See Tom Hanks And Robin Wright In First Look For Robert Zemeckis’ HERE

Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in HERE.

Opening theater this fall, and during awards season, is the upcoming movie HERE.

Reuniting the director, writer and stars of Forrest Gump, HERE is an original film about multiple families and a special place they inhabit. The story travels through generations, capturing the most relatable of human experiences. Robert Zemeckis (Forrest Gump, Castaway, Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Contact, Back to the Future) directs from a screenplay by Eric Roth (Forrest Gump, Killers of the Flower Moon, Dune, A Star is Born) and him.

Watch the trailer now.

Told much in the style of the acclaimed graphic novel by Richard McGuire on which it is based, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in a tale of love, loss, laughter and life, all of which happen right HERE.

Sony Pictures has also released a second video in which Zemeckis, Wright and Hanks discuss their latest collaboration.

The cast includes Tom Hanks, Robin Wright, Kelly Reilly, Michelle Dockery and Paul Bettany.

HERE opens on November 15, 2024.

This film is rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture Association for the following reasons: thematic material, some suggestive material, brief strong language and smoking.

Tom Hanks, Steven Spielberg, Callum Turner, Barry Keoghan And Austin Butler Premiere Photos From Apple TV+’s “Masters of the Air”

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – JANUARY 10: Cast attends the premiere of the Apple TV+ Masters of the Air at the Regency Village Theatre on January 10, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. Masters of the Air will make its global debut on Apple TV+ on Friday, January 26, 2024. (Photo by Eric Charbonneau/Getty Images for Apple TV+)

Last night at the Regency Village Theatre in Los Angeles, Apple TV+ hosted the red carpet premiere of “Masters of the Air,” the highly anticipated World War II drama that will premiere globally with two episodes of the nine-episode series on Friday, January 26.

Attendees at the “Masters of the Air” premiere included executive producers Steven Spielberg, Tom Hanks and Gary Goetzman, alongside stars Austin Butler, Callum Turner, Nate Mann, Anthony Boyle, Barry Keoghan, Raff Law, Sawyer Spielberg, Jonas Moore, Elliot Warren, Matt Gavan, Edward Ashley, David Shields, Ben Radcliffe, Jordan Coulson, Branden Cook, Josiah Cross, Francis Lovehall, Phillip Lewitski, Jerry MacKinnon, Ella Rubin, Josh Bolt and Kai Alexander.

Co-executive producer and writer John Orloff; co-executive producers Graham Yost, Justin Falvey, Darryl Frank and David Coatsworth; directors Ryan Fleck and Dee Rees; author of the book, Donald L. Miller; and, World War II veterans, John “Lucky” Luckadoo, James Rasmussen, Henry Cervantes and Robert Wolff also attended the red carpet premiere event.

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – JANUARY 10: (L-R) Callum Turner, Barry Keoghan and Austin Butler attend the premiere of the Apple TV+ “Masters of the Air” at the Regency Village Theatre on January 10, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. “Masters of the Air” will make its global debut on Apple TV+ on Friday, January 26, 2024. (Photo by Eric Charbonneau/Getty Images for Apple TV+)

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – JANUARY 10: (L-R) Tom Hanks, Steven Spielberg and Gary Goetzman attend the premiere of the Apple TV+ “Masters of the Air” at the Regency Village Theatre on January 10, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. “Masters of the Air” will make its global debut on Apple TV+ on Friday, January 26, 2024. (Photo by Eric Charbonneau/Getty Images for Apple TV+)

Based on Miller’s book of the same name, and scripted by John Orloff, “Masters of the Air” follows the men of the 100th Bomb Group (the “Bloody Hundredth”) as they conduct perilous bombing raids over Nazi Germany and grapple with the frigid conditions, lack of oxygen and sheer terror of combat conducted at 25,000 feet in the air. Portraying the psychological and emotional price paid by these young men as they helped destroy the horror of Hitler’s Third Reich, is at the heart of “Masters of the Air.” Some were shot down and captured; some were wounded or killed. And some were lucky enough to make it home. Regardless of individual fate, a toll was exacted on them all.

Ranging in location from the bucolic fields and villages of southeast England, to the harsh deprivations of a German prisoner-of-war camp, and depicting a unique and crucial time in world history, “Masters of the Air” is enormous in both scale and scope, and a genuine cinematic achievement.

From Apple Studios, “Masters of the Air” is executive produced by Spielberg through Amblin Television, and Hanks and Goetzman for Playtone. Amblin Television’s Darryl Frank and Justin Falvey co-executive produce alongside Playtone’s Steven Shareshian. In addition to writing, Orloff co-executive produces. Graham Yost is also a co-executive producer. Anna Boden, Ryan Fleck, Cary Joji Fukunaga, Dee Rees and Tim Van Patten serve as directors.

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – JANUARY 10: Callum Turner (L) and Austin Butler attend the premiere of the Apple TV+ “Masters of the Air” at the Regency Village Theatre on January 10, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. “Masters of the Air” will make its global debut on Apple TV+ on Friday, January 26, 2024. (Photo by Eric Charbonneau/Getty Images for Apple TV+)

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – JANUARY 10: Austin Butler attends the premiere of the Apple TV+ “Masters of the Air” at the Regency Village Theatre on January 10, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. “Masters of the Air” will make its global debut on Apple TV+ on Friday, January 26, 2024. (Photo by Eric Charbonneau/Getty Images for Apple TV+)

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – JANUARY 10: Callum Turner attends the premiere of the Apple TV+ “Masters of the Air” at the Regency Village Theatre on January 10, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. “Masters of the Air” will make its global debut on Apple TV+ on Friday, January 26, 2024. (Photo by Eric Charbonneau/Getty Images for Apple TV+)

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – JANUARY 10: (L-R) Henry Cervantes, John Iuckadoo, Robert Wolff and James Rasmussen attend the premiere of the Apple TV+ “Masters of the Air” at the Regency Village Theatre on January 10, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. “Masters of the Air” will make its global debut on Apple TV+ on Friday, January 26, 2024. (Photo by Eric Charbonneau/Getty Images for Apple TV+)

ASTEROID CITY – Review

(L to R) Jake Ryan as “Woodrow”, Jason Schwartzman as “Augie Steenbeck” and Tom Hanks as “Stanley Zak” in writer/director Wes Anderson’s ASTEROID CITY, a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features

Wes Anderson is among the most creative directors out there, a true auteur with a distinctive style. His films, including THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL, THE ROYAL TENENBAUMS and THE FANTASIC MR FOX, are often quirky, color-drenched, full of cultural references and even whimsical but also deeply human. While not everyone loves their unique style, he has many fans, including this writer. Anderson’s last film, THE FRENCH DISPATCH, was an anthology inspired by the New Yorker magazine, and while Anderson’s newest, ASTEROID CITY, is not an anthology, it’s a story-within-a-story format evokes some of that as does its deadpan off-kilter comedy – but here with an Atomic Age slant, of 1950s candy colors, science-focus, buttoned-down seriousness and even a touch of Area 51.

ASTEROID CITY is the name of a small Southwest desert town in the 1950s, where middle-aged war photographer Augie Steenbeck (Jason Schwartzman) has arrived with his three children so his oldest, Woodrow (Jake Ryan), can take part in a science fair-like competition for very brainy kids. The tiny town is named for the asteroid crater that is its one tourist draw, and has one gas station, one diner and one motel, the kind with little cabins. The cabins are filled with the gifted kids and their parents, including a famous actress, Midge Campbell (Scarlett Johansson). The kids are going to show off their science creations and receive awards at the meteor crater, in ceremony led by General Gibson (Jeffrey Wright) and organized by physicist Dr. Hickenlooper (Tilda Swinton). While waiting for the ceremony, Augie talks by phone with his well-off father-in-law Stanley Zak (Tom Hanks), who lives nearby and who urges Augie to share the tragic secret he has been concealing from his son and young twin daughters.

Except none of that is real, because Asteroid City isn’t a real place. It exists only in a play being broadcast on TV, as the announcer/host (Bryan Cranston) tells us. The whole thing – play and TV broadcast – evokes the 1950s, a time when serious theatrical productions by big-name playwrights, even original ones, appeared on the small screen. There is also just a touch of a “Twilight Zone” vibe to the TV sequences, with their narrator, presented in black-and-white and in a square frame like an old television show.

In contrast to those black-and-white sequences, the world of the play itself, “Asteroid City,” fills the screen with bright pastel colors, reflecting the era’s advertising artwork, with lots of pink, teal and tangerine orange. Everything looks like a stage set – or a movie one. The town has all the classic ’50s elements: a one-pump gas station, a diner with a long counter, a motel with little cabins, even a highway ramp that goes nowhere. From the wood-panel sided station wagons to the meteor crater tourist site, ASTEROID CITY has it all.

ASTEROID CITY is a complicated, three-ring circus of a comedy, a send-up of the ’50s stereotypes and culture, but it is also a film that is likely to divide audiences – a sort of love-it or hate-it film. It is busy and crazy but if you can just go with its flow, and especially if you are a fan of Wes Anderson generally, it is fun, and even impressive that Anderson can pull it all off (Anderson even throws in a little animation). Personally, as a big Wes Anderson fan, ASTEROID CITY delighted me although it may not top my list of favorites. Yet, some others might even rank it as among his best. However, for others, it may be the opposite. If you crave deeper character development or a reflection on human life, which some Anderson films offer, ASTEROID CITY might be irritating more than enthralling. A good rule of thumb might be how you felt about THE FRENCH DISPATCH. Love that one, and this one will likely follow its path to your heart.

As the film alternates between those two story-lines, one with the characters in the play and the other the people putting on that play and broadcast, both stories reflect the 1950s world where they both exist. In the desert world of the play, the adults struggle with their various issues as the kids await the science awards, until a surprise disrupts the carefully-planned program. In parallel, we follow playwright Conrad Earp (Edward Norton) as he crafts the play in which those character exist, and the artistically-driven director, Schubert Green (Adrien Brody), has he shapes it for the studio stage, as well as the tales of the quirky actors in it. Which means some of the film’s actors play dual roles, with Jason Schwartzman playing Jones Hall, the actor playing Augie Steenbeck and Scarlett Johansson playing Mercedes Ford, playing Midge Campbell. Matt Dillon, Stephen Park and Rupert Friend also play dual roles, actors and characters in the play.

Confused? Yes, director Wes Anderson has a lot of balls in the air as he juggles these two stories and this large cast, But this a comedy, which means a bit of chaos works in its favor. There are plenty of sterling comic bits, and visual joking, playing off the kitsch and culture of the 1950s era, with its science-seriousness, and futuristic optimism battling Atomic Age nerves, with a splash of space alien flavor.

ASTEROID CITY is packed with big-name stars, including several Wes Anderson regulars, which gives wide potential for its plentiful weird little comic bits involving supporting characters. And quirky, deadpan characters abound here, among them, Steve Carell as the manager/owner of the town’s sole motel, which has the most impressive oddball assortment of vending machines, including one that sells real estate.

Unsurprisingly, the A-list cast is excellent, and each gets his or her moment. Jason Schwartzman and Scarlett Johansson carry much of the dramatic element, as they share their various struggles, but Tom Hanks, Adrien Brody and others get their moments. A fair amount of comedy comes from Steve Carell as the very entrepreneurial motel owner, but there are plenty of others in the mix.

Actors playing actors playing actors is among the nested elements in this film. This structural conceit is a bit unwieldy at times but whether all the ’50s references about science, alien landings, Actors Studio and more delight or irritate will depend on the individual. One feels that if ASTEROID CITY were a straightforward telling of the story in the play, without the framing device, it would have been sufficient. But Wes Anderson wanted to do more, and so gives us this three-ring circus of a film, not content with just one act in the ring.

ASTEROID CITY has dazzle, it’s fun and sparkling, and has full-bore star power. But the dual-story track can distract, interrupting each story by turn, which might make it harder to engage with the characters. Depending on what someone wants or expects from the film, it will be an enthralling ride or a frustrating one.

ASTEROID CITY opens Friday, June 23, in theaters.

RATING: 3 out of 4 stars

Focus Features To Takeover The Landmark Theatres Sunset In Los Angeles For Wes Anderson’s ASTEROID CITY In A One-Of-A-Kind Immersive Experience From June 15th – June 30th

Get ready to Blast Off!

Focus Features is transforming the Landmark Theatres Sunset in Los Angeles into a real-life Asteroid City for an exclusive two-week immersive experience. The pop-up will be open to the public beginning with 7:45PM preview screenings of ASTEROID CITY on Thursday, June 15th, with all five screens at the theater showing Wes Anderson’s newest film for the first two weeks of its theatrical run. ASTEROID CITY takes place in a fictional American desert town circa 1955, when the itinerary of a Junior Stargazer/Space Cadet convention is spectacularly disrupted by world-changing events.

Brimming with vibrant colors and the unique aesthetic that has come to represent a Wes Anderson film, this singular experience will transport fans into another world. Patrons will have the opportunity to explore the fictional town of Asteroid City in person while capturing photos with set re-creations, props from the film, and costume displays. The theater’s concession area will be transformed into the 1950’s luncheonette seen in the movie, and interactive elements inspired by the film’s fictional town will be featured throughout the space.

Kevin Holloway President Landmark Theatres commented, “Landmark Theatres is proud to have innovative and collaborative studio partners like Focus Features, that like us, remain committed to celebrating specialty films like Wes Anderson’s latest, ASTEROID CITY. We’re excited to unveil our latest Landmark location by dedicating our entire Sunset complex to this fully immersive experience.”

Added Lisa Bunnell, President of Distribution at Focus Features, “Watching a Wes Anderson movie is an incredibly unique experience that can often feel like you’re stepping into an entirely new universe. We’re excited to partner with our friends at Landmark Theaters to bring his newest film to life with this pop-up and give fans the opportunity to experience a bit of Wes’ magic in person.”

(L to R) Jason Schwartzman stars as “Augie Steenbeck” and Scarlett Johansson stars as “Midge Campbell” in Wes Anderson’s ASTEROID CITY, a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features

In addition to standard admission tickets, fans can also purchase a premium experience ticket which will include a movie ticket, an exclusive t-shirt, and concessions.

Located at the Landmark Theatres Sunset at 8000 W Sunset Boulevard, the pop-up experience will be open from June 15th – June 30th.

For more information and to purchase tickets to ASTEROID CITY, visit: www.focusfeatures.com/asteroid-city

ASTEROID CITY takes place in a fictional American desert town circa 1955. Synopsis: The itinerary of a Junior Stargazer/Space Cadet convention (organized to bring together students and parents from across the country for fellowship and scholarly competition) is spectacularly disrupted by world-changing events.

The film’s huge cast features Jason Schwartzman, Scarlett Johansson, Tom Hanks, Jeffrey Wright, Tilda Swinton, Bryan Cranston, Edward Norton, Adrien Brody, Liev Schreiber, Hope Davis, Stephen Park, Rupert Friend, Maya Hawke, Steve Carell, Matt Dillon, Hong Chau, Willem Dafoe, Margot Robbie, Tony Revolori, Jake Ryan, Jeff Goldblum.

ASTEROID CITY opens in limited theaters in NYC and LA on Friday, June 16th and expands nationwide on June 23rd.

(L to R) Tom Hanks as Stanley Zak, Hope Davis as Sandy Borden, Tony Revolori as Aide-de-Camp, and Liev Schreiber as J.J. Kellogg in writer/director Wes Anderson’s ASTEROID CITY, a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features

Wes Anderson’s ASTEROID CITY First Trailer Features The Stellar Cast Of Jason Schwartzman, Scarlett Johansson, Tom Hanks, Jeffrey Wright, Tilda Swinton, Bryan Cranston And Jeff Goldblum

Focus Features has released the first trailer for Wes Anderson’s ASTEROID CITY.

ASTEROID CITY takes place in a fictional American desert town circa 1955.

The itinerary of a Junior Stargazer/Space Cadet convention (organized to bring together students and parents from across the country for fellowship and scholarly competition) is spectacularly disrupted by world-changing events.

Deadline is reporting that the film will debut in May at the Cannes Film Festival. Anderson’s previous films to bow at the festival are MOONRISE KINGDOM and THE FRENCH DISPATCH.

The huge cast includes Jason Schwartzman, Scarlett Johansson, Tom Hanks, Jeffrey Wright, Tilda Swinton, Bryan Cranston, Edward Norton, Adrien Brody, Liev Schreiber, Hope Davis, Stephen Park, Rupert Friend, Maya Hawke, Steve Carell, Matt Dillon, Hong Chau, Willem Dafoe, Margot Robbie, Tony Revolori, Jake Ryan, and Jeff Goldblum.

Focus Features will release Asteroid City in select theaters on Friday, June 16th nationwide on Friday, June 23rd.

Scarlett Johansson in director Wes Anderson’s ASTEROID CITY, a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features

(L to R) Jake Ryan, Jason Schwartzman and Tom Hanks in director Wes Anderson’s ASTEROID CITY, a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features

Steve Carell in director Wes Anderson’s ASTEROID CITY, a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features

A MAN CALLED OTTO – Review

Tom Hanks is Otto Anderson in Columbia Pictures A MAN CALLED OTTO. Photo by: Niko Tavernise

So, we’re almost a week into 2023 and all that holiday cheer is so…last year. What a perfect time for a film centering around an older fella’ who’s…well, a human version of the grinch, sans green fur and the larceny. And who’s taken on this role? It’s none other than the movie’s “Mr. Nice Guy’ himself, “America’s dad” (perhaps grandpa; now), and two-time Oscar winner Tom Hanks. Hey. we all need to “shake things up” a bit, and get out of our “comfort zone”. But are his filmgoing fans ready to accept him as a real grouch AKA A MAN CALLED OTTO? BTW, this has no connection to A FISH CALLED WANDA or THE MAN CALLED FLINTSTONE, in case you’re wondering.

When we first encounter Otto Anderson (Hanks), he’s raising a stink at his local hardware store because he doesn’t see why he has to pay for another foot of rope, when he only needs another six inches. From there he’s off to his gated community, a “pre-planned” set of “cloned” small two-story houses, just outside of Pittsburgh. Every morning, before he trudges off to his long-standing factory job, he makes the “rounds” Otto considers himself the “enforcer” of the homeowners’ society’s rules, quick with his notepad jotting down any infractions (not separating the recyclables, trimming the lawns, etc.). During this, he growls at some of his neighbors, including a talky “speed-walker”, a delivery driver parking too long in a guest, spot, and a young woman who doesn’t “curb” her pooch. Perhaps worst is the jerk from the real estate agency (Mike Birbiglia) who drives through “no vehicle” walkways. As far as work goes, he’s out of it, forced into early retirement by his company’s new, much-younger owners. On his way back home, he stops off at the grave of his beloved wife Sonya for a chat before embarking on his home “project”. Remember that rope, well it will be part of his plan to join Sonya. But as he puts the noose around his neck (while dressed in his best suit), a commotion outside distracts him. A family has rented out the house next door, and the husband can’t back up with the trailer attached to the old SUV. Being an auto buff, Otto has to intervene. He meets Pittsburgh native Tommy (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo), his pregnant Hispanic wife Marisol (Mariana Trevino), and their two pre-teen daughters. Needless to say, Otto is most unpleasant to them, but his gruffness doesn’t stop Marisol from reaching out to him. Can this young optimistic family break through his emotional barriers and get Otto to “lighten up” and perhaps put aside his “project’ and find a reason to go on living?

Well, can we buy our “bosom buddy” Mr. H as an unsociable curmudgeon? Hmmm, somewhat, especially in the first act as he focuses his disdainful glare at anyone coming into his sight range. But it’s more intense irritation than blind fury. We know his bark (more of a cry for help) is much worse than his bite as we wait for this stomping iceberg to gradually melt. And though we’d never want to deal with him in reality, Hanks makes Otto a compelling, often unpredictable toxic troll. By the story’s midpoint, we see that he’s met his match in Trevino as Marisol whose wide smile burns through the near-constant clouds of an Eastern winter (the scenes really seem chilly). She brings a lot of energy to the forever frazzled mama, though we wonder why she doesn’t give up on the “old mope”. Garcia-Rulfo is a likable doofus daddy who gladly lets her “run the show”. Rachel Keller is quite endearing in the flashback sequences as Otto’s soulmate Sonya. It’s a shame that we only get a couple of brief scenes with the gifted stand-up comic Birbiglia as Otto’s up-tight, buttom-down weasel of an arch-nemisis. Luckily Mr, B makes his every sneer count.

Now, as many of you know this is a remake of a Swedish film (A MAN CALLED OVE) based on a beloved novel of the same name, Back in 2016 it was the year’s biggest foreign-language box-office champ, so it’s got big snow boots to fill. Hanks is more than up for it, though he lacks the lumbering menace of that film’s lead star, Rolf Lassgard, who has an aura of real danger, as though he’s a bear just awake from hibernation (and you’re a tasty salmon). To “hedge their bets” the screenplay adapter, David Magee, has retained most of the story “beats” while shuffling some flashback sequences around a tad. Still, Sonya seems more saintly here as we meet a few of her former students who remind Otto of her unconditional kindness. And it’s a shame that director Mark Forster (talk about a wide resume, from MONSTER’S BALL to Bond) didn’t cut back on the antics of Otto’s cartoonish neighbors who seem lifted out of an ABC TGIF sitcom (plus the amped-up antics of the “newbies”). Still, it’s nice to see Hanks in a big lead role after doing supporting work in the past year. And it’s got a bit more bite than most “family-friendly” dramedies, despite the sentimental “memory pieces”. Even though he can be annoying and dismissive there are worse people to live next to than A MAN CALLED OTTO.

2.5 Out of 4

A MAN CALLED OTTO is now playing in select theatres

PINOCCHIO (2022) – Review

(L-R): Pinocchio (voiced by Benjamin Evan Ainsworth), Tom Hanks as Geppetto, and Figaro in Disney’s live-action PINOCCHIO, exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Disney Enterprises, Inc. © 2022 Disney Enterprises, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

As the Summer box office slowly begins to cool off, it may be time for another entry in one of Hollywood’s most lucrative franchises. Now, we’ve got to wait a few more weeks for the latest Marvel Cinematic Universe installment, the much-anticipated BLACK PANTHER: WAKANDA FOREVER. Oh, but you’re very close as this new film is from another ‘branch” of this huge studio “Redwood”. Nope, not that “galaxy far, far away” either. This springs from the fountain that helped form the Disney dynasty. You see, when the MCU began its climb to multiplex majesty, other studios combed their libraries to cultivate their own “multiverse” (Universal hit with those Fast and Furious flicks along with Gru and his Minions, while their classic monsters, well, languish in their crypt). Around 2016, the “mouse house” realized they had another series “in the vault” as they began a string of live-action (though with lotsa’ CGI wizardry) remakes of their animated feature films. Sure, they’ve been hit-and-miss, but they’re now going way, way back to the second classic, as they “slap a new coat of digital paint” on the “toy who wants to be a boy”, PINOCCHIO.

Audiences may be startled (the first of many in this flick) as the company logo theme song, an instrumental snippet of “When You Wish Upon a Star”, is suddenly given lyrics by a bug. Jiminy Cricket (voice of Joseph Gordon-Levitt) actually, who begins his narration with a peak at his “past self”, clad in raggedy clothes and seeking food and warmth. . He spots just the sanctuary, a tiny little shop with its lights still on. Inside is the place’s grey-haired owner, Geppetto (Tom Hanks), who turns away a potential customer, insisting that his ornate hand-crafted clocks are not for sale. As his disgruntled wannabe’ patron leaves, Geppetto returns to his “passion project”, a wooden marionette fashioned after his late son, which he dubs Pinocchio. His pets, the cat Figaro and the “water baby” Cleo aren’t that impressed. As the old cobbler drifts off to sleep, he makes a wish that the puppet would be a “flesh n’ blood” boy, which is heard by Jiminy as he drifts off. Ah, but that wish is also heard by the Blue Fairy (Cynthia Erivo) who awakens Jiminy when she instills life (and a voice) in Pinocchio (Benjamin Evan Ainsworth). As the fairy departs in a showing of glowing blue specks of dust, Geppetto also opens his eyes to meet his new “son”. After several hours of questions from the lad, Geppetto decides that school will best give him knowledge (and let the old fellow rest). Jiminy (assuming his new duty as the boy’s “conscience”) is separated from him as “Honest John” the fox (Keegan Michael Key) and his mute feline sidekick, tell the naive boy that his future is “on the stage”. Pinocchio resists but is swayed when the school doesn’t accept him (“No puppets!!”) and he joins the traveling wagon of the cruel Stromboli (Guiseppe Battiston). With the help of a sympathetic performer, Fabiana (Kyanne Lamaya) Pinocchio escapes, only to be scooped up by the glowering Coachman (Luke Evans) on the way back to the shop. An adventure on Pleasure Island with new pal Lampwick (Lewin Lloyd) eventually leads to the sea where Geppetto is scouring the seas in a tiny boat, searching for his “son”. But will they all become victims of the savage sea beast, Monstro?!

The production is an interesting mix of vocal performances mixed with the latest high-tech motion capture and “un-digitally enhanced” actors. Most prominent in the latter category is the always compelling Mr. Hanks who deftly balances sentimentality with his often “snarky’ talk show persona, which we didn’t get in recent dramas like ELVIS and NEWS OF THE WORLD. Hanks forgoes a heavy middle-European accent and gives his line-readings the slightest “lilt” to give the clockmaker an endearing charm, much like a beloved grandpa’ who tells tales of coming “over on the big boat”.Best of all he conveys the longing of a parent who has somehow endured the worst loss of all. Erivo projects an ethereal beauty as the Blue Fairy and truly delivers goosebumps with her take on the classic’s most celebrated tune. Lamaya also displays her musical talents in an original song as the protective puppeteer who smiles despite her challenges. Another actor lending his pipes to another new tune is Evans, who intimidates and dominates as the growling sinister Coachman. Essaying another formidable menace is Battistorm who combines his threats toward the wooden boy with a half-sloshed sneer, his anger only adding to his no-doubt constant hangover. The other great sneer is provided by Lloyd as the aggressively friendly Lampwick, who seems to relish taking the smaller Pinocchio under his wing and leading him astray. As for the vocal talents, Gordon-Levitt makes the plucky cricket a truly charming rascal, more than up to the challenge of steering the lad down the right path. And that’s despite the energetic cajoling of Key as the flamboyant “Honest John”, who seems to be having a blast with “An Actor’s Life for Me”. Oh, and there’s a new character, Sofia the very helpful seagull, given a raspy tone by the great Lorraine Braco. Oops, almost forgot the lead, Ainsworth who makes us care about the innocent wooden kid. much like “real boys” is equally exasperating and sweet (with almost no “syrup”).

After thirteen years away from “mo-cap”, Robert Zemeckis returns to deftly balance the mix of techniques. He gets the best of the cast, no matter the method or form. I mentioned earlier about these “live make-overs” being hit and miss, Well, put this in the first division, closer to THE JUNGLE BOOK and MULAN than Burton’s depressing DUMBO or THE LION KING. Of course the original is “darned-near-perfection” (I’ll admit to it being my fave of Walt’s legacy), so the “blueprint” is impeccable. The film’s artists have skillfully given a nice gleam to the 1800s town from the cobblestone streets to the quaint shops (especially Geppetto’s), while also doing a nice “twist” on the familiar, particularly with the revamp of Pleasure Island, recalling a certain theme park. But the most pleasant surprise is the script’s wit and humor (by Zemeckis and Chris Weitz) as it takes a playful jab at the whole genre, and its main producer. I was astounded to find myself laughing out a lot at several clever gags and wordplay. I only have a few “qualms” with this “re-imagining”. Though it might not have meshed with the “overall look” I had wished that Key could have had a specialty prosthetic make-up as the Fox (much as Rick Baker’s work on THE GRINCH), so we could see his wonderful facial expressions fully. And the new songs don’t quite measure up to those unforgettable 1940 standards (one of those is sorely missed here). But my biggest “beef” is the fact that we won’t be able to see these amazing visuals projected on a big Imax screen. Or “up-converted to 3D, since a few scenes look like they may have been planned for it). Oh well, it’s a shame that this one’s getting punished for the last couple of “underperforming” redos. Still, it’s certainly worth your time since it’s a film that has something for the whole family, although the “left turn” taken in the story’s final moments may inspire lots of animated (sorry) discussions (I’m sure it’ll inspire a cable TV news channel debate or two). Sure, it won’t “wipe out” the memories of that 40s still-gorgeous gem, but it’s nice to see there’s lots of magic in PINOCCHIO. And that’s with “no strings attached”.

3.5 Out of 4

PINOCCHIO streams exclusively on Disney+

ELVIS – Review

AUSTIN BUTLER as Elvis in Warner Bros. Pictures’ drama “ELVIS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2022 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

In a rhinestone-studded, cinematic extravaganza, director Baz Luhrmann gives Elvis Presley his signature dazzle treatment in an energetic epic tale about Elvis but told through the eyes of his scheming manager Colonel Tom Parker. Parker is played by a winking, sinister Tom Hanks in a riveting performance. By rights, the film really should be called “Elvis and the Colonel” or maybe the reverse, as Tom Hanks’ Parker is a dominate presence, serving as our master of ceremonies and narrating events from his point-of-view. Elvis is played winningly by Austin Butler, who not only looks like Elvis but sings some of his early hits while performing with hip-swiveling verve.

Luhrmann’s ELVIS is less a straight-forward admiring biopic than a magical fairy-tale built around the complicated relationship between the singer and his shady manager. The young Elvis makes a deal with the slick Parker that is a double-edged sword, bringing fame along with a Faustian bargain.

This drama may not be what Elvis fans expect but it is a colorful, entertaining film that casts the two central figures in Presley’s life as forces of light and dark. Such a good-versus-evil lens almost requires a less than completely truthful approach to the facts, and indeed ELVIS is no documentary. Instead it is a lightning-in-a-bottle kind of film, but one which does not require a viewer to be an Elvis fan, only be interested in the magic of stardom and star-making. For those of us who are more Baz Luhrmann fans than Elvis fans, as is the case for this author, ELVIS delivers on big entertainment. Luhrmann is noted for colorful, energetic, imaginative films like MOULIN ROUGE and THE GREAT GATSBY, and this one fits neatly in that category. His films are not to everyone’s taste but they do deliver color-drenched, visually-electrifying cinematic experiences.

Tom Hanks’ Parker claims to be the man who gave the world Elvis, in an opening scene. Luhrmann’s choice to focus on the complex relationship between the manager and the singer makes the film more interesting and compelling than a simple biopic. Tom Parker was no colonel, merely adopting a courtesy title common in Old Southern tradition, and his real name was not Parker either. What he was was a con man straight out of carny life, something the character admits in early on in voice-over. He was a man with a murky, secretive past who may have been born in Holland, but someone always on the hunt for talent to promote and from which to profit.

Elvis, played by Austin Butler (could there be a more perfect Southern moniker?), fit the bill when Col. Parker (Hanks) spots the young ambitious singer while touring with squeaky-clean country musician Hank Snow (David Wenham) and his musician wannabee son Jimmie Rodgers Snow (Kodi Smit-McPhee).When Parker sees Elvis perform and his audience go wild, Parker recognizes Elvis Presley is just what radio stations in the racially-segregated 1950s were salivating for: a white man who could sing Black music and perform it with that same wild energy. Parker knows he has found gold.

ELVIS is filled with Luhrmann razzle-dazzle and beautiful over-the-top delights, with Col. Parker coming across as a carnival barker luring us in. But it also is clear that Luhrmann is an Elvis fan, and his Elvis, played with smoldering charm by handsome Austin Butler. is like a force of nature, singing with irresistible force while wiggling and gyrating sexily across stage. “Elvis the Pelvis” was something that hit female audiences like a thunderbolt in the sexually-repressive ’50s, and the film captures that magic with bravura. Tom Hanks’ Col. Parker styles himself as the puppet master but the singer’s connection to his audience makes it clear he just hitched his wagon to that thunderbolt, a popular culture phenomenon that had mid-century America all shook up – uh-huh.

Most are familiar with Elvis’s complicated, exploitative relationship with Parker but Luhrmann and Tom Hanks squeeze every drop of drama from that, while still covering the outlines of Presley’s life. Luhrmann goes with that Faustian theme, giving Parker a carny sideshow, con man aspect that the film’s Parker himself embraces, which gives the drama a glittery surface with a dark undercurrent.

Elvis is played by Austin Butler with convincing sincerity and hip-swiveling skill. Butler plays young Elvis as a sort of innocent drawn into the Colonel’s seductive, slippery carnival world with promises of fame and riches. But his Elvis also has boundless ambition and a rebel streak that makes him chafe at the Colonel’s efforts to sanitize his image.

The film has a surprising honesty about Presley’s debt, musically and in performance style, to Black musicians, with bits featuring Little Richard (Alton Mason), B.B. King (Kelvin Harrison Jr.) and other greats. It is something the real Elvis himself acknowledged but is too often seems downplayed in adoring bios, in favor of focusing instead on his roots in gospel (again, shared by many Black musicians). Luhrmann is careful to correct some of that, although it does over-correct a bit with barely a nod to Black churches and only a little on Elvis’ love of gospel music. Presley grew up poor in the South, surrounded by Black musicians and their music, so it is natural that would be the music he played, gospel and blues along with country and early rock. He just happened to be white, and therefore acceptable to the music business of the racist, segregated 1950s. Elliott Wheeler and Anton Monsted’s musical score brings in more of Black voices, both Elvis’s contemporaries in enjoyable film segments and current Black artists in the sound track.

There is less honesty about Elvis’s other aspects of his career and life. His relationship with his wife Priscilla is depicted in glowing terms, with the film baldly failing to note her age – fourteen – when the 24-year-old Presley first met her. It works for Luhrmann’s purposes to sanitize Elvis a bit to increase the contrast with Parker, but a little more truth about Elvis’s well-known shortcomings might have been more convincing. The film also skips the singer’s strange meeting with Richard Nixon and glosses over how the pop music cultural earthquake caused by the Beatles and the British Invasion changed the direction of rock music and sent Elvis over to country music radio stations, something that sparked an Elvis-versus-Beatles pop music fan divide that persisted for years. Instead, ELVIS steers away from those negatives, personal and professional, to present Elvis in a more positive light, in better contrast with the sinister Col. Parker.

And sinister is the right word for the film’s exploitative Parker, something that Tom Hanks gleefully leans into. Tom Hanks gives a gripping, award-worthy performance as Col. Parker, a slick character who has a mysterious past. Tom Hanks’ Parker openly talks to the audience about being a con man but he is less forthcoming about his own past and even country of origin. That good-and evil contrast between Parker and Presley means the film also leans into the melodrama, although Luhrmann makes that work for the film’s entertainment value. And this film is highly entertaining, as long as one goes along with what it is and doesn’t expect it to be what it is not.

Austin Butler does his own singing as the young Presley and delivers a moving, smoldering performance as the ambitious young singer, struggling against restraints that Parker imposes. In the later Vegas years, Butler gives a very convincing stage performance, although it is mostly Presley’s voice we hear and Butler never does say “thank you, thank you very much.” This may be a star-making role for Butler, who has only been seen in a few supporting roles prior to this.

As you would expect from Luhrmann, the film is visually dazzling, full of color and movement, like a candy-colored carnival ride, which is very fitting for the subject. ELVIS was filmed, not in Memphis, but in Luhrmann’s native Australia, with the director carefully recreating important locations from Presley’s life. With its focus on the relationship between Elvis and the Colonel, it spends less time on Elvis’ childhood but does present his close relationship with his beloved mother Gladys (Helen Thomson) and less close relationship with his ineffective father Vernon (Richard Roxburgh), as well as Parker’s exploitation of Presley’s warm feelings about family. Yet everything is presented in a glowing, neon light, the good and the bad.

Once the film gets to the Elvis movies and the Vegas era, the film loses some steam, just as Presley’s career did, but the film is never ceases to keep us engaged and entertained. There is an emotionally complex moment when Austin Butler’s Presley finally realizes the truth of the deal he made with Parker, a low moment for the singer that is coupled with his growing health issues and personal issues. Late in the film, it gives Elvis fans a special treat, with moving archival footage of the real Elvis in a late-life Las Vegas performance, an overweight but still charismatic Elvis seated at a piano in his big-collared, sequined costume and crooning affectionately to his adoring fans. It is a sweet, event bittersweet, note to end the film, one that might touch even non-Elvis fans.

ELVIS offers an entertaining carnival ride version of Elvis Presley’s and Tom Parker’s story, suffused with Baz Luhrmann’s color-drenched signature style, and elevated with an award-worthy turn by Tom Hanks as the manipulative, mysterious Tom Parker and a breakout charismatic performance by Austin Butler as Elvis. If you are a fan of either Baz Luhrmann or Elvis Presley, this one hits the mark.

ELVIS opens June 24 in theaters.

RATING: 3.5 out of 4 stars

Win Passes To The St. Louis Advance Screening Of ELVIS

FROM WARNER BROTHERS PICTURES COMES VISIONARY DIRECTOR BAZ LUHRMANN’S HIGHLY ANTICIPATED BIG SCREEN SPECTACLE, ELVIS

AUSTIN BUTLER LIGHTS UP THE SCREEN AS THE LARGER-THAN-LIFE ICON ELVIS PRESLEY, ALONGSIDE TOM HANKS AS HIS INFAMOUS MANAGER, COLONEL TOM PARKER. SPANNING THREE DECADES, LUHRMANN’S DRAMA TAKES AUDIENCES FROM MEMPHIS TO LAS VEGAS AND ALL STOPS IN BETWEEN.

THE FILM’S SOUNDTRACK FEATURES CLASSIC ELVIS HITS AS WELL AS REINVENTED VERSIONS FROM SOME OF TODAY’S HOTTEST ARTISTS, INCLUDING GRAMMY WINNER DOJA CAT.

SEE ELVIS ONLY IN THEATERS JUNE 24TH

RATED PG-13. MAY BE INAPPROPRIATE FOR CHILDREN UNDER THIRTEEN.

Enter to win passes for you and a guest to attend the Advance Screening of ELVIS on June 16th 7PM at The AMC Esquire Theater.

Enter Here: http://wbtickets.com/YXAYj65618

ELVIS is an epic, big-screen spectacle from Warner Bros. Pictures and visionary, Oscar-nominated filmmaker Baz Luhrmann that explores the life and music of Elvis Presley, starring Austin Butler and Oscar winner Tom Hanks.

A thoroughly cinematic drama, Elvis’s (Butler) story is seen through the prism of his complicated relationship with his enigmatic manager, Colonel Tom Parker (Hanks). As told by Parker, the film delves into the complex dynamic between the two spanning over 20 years, from Presley’s rise to fame to his unprecedented stardom, against the backdrop of the evolving cultural landscape and loss of innocence in America. Central to that journey is one of the significant and influential people in Elvis’s life, Priscilla Presley (Olivia DeJonge).

Starring alongside Butler and Hanks, award-winning theatre actress Helen Thomson (“Top of the Lake: China Girl,” “Rake”) plays Elvis’s mother, Gladys, Richard Roxburgh (“Moulin Rouge!” “Breath,” “Hacksaw Ridge”) portrays Elvis’s father, Vernon, and DeJonge (“The Visit,” “Stray Dolls”) plays Priscilla. Luke Bracey (“Hacksaw Ridge,” “Point Break”) plays Jerry Schilling, Natasha Bassett (“Hail, Caesar!”) plays Dixie Locke, David Wenham (“The Lord of the Rings” Trilogy, “Lion,” “300”) plays Hank Snow, Kelvin Harrison Jr. (“The Trial of the Chicago 7,” “The High Note”) plays B.B. King, Xavier Samuel (“Adore,” “Love & Friendship,” “The Twilight Saga: Eclipse”) plays Scotty Moore, and Kodi Smit-McPhee (“The Power of the Dog”) plays Jimmie Rodgers Snow.

Also in the cast, Dacre Montgomery (“Stranger Things,” “The Broken Heart Gallery”) plays TV director Steve Binder, alongside Australian actors Leon Ford (“Gallipoli,” “The Pacific”) as Tom Diskin, Kate Mulvany (“The Great Gatsby,” “Hunters”) as Marion Keisker, Gareth Davies (“Peter Rabbit,” “Hunters”) as Bones Howe, Charles Grounds (“Crazy Rich Asians,” “Camp”) as Billy Smith, Josh McConville (“Fantasy Island”) as Sam Phillips, and Adam Dunn (“Home and Away”) as Bill Black.

To play additional iconic musical artists in the film, Luhrmann cast singer/songwriter Yola as Sister Rosetta Tharpe, model Alton Mason as Little Richard, Austin, Texas native Gary Clark Jr. as Arthur Crudup, and artist Shonka Dukureh as Willie Mae “Big Mama” Thornton.

Oscar nominee Luhrmann (“The Great Gatsby,” “Moulin Rouge!”) directed from a screenplay by Baz Luhrmann & Sam Bromell and Baz Luhrmann & Craig Pearce and Jeremy Doner, story by Baz Luhrmann and Jeremy Doner. The film’s producers are Luhrmann, Oscar winner Catherine Martin (“The Great Gatsby,” “Moulin Rouge!”), Gail Berman, Patrick McCormick and Schuyler Weiss. Toby Emmerich, Courtenay Valenti and Kevin McCormick executive produced.

The director’s behind-the-scenes creative team includes director of photography Mandy Walker (“Mulan,” “Australia”), Oscar-winning production designer and costume designer Catherine Martin (“The Great Gatsby,” “Moulin Rouge!”), production designer Karen Murphy (“A Star Is Born”), editors Matt Villa (“The Great Gatsby,” “Australia”) and Jonathan Redmond (“The Great Gatsby”), Oscar-nominated visual effects supervisor Thomas Wood (“Mad Max: Fury Road”), music supervisor Anton Monsted (“Australia,” “Moulin Rouge!”) and composer Elliott Wheeler (“The Get Down”).

Principal photography on “Elvis” took place in Queensland, Australia with the support of the Queensland Government, Screen Queensland, and the Australian Government’s Producer Offset program.

A Warner Bros. Pictures Presentation, A Bazmark Production, A Jackal Group Production, A Baz Luhrmann Film, “Elvis” will be distributed worldwide by Warner Bros. Pictures. It is set to release in theaters in North America on June 24, 2022, and internationally beginning 22 June 2022.

https://elvis.warnerbros.com/

Baz Luhrmann’s ELVIS Premieres At Cannes – See It In Theaters June 24

Baz Luhrmann’s ELVIS had it’s star-studded premiere on Wednesday night at the Cannes Film Festival. One of the big tentpole movies to show at the festival, the biopic on the King of Rock and Roll was enthusiastically received.

Variety reported “The film received an uproarious 12-minute standing ovation, the longest of this year’s festival so far. As the the cheers went on and on, a teary-eyed Butler hugged an equally-emotional Priscilla Presley, who flew to the South of France to give her blessing for the movie about her late husband.”

Baz Luhrmann’s ‘Elvis’ standing ovation during the 75th annual Cannes film festival at Palais des Festivals on May 25, 2022.
Baz Luhrmann’s ‘Elvis’ standing ovation during the 75th annual Cannes film festival at Palais des Festivals on May 25, 2022.
Jerry Schilling, Tom Hanks, Priscilla Presley, Olivia DeJonge, Austin Butler, Alton Mason, Catherine Martin, Toby Emmerich and Baz Luhrmann attending ‘Elvis’ Premiere at 75th Cannes Film Festival.

ELVIS is an epic, big-screen spectacle from Warner Bros. Pictures and visionary, Oscar-nominated filmmaker Baz Luhrmann that explores the life and music of Elvis Presley, starring Austin Butler and Oscar winner Tom Hanks.

Here’ a sampling of the reviews:

Variety says, “The film’s richest irony is that Butler’s performance as the young Elvis (the one who’s far closer to his own age) is an efficient shadow of the real thing, but his performance as the aging, saddened Elvis, who rediscovered success but lost everything, is splendid. He’s alive onstage more than he was doing “Hound Dog,” and offstage, for the first time in the movie, Elvis becomes a wrenching human being. Luhrmann has made a woefully imperfect but at times arresting drama that builds to something moving and true. By the end, the film’s melody has been unchained.”

The Hollywood Reporter: “there are moving moments, especially in Butler’s performance as he transforms into the puffy, sweaty Elvis of his final years (thankfully, his prosthetics are less of an eyesore than Hanks’), his marriage to Priscilla dissolving and causing sorrow for both of them. One might wish for a biopic with more access to the subject’s bruised, bleeding heart, but in terms of capturing the essence of what made Presley such a super nova, Elvis gets many things right. As a tribute from one champion of outrageous showmanship to another, it dazzles.”

Deadline: “Technically this is every bit as brilliant as you might think a Baz Luhrmann production would be, and that includes Oscar winner Catherine Martin’s costumes and production design. The musical aspects are superb in every way. Also there is a poignant coda with actual footage of the real Elvis performing in the final month of his life onstage in Las Vegas, wearing that glittery white jumpsuit, his face puffed and hidden behind those dark glasses.”

In an interview with Butler, GQ says, “The young actor made a pilgrimage to Graceland and met Elvis’s ex-wife, Priscilla Presley, who embraced him and told him he had a lot of support. “She looked like an angel,” Butler says. “I walked down the hall with Baz afterwards with tears in my eyes.”  Read the GQ article with Butler HERE

A thoroughly cinematic drama, Elvis’s (Butler) story is seen through the prism of his complicated relationship with his enigmatic manager, Colonel Tom Parker (Hanks). As told by Parker, the film delves into the complex dynamic between the two spanning over 20 years, from Presley’s rise to fame to his unprecedented stardom, against the backdrop of the evolving cultural landscape and loss of innocence in America. Central to that journey is one of the significant and influential people in Elvis’s life, Priscilla Presley (Olivia DeJonge).

https://elvis.warnerbros.com/

AUSTIN BUTLER as Elvis and HELEN THOMSON as Gladys in Warner Bros. Pictures’ drama “ELVIS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release.
COPYRIGHT: © 2022 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Starring alongside Butler and Hanks, award-winning theatre actress Helen Thomson (“Top of the Lake: China Girl,” “Rake”) plays Elvis’s mother, Gladys, Richard Roxburgh (“Moulin Rouge!” “Breath,” “Hacksaw Ridge”) portrays Elvis’s father, Vernon, and DeJonge (“The Visit,” “Stray Dolls”) plays Priscilla. Luke Bracey (“Hacksaw Ridge,” “Point Break”) plays Jerry Schilling, Natasha Bassett (“Hail, Caesar!”) plays Dixie Locke, David Wenham (“The Lord of the Rings” Trilogy, “Lion,” “300”) plays Hank Snow, Kelvin Harrison Jr. (“The Trial of the Chicago 7,” “The High Note”) plays B.B. King, Xavier Samuel (“Adore,” “Love & Friendship,” “The Twilight Saga: Eclipse”) plays Scotty Moore, and Kodi Smit-McPhee (“The Power of the Dog”) plays Jimmie Rodgers Snow.

Also in the cast, Dacre Montgomery (“Stranger Things,” “The Broken Heart Gallery”) plays TV director Steve Binder, alongside Australian actors Leon Ford (“Gallipoli,” “The Pacific”) as Tom Diskin, Kate Mulvany (“The Great Gatsby,” “Hunters”) as Marion Keisker, Gareth Davies (“Peter Rabbit,” “Hunters”) as Bones Howe, Charles Grounds (“Crazy Rich Asians,” “Camp”) as Billy Smith, Josh McConville (“Fantasy Island”) as Sam Phillips, and Adam Dunn (“Home and Away”) as Bill Black.

To play additional iconic musical artists in the film, Luhrmann cast singer/songwriter Yola as Sister Rosetta Tharpe, model Alton Mason as Little Richard, Austin, Texas native Gary Clark Jr. as Arthur Crudup, and artist Shonka Dukureh as Willie Mae “Big Mama” Thornton.

Oscar nominee Luhrmann (“The Great Gatsby,” “Moulin Rouge!”) directed from a screenplay by Baz Luhrmann & Sam Bromell and Baz Luhrmann & Craig Pearce and Jeremy Doner, story by Baz Luhrmann and Jeremy Doner. The film’s producers are Luhrmann, Oscar winner Catherine Martin (“The Great Gatsby,” “Moulin Rouge!”), Gail Berman, Patrick McCormick and Schuyler Weiss. Toby Emmerich, Courtenay Valenti and Kevin McCormick executive produced.

The director’s behind-the-scenes creative team includes director of photography Mandy Walker (“Mulan,” “Australia”), Oscar-winning production designer and costume designer Catherine Martin (“The Great Gatsby,” “Moulin Rouge!”), production designer Karen Murphy (“A Star Is Born”), editors Matt Villa (“The Great Gatsby,” “Australia”) and Jonathan Redmond (“The Great Gatsby”), Oscar-nominated visual effects supervisor Thomas Wood (“Mad Max: Fury Road”), music supervisor Anton Monsted (“Australia,” “Moulin Rouge!”) and composer Elliott Wheeler (“The Get Down”).

Principal photography on “Elvis” took place in Queensland, Australia with the support of the Queensland Government, Screen Queensland, and the Australian Government’s Producer Offset program.

A Warner Bros. Pictures Presentation, A Bazmark Production, A Jackal Group Production, A Baz Luhrmann Film, “Elvis” will be distributed worldwide by Warner Bros. Pictures. It is set to release in theaters in North America on June 24, 2022, and internationally beginning 22 June 2022.