Anne Hathaway
Jeremy Strong
Anthony Hopkins
James Gray
Cannes Film Festival
New York
Anne Hathaway
Jeremy Strong
Anthony Hopkins
James Gray
Cannes Film Festival
New York
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Marshall Tucker Band’s Doug Gray reflects on 50th anniversary: People ‘didn't know where to put us’ - www.foxnews.com - county Tucker - South Carolina - George - county Marshall - county Caldwell
foxnews.com
01.06.2022 / 21:19

Marshall Tucker Band’s Doug Gray reflects on 50th anniversary: People ‘didn't know where to put us’

Marshall Tucker Band has been playing at the highest level of the music scene since forming in 1972 and 50 years after coming together, Doug Gray – a founding member of the original Southern rock band – is "feeling good" as the group continues performing sold out shows. "I've been working my butt off for this 50th year, going to United Talent Artists (UTA) and I thought [it] was going to be difficult being an older band," Gray, 74, told Fox News Digital.

‘Rebel’ Review: Adil El Arbi & Bilall Fallah’s Radicalization Drama Pulsates With Terrible Inevitability [Cannes] - theplaylist.net - Belgium - Syria
theplaylist.net
30.05.2022 / 00:09

‘Rebel’ Review: Adil El Arbi & Bilall Fallah’s Radicalization Drama Pulsates With Terrible Inevitability [Cannes]

As a procedural drama centrally interested in the radicalization of a young Muslim boy in Belgium, Adil & Bilall’s “Rebel” pulsates with terrible inevitability. Falling behind at school, with an adored older brother already having made the trip to Syria and a trafficker whispering in his ear, it’s less a question of if Nassim (Amir El Arbi, another tremendous kid actor for Cannes ’22 to tick off) is going to find himself on the Jihadist frontline, but when.

‘Stars At Noon’ Filmmaker Claire Denis Says “Harder For Women” To Make Movies — Cannes - deadline.com - USA
deadline.com
26.05.2022 / 13:49

‘Stars At Noon’ Filmmaker Claire Denis Says “Harder For Women” To Make Movies — Cannes

Asked this morning at the Cannes presser about how the fest sidelines female filmmakers, Stars at Noon director took the high road, and didn’t throw the event, which lauded her with the Directors’ Fortnight prize for 2017’s Let the Sunshine In, under the bus.

Kaia Gerber Gives Austin Butler a Huge Kiss at 'Elvis' World Premiere - www.etonline.com - France - New York - county Butler
etonline.com
26.05.2022 / 01:53

Kaia Gerber Gives Austin Butler a Huge Kiss at 'Elvis' World Premiere

2022 Cannes Film Festival, where Kaia Gerber and Austin Butler were in full PDA mode!The 20-year-old model and 30-year-old star walked the red carpet Wednesday for the world premiere of the Baz Luhrmann-directed biopic and didn't let the cameras deter them from showing their affection. In fact, it appears as if it was Gerber, looking stunning in a red gown, who grabbed Butler's face with both hands and planted a wet one on the budding actor.Once inside the theater, the audience got to enjoy the highly anticipated screening of the film set to be released June 24.

‘Godland’ Review: Hlynur Pálmason’s Hypnotic, Spiritual, Slow-Cinema Look At 19th Century Iceland [Cannes] - theplaylist.net - Iceland - Denmark
theplaylist.net
25.05.2022 / 19:35

‘Godland’ Review: Hlynur Pálmason’s Hypnotic, Spiritual, Slow-Cinema Look At 19th Century Iceland [Cannes]

As countries go, Iceland is probably one of the most fast-changing in terms of its biological make up, its intense volcanic activities reshaping its surface and contours at a speed fast enough to be perceived within a single generation. Paradoxically, it is also a place where time appears to stand still, with the sun omnipresent for half the year and absent for the rest.

‘Funny Pages’ Review: Examines The Limits Of Privilege In Sharp New Comedy [Cannes] - theplaylist.net - county Sharp
theplaylist.net
24.05.2022 / 18:49

‘Funny Pages’ Review: Examines The Limits Of Privilege In Sharp New Comedy [Cannes]

It’s the plight of the plightless: a kid from a comfortable, upper-middle-class background wants to be some manner of artist, except that he’s (and it does seem to be a he more often than not) bereft of the experience, grit, or outsider credibility that define the role models he hopes he could one-day call influences. He ventures out into the big bad world in search of something to put a bit of hair on his creative chest, only to face the spiny question of whether this effort to get real is just class tourism, a jaunt in the gutter that one phone call to Dad could prevent.

‘Sick Of Myself’ Review: A Hilarious, Razor-Sharp Portrait Of The Worst Person In The World [Cannes] - theplaylist.net - county Person
theplaylist.net
23.05.2022 / 18:09

‘Sick Of Myself’ Review: A Hilarious, Razor-Sharp Portrait Of The Worst Person In The World [Cannes]

“Narcissists are the ones who make it…combined with talent, it’s a plus,” Signe (Kristine Kujath Thorp) coolly observes in the opening stages of the wickedly enjoyable “Sick of Myself.” For anyone who’s watched a partner realize their dreams, a trusted colleague get promoted, or a friend become famous, and curdled with jealousy and resentment, Kristoffer Borgli has made the film for you. The filmmaker’s tart and scabrously funny (both literally and figuratively) sophomore feature is a pointed portrait of a toxic relationship and a razor-sharp evisceration of those warped by a victim mentality.

‘Jerry Lee Lewis: Trouble in Mind’ Review: Ethan Coen Makes His Solo Debut With A Surprisingly Anonymous Bio-Doc [Cannes] - theplaylist.net
theplaylist.net
23.05.2022 / 02:57

‘Jerry Lee Lewis: Trouble in Mind’ Review: Ethan Coen Makes His Solo Debut With A Surprisingly Anonymous Bio-Doc [Cannes]

It probably says something, in spite of their public comments to the contrary, about the severity of the Coen Brothers’ break-up that each of them has proceeded to make a movie that you not only can’t imagine them making together, but that is so easily classifiable — after all, “Shakespeare adaptation” and “musical bio-doc” are two of the most venerable film types of today. The only genre you could safely consign them to before now was their own; they made “Coen Brothers movies,” and everyone knew what that meant, even if they couldn’t precisely pinpoint it.

‘More Than Ever’ Review: Vicky Krieps & Gaspard Ulliel Shine In A Heartbreaking Tale Of Love & Death [Cannes] - theplaylist.net
theplaylist.net
22.05.2022 / 16:25

‘More Than Ever’ Review: Vicky Krieps & Gaspard Ulliel Shine In A Heartbreaking Tale Of Love & Death [Cannes]

Inspired by her own late mother’s long battle with multiple sclerosis, writer/director Emily Atef’s (“Molly’s Way,” “3 Days in Quiberon”) latest work, “More Than Ever,” delivers a poignant and well-acted story. Featuring Gaspard Ulliel’s last performance, the film asks its audience to face the reality of and ponder the inevitability of death as well as the line between those who have experienced a type of suffering and those who haven’t.

‘My Imaginary Country’ Review: Patricio Guzmán’s Documentary On Chilean Revolution Is A Testament to Hope [Cannes] - theplaylist.net - France - Chile - city Santiago
theplaylist.net
21.05.2022 / 18:51

‘My Imaginary Country’ Review: Patricio Guzmán’s Documentary On Chilean Revolution Is A Testament to Hope [Cannes]

“When you want to film a fire, you need to be in the place where the first flame is produced.” So says the disembodied voice of Patricio Guzmán as he recalls a piece of advice received early in his filmmaking career by his mentor, French multimedia artist Chris Marker. In this case, the fire is the Estallido Social, a series of colossal protests and riots that started in the capital city of Santiago and rapidly spread across Chile at the end of 2019.

‘Enys Men’ Review: Mark Jenkin Crafts A Wicked, Witchy Folk Freak Horror That Defies Genre [Cannes] - theplaylist.net - Britain
theplaylist.net
20.05.2022 / 22:43

‘Enys Men’ Review: Mark Jenkin Crafts A Wicked, Witchy Folk Freak Horror That Defies Genre [Cannes]

“Bait,” British filmmaker Mark Jenkin’s breakout feature, could well be considered a horror movie. Set in a quaint little fishing enclave off the Cornish coast, where the ship decks are rickety and the townhouses’ whitewash ever-peeling, the knotty fear of loss is ever-present: of history, of possession, of tradition, of heritage, of liberty.

Anne Hathaway & James Gray Define The ‘Armageddon’ In ‘Armageddon Time’ [Cannes] - theplaylist.net - New York
theplaylist.net
20.05.2022 / 15:17

Anne Hathaway & James Gray Define The ‘Armageddon’ In ‘Armageddon Time’ [Cannes]

CANNES – James Gray’s new film, “Armageddon Time,” is an autobiographical tale recounting the systematic racism he witness at the age of 12-years-old over four decades ago. His parents are played by Anne Hathaway and Jeremy Strong, while he’s reimagined as Paul, an artistic dreamer portrayed by Banks Repeta.

‘Armageddon Time’ Director James Gray Says the US – and Hollywood – Are ‘in Serious Trouble’ - thewrap.com - USA - Hollywood
thewrap.com
20.05.2022 / 14:31

‘Armageddon Time’ Director James Gray Says the US – and Hollywood – Are ‘in Serious Trouble’

TheWrap’s review called the film one of the least nostalgic examples of a form that is almost by definition nostalgic,” and added: “Gray is hard on himself in ‘Armageddon Time’; Paul Graff, the film’s stand-in for the director as a sixth grader, is never cute, unless you want to dote on the angelic curls and ignore the purposefully stubborn personality.

‘Armageddon Time’ Cannes Premiere: James Gray Chokes Up During Emotional Speech After Standing Ovation - deadline.com - county Webb
deadline.com
20.05.2022 / 00:35

‘Armageddon Time’ Cannes Premiere: James Gray Chokes Up During Emotional Speech After Standing Ovation

James Gray returned to Cannes for the fifth time with what was a personal story inspired by his childhood during 1980s Queens, NY, and the premiere tonight was nothing but emotional.

Anne Hathaway, James Gray Tear Up During Seven-Minute Emotional Cannes Standing Ovation for ‘Armageddon Time’ - variety.com
variety.com
19.05.2022 / 23:45

Anne Hathaway, James Gray Tear Up During Seven-Minute Emotional Cannes Standing Ovation for ‘Armageddon Time’

Matt Donnelly Senior Film WriterAnne Hathaway and Jeremy Strong made the end of the world seem pretty fabulous on Thursday night, hitting the Croisette for the Cannes Film Festival premiere of writer-director James Gray’s “Armageddon Time.”Gray’s semi-autobiographical film about growing up in 1980s Queens stars newcomers Banks Repeta (as the Gray surrogate) and Jaylin Webb (as his best friend). Hathaway and Strong play solid a Jewish couple with dreams of upward mobility.

‘Armageddon Time’ Film Review: James Gray Looks at His Childhood Without Nostalgia - thewrap.com - Ireland - county Mills
thewrap.com
19.05.2022 / 22:43

‘Armageddon Time’ Film Review: James Gray Looks at His Childhood Without Nostalgia

Kenneth Branagh’s childhood was transformed by the Troubles in Northern Ireland, Mike Mills had very eccentric parents and Cameron Crowe was a teenage rock critic — and we know these things because all three directors have made films that drew upon their own childhoods. And now it’s James Gray’s turn to offer his own look back with “Armageddon Time,” which premiered to a rousing ovation in the main competition at the Cannes Film Festival on Thursday.And what does the film tell us about the young Gray? For starters, he was a dreamer, he was a brat, he didn’t understand the privileges he was born into and he went on his own path.

Jessica Chastain Plays Surprise Role as Maryanne Trump, Donald Trump’s Sister, in ‘Armageddon Time’ - variety.com - USA - New York - New Jersey
variety.com
19.05.2022 / 22:11

Jessica Chastain Plays Surprise Role as Maryanne Trump, Donald Trump’s Sister, in ‘Armageddon Time’

Jessica Chastain surprised audiences at the Cannes Film Festival on Thursday, when she appeared in an unannounced cameo in the 1980s coming-of-age drama “Armageddon Time” as Maryanne Trump, Donald Trump’s sister.Chastain’s role is small but effective. As Maryanne Trump, she appears as a guest lecturer at an austere private school where the film’s young protagonist, Paul (Banks Repeta), matriculates mid-film. She lectures the privileged boys and girls about the value of ambition in a Phyllis Schlafly-esque beehive.

‘Armageddon Time’ Cannes Review: Director James Gray Puts His Formative Years On Screen In Moving Coming-Of-Age Story - deadline.com - New York - city Lost
deadline.com
19.05.2022 / 21:45

‘Armageddon Time’ Cannes Review: Director James Gray Puts His Formative Years On Screen In Moving Coming-Of-Age Story

Writer-director James Gray has been to the Cannes Film Festival in competition on four previous occasions with We Own the Night, The Yards, The Immigrant, and Two Lovers but has yet to walk away with a prize. Maybe the fifth time will be the charm? It certainly would be deserving as Gray comes back to his beloved New York City roots with the highly autobiographical and intriguingly titled Armageddon Time. 

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