THE TRIP TO SPAIN – Review

 

Hmmm, just a few more days until the last Summer holiday, so there’s still time for a vacation, or at least a vicarious one with a very funny duo. Here’s their third cinematic excursion together, so let’s just go ahead and call it a movie franchise. And a most welcome, entertaining one at that. As long as there are countries that cook, it could go on for a long, long time (if we’re lucky). Under the pretense of a newspaper writing assignment we first got to accompany Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon as they traveled their native Britain, dashing from one splendid restaurant, while enjoying very plush accommodations at first class inns and hotels, in 2011’s THE TRIP. The two played heightened versions of themselves (much like Larry David in HBO’s “Curb Your Enthusiasm” and the celeb guests on the much-missed “The Larry Saunders Show”), with Coogan as the egocentric ladies man while Brydon was the easy-going affable family man (a running joke was Steve’s dismay and disgust at the affection shown to Rob by folks on their journey). Three years later they took THE TRIP TO ITALY. In between heaping plates of pasta, Coogan settled down and devoted more time to his teenage son, while Brydon finally scored a big movie role as he tested his marriage vows during a “rough patch”. Sure the sightseeing and meals are spectacular, but the best part of these travelogues are the delightfully witty conversations between the men, rife with inside show biz stories sprinkled liberally with uncanny vocal impressions.

 

It’s three years and the fellows are hitting the road once more. Steve has been hired by the Observer to write a gastronomic tour of Spain, so he naturally calls Rob. His marriage has stayed strong (so strong they’ve produced a little brother for their daughter), but Rob’s been contacted by the New York times for the same type of gig, and he’s ready for a break (close-up of his screaming lil’ boy), so he’s ready for THE TRIP TO SPAIN. Steve picks him up in his rented Range Rover and they hit the road…then the sea via a luxury ferry. The other big news over the past couple years, aside from the Brydon heir, is Steve’s acclaimed work on the multi-Oscar nominated 2013 drama PHILOMENA. Its success has somewhat reverted him back to his old pompous ways (and Rob is sick of him repeating stories about the flick). He’s frustrated that the studios aren’t eager to pounce on his new film script “Missing”, and he’s fuming that his American agent has left his agency without trying to “poach” him (a young upstart has been assigned to Steve). Oh, and Steve has taken up once more with his old American girlfriend Misha (Margo Stilley), despite the fact that’s she has married since last they met. Well, at least his son Joe (Timothy Leach) is taking a break from college and is joining them during the last few days of the assignment. Meanwhile Rob is his usual jovial self, spending lots of “face time” via Skype with the wife and kids back home. And of course, he and Steve are taking in the superb scenery, exploring the country’s rich history, and devouring meals that look so good you’re glad the movie’s not in 3D!

 

 

Director Michael Winterbottom continues to orchestrate the dinners and conversations expertly, knowing when to cut from the casual duo to the precisely choreographed “dance” happening in the kitchen (these chefs and their crew are superb artists and craftspeople). As for our hosts, Coogan really gets to stretch his acting muscles this time, by presenting a talented man who doesn’t deal well with people some of the time. He’s short with his agents during phone calls and downright surly to a street musician who offers some eatery suggestions (leaving Rob to clean up his mess). As for the impressions, a few icons are revisited briefly, namely Michael Caine and Sean Connery. In some scenes Steve and Rob pay tribute to some recently departed stars, with much time awarded to Roger Moore. When the pair are visited by Coogan’s manager Emma and her photographer Yolanda (Claire Keenan and Marta Barrio once more), he tries to give them a history lesson about the Moor invasion as Brydon (still a flirt around Emma) will not stem the flow of nearly non-stop Roger rumblings. A few sequences fall a bit flat (the Brando riff as a vicious inquisitor is not helped by a fantasy reenactment), or don’t really pay off (Mick Jaggar springs to mind), but when the guys are really in the groove (meshing a torture session on the rack with a game show is inspired) we’re swept up in the masterful off the cuff brilliance. And there are the show biz insights as when the two try to convince each other that age 50 is “the prime of life” (not in Hollywood, for certain). Thanks to a misguided ending that tries for a statement (or an action film-style cliffhanger), this installment is not as strong as the previous two, but it still has more wit and punch than any two recent studio comedy misfires. After THE TRIP TO SPAIN, I’m eager to get my multiplex passport stamped once more…right after a tasty meal. of course.

 

4 Out of 5 Stars

 

THE TRIP TO SPAIN opens everywhere and screens exclusively in the St. Louis area at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Cinemas

 

Win Passes To The Advance Screening Of THE TRIP TO SPAIN In St. Louis

It’s been four years since THE TRIP TO ITALY. Now comes IFC’s third film in the series, THE TRIP TO SPAIN, from director Michael Winterbottom.

After jaunts through northern England and Italy, Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon embark on another deliciously deadpan culinary road trip. This time around, the guys head to Spain to sample the best of the country’s gastronomic offerings in between rounds of their hilariously off-the-cuff banter. Over plates of pintxos and paella, the pair exchange barbs and their patented celebrity impressions, as well as more serious reflections on what it means to settle into middle age. As always, the locales are breathtaking, the cuisine to die for, and the humor delightfully devilish.

The film opens in St. Louis August 25, 2017.

Check out this hilarious clip now.

WAMG invites you to enter for the chance to win TWO (2) seats to the advance screening of THE TRIP TO SPAIN on August 22 at 7PM in the St. Louis area.

Answer the Following:

Brydon played a dwarf in which 2016 fantasy adventure film based on characters from the German fairy tale “Snow White”?

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.

See more about the movie here: http://www.ifcfilms.com/films/the-trip-to-spain

THE TRIP TO SPAIN. Photo by Phill Fisk. Courtesy of IFC Films.

WAMG Giveaway – Win THE DINNER Blu-ray – Stars Richard Gere


Based on the international best seller of the same name, The Dinner, a dark pyshological thiller about how far parents will go to protect their children, arrives on Blu-ray (plus Digital HD) and DVD on August 8th from Lionsgate. Boasting powerful performances from an all-star cast, including Golden Globe winner Richard Gere (2003, Best Actor – Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy, Chicago), Oscar nominee Laura Linney (2007, Best Actress, The Savages), Oscar nominee Steve Coogan (2013, Best Picture,Philomena), Oscar nominee  Chloë Sevigny (1999, Best Supporting Actress, Boys Don’t Cry), and Golden Globe nominee Rebecca Hall (2009, Best Actress – Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy, Vicky Christina Barcelona), the film was nominated for Best Film at the 2017 Berlin International Film Festival. Written and directed by Oscar nominee Oren Moverman (2009, Best Writing, Original Screenplay, The Messenger), The Dinner Blu-ray and DVD include audio commentary with Moverman and Linney and a photo gallery and will be available for the suggested retail price of $24.99 and $19.98, respectively.

Now you can own the THE DINNER Blu-ray. We Are Movie Geeks has FOUR copies to give away. All you have to do is leave a comment answering this question: What is your favorite movie starring Richard Gere? (mine is PRETTY WOMAN…. – Just Kidding! – it’s AMERICAN GIGOLO!). It’s so easy!

Good Luck!

OFFICIAL RULES:

1. YOU MUST BE A US RESIDENT. PRIZE WILL ONLY BE SHIPPED TO US ADDRESSES.  NO P.O. BOXES.  NO DUPLICATE ADDRESSES.

2. WINNERS WILL BE CHOSEN FROM ALL QUALIFYING ENTRIES.

Two estranged brothers and their wives meet at a restaurant to discuss a dark crime committed by their sons. With their involvement still a secret, they must decide how far they’ll go to protect the ones they love.
BLU-RAY/DVD SPECIAL FEATURES

  • Photo Gallery
  • Audio Commentary with Writer/Director Oren Moverman and Actress Laura Linney


CAST
Richard Gere               ArbitrageChicago
Laura Linney               SullyNocturnal Animals 
Steve Coogan             PhilomenaRules Don’t Apply
Rebecca Hall               Vicky Cristina BarcelonaChristine
Chloë Sevigny             Love & FriendshipBoys Don’t Cry

THE DINNER Starring Richard Gere and Rebecca Hall Arrives on Blu-ray and DVD August 8th


Based on the international best seller of the same name, The Dinner, a dark pyshological thiller about how far parents will go to protect their children, arrives on Blu-ray (plus Digital HD) and DVD on August 8from Lionsgate. Boasting powerful performances from an all-star cast, including Golden Globe winner Richard Gere (2003, Best Actor – Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy, Chicago), Oscar nominee Laura Linney (2007, Best Actress, The Savages), Oscar nominee Steve Coogan (2013, Best Picture,Philomena), Oscar nominee  Chloë Sevigny (1999, Best Supporting Actress, Boys Don’t Cry), and Golden Globe nominee Rebecca Hall (2009, Best Actress – Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy, Vicky Christina Barcelona), the film was nominated for Best Film at the 2017 Berlin International Film Festival. Written and directed by Oscar nominee Oren Moverman (2009, Best Writing, Original Screenplay, The Messenger), The Dinner Blu-ray and DVD include audio commentary with Moverman and Linney and a photo gallery and will be available for the suggested retail price of $24.99 and $19.98, respectively.

Two estranged brothers and their wives meet at a restaurant to discuss a dark crime committed by their sons. With their involvement still a secret, they must decide how far they’ll go to protect the ones they love.
BLU-RAY/DVD SPECIAL FEATURES

  • Photo Gallery
  • Audio Commentary with Writer/Director Oren Moverman and Actress Laura Linney


CAST
Richard Gere               ArbitrageChicago
Laura Linney               SullyNocturnal Animals 
Steve Coogan             PhilomenaRules Don’t Apply
Rebecca Hall               Vicky Cristina BarcelonaChristine
Chloë Sevigny             Love & FriendshipBoys Don’t Cry

Win A Family Four Pack Of Passes To The Advance Screening Of DESPICABLE ME 3 In St. Louis

Illumination and Universal Pictures’ DESPICABLE ME 3 opens in theaters nationwide on June 30, 2017.

Illumination, who brought moviegoers Despicable Me and the biggest animated hits of 2013 and 2015, Despicable Me 2 and Minions, continues the story of Gru, Lucy, their adorable daughters—Margo, Edith and Agnes—and the Minions in Despicable Me 3. After he is fired from the Anti-Villain League for failing to take down the latest bad guy to threaten humanity, Gru finds himself in the midst of a major identity crisis. But when a mysterious stranger shows up to inform Gru that he has a long-lost twin brother—a brother who desperately wishes to follow in his twin’s despicable footsteps—one former super-villain will rediscover just how good it feels to be bad.

STEVE CARELL (The Big Short, The 40-Year-Old Virgin) not only reprises his role as Gru, but also takes on a second part—that of Dru, Gru’s long-lost twin. KRISTEN WIIG (Bridesmaids, The Martian) returns as super-spy Lucy, while Emmy, Tony and Grammy Award winner TREY PARKER (South Park, The Book of Mormon) voices new villain Balthazar Bratt, a former child star who has become obsessed with the evil TV character he played in the ’80s. Gru’s most formidable and comedic nemesis to date, Bratt is out to take down Hollywood…and anyone who stands in his way.

Directed by PIERRE COFFIN (Despicable Me series, Minions) and KYLE BALDA (Minions, Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax), Despicable Me 3 is co-directed by ERIC GUILLON (production designer and character designer of Minions and Despicable Me series), executive produced by CHRIS RENAUD (Despicable Me series, Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax, The Secret Life of Pets) and written by CINCO PAUL & KEN DAURIO (Despicable Me series, Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax).

Returning to join their fellow stars are MIRANDA COSGROVE (TV’s iCarly, Crowded) as Margo, Gru and Lucy’s eldest daughter; DANA GAIER (The Ice Cream Truck) as Edith, their middle child; STEVE COOGAN (Philomena, The Secret Life of Pets), who voices Silas Ramsbottom, their former boss, as well as Fritz, Dru’s butler; and Academy Award® winner JULIE ANDREWS (Mary Poppins, The Sound of Music) as Gru’s always disappointed Mom. They are joined by newcomer NEV SCHARREL, who steps into the role of youngest daughter Agnes, and JENNY SLATE (Obvious Child, The Secret Life of Pets) as Valerie Da Vinci, Silas’ ambitious new replacement.

The music is from composer HEITOR PEREIRA (interview) and 11-time Grammy Award winner PHARRELL WILLIAMS, who once again brings his signature original songs and themes to the series.

WAMG invites you to enter for the chance to win FOUR (4) seats to the advance screening of DESPICABLE ME 3 on JUNE 27 at 7PM in the St. Louis area.

Answer the Following:

In MINIONS (which was released in 2015 but is a prequel to the Despicable Me franchise), we learned the origins of the lovable, yellow creatures and saw how Kevin, Stuart and Bob’s comedically misguided quest for an evil leader ultimately led them to team up with a young Gru. The mischievous trio will return for MINIONS 2 in July 2020.

Which Minion became King in the MINIONS film after he pulls the sword from the stone?

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.

Rated PG (Parental Guidance Suggested – Some Material May Not Be Suitable for Children) for action and rude humor.

http://www.despicable.me/

Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon Make A TRIP TO SPAIN In New Trailer

It’s been four years since THE TRIP TO ITALY. Now comes IFC’s third film in the series, THE TRIP TO SPAIN, from director Michael Winterbottom.

After jaunts through northern England and Italy, Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon embark on another deliciously deadpan culinary road trip. This time around, the guys head to Spain to sample the best of the country’s gastronomic offerings in between rounds of their hilariously off-the-cuff banter. Over plates of pintxos and paella, the pair exchange barbs and their patented celebrity impressions, as well as more serious reflections on what it means to settle into middle age. As always, the locales are breathtaking, the cuisine to die for, and the humor delightfully devilish.

The film opens in theaters August 11, 2017.

Steve’s film career includes five films with Michael Winterbottom.

The Trip To Spain is the third in an occasional series that began with 2011’s The Trip, a film that was originally intended as a one-off. The premise of the first film was simple: actor and comedian Steve Coogan has been commissioned to write a travel piece for the UK’s Observer newspaper, and so he invites his friend and peer Rob Brydon to accompany him. For a week they travel the Lake District, visiting the area’s critically acclaimed restaurants, and after several days they are joined by Steve’s PA Emma (Claire Keelan) and photographer Yolanda (Marta Barrio), whose work will illustrate the resulting article. Along the way, the two men discuss their hopes, their fears, and the cultural history of the north of England, all the while trying to outdo each other with their uncannily life-like impressions of celebrities such as Al Pacino, Michael Caine and Sean Connery. There would, said director Michael Winterbottom, never be another.

Except there was. The Trip was followed in 2014 by The Trip To Italy, which repeated the formula by having Steve and Rob make a similar journey from Piedmont to Capri, and, as he did after making its predecessor, Winterbottom said there would never be another. Fast-forward to 2017, and Steve and Rob are making another trip, this time from Santander in the north of Spain to Malaga in the south. Once again everything is the same and yet everything is different: over the course of the three films, the two men find their perspectives shifting, both on the subject of love and family and in their search for artistic fulfilment.

The seeds for the first Trip were sown back in 2005, on the set of Michael Winterbottom’s 13th feature film Tristram Shandy: A Cock And Bull Story. Inspired by Laurence Sterne’s 18th century novel The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, a book deemed unfilmable due to its extended comic digressions, Winterbottom’s film was a pairing of two actors that the director had previously worked with: Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon. Both appeared in Winterbottom’s 2002 film 24 Hour People, a biography of Manchester’s post-punk music scene, in which Coogan played the lead and Brydon – a TV star after the success of early 2000s BBC comedy series Marion & Geoff – had a cameo.

One fateful day it began to rain, and so Winterbottom put the two actors in the make-up truck and asked them to improvise a conversation. Recalls Brydon, “My memory of that shoot is that I was probably trying a bit harder than I would now. I mean, I’m naturally more inclined to entertain than Steve is. I take more pleasure in making people smile than he does. And what happened that day was that Michael told us, ‘Just talk.’ Now, Steve and I can do that very easily, so in we went, and we did it. We ended up at the beginning of the film and it became a very popular part of it.”

Two years later, Winterbottom took the two for lunch, and he told them about his about his idea for a project that would later become The Trip. “And initially we both said no,” says Brydon. “I thought, ‘We’ll never get enough good stuff.’ Thankfully I was wrong.”

Coogan agreed with Brydon’s original misgivings. “I thought what we did was quite funny,” he says, “but I didn’t think it would stretch to a whole film. But Michael kept pushing it, even though we really didn’t think that was the case. So it’s really Michael who’s responsible for it. Of all the things I do, The Trip is the thing I’m least in the driving seat for, really. With all the other projects I’m involved with, I’m usually there from the conception of it, but with this, Rob and I are simply wheeled out by Michael, prodded with a stick and made to perform, as it were. It was Michael’s conviction that it would work.”

Says Winterbottom, “In Tristram Shandy it seemed to me that the scenes with Steve and Rob improvising – especially in the opening – felt like they were funniest bits and the most enjoyable bits to do. And certainly the easiest bits, from my point of view, because I didn’t have to do anything except watch them.”

Further inspiration came from Tristram Shandy’s author, who gave Winterbottom the idea he needed to bring the two back together. “After Tristram Shandy,” he explains, “Sterne wrote another book, called A Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy, which was mocking travel writing. In the 18th century there were a lot of books about travelling and people going on a grand tour. He was mocking that, and making fun of it, but in a very enjoyable way. So I felt that it would be in the spirit of Sterne to do a mock travel piece with Steve and Rob.”

THE DINNER – Review

(l-r) Steve Coogan, Laura Linney, Richard Gere and Rebecca Hall in Oren Moverman’s THE DINNER. Photo courtesy of The Orchard (c)

Richard Gere stars as Stan Lohman, a congressman running for governor, who invites his brother Paul (Steve Coogan) and wife Claire (Laura Linney) to dine with him and his wife Kate (Rebecca Hall) at a very upscale restaurant. The brothers don’t get along and Paul does not want to go but his wife Claire is relishing the chance to have dinner at one of the town’s most exclusive restaurants. While the brothers are estranged, their 16-year-old sons Michael (Charlie Plummer) and Rick (Seamus Davey-Fitzpatrick) are friends. It is something the boys did together, something awful, that Stan wants to talk about at this tense family dinner.

THE DINNER is a dramatic examination of how far one might go for family, as well as explorations of mental illness, crime and privilege. The tone starts out slightly comic, with Coogan’s historian character muttering sarcastically about his older politician brother, referring to his brother as an ape. Paul also throws in frequent references to the Civil War, the former history teacher’s area of specialization, particularly Gettysburg. But there is more to the family dynamics than old sibling issues. .

Oren Moverman directs and wrote the screenplay for this adaptation of Herman Koch’s bestselling novel. Moverman recently directed Gere in TIME OUT OF MIND, in which Gere plays a man whose alcoholism leads him to slip into homelessness, despite an earlier more-prosperous life. Moverman used the film to explore how the homeless are invisible in New York and other related issues, and the experience of being homeless.

Gere might be the bigger name in the credits but the acting showcase goes to Steve Coogan, as the emotional, sharp-tongued brother Paul. Coogan’s character more the center of the story, with Gere playing an emotionally cooler but controlling character.

The sections of this family drama are divided like courses of a meal, as they are in Koch’s book, and the restaurant service is almost the comic relief to this sometimes heated drama. The solicitous maitre d’ Dylan (Michael Chernus) presents a series of artistically-styled plates of artisan food, which are described in the kind of self-involved loving detail one expects in a restaurant where the price is inversely proportional to the amount of food on the plate. The dinner takes place on a cold, snowy night, reflecting the chilly feeling that often surrounds this family dinner.

The boys’ involvement in a horrendous crime plunges the family into a crisis that pits parental concerns against questions about right and wrong, about privilege and responsibility, and a host of social issues. Family dynamics, not just between the brothers over their childhood, complicate the issues around what the teens did. Michael is Claire and Paul’s only child. Rick is Stan’s son with his first wife Barbara (Chloe Sevigny), but the couple adopted two more children before they divorced, children that his second wife Kate is raising while Stan pursues his career. Part of the problem is the second, adopted son Beau (Miles J. Harvey), who sometimes tags along with the older teens, and seems to be the family tattletale. Paul dislikes the boy, but that dislike carries a racist undertone since Beau is black.

Coogan turns in a strong performance as troubled Paul. Paul barely has a filter and is likely to storm out of rooms, but his wife Claire tries to smooth things over. In the course of the film, we learn much more about Paul than the others but also get a good view of the complex family dynamics. Gere is also good in his more restrained role, playing Stan as a sincere, well-meaning man but one who has a paternalistic streak as well as a moralizing one. All three of the others eventually rebel against Stan’s efforts to summarily make the decision for all of them. Linney is good as Claire, but Rebecca Hall is a standout, as the complicated Kate. Following up her astounding performance in the less-seen CHRISTINE, one hopes to see her in more high-profile roles in the near future.

The drama is at its best in the ensemble scenes, with all four of these gifted actors engaged in throwing sparks. Periodically, Moverman takes the action away from the table, maybe to keep the film from feeling too stage-y, but the effect is to make the dinner feel endless. Some of these scenes, which include flashbacks, contribute to the emotional power, such as the ones with the homeless woman, played by Onika Day, bu not all do.

Like Moverman’s previous film with Gere, the homeless and mental illness are part of this story. Social issues are raised but not dealt with in great depth. The scenes of the boys, empowered by their sense of privilege, hurl taunts and then trash at a homeless woman, as if she were not human, are chilling but so is Claire’s attempts at justification, shifting blame to the woman sleeping in front of the ATM the boys wanted to use. Mental health issues get a little deeper look through Paul’s personal history and Stan’s commitment to legislation to treat mental health bills like other medical expenses.

The soundtrack is interesting, adding subtle themes under the drama, and ranges from Beethoven and Satie to Bob Dylan and Serge Gainsbourg. Particularly in one tense moment, Sati’s eerie, sadly haunting strains underlying the dialog adds an extra dimension of heartbreak as the parents discuss what decision is best for their children. All of them want the best outcome and future for their children but disagree greatly on what is the best thing to do.

Despite fine performance from its gifted cast and moments of riveting drama and suspense, THE DINNER is a mixed cinematic experience. Like the rarefied world of the restaurant in which it is set, it will not appeal to every taste.

RATING: 3 1/2 out of 5 stars

New Poster And Trailer Are Here For DESPICABLE ME 3

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Hitting theaters on June 30, 2017 is DESPICABLE ME 3. Check out the brand new trailer and poster below.

The team who brought you Despicable Me and the biggest animated hits of 2013 and 2015, Despicable Me 2 and Minions, returns to continue the adventures of Gru, Lucy, their adorable daughters—Margo, Edith and Agnes—and the Minions. Despicable Me 3, directed by Pierre Coffin and Kyle Balda, co-directed by Eric Guillon, and written by Cinco Paul & Ken Daurio, will be released in theaters on June 30, 2017.

The animated film is produced by Illumination’s Chris Meledandri and Janet Healy, and executive produced by Chris Renaud.

Joining Steve Carell and Kristen Wiig in Despicable Me 3 is Emmy, Tony and Grammy Award winner Trey Parker, co-creator of Comedy Central’s global phenomenon South Park and the Broadway smash The Book of Mormon. Parker voices the role of villain Balthazar Bratt, a former child star who’s grown up to become obsessed with the character he played in the ‘80s, and proves to be Gru’s most formidable nemesis to date.

http://www.despicable.me/

https://www.facebook.com/DespicableMe/

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New Trailer Is Here For Warren Beatty’s New Film RULES DON’T APPLY

Photo Credit: Francois Duhamel-Copyright © 2016 Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation.
Photo Credit: Francois Duhamel-Copyright © 2016 Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation.

Regency Enterprises and 20th Century Fox have released a new trailer for the Romantic Dramedy RULES DON’T APPLY, written, directed and produced by 15 time Academy Award nominee Warren Beatty.

An aspiring young actress (Lily Collins) and her ambitious young driver (Alden Ehrenreich) struggle hopefully with the absurd eccentricities of the wildly unpredictable billionaire (Warren Beatty), who they work for.

It’s Hollywood, 1958. Small town beauty queen and devout Baptist virgin Marla Mabrey (Collins), under contract to the infamous Howard Hughes (Beatty), arrives in Los Angeles. At the airport, she meets her driver Frank Forbes (Ehrenreich), who is engaged to be married to his 7th grade sweetheart and is a deeply religious Methodist. Their instant attraction not only puts their religious convictions to the test, but also defies Hughes’ #1 rule: no employee is allowed to have any relationship whatsoever with a contract actress. Hughes’ behavior intersects with Marla and Frank in very separate and unexpected ways, and as they are drawn deeper into his bizarre world, their values are challenged and their lives are changed.

Watch the trailer now then tune in at 11:30amPT/2:30pmET for a Reddit AMA with Director Warren Beatty.

The film stars Alec Baldwin, Annette Bening, Haley Bennett, Candice Bergen, Matthew Broderick, Dabney Coleman, Lily Collins, Steve Coogan, Alden Ehrenreich, Taissa Farmiga, Ed Harris, Megan Hilty, Oliver Platt and Martin Sheen.

RULES DON’T APPLY opens in theaters everywhere November 23, 2016.

Visit the official website: RulesDontApplyMovie.com

Legendary filmmaker Warren Beatty stars as Howard Hughes in RULES DON’T APPLY, which Beatty wrote, directed and produced. Photo Credit: Francois Duhamel.
Legendary filmmaker Warren Beatty stars as Howard Hughes in RULES DON’T APPLY, which Beatty wrote, directed and produced. Photo Credit: Francois Duhamel.

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First Trailer For Warren Beatty’s RULES DON’T APPLY Hits

RULES DON'T APPLY

Regency Enterprises and 20th Century Fox have released the trailer for the upcoming dramedy RULES DON’T APPLY, written, directed and produced by 15 time Academy Award nominee Warren Beatty (HEAVEN CAN WAIT, REDS).

Opening in theaters on November 23rd, the movie stars Alec Baldwin, Warren Beatty, Annette Bening, Haley Bennett, Candice Bergen, Matthew Broderick, Dabney Coleman, Lily Collins, Steve Coogan, Alden Ehrenreich, Taissa Farmiga, Ed Harris, Megan Hilty, Oliver Platt and Martin Sheen.

An aspiring young actress (Lily Collins) and her ambitious young driver (Alden Ehrenreich) struggle hopefully with the absurd eccentricities of the wildly unpredictable billionaire (Warren Beatty), who they work for.

It’s Hollywood, 1958. Small town beauty queen and devout Baptist virgin Marla Mabrey (Collins), under contract to the infamous Howard Hughes (Beatty), arrives in Los Angeles. At the airport, she meets her driver Frank Forbes (Ehrenreich), who is engaged to be married to his 7th grade sweetheart and is a deeply religious Methodist. Their instant attraction not only puts their religious convictions to the test, but also defies Hughes’ #1 rule: no employee is allowed to have any relationship whatsoever with a contract actress.

Hughes’ behavior intersects with Marla and Frank in very separate and unexpected ways, and as they are drawn deeper into his bizarre world, their values are challenged and their lives are changed.

Visit the official site: www.foxmovies.com/movies/rules-dont-apply

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RULES DON'T APPLY

RULES DON'T APPLY

Photos – Francois Duhamel-Copyright © 2016 Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation. All rights reserved.