In “Fitch,” Tom Hanks is the last man standing, trying to survive a sandstorm-blasted Earth. The new sci-fi movie details the daily existence of Hanks’s title character, living in an underground bunker or traveling in a ramshackle RV to safer lands.
In “Fitch,” Tom Hanks is the last man standing, trying to survive a sandstorm-blasted Earth. The new sci-fi movie details the daily existence of Hanks’s title character, living in an underground bunker or traveling in a ramshackle RV to safer lands.
“Finch” arrives on Apple TV+ under the banner of Steven Spielberg’s Amblin Entertainment – indeed, one of the first things we see is the “E.T. moon” logo – and one of its credited executive producers is frequent Amblin partner Robert Zemeckis.
You wouldn’t be crazy to associate filmmaker Alex Gibney with documentaries. Over his decades-long career, a vast majority of his work has been in non-fiction filmmaking.
We’ve seen Tom Hanks play a character that defies the odds by himself in a deserted area before in “Cast Away.” However, the actor’s next feature, “Finch,” takes the loneliness of “Cast Away” and adds a post-apocalypse for good measure. READ MORE: Fall 2021 Movie Preview: 60+ Must-See Films To be fair, as seen in the trailer for “Finch,” Tom Hanks’ character isn’t completely alone.
“Should you still be drinking?” she asks, and it’s pointed, but everything they say to each other is pointed. Jo Henninger (Jessica Chastain) and her husband David (Ralph Fiennes) have been married for something like a dozen years, and it’s not going well; they guard each other with barely-veiled (if that) contempt, and their interactions are less like conversations than jousts, a constant barrage of little jabs and snipes.
It might be time to start calling Caleb Landry Jones a double threat. The young actor’s rapid ascent in the film industry has hardly hindered his longtime passion for music.
Though “Nitram” never depicts the unspoken horrific massacre that its protagonist commits, the entire film queasily pulses in the anxious anticipation of the unspeakable event. It’s not an easy film to watch, knowing what’s coming but remaining completely powerless, not unlike watching a car crash in motion and being unable to stop it.
Titane, Leos Carax and Caleb Landry Jones are among the winners of the top prizes at Cannes 2021 – scroll down to see the full list of winners.The film festival was held in full and in-person after the coronavirus pandemic meant the 2020 physical edition was unable to go ahead as planned.This year’s Cannes jury was comprised of Spike Lee serving as president, director Mati Diop, musician Mylène Farmer, writer and director Jessica Hausner, actor and director Mélanie Laurent, writer and director
Caleb Landry Jones was a big winner at the 2021 Cannes Film Festival!
The 74th Cannes Film Festival came to an end on Saturday night. It was a sweaty fest full of tourists more interested in the beach than the world premieres and lots of spitting in testing vials for non-Europeans, but it proved that a major festival could return at full capacity during the age of COVID.
Jessica Kiang Justin Kurzel’s exceptionally disturbing, horribly plausible “Nitram” opens with an excerpt from a 1979 Australian news report on firework accidents. A boy of about 12 is being interviewed from his Hobart hospital bed, and when the posh, compassionate voice of the presenter asks if the injuries he sustained will discourage him from playing with fireworks in future, he smiles a strange, sly smile, and says no.
Filmmaker Justin Kurzel hit a little bit of a speed bump in his rise as a filmmaker when his first major blockbuster, “Assassin’s Creed,” failed to live up to expectations. However, the filmmaker rebounded quite well a couple of years later with “True History of the Kelly Gang,” which showed Kurzel’s true style and talent once again.
Matt Donnelly Senior Film WriterVeteran talent agent Joey Stanton is exiting ICM Partners to become a manager and producer, sources told Variety.Known as a shepherd to top young Hollywood talent, insiders familiar with his plans said the exit is amicable and he’ll stay on in the coming weeks to help his department with the transition.
While we see streaming services snatch up exclusive rights to talent all over the world, it appears that Apple TV+ is wanting to stay in the Tom Hanks business as much as humanly possible.
With “The True History of the Kelly Gang” impressing folks earlier this year, people are eagerly anticipating whatever is next for filmmaker Justin Kurzel.
True History Of The Kelly Gang and Snowtown filmmaker Justin Kurzel has set cast for his next feature, Nitram, which will focus on the 1996 Port Arthur massacre on Tasmania.
Andreas Wiseman International EditorEXCLUSIVE: Focus Features has pre-bought worldwide rights excluding North America to Ralph Fiennes-Jessica Chastain starrer The Forgiven, which has finally wrapped shoot.Joining the previously announced Fiennes, Chastain, Said Taghmaoui (La Haine) and Caleb Landry Jones (X-Men: First Class) in the drama are Matt Smith (The Crown), Christopher Abbott (The Sinner), Ismael Kanater (Queen Of The Desert), Marie-Josée Croze (Munich), Alex Jennings (The Crown) and
400 Taliban fighters let loose on about 50 Americans days before the outpost was to be disbanded. Eight Americans were killed and 27 were wounded.
We’ve just got word of a brand new trailer and poster for the upcoming Viena and the Fantomes, a new film starring Zoë Kravitz, Evan Rachel Wood and Caleb Landry Jones. It will arrive in some territories from the end of next month.
Following the events of 9/11, the US began military conflict in Afghanistan that would end up stretching the better part of two decades. What was meant to be a quick, decisive response to the terrorist attack on American soil turned into a years-long battle that seemingly had no end in sight.
Onscreen, Caleb Landry Jones knows what it takes to be a psychotic dirtbag. He’s prowled the edges of Jordan Peele’s Get Out, David Lynch’s Twin Peaks: The Return, and the Safdie brothers’ Heaven Knows What, where he played a dangerous junkie whose idea of fun is listening to the notorious death metal act Burzum, led by real-life convicted murderer Varg Vikernes, on a public library computer.
Caleb Landry Jones didn't become one of the most compelling and acclaimed young actors of the past decade by playing it safe. His work is bold, visceral, and unconventional and tends toward high-wire, often troubled or toxic roles into which he invariably pours himself.
Caleb Landry Jones—best known for his roles in Get Out, Twin Peaks: The Return, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, and The Dead Don’t Die—has announced his debut album. The Mother Stone is out May 1 via Sacred Bones. Check out the psychedelic visual for Jones’ lead single “Flag Day / The Mother Stone” below, along with the LP art and tracklist.
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