Check out the officialtrailer for the upcoming supernatural thriller, MARIONETTE. Directed by Elbert van Strien (Two Eyes Staring), the film stars Thekla Reuten (In Bruges), Peter Mullan (Children of Men), and Elijah Wolf (T2 Trainspotting)!
In the wake of losing her husband in a seemingly random accident, child psychiatrist Marianne Winter starts life anew in Scotland. There, she begins treating a secretive 10-year-old who claims to control the future through his drawings. When his horrific sketches start coming true, Marianne begins an obsession that will derail her life and reality.
MARIONETTE is Available On Demand on Cable, Amazon, & Vimeo November 3, 2021 on Spectrum, Comcast, Cox, DirecTV, Dish, FiosExclusive Digital on Amazon and VimeoAvailable on iTunes, Vudu/Fandango, & Google Play December 3
Some treasures are better left unfound when The Vanishing arrives on Blu-ray™ (plus Digital) and DVD March 5 from Lionsgate.
Some treasures are better left unfound when The Vanishing arrives on Blu-ray™ (plus Digital) and DVD March 5 from Lionsgate. This film is currently available on Digital and On Demand. Based on a true story, this suspenseful thrillerfollows the lives of three lighthouse keepers whose worlds are turned upside down with paranoia and greed following the discovery of lost treasure. Starring Gerard Butler, Primetime Emmy® nominee Peter Mullan (Best Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or Movie, TV’s “Top of the Lake,” 2013), and Connor Swindells, and from the producers of Black Mass and Hacksaw Ridge, this film will keep you guessing until the very end. The Vanishing will be available onBlu-ray and DVD for the suggested retail price of $21.99 and $19.98, respectively.
Gerard Butler (Hunter Killer) and Peter Mullan (TV’s “Ozark”) star in this tense, action-packed thriller based on true events. After three lighthouse keepers arrive for work on a remote Scottish isle, they make a fateful discovery: a wrecked rowboat—with a chest full of gold. As a mysterious boat heads toward the island, the three men make a choice that will change their lives forever, ensnaring them in a web of greed, paranoia, and murder.
BLU-RAY / DVD / DIGITAL SPECIAL FEATURES
“Emerging from the Darkness: The Vanishing” Featurette
CAST
Gerard Butler Hunter Killer, 300, Law Abiding Citizen
Peter Mullan Children of Men, The Magdalene Sisters, TV’s “Ozark”
and Connor Swindells VS., Harlots, TV’s “Jamestown”
Witness the inspirational true story of the father-son duo who revolutionalized the modern game of golf whenTommy’s Honour arrives on Digital HD June 30 and on DVD July 18 from Lionsgate. The compelling drama features standout performances from Peter Mullan and Jack Lowden who play the father-son golf champions who grow together in their fame, fortune, and misfortune. Also starring Golden Globe® nominee Sam Neill (1999, Best Performance by an Actor in a Limited Series or Motion Picture Made for Television, Merlin) and winner of the Best Feature Film at the 2016 British Academy Scotland Awards, the Tommy’s Honour DVD will be available for the suggested retail price of $19.98. Tommy’s Honour is the inspirational, true story of “Old” Tom and “Young” Tommy Morris, the real-life father-and-son team that revolutionized the modern game of golf. Set against the early days of the sport, the film follows the challenging and complex relationship between the two as they grow into golf legends. DVD/DIGITAL HD SPECIAL FEATURES
“Far and Sure” Featurette – An Intimate Behind-the-Scenes Look at the Making of Tommy’s Honour,Featuring Jordan Spieth
CAST
Peter Mullan War Horse, Trainspotting
Jack Lowden TV’s “War & Peace,” A United Kingdom, ‘71
Ophelia Lovibond TV’s “Elementary,” Guardians of the Galaxy
and Sam Neill The Piano, Jurassic Park franchise
The critics love TOMMY’S HONOUR :
“An engrossing celebration of the game’s modern origins”
– Justin Lowe, The Hollywood Reporter
“Captures the game’s roots in St. Andrews”
– Max Adler, Golf Digest
SUNSET SONG is renowned English director Terence Davies’ adaptation of Lewis Grassic Gibbon’s Scottish novel, a drama set in rural Scotland in the years just before and during World War I. Centered on a bright Scottish young woman named Chris, the film is a powerfully moving drama that is at once visually beautiful, in its depiction of the Scottish rural landscape, and realistic in its unblinking portrait of the harshness of working-class farm life and the devastating impact of war.
Agyness Deyn brilliantly plays the lead character, Chris Guthrie, whom we follow from her days as the brightest student in her rural school to her years as a young woman confronting the devastating horror of war from the home front. Chris is a girl who dreams of poetry and of becoming a teacher, and her kind-hearted mother Jean (Daniela Nardini) dotes on her gifted daughter, ensuring she has the time to attend the local college for which she won a scholarship. However, the whole family defers to Chris’ harshly religious, and selfish father John (Peter Mullan) dominates the family, and is particularly abusive towards Chris’ beloved brother Will (Jack Greenlees).
Kevin Guthrie plays Ewan Tavendale, who eventually falls for Chris, while Ian Pirie plays as Chae Strachan and Douglas Rankine play Long Rob, neighbors and friends who play important roles in their lives. Deyn imparts a dark viewpoint, with touches of dry humor, and poetic sensibility to her role as the strong-willed Chris. The film is told from Chris’ point-of view, and is often narrated by her as we follow her from days as a school girl through the challenges of her hard family life and into young adulthood, where the first world war reaches out disrupt their world.
A film adaption of a beloved Scottish novel, one whose themes include resentment towards the distant English rulers, by a filmmaker who has been called a “most English director” seems fraught with risk. Yet, Davies crafts a striking, moving drama that captures the harshness and beauty of the remote land and the devastation of the war on a generation, and a film that is a sort of feminist raised fist, in the form of an indomitable young woman.
The director’s work has been described as poetic realism, a description that fits this film well. Davies’ previous films include an acclaimed adaption of Edith Wharton’s “House of Mirth” but the hard life of this Scottish lass is portrayed with a stark, gritty realism that audiences might not expect in a film some might call a historical or costume drama. At the same time, the lead character’s voice of narration lead a naturalistic yet poetic tone, as the young girl reflects on the beauty of the landscape, her love of the natural world, the way the land endures generation to generation. The narration also allows her to voice her darker inner thoughts, her resentment of the limits placed on women, especially bright ones like herself, and her particular circumstances with her harsh, selfish father. There is a sense of foreboding that often permeates the film, creating a tension that something awful is about to happen.
The film’s visual beauty comes from the natural world and the landscape in which it is set. The human landscape is stripped of artificial prettiness, as are the actors’ performances, but the photography captures all the beauty of the land as well as the compelling drama of the characters’ ordinary, working-class farm lives.
A scene that illustrates the film’s remarkable balance between realism and romantic beauty is the one where Chris and Ewan first connect romantically. As they walk along a village street lined with quaint stone shops, Ewan starts to cross the street to her but suddenly is blocked by a flock of beautiful black-faced white sheep, herded by a border collie, who fill the road and create a living stream of shifting life he must struggle through to reach her. The scene is visually lovely but also slightly comic, realistically presented and symbolic.
The film has a surprising feminist slant to it, and it also touches on political movements of the time and the war that virtually wiped out a whole generation of young men. Characters discuss the then-new idea of socialism and express their resentment of the aristocratic class, particularly their distant English rulers. Before the war intrudes, the characters exist in a land that seems remote from the rest of the world, and they sport a pride in their Scottish history. At school, Chris is acknowledged as their best student and wins a scholarship to a nearby college. But her options are limited by being female and by her family’s working class status. The family rents the land they farm, and money is tight, but Chris’ life is particularly shaped by her father’s whims and ego.
There are both emotional highs and lows in this gripping story. For the first part of the film, the emotional tone is often tense, as if something awful were looming, but then shifts dramatically to one of hope. Scenes of poverty, hard-work and the events of daily life in this rural landscape are played for realism, although anything graphically violent is avoided. When the father savagely beats his son, we see the son’s face, not his back but we also see the father turn the belt so the buckle strikes the boy’s back.. When a woman struggles in childbirth, we hear realistic screams, not something genteel and sanitized. As one character puts it, “we’re not gentry.”
This moving drama’s focus and point of view is almost entirely that of young Chris. The film is both personal and epic, following one woman’s life through a time of change, as a timeless rural Scottish life, where Scottish history and traditions are revered, are changed by the slow seeping in of ideas from the larger world and finally a war that nearly wiped out a whole generation of young men, and which swept away monarchies and centuries-old social institutions, to create the modern world. The film is also both starkly realistic and deeply romantic, with its unblinking depiction of hardships of life contrasted with the magical feel of young love, and a love for the land they live in. It also touches on issues about a war that has been described as the world’s first modern war, as well as a conflict that devastated a generation. The film deals with those facts indirectly, through the raw heartbreak of Chris’s experiences.
Everything in Chris’ life is handled with remarkable realism, and the acting is impressive throughout. The one scene that does not seem to ring true is when Ewan returns home to Chris briefly, after being inducted in the army and trained but before being sent to France. His course behavior before even seeing combat is hard to reconcile with how the character had been portrayed up to that point. It strikes a false note, and leaves the audience puzzled and unsettled, although the film does recover from the misstep. The film’s final scene, again focused on Chris, is moving and heartbreaking in the extreme.
SUNSET SONG is a moving film of love and loss, brilliantly acted and masterfully directed, set in a pivotal moment in history.
Warner Bros. Pictures today announced that it has assembled a big cast of stars for JUNGLE BOOK: ORIGINS, its new big-screen, 3D adaptation of Rudyard Kipling’s classic The Jungle Book, marking the feature film directorial debut of Andy Serkis.
The action adventure, which will blend motion capture and live action, will be released on October 21, 2016.
Meanwhile, Disney’s THE JUNGLE BOOK will be in theaters a full year earlier. Helmed by Jon Favreau, this film will star Bill Murray, Christopher Walken, Giancarlo Esposito, Ben Kingsley, Lupita Nyong’o, Idris Elba and Scarlett Johansson, and will released October 9, 2015.
The actors performing the roles of the JUNGLE BOOK: ORIGINS’ central animal characters are: Benedict Cumberbatch (“The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug”) as the fearsome tiger, Shere Khan; Oscar winner Cate Blanchett (“Blue Jasmine”) as the sinister snake, Kaa; Oscar winner Christian Bale (“The Fighter,” the “Dark Knight” Trilogy) as the cunning panther, Bagheera; Andy Serkis (“Dawn of the Planet of the Apes”) as the wise bear, Baloo; Peter Mullan (“Hercules”) as the leader of the wolf pack, Akela; Tom Hollander as the scavenging hyena, Tabaqui; Naomi Harris (“Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom”) as Nisha, the female wolf, who adopts the baby Mowgli as one of her cubs; Eddie Marsan (“Ray Donovan”) as Nisha’s mate, Vihaan; and Jack Reynor (“Transformers: Age of Extinction”) as Mowgli’s Brother Wolf.
On the human side, young actor Rohan Chand (“The Hundred-Foot Journey,” “Bad Words”) will play the boy raised by wolves, Mowgli.
The story follows the upbringing of the human child Mowgli, raised by a wolf pack in the jungles of India. As he learns the often harsh rules of the jungle, under the tutelage of a bear named Baloo and a panther named Bagheera, Mowgli becomes accepted by the animals of the jungle as one of their own. All but one: the fearsome tiger Shere Khan. But there may be greater dangers lurking in the jungle, as Mowgli comes face to face with his human origins.
The film is being produced by Steve Kloves, who wrote seven of the “Harry Potter” films. Jonathan Cavendish (“Elizabeth: The Golden Age,” performance capture producer “Godzilla”) is also serving as a producer. The screenplay is by Kloves’ daughter, Callie Kloves, based on the stories by Kipling.
Paramount Pictures and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures’ film HERCULES, starring Dwayne Johnson, bows on July 25th.
Based on Radical Comics’ Hercules by Steve Moore, this ensemble-action film is a revisionist take on the classic myth, HERCULES.
Directed by Brett Ratner, the epic action film also stars Golden Globe Winner Ian McShane, Rufus Sewell, Joseph Fiennes, Peter Mullan and Academy Award-nominee John Hurt.
WAMG invites you to enter to win passes to the advance screening on Thursday, July 24th at 6pm in the St. Louis area.
Answer the following:
Name 3 actors who have played Hercules – film or TV.
OFFICIAL RULES:
1. YOU MUST BE IN THE ST. LOUIS AREA THE DAY OF THE SCREENING.
2. ENTER YOUR NAME AND ANSWER IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION BELOW.
3. YOU MUST SUBMIT THE CORRECT ANSWER TO OUR QUESTION ABOVE TO WIN. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.
Dwayne Johnson wants YOU to follow his epic fitness and diet guide to becoming a warrior!
Participate with your own tips and progress using #TeamHercules
#TeamHercules is a epic fitness, diet and motivational program driven by Dwayne Johnson. Follow Dwayne Johnson on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram, and visit www.TeamHercules.com over the coming weeks for exclusive workouts, diet tips and motivation from Hercules himself. Update with your own tips and progress with #TeamHercules.
Paramount Pictures and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures’ film HERCULES, starring Dwayne Johnson, bows on July 25th.
Based on Radical Comics’ Hercules by Steve Moore, this ensemble-action film is a revisionist take on the classic myth, HERCULES.
Directed by Brett Ratner, the epic action film also stars Golden Globe Winner Ian McShane, Rufus Sewell, Joseph Fiennes, Peter Mullan and Academy Award-nominee John Hurt.
Watch this new clip from HERCULES with the son of Zeus himself, Dwayne The Rock Johnson.
From director Brett Ratner, HERCULES will be in theaters July 25th.
Paramount Pictures and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures’ film HERCULES, starring Dwayne Johnson, bows on July 25th. Based on Radical Comics’ Hercules by Steve Moore, this ensemble-action film is a revisionist take on the classic myth, HERCULES.
The epic action film also stars Golden Globe Winner Ian McShane, Rufus Sewell, Joseph Fiennes, Peter Mullan and Academy Award-nominee John Hurt.
Paramount Pictures and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures’ film HERCULES, starring Dwayne Johnson, hits theaters July 25th. Check out the teaser poster for director Brett Ratner’s film and come back tomorrow to see the first trailer.
Based on Radical Comics’ Hercules by Steve Moore, this ensemble-action film is a revisionist take on the classic myth, HERCULES. The epic action film also stars Golden Globe Winner Ian McShane, Rufus Sewell, Joseph Fiennes, Peter Mullan and Academy Award®-nominee John Hurt.
The screenplay is by Ryan Condal and Evan Spiliotopoulos.
Everyone knows the legend of Hercules and his twelve labors. Our story begins after the labors, and after the legend…
Haunted by a sin from his past, Hercules has become a mercenary. Along with five faithful companions, he travels ancient Greece selling his services for gold and using his legendary reputation to intimidate enemies. But when the benevolent ruler of Thrace and his daughter seek Hercules’ help to defeat a savage and terrifying warlord, Hercules finds that in order for good to triumph and justice to prevail… he must again become the hero he once was… he must embrace his own myth… he must be Hercules.
The behind-the-scenes creative team led by Ratner includes: Academy Award®-nominee director of photography Dante Spinotti (“THE INSIDER,” “LA CONFIDENTIAL”), editor Mark Helfrich (“X-MEN: THE LAST STAND”), production designer Jean-Vincent Puzos (“10,000 B.C.”), costume designer Jany Temime (“SKYFALL”), 2nd Unit director Alexander Witt (“SKYFALL”), VFX supervisor John Bruno (“AVATAR”), SFX Supervisor Neil Corbould (“BLACK HAWK DOWN”) and stunt coordinator Greg Powell (“FAST & FURIOUS 6,” “HARRY POTTER” franchise).
Few living things on this planet are more majestic than a horse. Creatures of graceful beauty and tremendous strength, almost as closely bonded with mankind as the dog, yet as a civilized species we’ve put the horse through so much over our centuries old relationship with the gentle giants.
WAR HORSE, directed by Steven Spielberg, offers a glimpse into the life of just one of these fine creatures. The story is told from the perspective of one horse named Joey, raised from a freshly born colt by an Irish farm boy named Albert (played by Jeremy Irvine) who immediately forms a strong friendship, only to be devastated when World War I hits home and the horse is sold into the cavalry by Albert’s father Ted (played by Peter Mullan).
What follows is the emotional journey of Joey through the trials and tribulations of war. Joey trades hands multiple times, his possession transferred from the British cavalry to German soldiers and to a frail young country girl and her pacifist grandfather. The film’s journey has no central human character, but several roles filling a segmented timeline. This creates a sort of anthology effect, allowing the viewer to more easily experience how this one horse could bring people together as it does.
WAR HORSE has two specific strong points; the performance – if you will allow me the liberty to call it such – of the horse playing Joey, and the gorgeous cinematography from Janusz Kaminski, a regular collaborator of Spielberg’s. The soft, glowing warmth of the scenes away from war and the colder, gray tinged scenes during and surrounding the war, compliment each other, but also often coincide and crossover to meld the two realities into one inseparable truth of the time and place of the film.
No one performance truly stands out amongst the human actors, except maybe that of Neils Arestrup’s as the frail girl Emilie’s Grandfather, the most endearing and convincingly unique performance. Otherwise, the entire cast performed wonderfully in their respective roles, never reaching beyond the scope of their purpose. The cast of many youthful and a few veteran names include Emily Watson as Albert’s mother, Benedict Cumberbatch, Tom Hiddleston, David Thewlis and Eddie Marsan.
The original score for WAR HORSE is composed by the legendary John Williams – you know… the guy who helped immortalize Luke Skywalker, Indiana Jones and Superman in our collective aural memory. Surprisingly, the music in this film does not display that characteristically dominating presence of Williams’ most recognizable work, instead slipping into the background to near subliminal effect. I personally didn’t even realize I was listening to John Williams until reaching the end credits, when for the first time, his music became vividly apparent.
WAR HORSE is just as much about the tough times as it is about the horse’s journey. One thing I relished in observing during this film was the attention given to details and lesser known facts about World War I. There is one very powerful scene in the third act that takes place in no man’s land between the British and German trenches. The grounds are obliterated, bodies mangled and tossed about the tangled chaos of the barbed wire. This is not a violent scene, but rather an incredibly poignant and uplifting scene depicting an example of occurrences that actually took place during the war. While WWI and WWII may share very similar names and scopes of conflict, they were in fact two very different wars with two very different pairs of warring sides.
In the end, WAR HORSE delivers on the type of ending most audiences will expect and want, which is fine because it’s warranted in this film. Expect a journey that lasts just barely more than two hours, but doesn’t feel exceedingly long, a journey that will touch the animal lover within and remind us that wars are waged by governments, but fought be regular Joes, and Joeys.