THE TROUBLE WITH JESSICA – Review

Indira Varma, Olivia Williams, Alan Tudyk, Shirley Henderson, and Rufus Sewell, in THE TROUBLE WITH JESSICA. Courtesy of Music Box Films

The British dark comedy THE TROUBLE WITH JESSICA has trouble for all, in a satirical tale where a dinner party between old friends goes so very, very wrong. Director Matt Winn’s dark tale features a starry British cast, with Rufus Sewell, Shirley Henderson, Alan Tudyk and Olivia Williams, with Indira Varma as Jessica. The trouble with Jessica (Indira Varma) is that she is a lot of trouble, something which architect Tom (Alan Tudyk) and wife Sarah (Shirley Henderson) already have in abundance. And what happens when she comes to dinner is even more trouble. However, the film THE TROUBLE WITH JESSICA has plenty of troubles of its own.

Tom and Sarah appear to have a comfortable life but they are in a terrible financial bind, due to a big architectural project that fell through, and now they are forced to sell their lovely London home. The good news is that they have found a buyer just in time to rescue them from financial disaster. The married couple are planning to have one last dinner party in their home before they must leave, with just their best friends, Richard (Rufus Sewell) and Beth (Olivia Williams), whom they have known since college.

But then Tom gets a phone call from Richard, asking if they can bring along another old friend from college, Jessica. Reluctantly, Tom agrees, optimistically hoping it is alright with wife Sarah. It’s not, but now they’re stuck. The trouble with beautiful Jessica is she is braggy and self-absorbed, and with her new book, a memoir, a bestseller, she’ll be more so. Plus, as Sarah complains, she always flirts with her husband Tom, although Tom points out Jessica flirts with everyone. But Tom has cooked plenty of food for another guest, including his signature special dessert, a clafoutis.

American audiences may not be familiar with this French dessert but it is a cherry, custard and sponge cake favorite featured on British baking shows, so anyone arriving in the house in this British dark comedy will recognize the tasty treat. And the appealing dessert becomes part of the plot.

The dinner guests arrive, and Jessica does flirt with both men and she does get on Sarah’s nerves. After a seemingly minor remark, Jessica leaves the table in a huff. When the dessert is brought out, someone eventually goes out into the back garden to check on her, where they find Jessica has hanged herself.

And this is where things get really weird. You would expect that finding that a long-time friend, no matter how much she irritates you, has committed suicide would create more of a emotional reaction, shock if not grief, in the friends that find her. And it does, but more briefly and less deeply than you would expect. That moment of shock, grief, even guilt, passes very quickly, although Beth, who is the more emotional one in the group and prone to moralizing too, holds on to is much longer, further into film.

There is something both unconvincing and creepy about the characters’ reactions to the suicide, reactions that would be cold even if she were a stranger. It makes the situation unconvincing and makes the characters seem unsympathetic as well.

The friends’ reaction is this: The suicide in shocking enough but doing it in someone else’s garden? Outrageous. Who does that? So inconsiderate because it creates special problems. Quickly, Sarah thinks of one special problem: will the suicide impact the sale of the house? Will the buyers back out because someone died there? Beth immediately chides Sarah for her coldness, but the others agree that it does seem likely to cause trouble. So Sarah hatches a plan: instead of calling the police or an ambulance, they move Jessica’s body to her own apartment and make it look like the suicide happened there. Then Sarah sets about bullying everyone else into going along with it.

Gallows humor rules the day, and the dead body becomes a prop, which might have worked if the comedy were broader. What is ensues is a series of bad decisions and bad behavior, as personalities clash, and events bring out the worst in everyone, plus a few secrets too. Everyone has their flaws: hard-eyed Sarah is a manipulator, lawyer Richard is a liar, moralist Beth is a hypocrite, and architect Tom is a dreamer who thinks it will all work out fine in the end. But there is isn’t anything very surprising in the way the film mocks these too-comfortable people.

However, the cast of British powerhouse talents are fantastic, and do what they can to milk the script for darkly comic stuff, a script that turns farcical every time someone new, like the police or a nosy neighbor (Anne Reid), turns up at the door. Which happens more than you’d think.

The cast is strong even if the film’s basic concept isn’t, with Scottish actor Shirley Henderson leading the pack. American audiences may know her best from a string of Mike Leigh films, like TOPSY TURVY or the Harry Potter ones. As Tom’s accountant wife, Henderson’s Sarah knows that selling their house is the only way out of their financial pickle, after architect Tom’s big grand project, for which he borrowed after losing his backer, went bust. She brings all her iron will, and some blackmail, to bear in pressuring the others to go along with her illegal plan.

Rufus Sewell is close behind, also giving a good performance as a character who has a charming demeanor but all kinds of moral shadiness. American audiences may recognize Sewell from his roles in “The Diplomat,” “Man in the High Castle” or PBS’ “Victoria,” and he sparkles here as egotistical, slippery lawyer Richard, whose specialty is defending rapists, although he claims to hate it.

Olivia Williams’ teary-eyed Beth seems ready to clutch her metaphorical pearls as she tries to claim the moral high ground, only to cave-in to pressure. Alan Tudyk’s Tom, the architect, just seems to want to stay out of everyone’s way, while closing his eyes and hoping it will all work out in the end.

The characters’ troubles, twists and bad decisions are divided into chapters with on-screen titles that all begin “The Trouble With..,” followed by “moving a body” or so forth. That is a technical flaw in a film that is already queasy on a humanity level. There are too many of these inserted title cards, all with little darkly funny comments, and they break up the flow of the action a bit too often. While the titles do focus our attention on the characters’ foibles or dilemmas, ethical and otherwise, they also break our concentration and take us out of the film, and sometimes make the film feel a bit smug itself.

Surprisingly often, more people arrive at the door, a few of which make it inside. Every time they do, the newcomer inevitably gazes longingly at, and comments on, the tempting dessert, the fruit-studded creamy clafoutis, on the table, placed there shortly before the discovery of the body and all the trouble started. That dessert even plays a role before all it done,

While there is some biting satire, plenty gallows humor, and darkly funny moments poking fun at these people’s human foibles, and it does feature a splendid cast, but there is a certain limpness in what should have been a wild tale of a quiet dinner gone oh-so-wrong where a dessert might help save the day

THE TROUBLE WITH JESSICA opens Friday, Apr. 25, at selected theaters.

RATING: 2.5 out of 4 stars

OLD – Review

(from left) Mid-Sized Sedan (Aaron Pierre), Prisca (Vicky Krieps), Guy (Gael García Bernal) and Chrystal (Abbey Lee) in OLD, written for the screen and directed by M. Night Shyamalan. Courtesy of Universal Pictures.

There is hardly anything scarier to Hollywood, or even to American culture generally, than growing old, and something that makes aging happen much more rapidly would be terrifying. So M. Night Shyamalan’s latest thriller OLD, where a group of people find themselves on a beach that compresses years of aging into hours, hits a cultural nerve, and has inherent potential for social commentary. Whether this director will use that potential, or even acknowledge it, is a big question going in to seeing this film.

A couple Guy (Gael Garcia Bernal) and Prisca (Vicky Krieps) and their 6-year-old son Trent (Nolan River) and 11-year-old Maddox (Alexa Swinton) check in to posh tropical resort for a family vacation. The wife found a deal on resort, and the family is pleased with their find as soon as they arrive, as they immediately are welcomed by the attentive staff with cocktails specially designed for their tastes. While the parents enjoy their cocktails, the kids check out their own candy and beverage bar, where their 6-year-old son Trent meets a boy who lives at the resort with his uncle and a friendship quickly forms.

The family looks happy but it soon becomes clear the pair on the verge of a breakup. Further, the wife has been diagnosed with a slow-growing tumor, although she is the one who is leaving the marriage. The next morning, the resort manager (Gustaf Hammarsten) approaches the family to offer a special treat: a day at a secret private beach hidden in a nature reserve, an excursion only offered to a select few. They gladly accept but as they are loaded into the van, they find they are not the only ones on the outing. Joining them are another couple, a nurse (Ken Leung) and his psychologist wife (Nikki Amuka-Bird ) and the family of a doctor (Rufus Sewell), with his much younger trophy wife (Abbey Lee), their 6-year-old daughter Kara (Mikaya Fischer) and his mother Agnes (Kathleen Chalfant) who has brought along her little dog. The resort provides beach chairs and umbrella, and a very full picnic basket, but no help getting that to the beach. As the driver (director Shyamalan) leaves, he tells them he’ll be back at 5 p.m. to pick them up. All they have to do is follow the path through a slot canyon and down to the beach.

The beach is beautiful as promised but a few odd things turn up right away. For one thing, there is someone already there, an African American man (Aaron Pierre) who looks a bit dazed and turns out to be a hip hop star with the improbable name of Mid-sized Sedan (one of the film’s few touches of humor). Soon become much weirder, and the vacationers quickly figure out the something is aging them (some more quickly than others). They also discover their phones don’t work and when they try to leave, something renders them unconscious. They appear to be trapped.

OLD, which is based on a graphic novel, has a fast-running ticking clock crossed with the familiar device of a group of people stuck together, which gives it a thriller set-up with a sci-fi/horror premise. That the threat is time and age, gives the story an extra twist, opening the door to a host of intriguing possibilities. As you expect, the people on the beach have a number of issues and getting them to work together to solve their mutual problem is a challenge in itself.

Sadly but maybe not surprisingly, Shyamalan largely passes on the social commentary potential and just goes for interpersonal conflict and ticking-clock terror. The film starts out well but then problems develop.

Here’s the problem: the sci-fi premise of M Night Shyamalan’s OLD requires an enormous suspension of disbelief upfront, and I’m fine with that. But then internal inconsistencies keep popping up that you have to keep overlooking. Then there is the surprising passivity of the people trapped in this situation. They quickly become consumed by internal concerns, like the parents’ panic over their children growing up. The few attempts at escape fail but there seems to be little organized effort and more personal introspection. The children seem to age faster than the adults, who hardly show a wrinkle, and there seems to be something about the food. While they hardly show external age, hidden medical conditions advance.

The gifted Gael Garcia Bernal and Vicky Krieps carry most of the dramatic load, creating a touching, layered portrait of a relationship evolving under pressure. Rufus Sewell is good as the arrogant doctor but both he and Abbey Lee as his looks-obsessed trophy wife have one-note characters. The children are played by several actors, including Thomasin McKenzie, who did impressive work in LEAVE NO TRACE and JOJO RABBIT, and Alex Wolff, who play the couple’s children in their teenage years. Embeth Davidtz and Emun Elliot are also good as grown versions of the characters. Ken Leung is a standout in the supporting role as a nurse who tries to bring others together, with strong backing by Nikki Amuka-Bird as his caring psychologist wife.

OLD has a good premise, something with a lot of potential for a thriller – even a thinking person’s thriller – and a very good cast. The film is based on the graphic novel “Sandcastles” and certainly graphic novels have been the basis of some excellent movies and television – think “Watchmen” for example. Unfortunately, OLD abandoned its more interesting potential early, to embrace nonsensical plot elements that are riddled with internal inconsistencies. It is that lack of consistency nags at the viewer, making one ask “but if that happened, why didn’t this happen” – over and over. The repeated suspension of disbelief is exhausting, and patience is quickly exhausted as well. Add in multiple false endings and a revealed conspiracy filled with so much false anti-medicine and anti-science messaging that it is the truly scary thing in this film, and you have a hot mess. Clearly, Shyamalan has never heard of either informed consent laws or medical ethics.

If you can ignore all the inconsistencies, and clearly from the audience reaction at the screening, there are plenty of people who can, then you may be entertained by OLD. But if you can’t stop noticing inconsistencies, wondering why this happens but that doesn’t, and why they do that but not this, or gag on the preposterous villainous reveal, you won’t enjoy this disappointing film because it makes less and less sense as it goes. Shyamalan’s clunker script seems to try to blend teen horror tropes and grown-up thriller ones but the emulsion proves a challenge to keep mixed, or suspended – much like your disbelief.

It’s disappointing because the premise had potential. Most disappointing, even disturbing, is the final reveal, a nauseating false message particularly unsettling in the middle of a pandemic.

OLD is not the worse film Shyamalan has ever made, and many will find it entertaining enough, as did about two-thirds of the audience at the screening. But those hoping the director will strike visionary gold again, like in THE SIXTH SENSE or UNBREAKABLE, will find more of a strike out. OLD opens wide Friday, July 23, at multiple theaters.

RATING: 1.5 out of 4 stars

Watch The New Trailer For M. Night Shyamalan’s OLD Movie – In Theaters July 23

Universal Pictures has debuted the trailer and new poster for OLD.

This summer, visionary filmmaker and Oscar-nominated director M. Night Shyamalan (THE SIXTH SENSE, SPLIT, UNBREAKABLE) unveils a chilling, mysterious new thriller about a family on a tropical holiday who discover that the secluded beach where they are relaxing for a few hours is somehow causing them to age rapidly … reducing their entire lives into a single day.

The film stars an impressive international cast including Golden Globe winner Gael García Bernal (Amazon’s Mozart in the Jungle), Vicky Krieps (Phantom Thread), Rufus Sewell (Amazon’s The Man in the High Castle), Ken Leung (Star Wars: Episode VII—The Force Awakens), Nikki Amuka-Bird (Jupiter Ascending), Abbey Lee (HBO’s Lovecraft Country), Aaron Pierre (Syfy’s Krypton), Alex Wolff (Hereditary), Embeth Davidtz (The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo), Eliza Scanlen (Little Women), Emun Elliott (Star Wars: Episode VII—The Force Awakens), Kathleen Chalfant (Showtime’s The Affair) and Thomasin McKenzie (Jojo Rabbit).

Old is a Blinding Edge Pictures production, directed and produced by M. Night Shyamalan, from his screenplay based on the graphic novel Sandcastle by Pierre Oscar Lévy and Frederik Peeters. The film is also produced by Ashwin Rajan (Glass, AppleTV+’s Servant) and Marc Bienstock (Glass, Split). The film’s executive producer is Steven Schneider.

https://www.old.movie

Anthony Hopkins Won His Second Best Actor Oscar for THE FATHER – Available to Own on Blu-ray May 18th

NOMINATED FOR SIX ACADEMY AWARDS – WINNER OF ACTOR IN A LEADING ROLE (ANTHONY HOPKINS) 
AND WRITING (ADAPTED SCREENPLAY) – Available on Digital today and to Own on Blu-ray May 18th

A man (Anthony Hopkins) refuses all assistance from his daughter (Olivia Colman) as he ages. As he tries to make sense of his changing circumstances, he begins to doubt his loved ones, his own mind and even the fabric of his reality.

BLU-RAY, DVD AND DIGITAL BONUS MATERIALS

  • Deleted Scenes 
  • Homecoming: Making THE FATHER 
  • Perception Check: Portrait of THE FATHER 

CAST AND CREW
Directed By: Florian Zeller
Screenplay By: Christopher Hampton and Florian Zeller
Based on the Play “The Father” By: Florian Zeller
Producers: Christophe Spadone, Simon Friend, David Parfitt, Jean-Louis Livi, Philippe Carcassonne
Executive Producers: Héloïse Spadone, Alessandro Mauceri, Lauren Dark, Ollie Madden, Daniel Battsek, Tim Haslam, Hugo Grumbar, Paul Grindey
Cast: Anthony Hopkins, Olivia Colman, Mark Gatiss, Imogen Poots, Rufus Sewell, Olivia Williams

THE FATHER – Review

With Spring and its school semester breaks looming, the studios are flooding our few operating theatres and streaming apps with lots of frothy fares, from kids’ animated fantasies to “brand-name” comedy sequels and prequels. But we’re not quite done with more somber serious offerings, as the biggest movie award is still several weeks away. That’s an apt description for this stark family drama, whose major themes are so familiar to so many today. But as the pandemic shuffles along, a huge invisible fence has been placed between loved ones in crisis. This dilemma concerns the loss of an elder, not from a swift reaper’s strike, or even a slow shutdown of physical functions. Rather it’s an achingly slow mental dissolve into darkness. And in this new work, that cruel fate is reserved for the family patriarch, THE FATHER.

The title character in question is Anthony (Anthony Hopkins), a retired literary man in his early 80s who seems quite content in an opulent apartment overlooking a quiet English village. He’s preparing a nice spot of tea after a grocery run when a noise has him reaching for a kitchen blade. Ah, but it’s only his middle-aged daughter Anne (Olivia Coleman), who has dropped in for a visit and will probably try to get him to sell his beloved comfy “flat”. But she has somewhat of a bombshell, as she informs him of her intent to move to France with her boyfriend. As Anne putters about in another room, he goes into his den and discovers a mysterious man (Mark Gatiss) reading the paper. Upon questioning him (and bluffing away his responses), “Tony” is informed that the “reader” is Anne’s hubby, who is the actual owner of the place. Anthony’s at a loss at to the cause of his confusion, until the private conversation between Anne and her husband reveals that “father” is battling dementia and is losing grip on reality, unable to recall his own circumstances, as the past morphs into the present. One afternoon Anne brings in a twenty-something woman named Laura (Imogen Poots) for a casual interview (to be her dad’s live-in caregiver). Laura is at first charmed by Anthony’s antics (he does a lil’ “soft shoe”) until he begins a vicious verbal assault. As Laura hurriedly exits, Anne nearly gives in to despair as another unfamiliar (to father) face appears, the pragmatic Paul (Rufus Sewell). Eventually, Anne dissolves into a woman (Olivia Williams) whose brusk demeanor adds to Anthony’s near-constant state of agitated panic. Will his waking nightmare ever end, or is this Anthony’s “new normal”?

In a film career now entering its seventh decade, Hopkins continues to astound and surprise, particularly in this, perhaps his most vulnerable and human character. His Anthony (interesting that the role takes his own first name) is proudly independent, keen on “getting things done”, though he realizes the need to get a bit of support from his family. But his anger often gets the best of him as his frustration boils into a fury, lashing out at those who care. He thinks he can escape his constant fog by the sheer force of his will, but his intellect fails him. In the heartbreaking final act, Anthony finally slides into childhood regression and fear. And even when his patriarch crosses the line, or gives in to selfish taunts (“Why would you go to France? They don’t even speak English there.”) Hopkins elicits compassion and his superb work captivates us. He has a most gifted scene partner in another Oscar-winner. Colman as Anne has a delicate balancing act, trying not to debase Anthony while gently steering him back into reality. And though she loses her patience, her affection for him is clear. This makes her conflicted feelings so agonizing. She wants to be there for him, but still wants to lead her own life. This is driven home by the two very different aspects of her “mate”: the affable Gatiss and the forceful and determined Sewell. A bright light of hope is illuminated by the radiant Poots as Laura. She makes us feel as though her nurturing spirit restores the glow to Anthony, who then ruthlessly snuffs out her “flame” by his bombastic insults. As his last act ‘angel”, Williams mixes the right amount of gentle compassion and clinical supervision for Anthony’s final “holiday”.

Filmmaker Florian Zeller directs this adaptation of his celebrated stage play (with screenplay assist from Christopher Hampton) with a gentle guiding hand. He never “sledgehammers” the tale’s tragic elements, but avoids “softsoaping” the emotional conflicts. He’s unafraid to show Anthony’s verbal nastiness, as his pride runs roughshod over those that help, especially Anne. And without showy camera tricks or effects, Zeller conveys that disorientation, as we, along with Anthony, have the “rug pulled out from under us” as recognized faces reveal a new identity or agenda. He’s a proud lion who is finally faced with the idea of being in a cage made by his mind. No matter how he claws and roars, these bars don’t budge. Sure, we can almost feel its stage origins, as the brunt of the action happens in the apartment living room and kitchen, but Zeller never makes the film claustrophobic. The story glides and soars on the wings of the gifted ensemble. This is indeed one tough trek, one that many of us will be part of someday if not now, but thanks to that cast and a sensitive script, THE FATHER is an emotional journey worth taking.

3 Out of 4

THE FATHER opens in select theatres everywhere on Friday March 12, 2021

Martin Phipps And Ruth Barrett VICTORIA Original Soundtrack Available Now

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Dubois Records, in cooperation with Mammoth Screen and Masterpiece will release the VICTORIA – ORIGINAL SOUNDTRACK digitally on all music streaming platforms to coincide with the US release of the television series on PBS this coming weekend. The album features the limited series’ original score by multi-BAFTA and Ivor Novello winning composer Martin Phipps (Woman In Gold, The Keeping Room) and Ruth Barrett (City Of Tiny Lights, Whitechapel) with vocals from the Mediaeval Baebes. VICTORIA was first aired on ITV in the UK on August 28, 2016.

Phipps says: “The idea was to give Victoria a dynamic voice, an explosive theme through which we could rejoice in her strength & courage. The Mediaeval Baebes were the perfect sound for this. With one foot in the classical world & one in the commercial, they gave Victoria the mixture of refinement & attitude I was after.”

Barrett says: “I started composing from episode 2, weaving in some of Martin’s original themes & creating new ones to track Victoria settling into her life as a young queen, her relationship with Albert, and the changing face of Victorian England” She goes on to say, “The music gets epic towards the end of the season, for the birth of the railway and the first royal heir.”

VICTORIA depicts the tumultuous first few years of the reign of Queen Victoria; a monarch who was raised to be a pawn of her powerful elders, but who wasted no time showing the British Empire who was in charge. The series follows Victoria, played by Jenna Coleman (Doctor Who), from her accession to the thrown at the tender age of eighteen, to her fast-developing friendship and infatuation with the then prime-minister, Lord Melborne, played by Rufus Sewell (The Man in the High Castle), to her courtship and marriage to her cousin Prince Albert, played by Tom Hughes (Dancing on the Edge), with the series ending on the birth of their first child, Victoria.

VICTORIA is a co-production of Mammoth Screen and Masterpiece. It is created, written and executive produced by Daisy Goodwin. The director is Tom Vaughan (He Knew He Was Right). The directors are Sandra Goldbacher and Olly Blackburn. The producer is Paul Frift (Restless). The executive producers are Dan McCulloch and Damien Timmer for Mammoth Screen and Rebecca Eaton for Masterpiece, presented by WGBH Boston. It is distributed internationally by ITV Studios Global Entertainment.

Head over to Spotify:

https://play.spotify.com/album/2DGZPLghwcbvUebGKDtRgP

https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/victoria-original-soundtrack/id1193581563

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Coming from a musical background (he is Benjamin Britten’s godson), Martin Phipps read drama at Manchester University. Since scoring his first TV drama in 2002, he has gone on to write music for many of the most interesting series of recent years, including The Weinstein Company’s WAR AND PEACE, PEAKY BLINDERS and THE SHADOW LINE, winning 2 BAFTAs & 3 Ivor Novello Awards.

More recently Martin has moved into film, scoring WOMAN IN GOLD with Hans Zimmer, HARRY BROWN and BRIGHTON ROCK. In 2014 Martin had 2 feature film scores premiering at the Toronto Film Festival; Daniel Barber’s US indie THE KEEPING ROOM, and Morgan Matthew’s X PLUS Y.

Composer, programmer and instrumentalist, Ruth Barrett has over the last ten years amassed an impressive number of cinema and drama credits including scores for LEGACY, an intense BBC cold war drama from Dredd 3D Director Pete Travis, TOAST, BBC feature film starring Helena Bonham Carter, WALLANDER, BBC detective series starring Kenneth Brannagh, WHITECHAPEL Series 4, starring Rupert Penryn-Jones, and HARRY BROWN with composer Martin Phipps.

She most recently scored THE DURRELLS, new ITV drama series starring Keely Hawes, CITY OF TINY LIGHTS, a modern film noir set in London directed by Pete Travis and starring Riz Ahmed and LOVE NINA, a BBC comedy series starring Helena Bonham Carter. Other works have included CRITICAL starring Lenny James, REMEMBER ME, a chilling BBC drama starring Michael Palin, and HUNTED, an eight-part modern espionage thriller starring Melissa George, which aired on BBC1 and HBO Cinemax.

Tracklist:

  1. Victoria – The Suite
  2. The King Is Dead
  3. Coronation
  4. Lord M
  5. Locomotives
  6. Mirrors
  7. The Wedding
  8. The Royal Birth
  9. Privy Council
  10. A Royal Affair
  11. Victoria Titles

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/masterpiece/shows/victoria/

https://www.facebook.com/VictoriaSeries

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Win Tickets To The Advance Screening Of HERCULES In St. Louis

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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.

rating

http://www.mightyhercules.com/
https://www.facebook.com/hercules
https://twitter.com/HerculesMovie

Photos (c) 2014 Paramount Pictures and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

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Dwayne Johnson Wants You To Join Team Hercules

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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.

http://www.mightyhercules.com/
https://www.facebook.com/hercules
https://twitter.com/HerculesMovie

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HERCULES Movie Clip Stars Dwayne The Rock Johnson

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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.

http://www.mightyhercules.com/
https://www.facebook.com/hercules
https://twitter.com/HerculesMovie

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