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Watch The Deliciously Sleazy Trailer For “Uncut Gems” Starring Adam Sandler…And Kevin Garnett???

Source: A24 “Uncut Gems” Trailer For the past few weeks, critics have been gushing over Adam Sandler’s ‘ferocious’ new film “Uncut Gems” –a deliciously sleazy crime thriller stuffed with greasy scumbags and KEVIN GARNETT ??? Yep, you read that right and should immediately watch this trailer that’s absolutely nuts (in the best way possible). Peep some Twitter chitter-chatter below: Adam Sandler is wearing Gunna glasses in Uncut Gems pic.twitter.com/ngbP4FGtae — Jacob Gallagher (@jacobwgallagher) September 24, 2019 Abel in Uncut Gems pic.twitter.com/rQ7lt8nLsz — abeltwodxo (@AbelsXOWeeknd) September 24, 2019 Uncut Gems looks fantastic. pic.twitter.com/SpRLSCafn6 — Sam. (@domesticmothman) September 24, 2019 Adam Sandler is such an underrated talent. Yeah, he rather make money and do dumb generic comedies with his friends. But once in a while a director is able to pull a brilliant performance out of him. So excited to see what he brings to #UncutGems ! pic.twitter.com/RIzA8AdFcR — Jon (@blvze97) September 24, 2019 Adam Sandler Lakeith Stanfield Kevin Garnett Yes, take all of my money https://t.co/TULrv1SjyE — Jemele Hill (@jemelehill) September 24, 2019 “Uncut Gems” hits theaters this December.

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Watch The Deliciously Sleazy Trailer For “Uncut Gems” Starring Adam Sandler…And Kevin Garnett???

Halloween Costume Party

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Halloween Costume Party

He’s Back! Watch Chris Rock’s Hilarious ‘Top Five’ Trailer Featuring Kevin Hart, Gabrielle Union, Tracy Morgan & More!

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Chris Rock has been notably absent from the big and small screens lately, allowing Kevin Hart to wear the comedic lead crown, but on December 12 Rock’s…

He’s Back! Watch Chris Rock’s Hilarious ‘Top Five’ Trailer Featuring Kevin Hart, Gabrielle Union, Tracy Morgan & More!

Grown Ups 2 Trailer: Shaq is Arresting

Shaquille O’Neal shows up in the first  Grown Ups 2  trailer . See if you can spot him (spot the 7 feet-tall basketball player amongst the tiny comedians? Impossible!): Grown Ups 2 With the success of 2010’s  Grown Ups , Adam Sandler, Chris Rock, Kevin James, and David Spade, the four comedians are returning for more. This time, the quartet is joined by a star-studded cast including the aforementioned Shaq, Taylor Lautner , Salma Hayek, Andy Samberg, and Taran Killam. The story follows Sandler’s character as he moves his family back to his home town to raise his kids in a more peaceful environment. Clearly from the trailer, it’s not quite as peaceful as he remembered. Grown Ups 2 will premiere July 12.

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Grown Ups 2 Trailer: Shaq is Arresting

‘Guardians of the Galaxy’: Why Casting Jim Carrey And/Or Adam Sandler Would Be A Smart Marvel Move

If you need further evidence that Marvel is winning the battle against DC on the comic-book movie front, consider the latest Internet chatter about  the Guardians of the Galaxy movie.   Latino Review , which knows how to work that fan boy beat, reports that Marvel has inquired about the availability of both Jim Carrey  and Adam Sandler for the movie, which is slated to hit theaters on Aug. 1, 2014. It’s unclear what roles Marvel envisions these actors playing, but Latino Review and other blogs have been guessing Rocket Raccoon (whose creation was inspired by the Beatles’s White Album song “Rocky Raccoon”)  and the tree-like Groot are the most plausible, since both are reportedly in the Guardians of the Galaxy script. Given these two superheroes’ non-human appearances, they’ll probably exist as computer-generated characters , and if I’m doing the casting, I’d want the shape-shifting Carrey to play Groot because the character bears a resemblance to the Grinch, which the actor already played (in Ron Howard’s obnoxious adaptation of the Dr. Seuss book), and Sandler as Rocket. Sandler’s biggest hit in a long time was as the voice of the CGI Count Dracula in Hotel Transylvania last year, so I suspect he’ll be up for the gig. Even if Marvel casts just one of these guys, or some equally funny dude,  it’s an astute move because, while the costumes and action sequences in these comic-book movies are fun, it’s the humor that gives them soul and makes them — so far — superior to the DC equivalent. Yes, Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight trilogy was exceptional, but, given the choice, I’ll take Robert Downey Jr.’s  satisfyingly smart-ass portrayal of Tony Stark and Iron Man every time. [ Latino Review , io9 ] Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter. 

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‘Guardians of the Galaxy’: Why Casting Jim Carrey And/Or Adam Sandler Would Be A Smart Marvel Move

Twilight Tracking Big At Box Office; Eli Roth Casts His The Green Inferno: Biz Break

Also in Thursday afternoon’s round-up of news briefs, Adam Sandler ‘s next comedy heads to a rival studio. Matthew Vaughn is departing X-Men . And Jill Scott boards a Fox Searchlight project. Eli Roth Casts The Green Inferno The film will shoot beginning November 5th in Peru. It will star Lorenzo Izzo ( Aftershock ), Ariel Levy ( Aftershock ), Aaron Burns ( John Carter ) and Daryl Sabara ( Machete ) Roth will direct the thriller based on a screenplay he co-wrote with Aftershock co-writer Guillermo Amoedo. This will be Roth’s much anticipated directorial follow up to the enormously successful Hostel franchise, which collectively grossed over $300 million worldwide. Roth spoke further with Movieline about the pic, which will be filming in a remote Amazonian village – read more here . Around the ‘net… Twilight Finale Tracking Like a Monster Hit Breaking Dawn Par – 2 is running 16% ahead of Part – 1 ‘s breakneck pace. It is outpacing Skyfall in terms of awareness. Summit is hoping to outpace the $138.1 million opening weekend grossed by Part 1 , Deadline reports . Adam Sandler’s Comedic Western Moves from Sony to Paramount The film, which was in development at Sony, is said to be an untitled comedic Western and likely will follow the Grown-Ups sequel that opens in July 2013. Sandler’s last few movies haven’t reached mega-grosser status — June’s R-rated That’s My Boy grossed just $57 million worldwide for Sony, THR reports . Matthew Vaughn Not Taking On X-Men: First Class 2 Speculation is that Bryan Singer will direct the 20th Century Fox spinoff after Vaughn decided not to direct the sequel. Singer launched the X-Men franchise with the first two films, Deadline reports . Jill Scott Boards Fox Searchlight’s Baggage Claim The Grammy-winning new should singer-songwriter will star in Baggage Claim along side Paula Patton and Derek Luke. The rom-com will be directed by David E. Talbert who also penned the script. Patton will play Montana Moore, a flight attendant who tries to find a man before her sister’s upcoming wedding. Scott will play Gail Best, Moore’s blunt best friend and coworker. The pic will open next year, Reuters reports .

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Twilight Tracking Big At Box Office; Eli Roth Casts His The Green Inferno: Biz Break

It’s a Mad World: Hotel Transylvania Director Genndy Tartakovsky Pushes 3D Animation Using 2D Tricks

It’s good to see Genndy Tartakovsky on the big screen. Even when he was working at Cartoon Network beginning in the 1990s,  where he produced such contemporary animated classics as Dexter’s Laboratory , Powerpuff Girls and the visually stunning Samurai Jack , Tartakovsky  and his team produced remarkably three-dimensional worlds — populated with fully developed characters, ageless physical humor and memorable sight gags — rendered in 2D animation. It was only a matter of time before he graduated to feature films, and on Friday,  his engaging and funny directorial debut Hotel Transylvania opened in theaters in 3D. Movieline talked to Tartakovsky about the challenges of making the transition from animated TV series to feature films and his push during production to achieve a hyper-exaggerated, Mad Magazine-meet- Looney Tunes style of animation that, he says, is largely taboo among the gatekeepers of the genre. The Moscow-born Tartakovsky, whose family moved to the United States when he was 7, also talked about working with Adam Sandler, who as the voice of Dracula, gives one of his best performances in a long time, and another genius of a certain type of animation, Saturday TV Funhouse creator Robert Smigel. Finally, he talks about his influences, which aren’t limited to cartoons.  Indeed, there’s more than a little The Good, The Bad And The Ugly i  in Samurai Jack , which, happily, Tartakovsky says he wants to revisit via a film or miniseries. Movieline:  This is your first theatrical feature.  Tartakovsky : Yeah, I’ve done long-form movies for DVD, but this is my first theatrical feature. What are the challenges of making that transition from TV to feature films? One of them is the simple idea that in television, you have episode after episode, so if you mess up one,  the audience  usually forgives you. In features nowadays, you work all this time and put out all this effort for one weekend. If you don’t open, you’re dead.  And so it’s a totally different type of pressure where you’re working so hard to tell a good story and create good characters. Usually in TV, it takes six to eight, sometimes 10 episodes, to really get going and know what the show is.  There’s always that moment in TV where a show clicks.  Seinfeld had it. A lot of shows go through it. But in features, you don’t have that choice. You’ve got to figure everything out. You’ve got to know what your movie is. And you’ve got to know what story you’re telling. And all of this pressure and build-up was very different for me because I was like, this is it. This is the one shot that I get at this. When it came to the monsters in Hotel Transylvania , I thought I saw and heard a lot of references to pop culture: the Universal monsters, of course, but also Count Floyd from SCTV  and Young Frankenstein. Tartakovsky:  Well, the main monsters are all inspired by the iconic things that we know them by. but we actually tried not to put in too many references. So, for Dracula, we tried to make him his own design, even though he probably has classic flavors of Count Chocula and other things. [Laughs] But that definitely wasn’t on purpose. If anything, we were trying to do almost a Mad Magazine type of vibe. We tried not to take ourselves too seriously. So any of the references you may have thought you saw, definitely weren’t on purpose. I first became of fan of your work watching Dexter’s Laboratory ,   The Powerpuff Girls and Samurai Jack on Cartoon Network.  I’m also a fan of  screenwriter Robert Smigel’s   Saturday TV Funhouse for SNL.  How did you get involved with Sandler and Smigel and that crew? When I came on, Adam was already signed on to do the voice of Dracula. I worked on the script to take the tone and other aspects in the direction I wanted them to go, and  then I gave it to Adam. He really liked what I did. No matter what movie he does, Adam brings in his own guys to help write whatever character he’s portraying, and one of the guys he works with is Robert Smigel. He asked me if I wanted to work with Smigel, and I said, ‘Oh yeah, definitely. I love the stuff he’s done.”  And that’s how he got involved. So this project didn’t originate with you?  I came on board after it had been going through the grinder for  few years. Judging from some of the bios I read about you, you grew up a pretty alienated kid. Did monsters help you deal with those feelings? The actuality is that I was really scared  of scary movies. I think kids either get off on it or they don’t. I was one of those that didn’t. I like knowing things. I didn’t like that feeling of, what’s around the corner?    I never went to haunted houses or anything like that. But at the same time, I liked the idea of Dracula and Frankenstein – definitely the older movies weren’t as scary as today’s are.  So, I definitely watched those. But, for me, where I really liked the monsters were in comedy, like Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein , or, of course, Young Frankenstein is one of my favorite movies. That was my introduction to the monsters, until I read some of the books and thought more in terms of the truer sense of them. Weirdly, I saw Hotel Transylvania knowing that you were involved but unaware that Sandler was the voice of Dracula.  And I have to say, I his  usual trademark vocal tics weren’t obvious.  That’s hilarious.  I am a real Adam Sandler fan, but,  at the same time, when a celebrity voice overtakes the character, it can throw you out of the film. You know, you realize who’s doing the voice and you’re just, ‘Oh, it’s that actor playing that character.’  And so, I was really worried about it. That’s why I tried really hard to push Dracula’s expressions and his posing and to push for Adam not to do his voice.  At first, I think he was really hesitant—you know comedians are really hard on each other and they’re hard on themselves. They want to make sure they don’t sound hacky, or whatever. And doing something [as iconic] as Dracula, you’re opening yourself up. But I loved the voice Adam did. We started looking at it, and for me, I wanted this to be a broad comedy. So I kept pressuring him to do it as cartoony as he could get and still be comfortable. So whenever he yelled and did those big ranges and different rhythms, the happier I was because then we could make some really fun, old-school animation like the old school — like Mel Blanc when he would do Bugs Bunny or Daffy. For the emotional stuff, he definitely came down and we have that kind of contrast. I loved the scene where Dracula is chasing the airplane that’s carrying  his daughter’s boyfriend, Jonathan (Andy Samberg) and sees him watching some sort of Twilight -like movie with bare-chested pretty boys. And even though the sunlight is burning him up, Dracula has to make some sort of smart-ass comment about the state of vampire movies today. Was that your idea? That was an Adam and Smigel idea, I think. I thought you were successful getting most of the actors not to sound too much like themselves. How did you manage that?   It all depended on the character. With Fran Drescher, for the Bride of Frankenstein, we really wanted it to be her voice, which  is super cartoony to begin with. With Kevin we decided to do Frankenstein as really conversational, so he could be more of his voice.  If we were successful, I think it had a lot to do with the visuals. They way we executed performances and stuff, you weren’t paying too much attention to the voices because they just kind of all fit. Tell me about what you were striving for in terms of the animation. We really tried to push the animation to be better than other movies, to have it’s own point of view. And, again, to support the broad comedy of it, we wanted to do a Tex Avery-, Warner Brothers-influenced type of animation. When I first started doing it, everybody was so hesitant because that’s the big taboo in feature animation.: you can’t have things too over-exaggerated.  I always thought that was ridiculous because for me the best scene in animation is in Disney’s  Snow White   and the Seven Dwarfs,  where you’ve got these crazy looking dwarves  and Snow White’s dead and they’re super sad. They’re as unrealistic as you get.  They’re ridiculous. And then they shed a tear and the audience is rapt.  They’re so involved in these characters. To me, it was always ridiculous that you can’t emote if you’re doing something cartoony and exaggerated.  I always argued the opposite. The more cartoony and exaggerated you are, the more range of expression you have and it will be more believable. And so, that was the whole point.  Push the expressions. Push the animation. Push the posing to a much more exaggerated level. When did that silly rule get made? Look at the movies. It’s really be around since Disney. Disney started really cartoony, and then it switched. It started going more and more realistic, and eventually that look kind of stuck. And that became the law. When you have a movie like Beauty And The Beast that’s very realistic making so much money, that starts the argument that you can only do it that way.  It’s just a trend that never went away. Maybe you’re about to reverse that. I’m hoping. [Laughs] The animation is all CGI? Technically, it’s the same as any Pixar, Dreamworks or big CG feature.  The only thing that’s really different is that we really pushed the drawing aspect of it. We tried to get funny expressions, funny poses and that’s what really stands out.  We really broke the puppet.  With CGI, you have this model of a puppet in the computer, and it can only do a limited number of things. But if you push it and stretch it and pull it and break it, it can do so much more. And that’s where the Mad  Magazine theory came into play. If you pause on a frame of Dracula, you get a funny expression. And that’s a really hand-drawn 2-D animated theory, where you have a funny drawing and you laugh at it. And that’s what I wanted to get more of — that the movie is  drawn, not so much just posed.

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It’s a Mad World: Hotel Transylvania Director Genndy Tartakovsky Pushes 3D Animation Using 2D Tricks

Should Adam Sandler Star in the Summer School Remake?

For some reason a remake of the 1987 comedy classic Summer School has been in development hell for years, and it may finally come to fruition under Adam Sandler ‘s Happy Madison banner. Though Sandler hasn’t yet threatened to star as the slacker high school gym teacher forced to start caring about education — a role played with Hawaiian-shirted panache by one Mr. Mark Harmon, and don’t you forget it — the possibility certainly looms over this project, as THR reports that Happy Madison is negotiating to produce. Take a trip down memory lane with the original trailer and decide: If not Sandler, who could fill Harmon’s sockless shoes? (And will there be a part for Kirstie Alley?) [ THR ]

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Should Adam Sandler Star in the Summer School Remake?

Hippie Romance + Terrorism Jokes = The New Trailer for The Dictator

The first trailer for Sacha Baron Cohen ‘s The Dictator had Megan Fox and Kardashian jokes, but those pop culture touchstones have been replaced by Anna Faris and terrorism gags in the new, longer trailer. An upgrade? Eh, sure. Maybe. Or not: Faris’s brunette pixie ‘do does make her look particularly adorable, but juxtaposed with her natural poise Cohen comes off as a poor man’s Adam Sandler . Like, hammy Zohan-lite Sandler. Here’s why Cohen’s Dictator schtick hasn’t really worked thus far, from the film footage that’s been released: When Cohen is 100 percent in character — clueless, masking any hint of self-awareness, as he was best in Borat or while Kim Jong-illing Ryan Seacrest recently at the Oscars — he absolutely slays. That unapologetic ignorance is key, and that’s how The Dictator seems to start out. But throw in those rom-com cliches and the lessons in humility and/or humanity that will surely come once Admiral General Aladeen falls for Faris’s hippie love interest, redeems himself, etc. (as the trailers suggest he will) and he’s instantly less interesting. Is it too late to cut together a version of The Dictator made entirely of Obama footage, Aladeen at the Wadiya Olympics, and scenes of Cohen frightening bigoted Americans with his terrifying “otherness?” Because that’s the movie I want after seeing all this learning lessons BS. Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Hippie Romance + Terrorism Jokes = The New Trailer for The Dictator

Hippie Romance + Terrorism Jokes = The New Trailer for The Dictator

The first trailer for Sacha Baron Cohen ‘s The Dictator had Megan Fox and Kardashian jokes, but those pop culture touchstones have been replaced by Anna Faris and terrorism gags in the new, longer trailer. An upgrade? Eh, sure. Maybe. Or not: Faris’s brunette pixie ‘do does make her look particularly adorable, but juxtaposed with her natural poise Cohen comes off as a poor man’s Adam Sandler . Like, hammy Zohan-lite Sandler. Here’s why Cohen’s Dictator schtick hasn’t really worked thus far, from the film footage that’s been released: When Cohen is 100 percent in character — clueless, masking any hint of self-awareness, as he was best in Borat or while Kim Jong-illing Ryan Seacrest recently at the Oscars — he absolutely slays. That unapologetic ignorance is key, and that’s how The Dictator seems to start out. But throw in those rom-com cliches and the lessons in humility and/or humanity that will surely come once Admiral General Aladeen falls for Faris’s hippie love interest, redeems himself, etc. (as the trailers suggest he will) and he’s instantly less interesting. Is it too late to cut together a version of The Dictator made entirely of Obama footage, Aladeen at the Wadiya Olympics, and scenes of Cohen frightening bigoted Americans with his terrifying “otherness?” Because that’s the movie I want after seeing all this learning lessons BS. Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Hippie Romance + Terrorism Jokes = The New Trailer for The Dictator