This just in from the Avengers press conference in Beverly Hills, where Robert Downey Jr. may or may not be messing with the assembled press a la Tony Stark: “We are shooting one more scene [for The Avengers ]… tonight. Not kidding.” Aaand with that mysterious cliffhanger, Downey and his fellow superheroes exited the stage. What does it mean? UPDATE : Joss Whedon reacts: “He’s Robert, of course he’s kidding.” Well, it was fun while it lasted. And Downey did promise that nothing after his first answer would be sincere. Stay tuned for Movieline’s full report from the Avengers junket!
Alas . But not because he’s gay! Maybe? “Though [Chris] New was recently turned down for the role of Jesus on a U.S. TV show, and suspects it was because he is gay, he said that actors should not blame homophobia for not getting cast in the roles they want. ‘There could be a million reasons why you might not get a job and gay people have to be careful about blaming [homophobia], because they’re reinforcing their own closet door.'” Anyway: Out or not? The debate continues… [ Guardian ]
Sony debuted the first poster for Rian Johnson’s Looper , which feels like its been in the works for something close to ever but nevertheless has nearly six months remaining before it comes to theaters on Sept. 28. In the meantime, here are its stars doing their best playing-card imitation. Jack of hearts? King of clubs? Enh, forget it. Also: Wouldn’t What to Expect When You’re Expecting benefit from this kind of more… painterly Photoshop? Just throwing that out there. [ /film ] Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
The Tribeca Film Festival has announced The Avengers as the closing-night selection of its 11th annual event, where Joss Whedon’s summer superhero blockbuster will have its New York premiere on April 28 — and for a good cause, according to Marvel and fest organizers. “Honoring the spirit of the Tribeca Film Festival, the screening will allow the opportunity for Marvel’s The Avengers to celebrate everyday heroes from police agencies, fire departments, first responders and various branches of the U.S. military,” reads a statement just over the transom at ML HQ. “These local heroes will have an opportunity to attend the screening and meet the cast.” Marvel Studios’ producer Kevin Feige adds: “We all know and love our iconic Super Heroes, but when it really counts, it’s our real-life heroes who save the world every day by making it a better place for all of us.” Whedon, meanwhile, reacted with customary cheekiness: “Showing at Tribeca is both an honor and a double homecoming for me, who grew up in Manhattan, and for the movie, which wrapped production there. I’m thoroughly psyched to be closing the festival with our intimate little think-piece.” More to come at Movieline as Tribeca gets underway next month. Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
While Johnny Depp, Armie Hammer and director Gore Verbinski are working to turn Disney’s rudderless blockbuster ship around with The Lone Ranger , Hollywood megaproducer and Twitter mainstay Jerry Bruckheimer has been busy dropping clues about and glimpses at the the making of the film from behind the scenes. If you are even the least bit interested in how this one’s coming together, you could do worse than keep an eye on Bruckheimer’s tweets. Not that there’s anything especially Earth-shattering going on here, but for those wondering about how and where this thing is being shot, the era of the film or even — ahem — what Verbinski’s birthday cake looks like, then Bruckheimer is your guy! Director Gore Verbinski breaking down a scene to The Lone Ranger crew twitter.com/BRUCKHEIMERJB/… — JERRY BRUCKHEIMER (@BRUCKHEIMERJB) March 22, 2012 Here’s another classic car on set of The Lone Ranger … Anyone know what this one is? twitter.com/BRUCKHEIMERJB/… — JERRY BRUCKHEIMER (@BRUCKHEIMERJB) March 20, 2012 Some cool cars from the set twitter.com/BRUCKHEIMERJB/… — JERRY BRUCKHEIMER (@BRUCKHEIMERJB) March 19, 2012 Celebrated Gore’s birthday on set last night twitter.com/BRUCKHEIMERJB/… — JERRY BRUCKHEIMER (@BRUCKHEIMERJB) March 17, 2012 And then there’s crap like this, but it’s at a minimum so far: Shooting a cool scene today, can’t tell you any more than that! — JERRY BRUCKHEIMER (@BRUCKHEIMERJB) March 16, 2012 Anyway, now you know. [ @bruckheimerjb ] Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
There are so few filmmakers willing to tackle the romantic melodrama these days that Terence Davies’s The Deep Blue Sea is welcome just for its sheer novelty. An adaptation of Terence Rattigan’s 1952 play, the picture opens with an attempted suicide and ends with an uneasy kind of redemption. It’s a love story with a great deal of furious, elegant handwriting packed between the lines, an exploration of immutable class distinctions and emotional and sexual repression in postwar England. And Rachel Weisz, as a woman who risks everything for the love of the wrong man, carries the mood and subtext of the material safely tucked in her dressing-gown pocket – she’s vulnerable and self-motivated in all the right measures. But there’s such a thing as having too much reverence for your material, and although Davies is an extraordinarily gifted and principled director, The Deep Blue Sea may suffer for that reverence. Weisz plays Hester Collyer, the wife of an esteemed judge, Sir William (Simon Russell Beale). Her life is clearly comfortable, though not altogether happy, which is made clear by a scene in which her mother-in-law (played by Barbara Jefford) excoriates her for even believing in the notion of passion. And when we first see her, she’s a person who no longer wishes to live, a limp, drained figure in a murky, crowded bedroom: That’s the drab flat she shares with Freddie Page (Tom Hiddleston, of War Horse , not to mention that he also plays Loki in Thor and the upcoming Avengers ), the shallow if occasionally charming former RAF pilot who drew her away from her husband like a magnet. The story of how and why Hester made the choices she did is told in flashback, but her present – a present that, in the days when it was a glimmering future, was supposed to bring her so much happiness – is a muted kind of hell. After her suicide attempt, Freddie, deciding she’s too much of an emotional mess (and blaming her for it), decides to leave her. Hester is seized with a desperation to get him back. Davies captures the milieu of ’50s Great Britain perfectly, as you’d expect from the director of Distant Voices, Still Lives – postwar England is his home turf, emotionally and physically, though his eyes and ears are also well-attuned when it comes to period details of eras before his own time. (His 2000 adaptation of The House of Mirth , starring an almost painfully radiant Gillian Anderson, gets Edith Wharton in a piercingly direct way.) Here, with his DP Florian Hoffmeister, he captures the dank optimism of 1950s London, a place where no one seems to be happy but everyone is working so hard at being cheerful that the murky illusion is almost believable. There’s rubble on the street corners, remnants of all-too-recent bombings that pedestrians now pass by without a glance. Gathering places like pubs can be cozy or oppressive, depending on the circumstances – their dark paneling and dim lighting can offer a place to hide from the world, though hiding from oneself is a different story. That’s a lot of subterranean social and psychological meaning to capture with a camera, and Davies does so beautifully. Yet the pacing of The Deep Blue Sea is somehow at odds with both the movie’s imagery and its performances. The actors are all marvelous here: Beale’s character starts out as an unlikable lump and gradually emerges as a thoughtful man with deep and ardent feelings – if Weisz’s Hester is the emotional compass of the movie, William is the figure most sensitized to her wavering needle. Hiddleston has the right mix of boyish eagerness and brainless, spineless schoolboy cruelty – his scrubbed-clean aura is really a kind of menace. And Weisz is superb here, giving a performance that’s so dappled with shadows and light that you almost can’t tell which is which. Her Hester is a creature of great refinement, the finest that civilization has to offer – no wonder she’s scrabbling to get back to something raw and real, something that looks, feels and smells more like nature. The thing she moves toward is, of course, the wrong thing. But this is a tragedy with a medium-happy ending, after all. And as beautifully made as The Deep Blue Sea is, it too has a passion problem, and not because Davies’ approach isn’t heartfelt enough. In fact, it may be too heartfelt. The picture moves like a contemplative, stately march, but the problem isn’t its slowness. It’s that Davies puts too much space between nearly every line – every dramatic work is constructed of dialogue and the breaths in between, but not every unspoken ellipses has to be swollen and pregnant with meaning. Davies may be, like his heroine, the man who loves too much, and the movie groans under the weight of all that lavish attention. This is a different world, again, from Anatole Litvak’s 1955 version of the same material, starring Vivien Leigh and Kenneth More. That movie has a crispness, an almost rakish detachment, that makes its subnotes of repression and self-flagellation even more potent. It’s not a better movie, exactly – simply a reminder of what different directors and performers can bring to the same words, ideas and feelings. Comparing the two only reminds us that there’s no such thing as perfect adaptation. If there is, it lies in that elusive patch of green between the devil and the you-know-what. Follow Stephanie Zacharek on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
The team at NextMovie today offers this stirring mash-up of deep thoughts proffered by Morgan Freeman — or at least characters played by Morgan Freeman. Even the guy in Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves! Incredible. Not bad! Honestly, though? Needs more Fast Black. [ NextMovie ] Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
Now that Piranha 3DD finally has an official release date , it’s time to roll out a very, very NSFW new red-band trailer for your viewing consideration. It is base, oversexed, gory, cheap-looking and patently disgusting in pretty much every conceivable way, featuring such steps down as stripper lifeguards, midcoital piranha attacks, and Gary Busey chewing the head off a live fish. It’s all just stupid enough to be kind of awesome. I mean, David Hasselhoff is invoking Darwin here! We must be on to something. [via IGN ] Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
Happy 69th birthday to David Cronenberg — a great Canadian and not a bad filmmaker, either. And because this has gone so well in the past , let’s celebrate by asking: What’s Cronenberg’s best feature film? His worst? And where do the rest fall in between? The answers are obvious: 19. Naked Lunch 18. Crimes of the Future 17. Fast Company 16. M. Butterfly 15. Stereo 14. They Came from Within 13. The Brood 12. A Dangerous Method 11. Rabid 10. eXistenZ 9. Crash 8. Spider 7. Eastern Promises 6. Videodrome 5. The Dead Zone 4. The Fly 3. Scanners 2. A History of Violence 1. Dead Ringers PREVIOUSLY
Richard Linklater’s latest film, Bernie , makes its SXSW debut on Wednesday, but Movieline will save you a trip to Austin by showcasing one of its finer highlights here. Take it away, Kay McCabe! McCabe, the saucy delight otherwise known as Matthew McConaughey’s mother, drops in for one of the dark comedy’s documentary interludes. In this first-look clip, she has a few words for the titular local mortician (played by Jack Black) and the rich widow (Shirley MacLaine) whose wealth he pursues with deadly consequences. McConaughey co-stars as the district attorney investigating Bernie’s shenanigans. Bernie opens April 27 via Millennium Entertainment. Check out more from SXSW 2012 here . Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .