sound of helicopters and several cars and trucks interrupt the silence. Little Cal escapes into the desert, and thirty years later the adult Cal (Michael Fassbender) is on death row in a Texas prison. It’s his birthday…and his last day. Cal is strapped down and administered a lethal injection. He blacks out as the poison makes its way through the tube leading to his vein. And then he wakes up in a lab/hospital. Hovering over him is the woman in charge, Sofia (Marion Cotillard). Cal’s death was faked in order to help in the scientific research begun by her father Rikkin (Jeremy Irons). They are searching for a baseball-size orb called the “apple of Eden” which will enable them to end violence around the globe for all time. Since Cal is a direct descendant of those 15th century assassins who last had the Eden orb, Sofia hooks him up to a memory exploration device called the Animus. As his ancestor Aguilar, Cal will find the orb when his brain is jacked into the Animus (the ultimate simulator) system. But Cal is not the only ancestor, a group of descendants are already there plotting an escape from the complex. But will this thwart the mission and finally end Cal’s new chance at life?

Well, that’s about all that sinks in from this rambling, incoherent mess. We’re in the modern day, now we’re back in 1492, but we’re still really in both. And so on to the point of delirium. What a waste of an incredibly talented cast. Many of his fans will be pleased that Mr. Fassbender is sans shirt for most of the film (just interferes with the tech I guess), but he’s got little to do dramatically as either Cal or Aguilar (his eyes are nearly always in shadow because of that #*%# hood!). He does get to bellow and howl the lyrics to Patsy’s Cline classic “Crazy” for no real reason. His considerable charisma can’t jump start this story. The recent ALLIED reminded us that Cotillard can be charming and compelling in an action thriller, but her role of Sofia exists mostly to explain the techno-babble to Cal, then have quiet, moral discussions with her papa (she gets to scream “I’ve got this!” to her over-zealous security team a couple a’ times). Her psuedo-Brit accent makes many of her lines difficult to grasp, maybe to heighten her connection to Irons, who has done this “noble intellectual hiding sinister intentions” role far too often. Two other wonderful actors, Brendan Gleeson and Charlotte Rampling, are underused in mere cameos.

 

Now I’m sure most of the “gamers” are just interested in the action sequences, but director Justin Kurzel shoots them in the dullest, most confusing way possible. Of course, there’s the “Matrix-inspired” changes in speed from kinetic fast to “super slo-mo” and back again, augmented by rapid-fire cuts, editing in a way that disconnects us from the main protagonists (that’s Cal, no that’s the lady assassin, no that’s…). There are far too many sweeping , soaring overhead shots with that omnipresent eagle (or is it a falcon?). One big rescue sequence with two wagons rumbling toward a cliff is near unwatchable thanks to the constant dust and dirt paired with headache-inducing sun flares. An escape from a fiery fate leads to an absurd rooftop battle that seems to be right from a ninja arcade game. All the fights come to abrupt conclusions when there’s a connection glitch and Cal is out cold. When things are working well, the flow of the action sequences is disrupted by cut aways to the modern Cal fighting “ghost images” of what’s playing in his head. Frustrating? You bet! And at nearly two hours, it’s truly a mind-numbing chore. I’m sure the studio hopes that this will be that start of a film franchise similar to the game series (nearly twenty incarnations for different systems and platforms), but it’s a sure bet that ASSASSIN’S CREED will return and stay on the small home screens rather than returning to the big screens at the multiplex. Okay, I’m ready for the fan fury, because this barely merits…

1 Out of 5

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ALLIED – Review

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“It’s still the same old story…”, but told it a new way. That old story being one of a couple that finds romance during wartime. In the case of this new film, that time is the early 1940’s, soon after the US entered World War II. There have been lots of great romances set in that period, such as THE ENGLISH PATIENT and, of course, CASABLANCA. As a matter of fact, this new film begins in that exact locale. But while other movies would do the final fade-out with its stars driving off into the desert (usually toward the setting sun), this tale’s drama is just starting. That drama is when two people from different worlds are united by a global threat, then soon become more than a couple ALLIED by war.

The aforementioned desert fills the screen in the film’s opening shot. French Morocco’s hills and dunes are the landing spot for a lone parachutist. Soon he’s picked up by a local driving a battered dusty sedan. The driver gives his passenger, Canadian pilot/special agent Max Vartan (Brad Pitt), a package containing finely tailored suits and several bits of I.D. (passport, etc.). Arriving in Casablanca, he changes clothes and heads into a bar to meet, for this first time, the agent posing as his wife. She is French resistance fighter Marianne Beausejour (Marion Cotillard), who has spent the last few weeks setting up their “cover identities” as sophisticated “ex-pats” and has become part of the town’s high society inner circle. This will earn them an invite to a fancy reception, which is the goal of their mission. While they train and prepare, Max and Marianne engage in playful banter, as they try to deny their mutual attraction. Until one day their defensive barriers melt away. When the mission is over, they cannot go their separate ways. Max returns to London where he works on bringing Marianne through the proper immigration channels. After many months, they are reunited and are soon wed. As they begin a family, Max is given a devastating assignment by a “V” agent conducting an internal investigation. This new mission may destroy his new-found happiness. Can he bring himself to complete it?

For a modern film with all the subject and setting of an “old-fashioned” “golden age” Hollywood movie, who could they cast that would emit the high-powered glamorous star power of a Bogie and Bacall or a Gable and Lombard.? Well, the producers have got a good 21st Century version in Pitt and Cotillard. Pitt brings a stoic world-weary quality to the determined soldier. He studies every new person, scans every new setting in order to be in control of every situation. This makes his second act conflict so powerful. Max is not in control any longer. Too much is left to chance, things are out of his hands. Plus the interminable waiting is unbearable.Pitt shows us that Max is only in his element when the bullets are flying. Cotillard’s Marianne is an excellent sparring partner and social guide to him. She’s confident, smart, and unwilling to defer to Max. We understand why she’s charmed the upper crust of Morocco, while learning their habits and foibles. Domesticity doesn’t dull her wits in the least. She can still read Max like a book. They make for the sexiest, most charming spy duo since, well, MR. & MRS. SMITH. The pair is superbly supported by Jared Harris, bulldog tough and sympathetic as Max’s commander Frank Heslop and Lizzy Caplan as Max’s concerned solider sister Bridget, whose open Lesbian lifestyle doesn’t seem to offend a soul.

Following up last year’s spectacular, but little scene THE WALK, veteran director Robert Zemeckis gives the story a classic movie sheen, balancing the mood-drenched dialogue exchanges with pulse-pounding action sequences. The opening mission and a jail assault are true “nail-biters”. More importantly, he knows how to linger on a look of longing or a smouldering glance. Zemeckis somehow makes being stranded in a sandstorm improbably sexy. Of course, the swooning subtle score by Alan Silvestri and the warm lush cinematography from Don Burgess add much to the mood. Oh, and that 1940’s mood is expertly recreated by a score of terrific artists. Special kudos should go to costume designer Joanna Johnston who makes Pitt and Cotillard a dazzling power couple. She glides through the mayhem in a shimmering variety of vintage gowns, while he goes from jaunty beige three-piece suits and fedoras to an impeccable black tuxedo. In one sequence they stroll through the streets evoking the Lazlos heading to the Blue Parrot in the 1943 iconic flick. Steven Knight’s script is particularly strong in those early scenes, while the pace slows a bit much during the last act making the film seem too long (just a tad over two hours). Still, if you’re in the mood for a modern take on a “late show” staple that sparkles with high “star” wattage then join Pitt and Cotillard’s alliance in ALLIED.

4 Out of 5

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Win Passes To The Advance Screening Of ALLIED In St. Louis

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ALLIED is the story of intelligence officer Max Vatan (Brad Pitt), who in 1942 North Africa encounters French Resistance fighter Marianne Beausejour (Marion Cotillard) on a deadly mission behind enemy lines. Reunited in London, their relationship is threatened by the extreme pressures of the war.

Directed by Robert Zemeckis, ALLIED opens in theaters November 23, 2016.

WAMG invites you to enter for the chance to win TWO (2) seats to the advance screening of ALLIED on Thursday, Nov. 17 at 7PM in the St. Louis area.

Answer the following:

How many Oscars have Pitt and Cotillard won combined?

TO ENTER, ADD YOUR NAME, ANSWER 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 theater is not responsible for overbooking.

RATING: R for violence, some sexuality/nudity, language and brief drug use.

WEBSITE: http://www.alliedmovie.com/

ALLIED

ASSASSIN’S CREED New Trailer and Poster Released!

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New Regency and 20th Century Fox have just revealed a NEW Trailer and Poster for the upcoming film ASSASSIN’S CREED starring Michael Fassbender and Marion Cotillard and wow, does it look amazing!!

See for yourself:

ASSASSIN’S CREED opens in theaters worldwide onDecember 21st, 2016.

And check out this cool new poster:

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SYNOPSIS
Through a revolutionary technology that unlocks his genetic memories, Callum Lynch (Michael Fassbender) experiences the adventures of his ancestor, Aguilar, in 15th Century Spain.  Callum discovers he is descended from a mysterious secret society, the Assassins, and amasses incredible knowledge and skills to take on the oppressive and powerful Templar organization in the present day.
ASSASSIN’S CREED stars Academy Award® nominee Michael Fassbender (X-Men: Days of Future Past, 12 Years a Slave) and Academy Award winner Marion Cotillard (The Dark Knight Rises, La Vie en Rose). The film is directed by Justin Kurzel (Snowtown, Macbeth); produced by New Regency, Ubisoft Motion Pictures, DMC Films and Kennedy/Marshall; co-financed by RatPac Entertainment and Alpha Pictures; and distributed by 20th Century Fox .

Brad Pitt And Marion Cotillard Star In New Trailer For ALLIED

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Brad Pitt plays Max Vatan and Marion Cotillard plays Marianne Beausejour in director Robert Zemeckis’ ALLIED from Paramount Pictures.

Check out the brand new trailer now.

ALLIED” is the story of intelligence officer Max Vatan (Pitt), who in 1942 North Africa encounters French Resistance fighter Marianne Beausejour (Cotillard) on a deadly mission behind enemy lines. Reunited in London, their relationship is threatened by the extreme pressures of the war.

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#Allied

ALLIED is in theaters November 23, 2016

Check Out The First Teaser From Robert Zemeckis’ ALLIED Starring Brad Pitt and Marion Cotillard

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Photo credit: Daniel Smith © 2016 Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

Brad Pitt plays Max Vatan and Marion Cotillard plays Marianne Beausejour in the first teaser trailer for ALLIED from Paramount Pictures.

Directed by Robert Zemeckis, ALLIED is the story of intelligence officer Max Vatan (Pitt), who in 1942 North Africa encounters French Resistance fighter Marianne Beausejour (Cotillard) on a deadly mission behind enemy lines. Reunited in London, their relationship is threatened by the extreme pressures of the war.

ALLIED is in theaters November 23.

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Website: AlliedMovie.com
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