Tag Archives: film

INTERVIEW: ‘Killing Them Softly’ Director Andrew Dominik Discusses His American Horror Story

Andrew Dominik does not look like a guy who could teach this country a lesson. With his floppy hair, fashionable glasses and ever-present cigarette, he resembles the kind of international hipster you’d find brandishing his American Express black card in Manhattan’s Meatpacking District on a Thursday night. But don’t be fooled by appearances. With the help of Brad Pitt and an impressive ensemble of actors that includes James Gandolfini ,  the exquisite  Ben Mendelsohn and a breakthrough performance by Scoot McNairy , Dominik has made a acrid — and memorably violent — cinematic statement about the state of the American Dream that should resonate with anyone whose job has become a kill-or-be-killed battlefield in the wake of the 2008 crash. Although Killing Them Softly is an adaptation of George V. Higgins’ 1974 novel,   Cogan’s Trade , Dominik, who wrote and directed the movie, set the picture in the middle of this country’s 2008 economic meltdown and presidential election. (News coverage of both George W. Bush and Barack Obama figures in the background.) Pitt plays Jackie Cogan, a mob enforcer sent to a grim-looking New Orleans to investigate a poker-game heist, but the lowlife characters in this movie could be Wall Street bankers, film producers or overworked bloggers running and gunning to survive one more day in the rat race. There’s nothing like an outsider to point out the chinks in America’s armor, and the New Zealand-born, Australian-bred Dominik bludgeons a number of this country’s sacred cows and concepts, from Thomas Jefferson, who’s dismissed as a hypocritical “wine snob,” to “E Pluribus Unum” to the hopeful (but possibly empty) rhetoric of Barack Obama . “America’s not a country, it’s just a business,” Pitt’s character says at a key moment in the film, and given the actor’s reputation as a righteous liberal dude, it’s a brave performance. I don’t think that even Dominik would admit this, but beneath the noirish storyline, Killing Them Softly   echoes the lyrics of the Who’s classic song. “Won’t Get Fooled Again”:  “Meet the new boss/Same as the old boss.” In a frank and fairly amusing interview, Dominik, whose credits also include the excellent Chopper and The Assassination of Jesse James By the Coward Robert Ford ,  shared his views on the reelection of President Obama, the “masculine confusion” that is prevalent in Killing Them Softly,  his next planned picture, an adaptation of Joyce Carol Oates’ novel about Marilyn Monroe, Blonde,  and whether Brad Pitt can remember what it was like to be normal. Movieline:  After seeing Killing Them Softly , I’ve got to know if you were rooting for anyone in the presidential election. Dominik:   Obama.  Yeah. I ask because the message of your movie seems to be that it doesn’t matter who’s running America from the Oval office.   Well I think, obviously, that the president’s powers can be fairly limited. But Obama was a better option than the other guy. That seemed to be the rationale of a lot of voters this year.  I really believed Obama when he spoke in 2008, but  I remember watching his victory speech after this last election and it was the same speech. Exactly the same speech.  I felt like he didn’t even believe it anymore.  He seemed to be tired of saying the same thing.  He even made the same joke about the dog. Your film is distributed by The Weinstein Company, which is co-chaired by Harvey Weinstein , an avid supporter of President Obama. Was there any discomfort with the political aspects of your film?  How tight is Harvey really with Obama?  He says he’s talked with Obama.  I’m sure Harvey feels tighter with Obama than Obama feels with Harvey.  You know what I mean? But, yeah, he was uncomfortable about that stuff.  And I think Brad was, too. But I don’t know that the movie’s really pointing its finger at Obama, specifically.  It’s pointing its finger at the lie with which American was constructed — this idea that we’re all equal. Which clearly nobody believes. It takes an outsider to tell us that.  What made you decide to take a 1974 George V. Higgins novel and set it in 2008 at the time of  the 2008 economic crash and the presidential election? I guess it was everything going on at once.  I found the book, and I needed money. And everyone around me needed money.  All they were talking about was the economy.  I realized that the movie was the story of an economic crisis, and I started to see parallels between this little story and the bigger story. I’ve always suspected that crime movies are really about capitalism.  I didn’t watch The Sopranos and think Tony Soprano was a sociopath.  He just looks like a normal guy with normal problems to me.  So I felt like maybe here’s an opportunity to make a self-conscious crime film. Fiction is how we organize reality — but what are we trying to organize when we watch crime movies? I guess it’s the reality of existing in a dollar-driven society. You mentioned The Sopranos .  At its core, that series was a epic parable about the George W. Bush era, and, in some respects Killing Them Softly felt like an extension or a kindred spirit of that show. Were you inspired at all by the universe that David Chase created?  I love The Sopranos .  It’s a fucking great, great show.  But not directly as far as the movie was concerned. There are actors from the series in the movie, but I guess when you’re looking for goombah-type guys, David Chase found them all.  So there’s really no getting away from it.

Visit link:
INTERVIEW: ‘Killing Them Softly’ Director Andrew Dominik Discusses His American Horror Story

INTERVIEW: ‘Killing Them Softly’ Director Andrew Dominik Discusses His American Horror Story

Andrew Dominik does not look like a guy who could teach this country a lesson. With his floppy hair, fashionable glasses and ever-present cigarette, he resembles the kind of international hipster you’d find brandishing his American Express black card in Manhattan’s Meatpacking District on a Thursday night. But don’t be fooled by appearances. With the help of Brad Pitt and an impressive ensemble of actors that includes James Gandolfini ,  the exquisite  Ben Mendelsohn and a breakthrough performance by Scoot McNairy , Dominik has made a acrid — and memorably violent — cinematic statement about the state of the American Dream that should resonate with anyone whose job has become a kill-or-be-killed battlefield in the wake of the 2008 crash. Although Killing Them Softly is an adaptation of George V. Higgins’ 1974 novel,   Cogan’s Trade , Dominik, who wrote and directed the movie, set the picture in the middle of this country’s 2008 economic meltdown and presidential election. (News coverage of both George W. Bush and Barack Obama figures in the background.) Pitt plays Jackie Cogan, a mob enforcer sent to a grim-looking New Orleans to investigate a poker-game heist, but the lowlife characters in this movie could be Wall Street bankers, film producers or overworked bloggers running and gunning to survive one more day in the rat race. There’s nothing like an outsider to point out the chinks in America’s armor, and the New Zealand-born, Australian-bred Dominik bludgeons a number of this country’s sacred cows and concepts, from Thomas Jefferson, who’s dismissed as a hypocritical “wine snob,” to “E Pluribus Unum” to the hopeful (but possibly empty) rhetoric of Barack Obama . “America’s not a country, it’s just a business,” Pitt’s character says at a key moment in the film, and given the actor’s reputation as a righteous liberal dude, it’s a brave performance. I don’t think that even Dominik would admit this, but beneath the noirish storyline, Killing Them Softly   echoes the lyrics of the Who’s classic song. “Won’t Get Fooled Again”:  “Meet the new boss/Same as the old boss.” In a frank and fairly amusing interview, Dominik, whose credits also include the excellent Chopper and The Assassination of Jesse James By the Coward Robert Ford ,  shared his views on the reelection of President Obama, the “masculine confusion” that is prevalent in Killing Them Softly,  his next planned picture, an adaptation of Joyce Carol Oates’ novel about Marilyn Monroe, Blonde,  and whether Brad Pitt can remember what it was like to be normal. Movieline:  After seeing Killing Them Softly , I’ve got to know if you were rooting for anyone in the presidential election. Dominik:   Obama.  Yeah. I ask because the message of your movie seems to be that it doesn’t matter who’s running America from the Oval office.   Well I think, obviously, that the president’s powers can be fairly limited. But Obama was a better option than the other guy. That seemed to be the rationale of a lot of voters this year.  I really believed Obama when he spoke in 2008, but  I remember watching his victory speech after this last election and it was the same speech. Exactly the same speech.  I felt like he didn’t even believe it anymore.  He seemed to be tired of saying the same thing.  He even made the same joke about the dog. Your film is distributed by The Weinstein Company, which is co-chaired by Harvey Weinstein , an avid supporter of President Obama. Was there any discomfort with the political aspects of your film?  How tight is Harvey really with Obama?  He says he’s talked with Obama.  I’m sure Harvey feels tighter with Obama than Obama feels with Harvey.  You know what I mean? But, yeah, he was uncomfortable about that stuff.  And I think Brad was, too. But I don’t know that the movie’s really pointing its finger at Obama, specifically.  It’s pointing its finger at the lie with which American was constructed — this idea that we’re all equal. Which clearly nobody believes. It takes an outsider to tell us that.  What made you decide to take a 1974 George V. Higgins novel and set it in 2008 at the time of  the 2008 economic crash and the presidential election? I guess it was everything going on at once.  I found the book, and I needed money. And everyone around me needed money.  All they were talking about was the economy.  I realized that the movie was the story of an economic crisis, and I started to see parallels between this little story and the bigger story. I’ve always suspected that crime movies are really about capitalism.  I didn’t watch The Sopranos and think Tony Soprano was a sociopath.  He just looks like a normal guy with normal problems to me.  So I felt like maybe here’s an opportunity to make a self-conscious crime film. Fiction is how we organize reality — but what are we trying to organize when we watch crime movies? I guess it’s the reality of existing in a dollar-driven society. You mentioned The Sopranos .  At its core, that series was a epic parable about the George W. Bush era, and, in some respects Killing Them Softly felt like an extension or a kindred spirit of that show. Were you inspired at all by the universe that David Chase created?  I love The Sopranos .  It’s a fucking great, great show.  But not directly as far as the movie was concerned. There are actors from the series in the movie, but I guess when you’re looking for goombah-type guys, David Chase found them all.  So there’s really no getting away from it.

Visit link:
INTERVIEW: ‘Killing Them Softly’ Director Andrew Dominik Discusses His American Horror Story

Sundance 2013 Images: ‘Fruitvale,’ Shane Carruth’s ‘Upstream Color,’ Rooney Mara & Casey Affleck In ‘Ain’t Them Bodies Saints’

The first wave of Sundance 2013 programming has been unveiled ( find the full list of U.S. and World narrative and documentary titles, plus the NEXT line-up, here ) along with some intriguing first images from films like David Lowery’s Ain’t Them Bodies Saints , starring Rooney Mara and Casey Affleck as 1970s outlaw lovers, and Primer director Shane Carruth’s sophomore film Upstream Color . The U.S. dramatic competition line-up is filled with exciting titles and filmmakers; below, check out the first images from Ain’t Them Bodies Saints , Upstream Color , and another highly anticipated film on my Sundance radar, Fruitvale — about the last day in the life of Bay Area man Oscar Grant, who was shot and killed by BART police in a headline-grabbing 2009 incident that sparked outrage in Oakland, California. Ain’t Them Bodies Saints , director and screenwriter David Lowery Synopsis : The tale of an outlaw who escapes from prison and sets out across the Texas hills to reunite with his wife and the daughter he has never met. Cast : Rooney Mara, Casey Affleck, Ben Foster, Nate Parker, Keith Carradine. Upstream Color , director and screenwriter Shane Carruth) Synopsis : A man and woman are drawn together, entangled in the life cycle of an ageless organism. Identity becomes an illusion as they struggle to assemble the loose fragments of wrecked lives. Cast : Amy Seimetz, Shane Carruth, Andrew Sensenig, Thiago Martins. Fruitvale , director and screenwriter Ryan Coogler Synopsis : The true story of Oscar, a 22-year-old Bay Area resident who crosses paths with friends, enemies, family and strangers on the last day of 2008. Cast : Michael B. Jordan, Octavia Spencer, Melonie Diaz, Ahna O’Reilly, Kevin Durand, Chad Michael Murray. Get the full first slate of Sundance competition titles here and stay tuned for more first looks at the Sundance 2013 lineup… Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

Read the original:
Sundance 2013 Images: ‘Fruitvale,’ Shane Carruth’s ‘Upstream Color,’ Rooney Mara & Casey Affleck In ‘Ain’t Them Bodies Saints’

Ben Affleck ‘Reluctantly’ Fired Some ‘Argo’ Actors

Ben Affleck ‘s Argo is in the running for a host of possible Oscar nods this season. And while the film, which he directs and stars in is now just shy of making $100 million in the U.S. (it’s closing in on $150 million internationally) critical acclaim and the big bucks mask some of the pitfalls of moviemaking. For the first time, Affleck had to give some actors the boot while shooting the feature based on a true story set during the Iranian hostage crisis. “I’ve fired a couple of actors. It’s the worst thing in the world because I know, as an actor, what it’s like,” Affleck said during THR ‘s directors roundtable discussion via Access Hollywood . “I was a child actor, and the director threatened to fire me. That traumatized me. I was 13 years old. And I went around in fear of being fired.” The Good Will Hunting Oscar-winner first went behind the camera as director with Gone Baby Gone in 2007, but was forced to sack a few actors during Argo . “This movie [Argo] was the only time I really fired people, but I had to do it,” he said. “I had all these Persian actors who were supposed to speak Farsi. And often they would audition in English and I would say, ‘You can speak Farsi, right?’ ‘Oh, yes, yes.'” Affleck recalled one actor who hammed up his part as an Iranian during production, using some stereotypes that prompted Affleck to call him on his tricks. “A guy came in for a really crucial part, and on the day of shooting, we were blocking the scene, and this guy’s got this mini speech,” he said. “And the guy did it, and it was just terrible. He was sort of like, you know, twisting the mustache and being the Iranian villain and having the accent and adding all these flourishes. A couple times I said, ‘Just do nothing and say your lines. Let’s try that.” And another actor ran afoul after trying to grab camera time, also getting the boot after one incident. “There was this guy who had a little bit in the movie, but it was so nice,” Ben said. “And then when this other guy was blowing it — and not just blowing it, but hamming it up — it made it easy to say, ‘No, you know, you’re trying to ruin my movie.'” [ Source: Access Hollywood ]

More here:
Ben Affleck ‘Reluctantly’ Fired Some ‘Argo’ Actors

Guest-Starring Sharktopus! A Syfy ‘Waterworld’ Remake Could Be Genius

I’m starting to think the execs over at Syfy may be a bunch of secret geniuses. When I first read Forbes ‘ report that the NBC Universal -owned cable network is considering giving the lifeguard’s kiss to Waterworld as either a film for its new theatrical division or, more likely, a TV series for its prime-time schedule, I  almost choked on my coffee.   Just hearing the title of the $235-million 1995 stink bomb — until Titanic , reportedly the most expensive movie made — makes me simultaneously think of mildew and bacon. The first, because of the movie’s stagnant, waterlogged plot; the second, because Dennis Hopper’s  performance is so damn hammy.  The late actor, who played Deacon, the leader of the pirates known as Smokers,  actually says at one point in the movie: “Dry land is not just our destination, it is our destiny!” And the more I think about it, a Waterworld  reboot is Syfy’s destiny.  As the Forbes post notes, the movie does well every time it runs on the network, but with a little Syfy-style goosing, a TV series could become destination programming for B-movie nerds everywhere. Waterworld is set in a post-apocalyptic world where the polar icecaps have melted and land is sparse.  First of all, in a post-Katrina-Irene-Sandy world, the concept doesn’t seem all that farfetched anymore.  Better yet, that extremely moist setting makes an ideal universe  for Syfy to populate with all of the mutated monsters that have starred in its cheese-tastic original TV movies. The movie’s protagonist, the Mariner — who was played by  Kevin Costner — is, after all, a mutant, too. He sports gills and webbed feet. So, as long as we’re suspending disbelief for him, why not have him face down such inspired Syfy abominations as   Sharktopus , Mega-Python, Mega-Piranha, Piranhaconda — and, from above, Mansquito! — on a weekly basis.  I see parts for Barry Williams, Tiffany , Debbie Gibson and Kevin Sorbo.  And if Universal hasn’t settled its suit with mockbuster production house The Asylum , which produced some of the most successful and preposterous creature films to air on Syfy, maybe they can make nice and make waves.  (Ba-dum-bump!) Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.

Link:
Guest-Starring Sharktopus! A Syfy ‘Waterworld’ Remake Could Be Genius

Guest-Starring Sharktopus! A Syfy ‘Waterworld’ Remake Could Be Genius

I’m starting to think the execs over at Syfy may be a bunch of secret geniuses. When I first read Forbes ‘ report that the NBC Universal -owned cable network is considering giving the lifeguard’s kiss to Waterworld as either a film for its new theatrical division or, more likely, a TV series for its prime-time schedule, I  almost choked on my coffee.   Just hearing the title of the $235-million 1995 stink bomb — until Titanic , reportedly the most expensive movie made — makes me simultaneously think of mildew and bacon. The first, because of the movie’s stagnant, waterlogged plot; the second, because Dennis Hopper’s  performance is so damn hammy.  The late actor, who played Deacon, the leader of the pirates known as Smokers,  actually says at one point in the movie: “Dry land is not just our destination, it is our destiny!” And the more I think about it, a Waterworld  reboot is Syfy’s destiny.  As the Forbes post notes, the movie does well every time it runs on the network, but with a little Syfy-style goosing, a TV series could become destination programming for B-movie nerds everywhere. Waterworld is set in a post-apocalyptic world where the polar icecaps have melted and land is sparse.  First of all, in a post-Katrina-Irene-Sandy world, the concept doesn’t seem all that farfetched anymore.  Better yet, that extremely moist setting makes an ideal universe  for Syfy to populate with all of the mutated monsters that have starred in its cheese-tastic original TV movies. The movie’s protagonist, the Mariner — who was played by  Kevin Costner — is, after all, a mutant, too. He sports gills and webbed feet. So, as long as we’re suspending disbelief for him, why not have him face down such inspired Syfy abominations as   Sharktopus , Mega-Python, Mega-Piranha, Piranhaconda — and, from above, Mansquito! — on a weekly basis.  I see parts for Barry Williams, Tiffany , Debbie Gibson and Kevin Sorbo.  And if Universal hasn’t settled its suit with mockbuster production house The Asylum , which produced some of the most successful and preposterous creature films to air on Syfy, maybe they can make nice and make waves.  (Ba-dum-bump!) Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.

Link:
Guest-Starring Sharktopus! A Syfy ‘Waterworld’ Remake Could Be Genius

High And Low: Yule Have A Blue Christmas With Desplechin & Deneuve, A Shticky One With Ernest

With the post-Thanksgiving and post–Black Friday hangover still lingering, it’s a pretty slow week for new DVD releases. Since we’re entering the Christmas season, however, there’s no better time to find Highs and Lows among holiday films (while also sneakily reminding you of my film guide Have Yourself a Movie Little Christmas , which makes a great stocking stuffer). So if you’re feeling worldly, spend Noel with some extremely unhappy French folks. Otherwise, pop some Ro-Tel and Velveeta in the crock pot and enjoy the holiday hi-jinks of America’s favorite rubber-faced redneck. HIGH: A Christmas Tale (The Criterion Collection; DVD/Blu-Ray, $39.95) WHO’S RESPONSIBLE: Written by Arnaud Desplechin and Emmanuel Bourdieu; directed by Desplechin; starring Catherine Deneuve , Mathieu Amalric, Anne Consigny, Melvil Poupaud, Chiara Mastroianni. WHAT’S IT ALL ABOUT: Matriarch Junon (Deneuve) needs a bone marrow transplant, and while this is usually a procedure where parents donate to children, Junon figures that she gave her kids life and now it’s time for them to repay the debt. The search for a donor means that black-sheep son Henri (Amalric) is coming home for Christmas for the first time in years, where he clashes with sister Elizabeth (Consigny), who essentially had him banished from the family for his shady financial machinations. WHY IT’S SCHMANCY: The “mommy dies at Christmas” genre is an ever-more-crowded one, but there’s no easy sentimentality from Desplechin. Junon is haughty and prickly — her barbed exchanges with Henri are classic — and this family tapestry is woven with such care and intelligence that you may find your allegiances shifting from viewing to viewing. I also admire a movie that casually drops cultural references to everything from Nietzsche to Cecil B. DeMille’s The Ten Commandments . WHY YOU SHOULD BUY IT: This 2008 import (original title: Un conte de Noël ) has become one of my annual screening rituals. It’s funny, moving, thought-provoking and endlessly fascinating. And since this is a Criterion release, there are some great extras, including L’aimee , a short film by Desplechin (in which he and his father go through their old family home) that inspired the feature. LOW: Ernest Saves Christmas (Touchstone Home Entertainment; DVD $9.99) WHO’S RESPONSIBLE: Written by B. Kline and Ed Turner; directed by John Cherry; starring Jim Varney, Douglas Seale, Oliver Clark, Noelle Parker. WHAT IT’S ALL ABOUT: Cab driver Ernest P. Worrell (Varney) gets involved when Santa (Seale) travels to Orlando to hand the keys to his workshop over to kids-show host Joe Carruthers (Clark) — who thinks the old man is a lunatic. Besides, Joe’s more concerned about making the leap to the big screen, even though what he thinks is a family film called Santa’s Sleigh winds up being something far darker. Can Ernest and plucky orphan Harmony (Parker) appeal to Joe’s better nature and save the holiday? WHY IT’S FUN: From local TV spots to stardom on the big and small screens, the character of Ernest is something of an acquired taste. But it’s hard not to be won over by Ernest Saves Christmas , which features some of Varney’s most inspired shtick, from destroying the always-unseen Vern’s house to dressing in drag as the mother of Joe’s agent. There are also appearances by legendary comic second bananas Bille Bird and Gailard Sartain. Before you scoff too much, see the movie. WHY YOU SHOULD BUY IT: Hey, Disney! What’s with Ernest Scared Stupid getting a Blu-Ray release and not Ernest Saves Christmas ? Someone at the Mouse House should be getting coal in their stocking for this one. Alonso Duralde has written about film for Salon and MSNBC.com. He also co-hosts the Linoleum Knife podcast and regularly appears on What the Flick?! (The Young Turks Network) .  He is a senior programmer for the Outfest Film Festival in Los Angeles and a pre-screener for the Sundance Film Festival. He also the author of two books: Have Yourself a Movie Little Christmas (Limelight Editions) and 101 Must-See Movies for Gay Men  (Advocate Books). Follow Alonso Duralde on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter. 

Read the original post:
High And Low: Yule Have A Blue Christmas With Desplechin & Deneuve, A Shticky One With Ernest

Peter Jackson Still Working On ‘The Hobbit’ As New Clip Appears

December 14th is the day when Peter Jackson will unleash the first of his Hobbit films, but that doesn’t mean it’s practically in the can. Jackson is bunkering down in the Park Road Post Production facility in Wellington, New Zealand to finish up the first in the trilogy, The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey . “It’s due to be completed literally two days before the premiere. Hopefully,” Jackson comments in the film’s latest production video (below). “You’re going to see a lot of sleep-deprived people in this blog — everybody’s working around the clock to get the film finished.” The behind the scenes look shows Jabez Olssen and Jackson editing the film, final construction of hundreds of CGI shots and working on sound effects for the feature which stars Martin Freeman, Ian McKellen, Richard Armitage, Cate Blachett and Elijah Wood. “We’ve got another three weeks…and then another couple films,” Jackson said. “The journey’s long from over, it’s just really starting.” Meanwhile, a new clip from the film also rolled out. The scene shows Gandalf (Ian McKellen) giving a magical sword to Bilbo Baggins (Martin Freeman). It’s rather quick and Gandalf seems to forewarn of its pending need. Peter Jackson interview : First clip : [ Sources: Wired , The Film Stage ]

Link:
Peter Jackson Still Working On ‘The Hobbit’ As New Clip Appears

Patrick Stewart, Ian McKellen Back For ‘X-Men: Days Of Future Past’

Prepare for a double dose of mutant powers: The X-Men of the past and future will collide in Bryan Singer ‘s forthcoming sequel X-Men: Days of Future Past , which will bring Patrick Stewart ‘s Professor X and Ian McKellen ‘s Magneto together with their X-Men: First Class counterparts James McAvoy and Michael Fassbender in the same film, Singer announced today. I’d like to officially welcome back James McAvoy, Jennifer Lawrence, Michael Fassbender, & Nicholas Hoult to #XMEN for #DaysOfFuturePast — Bryan Singer (@BryanSinger) November 27, 2012 Thrilled to announce @ ianmckellen118 & @ sirpatstew are joining the cast of #XMEN #DaysOfFuturePast #magneto #professorX More to come… — Bryan Singer (@BryanSinger) November 27, 2012 This should be exciting for X-Men fans, who’ve seen the comic book franchise flit around timelines and younger/older versions of the same characters since Singer’s X-Men spawned a film universe of spin-offs and standalone superhero pics. This synopsis for X-Men: Days of Future Past explains how two Professor Xs and Magnetos can co-exist in the same film (via The Film Stage ): The storyline alternates between present day, in which the X-Men fight Mystique’s Brotherhood of Evil Mutants, and a future timeline caused by the X-Men’s failure to prevent the Brotherhood from assassinating Senator Robert Kelly. In this future universe, Sentinels rule the United States, and mutants live in internment camps. The present-day X-Men are forewarned of the possible future by a future version of their teammate Kitty Pryde, whose mind traveled back in time and possessed her younger self to warn the X-Men. It’s a familiar tale to fans of the X-Men comic; the dystopian alternate future saga of Days of Future Past was a hugely popular storyline, adapted memorably in the animated X-Men series in episodes featuring the time-traveling Bishop. The original comic storyline featured Kitty Pryde in the pivotal time-traveling role; is it too much to hope for Ellen Page reprising her X3 character to bring the entire X-Men film franchise full circle? (Probably.) X-Men: Days of Future Past is being scripted by Simon Kinberg, aiming for a July 18, 2014 release — excited, X-fans? Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

More here:
Patrick Stewart, Ian McKellen Back For ‘X-Men: Days Of Future Past’

The A-List Goes Indie: Spirit Awards Nominations Heavy On Hollywood Alpha Males

When the Independent Spirit Awards  take place in Santa Monica on the Saturday before the Academy Awards  next February,  there should be plenty of A-list testosterone coursing through the event tent.  The slate of nominations for the 2013 honors , which celebrate independent film, is studded with box-office friendly male actor who’ve carried studio films. And Jennifer Lawrence .  Best Male Lead Jack Black ( Bernie) , Bradley Cooper ( Silver Linings Playbook ) and Matthew McConaughey ( Killer Joe ) , who’ve all starred in studio pictures,  count for three of the six Best Male Lead nominations. John Hawkes ( The Sessions ) , who’s on the verge of leading-man status, Wendell Pierce ( Four ) and Thure Lindhardt ( Keep The Lights On ) round out the category. That’s a considerably more Hollywood pack than last year’s nominations, of which there were only five: The biggest studio star in that bunch was Ryan Gosling ( Drive ), whose fellow nominees were, respectively French and Mexican actors, Jean Dujardin ( The Artist ) and Demián Bichir ( A Better Life ) and Woody Harrelson ( Rampart )  and Michael Shannon ( Take Shelter ), who are best known for excellent character work. Best Female Lead The Female Acting categories are not so larded with heavy hitters, but they do include   The Hunger Games star Lawrence, nominated for Best Female Lead based on her performance in Silver Linings Playbook , and Helen Hunt, who nabbed a Best Supporting Female nomination for her portrayal of a sex therapist in The Sessions . Best Supporting Male Actor The Best Supporting Male actor category also has two A-listers: Bruce Willis , for his work in Wes Anderson ‘s Moonrise Kingdom, and, nominated in his second category, McConaughey  for his inspired pelvic thrusting in Magic Mike . As far as I’m concerned, Sam Rockwell, who’s nominated for Seven Psychopaths , is an A-lister, too, even if he hasn’t anchored a tentpole movie. With the indie film market growing increasingly choked with product, big-box-office actors populating independent movies — and getting honored for their work — probably isn’t going away any time soon since A-list names help draw investors and distributors to small projects. In terms of reading the Oscar tea leaves, five Spirit nominations for Moonrise Kingdom , including Best Film and Best Director, bodes well for Wes Anderson’s Academy Award nomination chances. Hawkes and Hunt’s actor nominations could provide the spark that The Sessions needs to get back into the Oscar derby. Multiple nominations for Silver Linings Playbook should intensify the film’s already golden Oscar glow, while nods to  Beasts of the Southern Wild   and its child star  Quvenzhané Wallis  are making the film look like one strong dark-horse candidate. Who wasn’t nominated for a Spirit Award is also interesting.  Despite fine performances in both Hyde Park on Hudson and Moonrise Kingdom , longtime studio-star-turned-indie-darling Bill Murray got bupkis, and, though Channing Tatum got the lion’s share of the press when  Magic Mike  was released — in part because he produced the picture and brought his real-life experiences as a stripper to the story — his G-string came up empty. RELATED:  ‘Moonrise Kingdom,’ ‘Beasts’ & ‘Keep the Lights On’ Lead Spirit Awards Nominations Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.

Read more:
The A-List Goes Indie: Spirit Awards Nominations Heavy On Hollywood Alpha Males