Tag Archive | "Atonement"

A Prophet’s Niels Arestrup Joins Joe Wright’s ‘Hanna’

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A Prophet’s Niels Arestrup Joins Joe Wright’s ‘Hanna’


The Playlist is reporting that French actor Niels Arestrup, star of Jacques Audiard’s Oscar-nominated A Prophet, has joined Joe Wright’s (Atonement, The Soloist) upcoming thriller Hanna. Arestrup joins an already impressive cast that includes Cate Blanchett, Eric Bana and Saoirse Ronan (Atonement, The Lovely Bones) in the title role. Ronan’s Hanna is a 14-year-old raised by her father to become a killing machine. The report suggests that Arestrup will play the head of a French family that befriends Hanna, while Bana will portray the girl’s father.

The film is scheduled to start shooting as soon as next week, and will take place in many locations including Finland, Bavaria, Morocco, and Berlin. The script comes courtesy of first-time writer Seth Lochhead. Although Wright’s The Soloist was an immense disappointment, he has done enough as a filmmaker to warrant my interest.

Hanna will be released by Focus Features sometime in 2011. Are you looking forward to it?

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Saoirse Ronan And Joe Wright Team Up For Teen Assassin Film

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Saoirse Ronan And Joe Wright Team Up For Teen Assassin Film


According to Heat Vision, Rising star Saoirse Ronan is in negotiations to collaborate once again with her Atonement director Joe Wright as the title character, Hanna, which is a teenage assassin movie.

The story follows a 14-year-old Eastern European girl (Ronan) who has been raised by her father to be a remorseless murderer. She connects with a French family, forms a friendship with their daughter and goes through the pangs of adolescence. When the girl is dragged back to her father’s world and discovers that she was bred as a killing machine in a CIA prison camp, she must fight her way to a free life.

Nobody who has seen Atonement could deny that Ronan has a chilling ability to avoke the sinister using her blank expressions and small voice. But expectation will be higher with this role and she deserves it. Ronan has been entering into more mature territory than any of her previous work, case in point The Lovely Bones. Nevertheless with Wright to guide her once again, Ronan would have the chance to start making the transition from child to adult actor.

Would Saoirse Ronan being cast in the lead role make you more or less likely to see Hanna?

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More Photos From Peter Jackson’s ‘The Lovely Bones’


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We had two new photos a few days ago, but the 20th Anniversary issue of Empire has debuted some more photos from Peter Jackson’s The Lovely Bones, including more information on the film. The film is completed and is going to be released in December so it can have proper award consideration, and Brian Eno does score the whole film. The photos provide a first look of Mark Wahlberg (Max Payne) as Jack Salmon, Susan Sarandon (Speed Racer) as Grandma Lynn, and Saoirse Ronan (Atonement) as Susie Salmon. Check more photos out after the jump.

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[Review] The Strange Case of The Soloist


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Someone should have told Steve Lopez that his story just wasn’t that interesting. Granted, discovering a musical prodigy on the streets of L.A. is quite zesty, but that can only be the beginning of the tale. And since this whole thing only happened recently (within the last few years), there’s no real ending to the true story The Soloist is based on.

Cue the incredible mess that is the film adaptation. Directed by Joe Wright, the artistic mind behind Atonement, and written by Susannah Grant, who gave us two worthy scripts in Erin Brokovich and In Her Shoes, one wonders how these talents failed to zero in on the juice in this story of a L.A. Times columnist who meets homeless genius – it’s Rain Man meets Ray for goodness sake.

Read the rest of the review >>

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[First Look] Peter Jackson’s ‘The Lovely Bones’


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Empire Magazine has debuted the first two photos from Peter Jackson’s (King Kong) upcoming adaptation of Alice Sebold’s novel The Lovely Bones. The 1st photo gives a glimpse of how Peter Jackson is depicting heaven, which is where we see the main character Susie Salmon played by Saoirse Ronan (Atonement). Check out two new photos after the jump.

Check out the photos >>

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10 Films To See In April (And 5 To Avoid)


Not sure what is coming out this month? Here is my rundown of my most anticipated films coming out:

10. Fast & Furious (Lin, April 3rd)

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Plot: As he is released from prison, Brian O’Conner teams up with Dominic Toretto work with the feds to bring down a heroin importer by infiltrating his operation.

Trailer

Why You Should See It: I’m actually not sure if this is a film to watch or avoid. The first one was enjoyable and it looks like a return to the original. I’ve heard early buzz that it is a decent popcorn flick.

Check out the rest of the list >>

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Ridley Scott’s ‘Robin Hood’ Has A King and Queen


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Universal Pictures just put out a press release that reveals a few more cast members in Ridley Scott’s upcoming film, Robin Hood.

Joining Crowe and Blanchett for the film are Oscar® winner Vanessa Redgrave (Julia, Atonement) as John and Richard’s mother, Queen Eleanor of Aquitaine; Mark Strong (Body of Lies, Stardust) as King John’s vicious henchman, Sir Godfrey; Oscar Isaac (Che, Body of Lies) as King John; and Léa Seydoux (13 French Street, upcoming Inglourious Basterds) as the woman who will become queen, French Princess Isabella.

Hm… I really like these casting decisions. I honestly don’t know what to expect from this film, but I’ll definitely keep my eye on it.

What do you think about the additions to the cast?

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The Edge of Love on the Edge of Obscurity?


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With an apparent (and certainly limited) U.S. release of this film finally coming on March 13th, here’s a little diddy about The Edge of Love, directed by John Maybury (The Jacket) and starring Keira Knightley, Sienna Miller, Cillian Murphy and Matthew Rhys.

Here’s a link to the film’s website and a trailer of the film.

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[Looking Ahead] 2010 Oscar Predictions


Last Sunday Slumdog Millionaire swept the Academy Awards concluding the culmination of 2008 cinema. 2009 film is now upon us. It’s been a bit of a mix with the horrendous Paul Blart: Mall Cop kicking off the year, but so far, it’s left us with a couple gems (Taken and Coraline 3-D). It’s not too early to take a look at the films that we will be seeing in next year’s Academy Awards. If you are looking for a more mainstream/blockbuster films, check out my 50 Must-See Movies of 2009. If you want a list of higher caliber films, here are my predictions for the major 2010 Oscars categories:

Best Picture/Director

I’ve decided to lump these two categories together since it’s too early to separate them out. Here are 10 films that I can see being in the running with some other contenders after:

Martin Scorsese – Shutter Island (a.k.a. Ashecliffe

Plot: Drama is set in 1954, U.S. Marshal Teddy Daniels is investigating the disappearance of a murderess who escaped from a hospital for the criminally insane and is presumed to be hiding on the remote Shutter Island. Leo DiCaprio leads an all-star cast, including Mark Ruffalo, Ben Kingsley, Michelle Williams and Max von Sydow

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[Spotlight On] James McAvoy


By Dan Mecca

I don’t know where this guy came from, but he is one of the best actors around right now, and if you can’t admit that than you are lying to yourself. It all started, in hindsight, with Wimbledon, a sassy little rom-com starring Kirsten Dunst and Paul Bettany. And who was Bettany’s younger brother? You guessed it! McAvoy was also the funniest part of the movie, providing laughs where there should not have been any, and playing off Bettany’s awkward charm with…more awkward charm.

And that’s what he’s got: charm. The guy’s a natural, most likely unaware of the depths of his facial expressions and weight of his words. As Carl Colt in Wimbledon, McAvoy played an endearing character, constantly betting (literally) against his brother (Bettany) to lose but rooting for him to win…no matter what the cost.

These terms of endearment would only expand with his next breakout role, that of Mr. Tumnus in The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. Playing a faun, McAvoy served, once again, as the comic relief in a children’s movie that took itself far too seriously.

And, once again, his performance felt less like acting and more like being, as if McAvoy was always a faun, who just happened to be on set that day, armed with a handful of nice one-liners. Every scene he is in he steals from those wooden kid actors, making every viewer wish he would take their place.

All of this, however, is foreplay. Where McAvoy really broke out was in The Last King of Scotland, playing Dr. Nicholas Garrigan. As the young naive doctor, McAvoy found a dramatic voice not present in his earlier roles. Unfortunately, he was in a film geared not towards his performance, but that of Forest Whittaker and his calculated imitation of Idi Amin. Reminescent of Anthony Hopkins overshadowing Jodie Foster in The Silence of the Lambs or Marlon Brando overshadowing Al Pacino in The Godfather, Whittaker distracts viewers from McAvoy, who carries the film on his shoulders throughout, allowing Whittaker to overact his way to a Best Actor Oscar. I only hope Forest thanked McAvoy for the assist.

But young James’ time will surely come. He anchored Atonement and made the intelligent romance Starter for 10 delightful, with considerable help from Rebecca Hall, another up-and-comer with ridculously natural acting chops. Hell, he even made it through Wanted without laughing, which is more than you can say for Morgan Freeman, who was clearly laughing all the way to the bank in that piece of shit. McAvoy even made waves in the 2003 BBC series State of Play, which has since been adapted into an American feature film starring Russell Crowe and Ben Affleck. And while the film sports a nice poster and trailer for its April 17th release, it has a huge problem: no James McAvoy.

McAvoy’s next film is Michael Hoffman’s The Last Station, a film based on Russian author Leo Tolstoy (the guy who wrote War and Peace). McAvoy is not Tolstoy and it looks like he is not the lead, which is refreshing in a way. Maybe he picked the film because he honestly liked the screenplay. The word on the street is that the film, as a matter of fact, is 2010 Oscar material. It appears McAvoy makes any movie he’s in better for it (see both Penelope and Becoming Jane), so I’m willing to bet we see McAvoy at the Academy Awards next year, if not nominated most certainly deserving.

Do you enjoy McAvoy’s performances? Do you see him growing as an actor?

Check out our other spotlights in our Articles section.

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