Month: January 2025

Back in November, we here at JoBlo received a pretty intriguing invitation. We were invited to Los Angeles to get an early look at Nickel Boys, a film based on the novel by Colson Whitehead. Directed by RaMell Ross, the movie’s gotten a ton of Oscar buzz, both for its director and the movie’s stars, Ethan Herisse, Brandon Wilson, and Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor. In it, Herisse and Wilson play Elwood and Turner, two young men sentenced to a reformatory in the Jim Crow-era South. Once there, they realize there’s a good chance they won’t live through their respective sentences, with the punishment inflicted on them far outweighing the petty crimes they’re supposed to have committed. 

It’s undoubtedly one of the boldest movies of the year, with it shot entirely in a first-person point of view, where the camera literally takes the place of Herisse and Wilson at different points in the narrative. While this technique takes a good deal of getting used to (Ross has admitted that the movie really takes two viewings to take in), it’s immersive in ways few other movies are – and considering the hell Elwood and Turner go through, that aspect makes Nickel Boys a rough, but necessary watch.

Yet, for all of the film’s weight, when we were invited to interview the cast and director afterwards, we were delighted to see how laid-back, easygoing and friendly they all were. In our interviews, we speak to Herisse and Wilson about what it was like acting directly into a camera for the entire shooting schedule, while Ross explains just how he and the DP were able to pull off some of the film’s amazing shots. Finally, the great Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor reveals how she openly campaigned for the role she plays in the movie, having been a huge fan of Ross’s last film, Hale County This Morning, This Evening. Check out the interviews embedded above, and check back for our full review of Nickel Boys later this week as it begins its expansion into more theatres this weekend. 

The post Nickel Boys: We interview the cast and director of this drama with Oscar buzz appeared first on JoBlo.

Trying to comprehend the root cause of pain and the depths of the human soul is an ambitious task. It’s one which writer, director and actor Jesse Eisenberg approaches with poignant reflection and laugh-out-loud humour as he traverses fractious political and personal history.

Eisenberg’s third feature film as writer/director takes on the form of an elegantly-composed road trip movie complete with Frédéric Chopin soundtrack. It’s a deeply personal journey across Poland that follows two cousins, Benji (Kieran Culkin) and David (Jesse Eisenberg), who use an inheritance from their late grandmother to head on a group tour led by earnest guide James (Will Sharpe doing a fine Yorkshire accent). The rest of the group is made up of divorcee Marcia (Jennifer Grey from Dirty Dancing), Midwestern couple Diane (Liza Sadovy) and Mark (Daniel Oreskes) and a Rwandan-Canadian convert to Judaism, Eloge (Kurt Egyiawan).

Eisenberg paid tribute to his family who were affected by the horrors of the Holocaust with a trip to Lublin, the former concentration camp Majdanek, and the place where his great-aunt lived in Kranystaw. In the film, the cousins visit the exact same locations. They also spend a lot of time getting high on hotel rooftops as a way to recapture their once close bond and survey the crisply shot (by cinematographer Michal Dymek) cityscapes and tourist spots. Just as the weed smoke hangs
heavy in the air, so too do pertinent questions about the cousins’ mysteriously-strained relationship.

With Benji, Eisenberg has written a very recognisable male character and Culkin’s performance is a  wonder to behold. His moods are unpredictable and his behaviour impulsive but he is also charming and funny. People may be occasionally shocked by his frankness, but they are also drawn to it. On the flipside, Eisenberg’s David is more collected even if he is neurotic, a little repressed and not as much fun to be around. The juxtaposition between the two men further explores the great void that can emerge when grief and trauma go unaddressed.

This is a film of many juxtapositions and complex layers. It deliberates the joy of living in the moment while also considering the consequences of actions. At one point the cousins take an unplanned detour on a train ride. It’s a moment that brings to mind the exhilarating romance of Richard Linklater’s Before Sunrise, with the pair’s brotherly connection blossoming through risk- taking and the promise of adventure. A Real Pain may set out its stall as an empathetic tour of pain, effortlessly exposing the quiet and chaos of the human condition through its multiple characters and the places they visit, but it is also distinctly a film about the boundaries and limits of love.


ANTICIPATION.

Excited to see Kieran Culkin in a film role post-Succession.
4

ENJOYMENT.

An amusing and compelling inquiry into human pain and suffering.
4

IN RETROSPECT.


Culkin turns in a truly touching and unforgettable performance.

4


Directed by



Jesse Eisenberg

Starring



Jesse Eisenberg,


Kieran Culkin,


Will Sharpe

The post A Real Pain review – an amusing and compelling inquiry into human pain and suffering appeared first on Little White Lies.

adrien brody snl

“Ladies and gentlemen, Sean Paul.” That’s all Adrien Brody had to say when he hosted Saturday Night Live. Instead, he went full Jamaican, donning a wig, taking on an accent and grooving in a way that nobody expected or wanted. As such, he got a lifetime ban from the show. Or did he? While the moment is undoubtedly one of the more questionable moments to happen on SNL, Adrien Brody isn’t so sure that he is actually banned.

As far as Adrien Brody remembers, his one-time hosting stint on SNL was going well enough, finding the confidence to pitch his faux Jamaican character to the cast and Lorne Michaels. “I think Lorne wasn’t happy with me embellishing a bit, but they allowed me to. I thought that was a safe space to do that, weirdly.” With that sort of confidence, Brody took the stage at Studio 8H and introduced Paul, set to perform “Get Busy.”

The general belief was that the blatant goof had immediately lumped Adrien Brody with the likes of Martin Lawrence, Milton Berle, Steven Seagal, and more with having a lifetime ban from SNL, especially since most don’t realize that Brody did the bit during dress rehearsal. And while Brody hasn’t been on since that May 2003 episode, he’s not convinced he couldn’t pop in again. “But I also have never been invited back on. So I don’t know what to tell you.”

Adrien Brody’s SNL spot has once again gone viral following his Golden Globe win for The Brutalist. And while the infamous moment came after he won the Best Actor Oscar for The Pianist, there’s the belief that his shot at another Academy Award might be hindered because he can’t head back to Saturday Night Live as part of the awards circuit. I personally don’t think that Adrien Brody not landing another SNL hosting gig will hurt his chances at another Oscar, as he is now the odds-on favorite. If he does happen to win again, he would join the likes of Marlon Brando, Dustin Hoffman and Spencer Tracy, although only Brody would have gone two for two.

What do you make of Adrien Brody’s infamous SNL moment 20+ years on? Do you think he will win another Oscar?

The post Adrien Brody doesn’t think he’s actually banned from SNL appeared first on JoBlo.

Amy Schumer is back with a new Netflix comedy. Schumer recently worked with the streamer when she appeared in Jerry Seinfeld’s breakfast comedy Unfrosted: The Pop-Tart Story. This time, she co-writes and stars in Kinda Pregnant. The synopsis reads, “Jealous of her best friend’s pregnancy, Lainy wears a fake baby bump…and accidentally meets the man of her dreams.” Netflix has just released a trailer for the movie, which is written by Schumer and Julie Paiva. The script also comes from a story by Paiva, and Tyler Spindel helms the film as the director.

Kinda Pregnant also stars Jillian Bell (Brittany Runs a Marathon, Murder Mystery 2), Will Forte (The Last Man on Earth, MacGruber, Bodkin), Damon Wayans Jr. (Players, Love, Guaranteed), and Brianne Howey (Ginny & Georgia). Also joining the film are Alex Moffat (Saturday Night Live, Bad Monkey), Joel David Moore (Avatar), Lizze Broadway (Gen V), Urzila Carlson (upcoming Ozi, Voice of the Forest) and Francis Benhamou (Arranged, “Prayer for the French Republic”).

Spindel recently directed the Happy Madison production The Out-Laws and Adam Sandler also produces this film along with Tim Herlihy, Judit Maull, Kevin Grady, Eli Thomas for Happy Madison, Molly Sims for Something Happy Productions, Amy Schumer and Alex Saks for Saks Picture Company. The executive producers on the comedy include Barry Bernardi and Michael D. Robins.

Schumer’s film career never quite outdid her debut with Trainwreck, which was a Judd Apatow film. That movie had gotten a positive reception by critics and grossed $140.8 million on a $35 million budget. Her next two starring vehicles, Snatched and I Feel Pretty, made profits, but fizzled pretty quickly in the public’s attention. Schumer was once attached to make Barbie before Greta Gerwig signed on, but Schumer revealed that there were creative differences. She told Andy Cohen on Watch What Happens Live“I think we said it was scheduling conflicts, that’s what we said. But yeah, it really was just creative differences. But you know, there’s a new team behind it, and it looks like it’s very feminist and cool so I will be seeing the movie.” She also said, “They definitely didn’t want to do it the way I wanted to do it, the only way I was interested in doing it.” While she still hasn’t offered specifics, she did tell Cohen that her own movie didn’t have that “feminist and cool” vibe.

Kinda Pregnant. (L to R) Jillian Bell as Kate and Amy Schumer as Lainy in Kinda Pregnant. Cr. Courtesy of Netflix © 2024.
Kinda Pregnant. Amy Schumer as Lainy in Kinda Pregnant. Cr. Spencer Pazer/Netflix © 2024.
Kinda Pregnant. (Featured Center L to R) Brianne Howey as Megan and Amy Schumer as Lainy in Kinda Pregnant. Cr. Scott Yamano/Netflix © 2024.
Kinda Pregnant. (L to R) Will Forte as Josh and Amy Schumer as Lainy in Kinda Pregnant. Cr. Scott Yamano/Netflix © 2024.
Kinda Pregnant. (L to R) Amy Schumer as Lainy, Urzila Carlson as Fallon and Jillian Bell as Kate in Kinda Pregnant. Cr. Scott Yamano/Netflix © 2024.
Kinda Pregnant. (L to R) Lizze Broadway as Shirley, Jillian Bell as Kate, Amy Schumer as Lainy, Brianne Howey as Megan and Urzila Carlson as Fallon in Kinda Pregnant. Cr. Scott Yamano/Netflix © 2024.
Kinda Pregnant. (L to R) Brianne Howey as Megan, Amy Schumer as Lainy, Lizze Broadway as Shirley, Urzila Carlson as Fallon and Jillian Bell as Kate in Kinda Pregnant. Cr. Scott Yamano/Netflix © 2024.

Kinda Pregnant starts streaming on Netflix on February 5.

The post Amy Schumer straps on a fake baby bump in the trailer for Kinda Pregnant appeared first on JoBlo.

It’s trendy these days to take a character from popular children’s stories and given them a horror twist. Lately we’ve been hearing about horror movies based on the likes of Winnie the Pooh, Mickey Mouse, Sleeping Beauty, Cinderella, Peter Pan, Bambi, Pinocchio, Three Blind Mice, and Goldilocks and the Three Bears… and like I said the last time I wrote about this, when one set of filmmakers decides to make a horror film featuring a beloved kids’ story character, there are sometimes multiple other sets of filmmakers working on horror films that center on the same character. We’ve seen this happen with Mickey Mouse, and now the character who’ll soon be seen in more than one horror movie is Popeye the Sailor Man. Back in November,  it was announced that Alpeke Entertainment is working on a slasher horror comedy called Shiver Me Timbers, which puts a horror twist on Popeye. Then a trailer dropped for Popeye the Slayer Man, from director Robert Michael Ryan. We also heard of another Popeye horror movie, Popeye from ITN Studios – and that project, which is now going by the title Popeye’s Revenge, has now unveiled its own trailer! You can watch it in the embed above.

William Stead, who previously directed the World War II horror film Children of the Night, is at the helm of Popeye’s Revenge, which is described as being a “raunchy and gory slasher.” Here’s the synopsis: The legend of Popeye haunts a group of counselors as they intend to open a summer camp. I can’t say I ever imagined that Popeye would someday become a summer camp slasher.

Rene August is producing the film, which is coming our way from ITN Studios. Although ITN is the company behind Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey and the rest of the “Poohniverse” that’s being built around those films, our friends at Bloody Disgusting were informed that this movie is not part of that cinematic universe.

Popeye himself is being played in the film by Steven Murphy.

Popeye’s Revenge is aiming to be released sometime this month. Will you be watching it? Share your thoughts on the trailer by leaving a comment below.

Popeye's Revenge

The post Popeye’s Revenge trailer turns beloved character into a summer camp slasher appeared first on JoBlo.