By Peter White
19.01.2020 - 18:42 / torontosun.com
NEW YORK — Crazy Rich Asians star Henry Golding breaks into a laugh as he tries to explain his meteoric career trajectory that has seen him go from being a travel host to rom-com leading man to foul-mouthed villain in Guy Ritchie’s gangster romp, The Gentlemen — out this Friday.
“It’s crazy isn’t it?” Golding muses as a wedge of sunlight pushes its way into a suite of a midtown Manhattan hotel.
The 32-year-old British-Malaysian actor, who just a few years ago was working in New Zealand for the BBC
The scene also appeared in the books and the game
By Tom Grater
"After finishing work on a film, you tend to move on to the next one, but when I watched the trailer for 'The Gentlemen', I was reminded how impressive our cast is, and that it was a happy accident how these chaps all came together," Ritchie said. "The Gentleman" is written and directed by Ritchie.
#Roommates, Valentine’s Day is quickly approaching and is only a few weeks away, which means that love is in the air…and that could also be true for a few reality stars. “Love & Hip Hop Hollywood” star Alexis Skyy and “Black Ink Crew Chicago” star Ryan Henry were apparently feeling the love as they got a little flirty for the ‘gram.
NEW YORK — Matthew McConaughey loved the duds his sharp-dressed weed dealer wears in The Gentlemen. So much so that he did one thing when shooting wrapped — he swiped them.
STX’s Matthew McConaughey crime comedy “The Gentlemen” has opened with a moderate $725,000 at 1,885 North American locations on Thursday night.
By Anthony D'Alessandro
Matthew McConaughey liked playing the bad guy in his latest crime-action drama The Gentlemen. The 50-year-old actor was thrilled when he was told he would be playing a villain in Guy Ritchie’s film. During a recent media interaction, while talking about his film and his role in it, the Oscar winner said that there is a thrill in wanting something and going after it and maybe even die for it. It is fun to run after something doing despicable things to achieve it.
Known for his meticulous dress sense, director Guy Ritchie wanted each of the actors in his latest movie, The Gentlemen, to be well put-together, even if their characters are on different rungs of the social ladder. “Guy wanted a compelling, urban look for The Gentlemen that is quintessentially British,” costume designer Michael Wilkinson told The Hollywood Reporter.
A mean-streets crime flick that flirts with Blaxploitation but seemingly aspires to a more serious kind of moral myth-making, Will Forbes' John Henry offers a man (Terry Crews), just as mighty as the steel-drivin' hero of folklore, who has spent his adult life attempting to avoid having his strength tested.
After a brief foray into historical legend with King Arthur and Disney musicals with Aladdin, writer-director Guy Ritchie returns to the genre he’s known best for with the snazzy crime caper The Gentlemen, which is set to bow Friday.Matthew McConaughey stars as Mickey, a highly successful drug dealer in London who’s looking to get out of the game and sell his empire to his trusted assistant Raymond (Charlie Hunnam).
Terry Crews’ John Henry is a man of few words. “John Henry,” the folklore-cribbing, violent thriller (opening theatrically and available on demand) about a former gang member who must face his demons when two young immigrants require his help, feels like it wants to say a lot. But what exactly?