Senin, 02 September 2019

Tracy Morgan, Sarah Silverman, Nick Kroll Lead Crank Yankers Season Five

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Tracy Morgan, Sarah Silverman, Nick Kroll, Aubrey Plaza, Tiffany Haddish and Kathy Griffin lead the cast for the long-awaited fifth season of Comedy Centrals Crank Yankers. The first episode of the revived series in which comedians voice puppets reenacting absurd and outrageous prank calls premieres September 25th.

Adam Carolla, Kevin Nealon, Chelsea Peretti, Will Forte, Nikki Glaser, David Alan Grier, Demetri Martin, Bobby Moynihan, Arturo Castro, Jeff Ross and Adam Pally will also contribute to Season 5. Returning puppet characters include Elmer Higgins, Niles Standish, Spoonie Luv and Bobby Fletcher.

Comedy Central previewed the new installment with a trailer featuring a montage of wacky one-liners and awkward interactions, including the following questions: What if I get pregnant by a ghost?, Why are you burping on the phone? and How are we able to handle a wet and sticky load? The clip ends with a character rejoicing, Im so happy because Im making a brown, beautiful doody in my pants.

Jimmy Kimmel, showrunner for the upcoming season, will executive produce alongside Carolla and Daniel Kellison. The trio created the show in 2002, and it ran for four total seasons (until 2007) during its initial run on the network.

Watch Adam Driver Expose CIA Torture in The Report Trailer

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Adam Driver portrays Daniel J. Jones, the real-life Senate staffer who led an exhaustive investigation into accusations of CIA torture techniques, in the riveting new trailer for The Report. The film, which premiered in January at the Sundance Film Festival, hits theaters November 15th before streaming two weeks later on Amazon Prime.

The clip opens with a montage of reaction shots to a news report of an obvious terrorist attack on September 11th, 2001. After 9/11, everyone was scared, Jones narrates. Scared it might happen again. It was my second day of grad school. Next day, I changed all my classes to National Security.

From there, we jump forward to the office of Senator Dianne Feinstein (Annette Bening), who shows Jones a New York Times headline about the CIA destroying tapes of interrogations of Al-Qaeda detainees. I want to find out what was on the tapes, she says. Why they were destroyed.

Jones begins his investigation but quickly runs into roadblocks from the government and the CIA. Nevertheless, he uncovers some disturbing facts including one example of a detainee who was waterboarded 183 times. Later, an adamant Feinstein proclaims, We will not allow this to be covered up.

Scott Z. Burns (screenwriter of The Bourne Ultimatumand The Informant!) wrote and directed the film, which co-stars Jon Hamm, Michael C. Hall, Corey Stoll, Maura Tierney, Tim Blake Nelson and Ted Levine. Steven Soderbergh co-produced the project.

Paul Rudd to Go Full Multiplicity in Living With Yourself Netflix Series

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Paul Rudd will follow in the multiple footsteps of Michael Keaton in Multiplicity this fall when he plays multiple versions of the same character in Netflixs new comedy series Living With Yourself. The series marks Rudds first leading role on a television series.

Rudd will be playing down-on-his luck Miles, who tries to make his life better by taking a spa treatment that is supposed to improve his life. The thing is, the treatment has created a whole new, better version of him, forcing him to become a better man in the process in his efforts to convince his wife Kate (Aisling Bea), his boss and himself that hes the worthwhile Miles. The program is told from multiple perspectives and will premiere on the streaming service on October 18th.

Timothy Greenberg, who has worked as a producer on The Daily Show and Wyatt Cenacs Problem Areas, created and wrote the eight-episode series. In addition to Cenacs show, his other most prominent writing credit is an episode of TBS family-on-the-run series The Detour, for which he also served as a consulting producer. The shows directors are Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris, who co-directed Little Miss Sunshine, Battle of the Sexes and music videos for R.E.M., Smashing Pumpkins, Red Hot Chili Peppers, and Korn, among others.

A few years back, Rolling Stone evaluated Paul Rudds many roles and rated them by Ruddiness the leading-man charm, the character-actor chops and the comedians ability to crack us up. At the time, the Ruddiest role was the groom in search of a best friend in I Love You, Man. The least Ruddy role was the mature loner he played in Prince Avalanche, a role that was maybe a little too dramatic for true Ruddosity.

Star Wars Confirms Ewan McGregor-Starring Obi-Wan Kenobi Series for Disney+

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In addition to the new trailer for The Mandalorian, Disney+ confirmed that a new Star Wars series featuring Ewan McGregor reprising the role of a young Obi-Wan Kenobi is in the works.

The franchise made the announcement Friday at the D23 expo, where Star Wars producer Kathleen Kennedy told the audience, We have all the scripts written, were ready to start shooting next year, Variety reports.

A Star Wars film featuring McGregor returning to the Jedi role was previously rumored when the franchise announced a series of spinoff films that would pad out the new Star Wars trilogy. The project will instead land at the Disney+ streaming service, which also has The Mandalorian and a new season of The Clone Wars in the wings.

After Alec Guinness put his stamp on the beloved character, Number Nine on Rolling Stones 50 Best Star Wars Characters of All Time list, in the original Star Wars trilogy, McGregor portrayed a young version of the young Jedi knight in the prequel films The Phantom Menace, Attack of the Clones and Return of the Sith. McGregor also provided a voice cameo during a scene in 2015s The Force Awakens.

Internally, weve wanted this for so long, but we know how much the fans want it too, Kennedy told EW at D23. [McGregor] wanted to come back, and hes so excited to play the character of Obi-Wan again. He really does embody who Obi-Wan is. And to think that Alec Guinness was really his mentor and now hes stepping into those shoes for this series, its really exciting.

Minggu, 01 September 2019

Legion Series Finale: What a Long, Strange Trip Its Been

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This post contains full spoilers for the series finale of FXs Legion.

As Professor X himself, Charles Xavier (Harry Lloyd), confronts the powerful telepath Amahl Farouk (Navid Negahban) on the astral plane late in the Legion series finale, Farouk scoffs at Xavier choosing a military knife as his weapon. The astral plane is an arena of infinite promise, Farouk notes. Surely, we have more imagination than that?

Legion creator Noah Hawley treated these three deeply strange, often riveting, occasionally indecipherable seasons as his arena of infinite promise. Coherence both narrative and emotional always came across as secondary to presenting the wildest and most memorable imagery possible. Why fight with a knife when you can transform into a samurai, or a tank, instead? Why explain things when you can stage a rap battle? Bigger, more colorful, and more bizarre was always the order of the day, particularly as the series facility with digital effects increased over time to make the powers of title character David Haller (Dan Stevens) appear disturbingly casual and real.

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This philosophy could lead to remarkable images, like this seasons introduction of a race of time demons that appeared as steampunk shadows with crooked smiles and apelike hands. But Hawley and his collaborators had a tendency to get high on their own supply, and to weigh the style so much more heavily than the substance that even the cool visuals could become numbing. The first season felt just coherent enough for the garish depictions of superpowers and mental illness to feel like a thrilling bonus. But Season Two wandered aimlessly until not even the pretty pictures were enough to justify the muddled storytelling.

This third and final season mostly returned to that original, effective balance. At only eight episodes, and with one clear story arc David, now a cult leader, uses the time traveler Switch (Lauren Tsai) to try to rewrite his own damaged life story, while ex-girlfriend Syd (Rachel Keller) and her team try to stop him it was easy enough to follow. Little time was wasted on supporting characters who had never really come to life, like Jeremie Harris Ptonomy, who spent part of this season in a robot body with an interesting hairstyle, or Hamish Linklaters Clark, who was thrown out of a blimp after losing his narrative usefulness.

It was Legion playing to its strengths and largely avoiding its weaknesses, and the characters who had always mattered got fitting send-offs. Aubrey Plazas ruthless grifter Lenny, for instance, finally developed genuine, tragic emotions when a time hiccup caused her to spend an entire lifetime in a day with the daughter she never knew she wanted. Syd got to hang out with her teen self, each giving the other emotional closure, before this final adventure rewrote her timeline altogether, effectively killing off this version of her. Mutant twins Cary (Bill Irwin) and Kerry (Amber Midthunder) experienced one last role reversal, as Kerrys furious, thrilling battle against the time demons aged her into the older of the two siblings after a lifetime of calling Cary old man. (Never mind that the rewriting of the timeline should have fixed that problem, too; even at the end, Legion didnt want you to think too closely about anything that was happening.)

Most interesting of all was what the final season did with the shows most problematic character: David himself. Stevens had seemed miscast in the first two years, but he did very well as this new villainous iteration of the character. And the adventures in time allowed us to get to know both his dad, Charles, and his mother, Gabrielle Haller (Stephanie Corneliussen from Mr. Robot). Back in the first season, characters kept debating whether David was a powerful mutant or just mentally ill, before the answer turned out to be both. This season provided further nuance. In depicting Gabrielle as someone with her own sickness, the season made clear that Farouk didnt make David ill, but only exacerbated a condition hed inherited from one parent (just like he inherited superpowers from the other). It added a welcome level of poignance and depth to a character who had previously been a pencil sketch in a show with stunningly colorful backgrounds. When Davids core personality sang Mother from The Wall one final nod to Pink Floyd, one of the series creative touchstones as his other personae fought Farouk, it felt like the steak and the sizzle had come together again, and David seemed like enough of a person for the extended music video sequence to matter.

This final chapter even winked at the shows own fondness for gibberish. It opened with a series of title cards explaining, This is the end. Then, the beginning. Then, the end. What it all means is not for us to know. It is for history to decide.

How will history view Legion? From the start, it was already something of a footnote to our current era of comic-book dominance of movies and TV: a marginal X-Men character, on a channel not generally known for superhero properties (though it was the once and future home to Hawleys Fargo), presented in a radically different style from any other Marvel or DC property on the big and small screen. It didnt even get to hold the unofficial title of weirdest show on TV for very long, because Twin Peaks: The Return debuted a couple of months after Legion Season One ended, and David Lynchs inscrutability left Hawleys work seeming like Law & Order in comparison. There was a fair amount of critical buzz about the first season, particularly when we got to the Bolero montage, but Season Two cooled that enthusiasm and seemed to chase away all but the diehards.

When it was good, Legion offered imagery the likes of which I never could have imagined seeing on television. (And which would have seemed awfully trippy even if they were on a comics page drawn by Hallers co-creator, the very psychedelic Bill Sienkiewicz.) It offered spectacular supporting performances by the likes of Keller, Plaza, Irwin, Jemaine Clement, and more. And periodically including in this very satisfying finale all its mismatched pieces held themselves together just long enough to create something more beautiful than their sum total.

The end takes us right back to the beginning: baby David Haller, now freed of Farouks stain on his life, but still with many challenges to face thanks to the gifts and deficits his parents have given him. The Whos Happy Jack plays, just as it did in the series opening moments. Will this version of David grow up happier and healthier than the one depicted across these psychedelic 27 episodes of television? Well have to leave that up to our own imaginations. But for his sake, I want to imagine something a bit more prosaic for his new life than his old one turned out to be.

Best Movies to See in Aug.: Hobbs & Shaw, The Kitchen, Springsteen Musical

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August was once a virtual graveyard for major releases. Thats not the case for this 2019 end-of-summer month, people. Nope. No sirree. This August is packed to bursting with noteworthy selections. Indie bloodbaths? Horror-anthology scarefests? Several character pieces bedecked with festival plaudits? Yes, yes, and yes. Also: were getting new movies from Richard Linklater or The Babadooks Jennifer Kent. And for those in need of a laugh, a few tweens have some very, very bad words theyd like to share with you. Heres whats coming to a theater near you.

After the Wedding (Aug. 9th)
Isabel (Michelle Williams), the cofounder of an Indian orphanage, travels back to the states to win the favor of potential benefactor (Julianne Moore). She invites the visitor to attend her daughters wedding the next day. Over the course of the weekend, layers upon layers of false pretenses get peeled back to reveal a shocking connection, a mistake two decades old, and a life hanging in the balance. Adapted from a Danish-language Academy Award nominee by Bird Boxs Susanne Bier, this gender-flipped take on the material strikes the same balance of high chamber drama and page-turning paperback intrigue.

Blinded by the Light (Aug. 14th)
Bruce Springsteen gave a voice to post-industrial smalltown America but that doesnt mean a British-Pakistani teenager named Javed (Viveik Kalra) whos suffering through Thatcher-era malaise cant also love the music of our nations blue-collar troubadour! Sure, the young mans friends and family balk at the cross-cultural interchange. But they just dont understand how Springsteens rebel-poet attitude and singular rock & roll style speaks to him and his fellow Born-to-Runners. The man himself has said that this musical from Bend It Like Beckhams Gurinder Chadha captures the spirit of his songs beautifully. Praise doesnt come any higher than that.

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Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw (Aug. 2nd)
Get two, two, two USDA-certified beefsteaks for the price of one! This Fast & Furious spin-off pits Dwayne Johnsons special agent and Jason Stathams villain-turned-ally against a former MI6 operative (Idris Elba) whos gained your run-of-the-mill cybernetically enhanced superpowers. Mission: Impossible Fallouts Vanessa Kirby is also along for the ride. People get punched. Macho one-liners get uttered. Things get blown up a lot. Each new F&F installment pushes the boundaries of physics and plausibility just a bit further. This entry may be the one where they simply chuck anything resembling reality right off the cliff.

Good Boys (Aug. 16th)
Office alumni Gene Stupnitsky and producer/cowriter Lee Eisenberg bring the world a bawdy R-rated comedy featuring kids not yet old enough to buy a ticket for it. Tween besties Max (Jacob Tremblay), Thor (Brady Noon), and Lucas (Keith L. Williams) get in big trouble when they lose a camera drone its a long story. To get it back, theyll have to survive a paintball onslaught, a perilous visit to a frat house, and their first traumatizing glimpses of porn. Its all the hilarity and humiliation of pre-pubescence, coming from fouler mouths.

The Kitchen (Aug. 9th)
Hells Kitchen, circa the late 70s. A trio of mob wives (Melissa McCarthy, Tiffany Haddish and Elisabeth Moss) watch as their husbands get carted off to the Big House. So while the men are stuck doing time behind bars, they decide to form a criminal empire of their own to put food in their kids mouths. Turns out theyre pretty good at this whole racketeering thing. If the cast makes it sound like a comedy and the premise makes it sound like a Widows clone, rest assured that neither charge sticks. Hell hath no fury, et cetera.

Luce (Aug. 2nd)
It sounds like a ethics class thought experiment come to life: A suspicious teacher (Octavia Spencer) finds a bag of illegal fireworks in a school locker. She points the finger at a star student named Luce (Kevin Harrison Jr.). Is she singling him out because of the essay he wrote, in which he appears to advocate the use of violence to spur social change? Or has she mentally put him in a box because hes a former African child soldier who was adopted by two well-meaning white liberals (Tim Roth and Naomi Watts)? Like it or loathe it, Julius Onahs controversial adaptation of an Off-Broadway play is guaranteed to start a conversation.

The Nightingale (Aug. 2nd)
Director Jennifer Kent (The Babadook) weaves another story about a woman under extraordinary duress but the similarities stop there. Her latest takes the form of a 19th-century brush Western, as an Irish prisoner (Aisling Franciosi) in an Australian penal colony tracks down the monstrous man (Sam Claflin) that raped her and murdered her husband days earlier. As for her aboriginal guide (Baykali Ganambarr), he has his own reasons for wanting payback. Kents film shares both of their pain and rage, not once shying away from the brutality or ugliness of her situation. Brace yourself.

Ready or Not (Aug. 21st)
The indie horror stalwarts known as Radio Silence Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett bring us the story of a blushing bride (Samara Weaving) cant wait to start her new life with the perfect groom (Mark OBrien). First, however, shes got to win over his family. All she has to do is survive a night from hell as the clan of ultra-wealthy eccentrics (including Andie MacDowell and Adam Brody) hunt her for sport. Who likes their scares spiced up with class tensions, relationship squabbles, and pitch-black physical humor involving hair-trigger crossbows?

Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark (Aug. 9th)
From Alvin Schwartzs millennial-beloved series of books comes this adaptation binding multiple tales of the macabre in one waking nightmare. Suburban teens rouse the malevolent spirits hiding in a cursed diary and let loose a menagerie of terrors: Harold the homicidal scarecrow, a ghoul dubbed the Jangly Man, a bulbous red facial blemish containing a chilling surprise that can never be unseen, etc. Our Spielbergian heroes have to get to the bottom of a legend regarding a family and a cursed young woman or die trying! [Cue black cat screech, chains rattling, wind howling through dead branches]

Whered You Go, Bernadette (Aug. 16th)
To the outside observer, it would appear that Bernadette Fox (Cate Blanchett) has it all: a loving husband (Billy Crudup), a MacArthur Genius grant, a gorgeous Seattle home. But communication has grown strained, she hasnt done any architecture work in years, and her agoraphobia has turned the house into an exceptionally lovely prison. Its enough to make a woman want to vanish into thin air which she does without warning. Its up to baffled spouse (Billy Crudup) and daughter (Emma Nelson) to track her down. Welcome to Richard Linklaters A Woman on the Verge of a Breakdown.

Lodge 49 Season 2 Review: And Now Our Moment of Zen

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Dreams are important, right? Sean Dud Dudley asks midway through the second season of AMCs Lodge 49. This isnt just a metaphorical discussion for Dud (Wyatt Russell), a shaggy former pool cleaner whose optimism never flags even though hes technically homeless and barely survived a shark attack at the end of Season One. No, Duds best friend Ernie Fontaine (Brent Jennings) has recently told him about a man who paints images from his own prophetic dreams, then watches the paintings come true. So dreams are both important and real to Dud and to Lodge 49, an addictively strange, nigh-indescribable drama whose ongoing existence feels like a dream that somebody painted into the Peak TV landscape.

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The core plot, such as it is, involves Dud and Ernies membership in a local fraternal order that has like the guys themselves, and Duds sister Liz (Sonya Cassidy), and the entire world around them seen much better days. The first season (now streaming on Hulu) was practically half over before anything resembling a story appeared. Season Two starts in a crazy place, with a perfect celebrity cameo, before jumping back six weeks to begin the long, meandering, and yet utterly watchable tale of how our heroes wound up in this particular jam. In general, TV overuses this kind of in media res opening, but its extremely useful for a series that leans much more on vibe than story to throw down an early narrative marker like this.

Yet if Lodge 49 often seems to be about nothing, it also manages to say a lot about everything: hopes and dreams and disappointments, and finding reasons to go on when there doesnt seem to be much point. The tiny nature of it all is a feature, not a bug, as the series teeters between the naive idealism of Dud and the hard-earned cynicism of Ernie and Liz. This year, Liz gets a job at a new theme restaurant, whose name, Higher Steaks, feels like the creative team winking at the idea that the series should be more eventful. There is a bit more plot this time, and also a bit more openness to the idea that there could be something genuinely magical about the Lodge.

But even as we meet the dream painter (played by Cheech Marin) and get occasional glimpses of some kind of donkey unicorn, the focus remains on the three core characters and their friends, from Lizs motley but loyal restaurant pals to Lodge 49s flaky but well-meaning apothecary Blaise (David Pasquesi) and Connie (Linda Emond), the ailing reporter torn between Ernie and new Lodge boss Scott (Eric Allan Kramer). Where too many current dramas move slowly because they dont have enough plot to fill a full season, Lodge 49 takes its sweet time because its more interested in the feeling of being in this place and around these people than it is on finding out what happens next. Thats placing a very large burden on the actors, the writers, and the directors to make this leisurely stroll feel worthwhile, but Lodge 49 succeeds at almost every turn (*).

(*) The start of the new season periodically checks in on Connies adventures at Lodge 1 in England, and those scenes are the first time the show has made me impatient for something to happen already.

In particular, Season Two confirms the amount of electricity radiating from Cassidy in every scene about Lizs attempt to find happiness in a profoundly disappointing life. Liz isnt part of the lodge, and Ernie already exists as Duds philosophical counterweight. So she could easily feel extraneous, like the one regular on a superhero show who doesnt know the main characters secret identity. But Cassidy is so funny in depicting Lizs barely-repressed rage that her subplots always play as a bonus, rather than a distraction. Like Dud, Ernie, Scott, and even many of us watching at home, shes looking for a world that doesnt seem to exist anymore, if it ever did. Shes just louder and more impatient in her search than they are. (Dud and Lizs favorite shared activity is watching TV on her living room couch; suffice it to say that hed probably enjoy Lodge 49 a lot more than she would.)

Over time, Lodge 49 develops a soft spot for almost everyone. Scott keeps gassing on about how to make the lodge great again, but the new season also depicts the emotional burden that leadership places on him. Ernie works as a salesman for a plumbing supply company where his co-workers constantly make him die a little inside, but we find out that his boss Bob (Brian Doyle-Murray) recently took an online poetry class, and now, Bob says, I see poetry everywhere.

Thats just how Lodge 49 works. Its a show about small people living small lives, but it also sees poetry everywhere.

Lodge 49 returns to AMC on August 12th. Ive seen four episodes.