Lily Rabe once again shines as Doris Gardner in.
02.09.2021 - 20:19 / deadline.com
In movies as disparate and vividly imagined as Il Divo, Loro, the Oscar winning The Great Beauty, as well as English language efforts like This Must Be The Place, Youth, and his TV miniseries The Young Pope and The New Pope Paolo Sorrentino has always seemed to be a director with a large brush and even more of a Fellini influence in some cases.
That is why his latest, a largely autobiographical coming of age film called The Hand Of God which just had its World Premiere at the Venice Film
.Lily Rabe once again shines as Doris Gardner in.
(Warning: This post contains spoilers for Wednesday’s episode of “American Horror Story: Double Feature.”)The first half of Ryan Murphy’s “American Horror Story: Double Feature” season, a.k.a. “Red Tide,” comes to a close next week with a finale that will see what becomes of the Gardener Family now that Doris (Lily Rabe) has turned into a Pale Person after taking the black pill and not being talented enough to benefit from its gift-amplifying properties.
Warning spoilers below!)During the episode, the drama and gore were at an all-time high after Harry and Doris welcomed their second child, a baby boy. Since things in the family were already rocky, the baby’s arrival caused even more of an upheaval, especially with Alma, who was later caught feeding from her little brother’s leg!However, there was one scene in particular that caused fans to turn to social media in complaint.
British director Michael Pearce has come up with a bold and nervy puzzle in “Encounter,“ a sci-fi/character study hybrid that premiered at Telluride last week and came to the Toronto International Film Festival on Friday.
always produces at least one or two breakout performances, whether it was Sarah Paulson and Sterling K. Brown as the prosecutors in season 1’s or Darren Criss as serial killer Andrew Cunanan in season 2’s.
, the third season of the FX true-crime anthology series, turns back time once again to re-examine the events leading up to and surrounding the 1998 trial of.
Blast from the past. Impeachment: American Crime Story might put Monica Lewinsky front and center, but viewers will be introduced to another important woman in the saga: Paula Jones.
B Positive, the CBS sitcom she stars in that enters its second season this fall. With her blonde hair piled into a top-knot and her face free of any makeup, she looks so different from Paula Jones, the Arkansas state employee who sued President Bill Clinton for sexual harassment in 1994 and was known for her then-stylish perm and heavy lip liner.
Manori Ravindran International Editor“Parasite” director Bong Joon Ho, this year’s Venice jury president, famously accepted his 2020 Golden Globe for best foreign film by assuring audiences that “once you overcome the one-inch-tall barrier of subtitles, you will be introduced to so many more amazing films.”This is especially true at this year’s festival, where in addition to the standard Italian subtitles on every film, another monitor also displays English subtitles — even for English-language
Impeachment: American Crime Story,” the FX series premiering Tuesday, Ashford plays Paula Jones, the (brunette) Arkansas state employee who sued President Bill Clinton for alleged sexual harassment in 1994.It’s a tough role: Ashford’s Jones grapples with sexual trauma, emotional abuse from her husband and unrelenting ridicule from the press, who painted her as trailer trash and used her as a dimwitted pawn to try to bring down the president.And unlike Monica Lewinsky — portrayed in “Crime Story”
EXCLUSIVE: Ahead of its world premiere at the Venice Film Festival, Protagonist Pictures has closed a UK all rights deal with Curzon for Spanish-language pic Official Competition starring Antonio Banderas, Penelope Cruz and Oscar Martínez.
In the wake of documentaries on Britney Spears, Lorena Bobbitt, and other victims of a crueler, “more misogynistic” press machine, the hook to these projects is a prodding at both individual and collective memory. They claim to be recontextualizations, revisions, and rehabilitations, while they are still fundamentally pieced together as amalgamations of fame and identity, with the involvement of the subject or not.
Naman Ramachandran The 65th British Film Institute (BFI) London Film Festival has revealed the eight films in its official competition.The competition titles include a few films currently playing at the Venice Film Festival, including Michelangelo Frammartino’s “Il Buco” (Italy-Germany-France), Paolo Sorrentino’s “The Hand of God” (Italy) Harry Wootliff’s “True Things” (U.K.) and Michel Franco’s “Sundown” (Mexico-France-Sweden).
The BFI London Film Festival has confirmed an eight-strong lineup for its Official Competition this year. The movies are:
Benedict Cumberbatch may have been on the red carpet at the Venice International Film Festival to promote his new film but he only had eyes for one person on the night, his wife Sophie Hunter.
Leo Barraclough International Features EditorHarry Wootliff, one of Britain’s rising women filmmakers, is in Venice for the world premiere of her second feature, “True Things,” starring Ruth Wilson and Tom Burke. The film, which screens in Venice’s Horizons, also plays at the Toronto Festival.The film, based on Deborah Kay Davies’ novel “True Things About Me,” was initially developed by Jackson and Law’s production company Riff Raff U.K.
Ryan Murphy’s penchant for campy histrionics in focusing its narrative arc on the three women whose cumulative actions culminated in Clinton’s fall from grace: Monica Lewinsky (Beanie Feldstein), Linda Tripp (Murphy stock player Sarah Paulson) and Paula Jones (“B Positive” star Annaleigh Ashford). They each deliver terrific performances in an absorbing take on a scandal that closed out the decade on a sour note.
Sarah Paulson admitted that she regrets wearing a fat suit to portray Linda Tripp in "Impeachment: American Crime Story." Paulson was tapped to play the real-life White House staff member who blew the whistle on the affair between former President Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky.The affair and ensuing national scandal will be depicted and dramatized in the upcoming season of the series that has previously tackled real-life events like the trial of O.J.
. In a recent interview with the , Paulson said she had «regret» over wearing a fat suit. «It's very hard for me to talk about this without feeling like I'm making excuses,» she shared, noting the controversy over actors wearing fat suits «is a legitimate one.» «I think fat phobia is real.