Month: September 2024

Jeff Goldblum, 25, has forgotten his mantra. At least, his nameless party guest character – dubbed “Man on the Phone” in the screenplay – has. And it’s the way he delivered that line in 1977’s Annie Hall that made him stand out despite only having a few seconds of screen time. Somehow – just by being himself – Jeff Goldblum turned a throwaway bit into one of the funniest lines in one of the funniest films.

As for Jeff Goldblum himself, he says his mantras are “I am grateful” and “Accept, enjoy, enthuse.” And that, across 50 years on the big screen, is as truthful as it gets when it comes to Jeff Goldblum.

Let’s find out: What Happened to…JEFF GOLDBLUM?

Jeff Goldblum was born on October 22nd, 1952 just outside of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the son of a doctor and a radio broadcaster, the sort of brains and art pairing that perfectly describes the actor (his father even once considered the arts).

Goldblum developed a love of acting early on, even writing, “Please, God, let me be an actor” on steamed bathroom mirrors. And so it was, doing a few summer acting sessions at Carnegie Mellon before going to New York to study at the famed Neighborhood Playhouse under legendary coach Sandy Meisner.

Two years later, he made his Broadway debut in Two Gentlemen of Verona (1971). A natural performer, Goldblum would continue to take the stage even as he made it on TV and in movies, returning many times over the years…In 2006, he launched his own theater troupe called The Fire Dept, which isn’t surprising considering he started an acting school in the early ‘80s.

jeff goldblum death wish

Early roles

The stage actually helped him get his start. No, not as Freak #1 in Death Wish (1974; he’d play something similar in ‘76’s St. Ives, also starring Bronson) but rather California Split, as director Robert Altman saw him perform. Altman would next cast him in 1975’s Nashville as a tricycling mute, clearly recognizing the quirk Goldblum had embedded in him. Although he was still a few years off from fame, he had at least the confidence to quit his job peddling office supplies to prisons…As such, he continued with small bits on shows like Columbo and Starsky & Hutch, as well as supporting roles in Next Stop, Greenwich Village and Special Delivery (both 1976).

1977 would mark his first genuine breakthrough. Following The Sentinel, Woody Allen (who Goldblum later named his dog after) cast him in Annie Hall as a man calling his manager to tell him he forgot his mantra. It’s just one line and Goldblum is barely on the screen, but somehow it is one of the most quoted in his career and the iconic comedy. That same year, he stood out as a music critic at a low-level newspaper in Between the Lines, truly introducing us to his trademark humor and mannerisms in every scene he stole. It was like the title for his next picture was intentional…

Following the thriller Remember My Name (1978) and playing a disco owner in Thank God It’s Friday (1978), Goldblum appeared in his first mainstream supporting role, falling victim to the pod people in Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978). Almost a fact, this is where he defined his easily identifiable patterns, especially in speech, blowing away director Philip Kaufman – and audiences – with the delivery of the line: “I – I – I – I never thought that they would come in – in metal ships.” It was never intentional, Goldblum said, but “it became useful.”

It’s this unusual nature, this singular voice that ensured he would get a lot of voice work on shows like King of the Hill, Crank Yankers, Big Mouth, and actual play podcast Dark Dice; heck, he even voiced God on an oddball series call Happy! (2019). And certainly, we can’t forget Verminous Skumm on Captain Planet and the Planeteers, a brilliant one-off on The Simpsons “A Fish Called Selma” and The Prince of Egypt (1998). It’s no wonder he has been cast as The Wonderful Wizard of Oz – a character known, at least at first, by his voice and commanding presence – in Wicked.

In 1980, he played a pitch-perfect Ichabod Crane on TV’s The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, the same year his one-season comedy Tenspeed and Brown Shoe aired. The early ‘80s kept him busy: re-teaming with Donald Sutherland for another sci-fi, Threshold, to a Genie Award nod; playing a comic accused of murder in TV movie Rehearsal for Murder (1982); again playing a reporter in ensemble record-seller The Big Chill (1983), turning up for the faithful Philip Kaufman in an unnamed role in The Right Stuff (1983), a cowboy-topped fella named New Jersey in Buckaroo Banzai (1984); and a diverse 1985 triple feature, showing great chemistry with Michelle Pfeiffer in Into the Night, playing a heel who meets a proper fate in Silverado and leading a lousy but near-cult horror-comedy Transylvania 6-500. All the while, he kept doing TV one-offs on fare like American Playhouse, Faerie Tale Theatre and The Ray Bradbury Theatre.

the fly

The Fly

But it was time to be afraid, be very afraid. In 1986, Jeff Goldblum starred in David Cronenberg’s The Fly remake. It was the most praise he had ever earned, giving the genre performance of a lifetime that should have been nominated for Best Actor. While always a scene-stealer, too rarely does Goldblum get credit for just how good of an actor he can be. Consider also 2008’s Adam Resurrected, earning some of the highest praise of his career and putting him in the middle of failed Oscar chatter, playing a Holocaust survivor committed to an institution. Another good one is 1992’s Deep Cover, showing he wasn’t afraid to steal scenes from Laurence Fishburne; and for it he earned an Independent Spirit Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor.

Perhaps for too long, he spent too much time doing whatever he wanted, however good or bad, concluding his post-Fly output with virtually nothing memorable: lifetime rom-com Beyond Therapy (1987), TV drama Life Story (playing DNA structure discoverer Watson; he would only play one other real-life figure, in Spinning Boris), Cyndi Lauper-starrer Vibes (1988), former Comedy Central staple – and genuinely fun time – Earth Girls Are Easy (1988), an enjoyable enough starring role in The Tall Guy, and again playing a writer in Spanish-French production El Sueño del Mono Loco.

The ‘90s had a forgettable start, too: demented, chewy roles in Mister Frost and HBO movie Framed (1990); 1991’s The Favour, the Watch and the Very Big Fish, which was far less entertaining than the title. 1992 brought Fathers & Sons – giving Goldblum much physical and emotional to handle – and Shooting Elizabeth.

Jurassic Park, jeff goldblum, shirtless, meme

Jurrasic Park

Another resurrection waited behind the gates of Jurassic Park (1993), playing what would be his trademark role: Dr. Ian Malcolm, later reprising him for 1997’s The Lost World and 2022’s Jurassic World: Dominion. Somehow – or maybe inevitably – Jeff Goldblum also became a sex symbol. This character is now so regarded that a 25-foot statue was erected in London – and even that was sexy! Jeff Goldblum was now officially in the pop culture hierarchy, a wholly unique figure in a field where it’s near-impossible to stand out. And yet there he is, becoming a guy we knew could bring something interesting to anything. Here was a guy trusted to sell everything from apartments and Apple products (even though he can barely use an iPhone) to Toyotas and German beer (even though he rarely drinks).

As he did for a lot of his post-The Fly work, very little was truly memorable, but he enhanced every project: hosting PBS series Future Quest (1994); 1995’s Hideaway, Nine Months and Powder; 1996’s The Great White Hype and Mad Dog Time. All this unmemorable fare was balanced by another defining role in Independence Day (and its 2016 sequel), as well as – fun fact here – earning an Oscar nod for Best Live-Action Short for Little Surprises. The ‘90s ended with Holy Man (1998) before the next century brought Beyond Suspicion, Chain of Fools, One of the Hollywood Ten (all 2000), Perfume (2001), the paycheck movie Cats & Dogs (2001), Igby Goes Down (2002), Dallas 362 (2003), Mini’s First Time, Fay Grim, Man of the Year (2006), The Switch, Morning Glory (both 2010), Le Week-End (2013), Mortdecai (2015), Hotel Artemis, The Mountain (both 2018)… And what of his various spots on Friends, Will & Grace (earning an Emmy nod), The Larry Sanders Show, Glee, The League, Portlandia, and Kimmy Schmidt? From 2009-2010, Goldblum replaced Chris Noth’s detective on Law & Order: Criminal Intent, a show lucky to have him. But he would leave after 24 episodes, uncertain as to the show’s future. Here’s an even more uncertain future: he was the subject of a death hoax that had him falling off of a cliff. That’s so Goldblum!

Goldblum

Wes Anderson

In 2004, Jeff Goldblum first teamed with Wes Anderson, playing an oceanographer in The Life Aquatic, returning as a deputy in The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014), a pooch in Isle of Dogs (2018), and, most recently, the alien – how fitting! – in Asteroid City (2023). He, too, has made that MCU rite of passage, having proven himself as a key supporter of blockbuster entertainment, here playing Grandmaster in Thor: Ragnarok (2017) after a credits cameo in Guardians 2 but before in voice form on What If…? Next, he will play Zeus in Netflix’s mythology-based Kaos.

In 2019, Goldblum said, “I still have creative choices more varied than ever. I still feel like I’m on the threshold of my best work, not only understanding it but being able to practice it.” OK, so his next movie was Boss Baby (2021), but you know what he means! That year, he hosted The World According to Jeff Goldblum, in which he somehow made denim, puzzles, and random small stuff interesting!

It’s that endless curiosity and fascination with all of it that continues to keep Jeff Goldblum in the collective consciousness of oddballs everywhere. As he once said, “There’s so much that’s delicious, precious, magnificent, mysterious and infinitely enjoyable that it would be foolish not to make every day an adventure.” And he does because, as we know, Jeff Goldblum, uh, finds a way.

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Back in 2022, it was announced that Fighting with My Family co-stars Nick Frost and Lena Headey were going to reunite to work on the serial killer thriller Svalta, which was set to start filming in Finland soon… but then Headey had to drop out of the project due to scheduling issues before it started rolling in 2023 and was replaced by Aisling Bea, whose previous credits include This Way Up, Living with Yourself, and Home Sweet Home Alone. Last month, IFC Films and the Shudder streaming service acquired the North American distribution rights to Svalta, which is now going by the title Get Away, and the plan is that IFC Films will be giving the movie a theatrical release on December 6th. Get Away will then make its way over to Shudder sometime in 2025. As we dive into spooky season, a trailer for Get Away has now arrived online and can be seen in the embed above.

Get Away was directed by Steffen Haars (New Kids Turbo) from a screenplay Frost wrote himself. The story follows a family on their summer vacation to a remote island where they discover a serial killer is on the loose. Unfortunately for them, the locals have no interest in helping the stranded family. The title is taken from the name of the fictional island. As Frost described the story, “Take a gentle English family and send them on holiday to a tiny Swedish island full of maniacs. Simple. Not so much Nuts in May. More ‘Nuts in Mayhem’.

Frost and Bea are joined in the cast by Sebastian Croft (Heartstopper) and newcomer Maisie Ayres. 

Coming our way from XYZ Films, Wayward Entertainment, and Resolute Films, Get Away was produced by Lee Kim for Resolute Films, John Hegeman for Wayward Entertainment, Nick Spicer and Aram Tertzakian for XYZ, and Frost. Richard Kondal co-produced for Big Safari, while Vince Totino of Wayward Entertainment and Patrick Fischer of Creativity Capital served as executive producers. Financing was provided by XYZ in collaboration with IPR.VC, along with additional funding from Creativity Media, with tax incentives and support from Business Finland, Business Tampere, and the City of Tampere.

We first heard about this project back in 2019, at which time Frost’s frequent collaborator Simon Pegg was going to producing the movie with him, and James Serafinowicz and Nat Saunders were going to be co-writing the script. But it doesn’t look like Pegg, Serafinowicz, or Saunders have any involvement with the finished product.

What did you think of the Get Away trailer? Will you be watching this movie later this year? Let us know by leaving a comment below. While we wait for this one, Frost has another horror movie, Krazy House, reaching VOD on October 4th.

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maggie smith

Maggie Smith, who has graced audiences with her work in the Harry Potter films, Downton Abbey, A Room with a View and Gosford Park, has passed away at the age of 89.

According to the BBC, her sons Toby Stephens and Chris Larkin have made the announcement with the following statement, “It is with great sadness we have to announce the death of Dame Maggie Smith. She passed away peacefully in hospital early this morning, Friday 27th September. An intensely private person, she was with friends and family at the end. She leaves two sons and five loving grandchildren who are devastated by the loss of their extraordinary mother and grandmother. We would like to take this opportunity to thank the wonderful staff at the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital for their care and unstinting kindness during her final days. We thank you for all your kind messages and support and ask that you respect our privacy at this time.”

More information to follow…

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Time Cut

Three years ago, it was announced that Freaky (watch it HERE) collaborators Michael Kennedy and Christopher Landon would be teaming up again to bring us a new genre project called Time Cut, which was being described as “Back to the Future meets Scream” – and now, Time Cut is finally ready to make its way out into the world! Netflix has announced that they will be releasing the movie on October 30th, just in time for Halloween viewings, and Entertainment Weekly has unveiled a first look image from the film that can be seen right here in this article.

Although Landon directed Freaky, he did not Time Cut. Instead, Hannah MacPherson, director of Sickhouse and the Into the Dark film Pure, took the helm. Kennedy wrote the initial script with Crazy Ex-Girlfriend story editor Sono Patel, then MacPherson got involved in the writing process as well. Landon produced the film with Matt Kaplan’s ACE Entertainment.

Landon and Kennedy are both known for putting slasher twists on familiar concept. Landon directed the time loop slashers Happy Death Day and Happy Death Day 2 U, as well as the Kennedy-scripted body swap slasher Freaky. Kennedy also wrote It’s a Wonderful Knife, which was a slasher take on It’s a Wonderful Life. A “Back to the Future meets Scream” movie sounds like something that will be right in line with those films… the only problem is, Time Cut was beaten to the concept! Although it was announced a year after we first heard about Time Cut, the movie Totally Killer was released last October, and it was a time travel slasher blend of Back to the Future and Scream. It even took its lead character to the 1980s, the decade when Back to the Future was released.

Time Cut doesn’t go back that far. It shows us what happens when a teenage girl travels back to the early 2000s to stop a vicious killer from murdering her sister. The cast includes Madison Bailey, Antonia Gentry, Michael Shanks, Griffin Gluck, Summer H. Howell, Rachael Crawford, Megan Best, Sydney Sabiston, Adam Hurtig, Samuel Braun, Kataem O’Connor, Jordan Pettle, Chess Tomlinson, Dutchess Cayetano, Gwendolyn Collins, BJ Verot, Colleen Furlan, and Elena Howard-Scott.

Totally Killer already did the time travel slasher thing and the ’80s were a much cooler time period than the early 2000s, but I’m still on board to watch Time Cut once it starts streaming. I’m always interested in watching a new slasher movie.

Does Time Cut sound like a movie you’ll be watching next month? Take a look at the image, then let us know by leaving a comment below.

Time Cut

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life of chuck

Mike Flanagan’s The Life of Chuck is earning high praise and building hype after the film won the People’s Choice Award at this year’s Toronto International Film Festival. Our own Chris Bumbray even listed it as one of the 10 favorite films of his from the festival. In his review, he states, “Ultimately, Life of Chuck is different for Flanagan because he can fully explore the rich characterizations that define his work without hitting those genre beats. While that might limit his audiences, his fans (of which I am one) will undoubtedly appreciate this detour and find The Life of Chuck a bittersweet tearjerker. More than anything, it’s a warning that our time on earth is limited and that it’s best to find joy wherever we can, even in the most fleeting moments.”

Variety is now reporting that the Stephen King adaptation has been sold to the indie production company Neon and is predicted to be released in the summer of 2025, with an awards push in the fall. Although the film is currently closing with Neon, the terms of the deal have not yet been announced as they are not yet completely finalized. Furthermore, Variety has not been able to get a spokesperson for the film distributor to comment on the acquisition at this time.

Per Variety, “Adapted from Stephen King’s 2020 novella, The Life of Chuck stars Tom Hiddleston and is directed by Mike Flanagan. Billed as a ‘life-affirming’ story about an ordinary man named Charles Krantz, the film is split into three distinct chapters that unfurl in reverse chronological order and set against the backdrop of a world that appears to be slowly crumbling. Mark Hamill, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Karen Gillan, and Jacob Tremblay co-star in The Life of Chuck, which has been compared to King adaptations like Shawshank Redemption and Stand By Me rather than It or Pet Sematary.”

One of the notable scenes from the film’s hype is Tom Hiddleston partaking in an extended dance sequence. Hiddleston spoke about his experience in filming such a sequence, “I had to do all of these technical dances, none of which I have any training in. There are some that came more easily than others. I found I love dancing jazz and swing. Bossa nova is a technical thing that took my hips a minute to get my head around. Polka is like a 100-meter sprint. It feels like a gallop.”

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Plot: The story of American photographer Lee Miller, a fashion model who became an acclaimed war correspondent for Vogue magazine during World War II.

Review: Operating from the belief that Kate Winslet cannot deliver a bad performance, I went into Lee expecting the acclaimed actress to be excellent. As a surprise to no one, Winslet is astoundingly good in a passion project she has shepherded for almost a decade. At one point, Winslet financed cast salaries out of her own pocket as well as acted with a brutal back injury sustained during filming. While those trials have added to the aura exuded by Lee Miller over the course of the film, Lee is nevertheless a formulaic biopic kept afloat by a stellar cast that includes Alexander Skarsgard, Andy Samberg, Marion Cotillard, Andrea Riseborough, and more. The story still packs an emotional punch with striking historical context from World War II but fails to live up to the exceptional acting provided by Kate Winslet.

Regarded as one of the most important war correspondents of all time, Lee Miller (Kate Winslet) was a fashion model in her late thirties (aka past the prime for a model). Miller was interested in photography as an art form and was exploring working on the other side of the camera lens. Her close friends, including French Vogue fashion editor Solange d’Ayen (Marion Cotillard) and artist Nusch Eluard (Noemie Merlant), encouraged Lee’s passions. Lee soon met Roland Penrose (Alexander Skarsgard), a fellow artist, and at the break of World War II, they each followed their paths into the battlefields in different ways. Supported by Audrey Withers (Andrea Riseborough), the editor of British Vogue, Lee photographed everything from Saint-Malo during the battle of the same name to the streets of Paris after the city was liberated. Along the way, Lee partnered with American photographer David Scherman (Andy Samberg), who faced far fewer restrictions as a man during wartime. Through the years and the dangers of the frontlines, Miller and Scherman experienced the horrors of what the Nazis wrought and insisted on chronicling it for the world to see.

Clocking in at two hours, Lee opens in 1977 with the photographer relating her life story to a young man named Antony (Josh O’Connor) and flashes back to 1937 all the way through 1944. In that seven-year time span, Lee went from a self-assured model to a self-assured photographer who experienced every limitation that was forced on women in a professional capacity. Miller is not allowed in places because she is a woman or a civilian, but she never once gives up documenting the truth of the brutal fallout of war. This includes soldiers with grave injuries to survivors of the Holocaust as well as victims whose bodies were left to rot by the retreating German occupiers. Lee does not pull any punches as it delivers some haunting moments, accentuated by some truly remarkable performances from both Kate Winslet and a solid dramatic turn from Andy Samberg. Winslet and Samberg share the most screen time in the film, with Winslet appearing in virtually every scene.

Winslet’s ability to land a cast of talent as strong as this rested on her network of friends and colleagues in the industry. Most of the performances are limited to a handful of scenes each outside of Winslet’s The Regime co-stars Andrea Riseborough and Josh O’Connor, who have strong supporting roles. The challenge with Lee is that everyone else feels thinly written since the story is so centered on the title character. Andy Samberg’s David Scherman was a close friend of Lee’s and was present for many of her major milestones during the war. Still, his character feels requisite to remain historically accurate rather than a significant part of the story. Both Alexander Skarsgard and Marion Cotillard have strong scenes, but their total time on camera clocks in at less than twenty minutes between them. For such an emotionally heavy story, Lee seems determined to make the title character unlikeable by having those around her seem less than vital to her story.

Making her feature directorial debut, Ellen Kuras brings some haunting visuals to Lee that echo her decades of work as a cinematographer. Kuras uses the screenplay from Liz Hannah, John Collee, and Marion Hume based on the book The Lives of Lee Miller to tell the story of an artist and journalist that few today may know about. Often, stories of World War II center on the military or espionage aspects of the era, but Lee embeds the characters in the conflict while not focusing on the battlefields themselves as part of the story. Like many correspondents, Lee is set in the aftermath of battles and shows how the photographer has a duty to preserve the horror so future generations can learn from it. There are a few stirring moments in the film that stand out, including Lee taking a legendary photo bathing in Hitler’s bathtub after he had committed suicide, as well as the framing conversation, which carries a much more important meaning after you finish the film. However, Lee also hits many somewhat cliche moments, such as the character revealing a childhood trauma that motivates her to photograph what she does. By no means do I underplay the power of such trauma, but the film presents it in such a way that feels rote and cliche when it should have been powerful.

From Alexandre Desplat’s beautiful score to the multiple talented actors in the cast, Lee has much more going for it than I expected. Kate Winslet is once again an exemplary actor and proves herself worthy of another Oscar nomination. But Winslet alone cannot save this movie from feeling like it is telling a familiar story we have seen countless times before. If it were not for Kate Winslet, this would be a forgettable dramatization of an important historical figure. Thanks to Winslet, Lee Miller’s story is reaching a wider audience than ever, and I am thankful that she completed her passion project. But, Lee is not as good as it could have been had it spent a bit more time distinguishing itself from every other World War II biopic. Lee is a master-class in acting within a film that needed a stronger vision from a more experienced filmmaker.


Lee

AVERAGE

6

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