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    Prince Harry and Meghan Markle Announce 'Heart of Invictus' as First Netflix Project

    WENN

    The Duke and Duchess of Sussex are working on a documentary about the Invictus Games, that he helped launch in 2014, as the couple’s first project for the streaming giant.

    Apr 7, 2021

    AceShowbiz –
    Prince Harry and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex have landed their first Netflix project – a docu-series about the Invictus Games.

    The pair and their Archewell Productions partners are developing “Heart of Invictus”, with Orlando von Einsiedel on board to direct.

    The film will follow a group of competitors, who have all suffered life-changing injuries or illnesses while fighting for their country, on their road to the Invictus Games in The Hague in 2022.

    Prince Harry was among those who helped launch the first Invictus Games in 2014 and remains a patron of The Invictus Games Foundation.

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    Harry will appear in “Heart of Invictus” and serve as an executive producer.

    “Since the very first Invictus Games back in 2014, we knew that each competitor would contribute in their own exceptional way to a mosaic of resilience, determination, and resolve,” he says in a statement. “This series will give communities around the world a window into the moving and uplifting stories of these competitors on their path to the Netherlands next year.”

    “As Archewell Productions’ first series with Netflix, in partnership with the Invictus Games Foundation, I couldn’t be more excited for the journey ahead or prouder of the Invictus community for continuously inspiring global healing, human potential and continued service.”

    The Duke and Duchess of Sussex signed a multi-project deal with Netflix bosses, worth millions, last year (20).

    The couple additionally inked an exclusive deal with Spotify for their podcast series.

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    Gal Gadot Confirms 'Issues' With Joss Whedon Amid Feud Rumors on 'Justice League' Set

    WENN

    The ‘Wonder Woman’ actress confirms she had her differences with the former Marvel filmmaker as she’s rumored to clash with him over plans to make her character more aggressive.

    Apr 7, 2021

    AceShowbiz –
    Gal Gadot has confirmed reports she clashed with Joss Whedon on the “Justice League” set over the director’s plans to toughen up her “Wonder Woman” character.

    A new expose in The Hollywood Reporter suggests the filmmaker and the actress fell out after he stepped in to complete the Warner Bros. blockbuster following Zack Snyder’s exit, and “Wonder Woman” director Patty Jenkins had to intervene and talk to movie studio bosses.

    The piece, centred on a new interview with Ray Fisher who has previously made it clear he and Whedon clashed over the director’s “gross, abusive, unprofessional, and completely unacceptable” behaviour on the “Justice League” set, suggests Gadot had several issues with the moviemaker as he allegedly tried to make her character more aggressive.

    “She wanted to make the character flow from one movie to the next,” a source tells the publication, while another insider tells The Hollywood Reporter that Whedon allegedly threatened to harm the Israeli actress’ career if she didn’t follow his lead and read lines she didn’t want to.

    “He told her he’s the writer and she’s going to shut up and say the lines and he can make her look incredibly stupid in this movie,” the witness said.

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    In a statement, Gadot states, “I had my issues with him (Whedon) and Warner Bros. handled it in a timely manner.”

    The director, who has been hit with several allegations of misconduct and inappropriate behaviour from the stars of his films and TV shows in the past year, has yet to comment.

    Gadot previously told the Los Angeles Times her experience with Whedon “wasn’t the best one” but added, “I took care of it there and when it happened I took it to the higher-ups and they took care of it.”

    She also supported co-star Fisher, adding, “I’m happy for Ray to go up and say his truth.”

    Fisher’s initial complaint sparked an official investigation by WarnerMedia, led by former federal judge Katherine Forrest, who told The Hollywood Reporter she found “no credible support for claims of racial animus” or racial “insensitivity.”

    Fisher has slammed the investigation several times.

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    The Many Selves of Alfred Hitchcock, Phobias, Fetishes and All

    In the world of Alfred Hitchcock, resemblance is fatal. It is the story of “Vertigo,” of Charlie, in “Shadow of a Doubt,” named for a beloved uncle who turns out to be a notorious murderer of wealthy widows. Think of the falsely accused men in “The Lodger,” “The Wrong Man,” “The Thirty-Nine Steps,” “I Confess,” “North by Northwest” and “Frenzy.”Of course, there was no one to resemble him. With his uniform of dark suits, his Victorian manner, he was a relic in his own time. Only Mickey Mouse cut a more distinctive profile. And for all the influence of his films, he has no real inheritors, no one who combines silence, suspense and wit in that particular way, with his winking self-referentiality and the thicket of fetishes and symbols that became a grammar of their own — the staircases, suitcases and icy blondes, the parallel lines, the sinister glasses of milk.It’s said that more books have been written about Hitchcock than any other filmmaker. Edward White’s sleek and modest “The Twelve Lives of Alfred Hitchcock” does not offer grand revelation but a provocative new way of thinking about biography.Any life is a study in contradiction — Hitchcock’s perhaps more than most. He was a man afraid of the dark who was in love with the movies. (Other phobias included crowds and solitude.) He was a famously uxorious husband said to have preyed upon his actresses and assistants. A man shamed for his body (the “300-pound prophet,” as The Saturday Evening Post called him), beset by self-loathing, who nevertheless possessed an enormous desire to be seen and relentlessly used his body as a promotional tool.Those films — were they art or entertainment? Were they “mousetraps,” per Pauline Kael, or was Hitchcock “the greatest creator of forms of the 20th century,” as Godard put it? “Hitchcock succeeded where Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar, Napoleon and Hitler failed,” Godard wrote: “in taking control of the universe.” Hitchcock himself shrugged off such seriousness. Let other directors foist slices of life on the public; he wanted his films to be “slices of cake.”White doesn’t reconcile these contradictions. He never needs to. He presents the reader with 12 portraits of Hitchcock, taken from 12 different angles — including “The Boy Who Couldn’t Grow Up,” “The Voyeur,” “The Pioneer,” “The Family Man,” “The Womanizer,” “The Dandy.” There is no verdict to be issued, no single identity most authentic or true. His selves clash and coexist, as they did in a life that spanned the emergence of feminism, psychoanalysis and mass advertising, and a career that mapped onto the history of film itself, from the silent era to the rise of television.Edward White, the author of “The Twelve Lives of Alfred Hitchcock.”Andrew BainbridgeStrangely, through these refractions, we receive a smoother, more cohesive sense of a man so adept at toying with his audience, on and off the screen. (I would have added a 13th angle, however: “The Dissembler,” for Hitchcock’s own joy in issuing contradictory statements about his life.)In the filmmaker’s own words, “the man is not different from the boy.” The traditional task of the Hitchcock biographer has been to locate the defining event that became the wellspring for his lifelong interest in paranoia, surveillance and sexual violence. The biographer as detective, as it were, wandering the Bates home in “Psycho,” searching for the body of the mother, the all-revealing trauma. Hitchcock was only to play along (or dissemble), offering up theories: the harsh beatings by Jesuit priests, early fascination with Edgar Allan Poe, the day his father had him inexplicably locked up in a prison for a few hours to teach him a lesson as a small child.White indulges these explanations while subtly shifting the focus to what Hitchcock rarely discussed — the death of his father and the strain of living through war — “the very type of tortuous suspense and grinding anxiety that was the adult Hitchcock’s stock in trade.” Neighborhood children and infants died in the air raids, and White suggests that “The Birds” — with the attacks on a school, and the pioneering aerial shots — can be seen as Hitchcock’s way of reliving the terror.White’s style is unadorned and unobtrusive; only occasionally does he allow himself a little turn of phrase (on Jimmy Stewart: “If Cary Grant was Hitchcock’s favorite man of action, some heroic, imaginary version of himself, Stewart was surely his favorite man of reaction”). The psychologizing is of a delicate sort — far from Hitchcock’s own ham-handed attempts, which his own characters seemed to mock. “You Freud, me Jane,” Tippi Hedren says to Sean Connery in “Marnie.” White’s real interest, and talent, lies in synthesizing the scholarship, and in troubling easy assumptions.Three Hitchcock films — “Rear Window,” “Vertigo” and “Marnie” — served as the basis of Laura Mulvey’s conception of the “male gaze,” the idea that Hollywood movies presented a vision of the world rooted in male experience, with women existing as objects of desire.Hitchcock’s work is rich with references to the tradition of the “watched woman.” The very first shot in a Hitchcock movie, “The Pleasure Garden,” features the bare legs of dancers running down a spiral staircase, which White ties to Duchamp’s painting “Nude Descending a Staircase,” which itself recalls Eadweard Muybridge’s time-lapse photographic study of a naked woman walking down a flight of stairs. In “Psycho,” again, we see this palimpsest effect: The peephole Norman Bates uses to spy on Marion Crane as she undresses is concealed by a framed print of Willem van Mieris’s “Susannah and the Elders,” the biblical story of two men preying on a woman while she bathes. But obsessive looking is full of complication in Hitchcock, White argues; it is almost always punished. Scottie, in “Vertigo,” is “driven mad by silent watching.”Thwarted, unfulfilled desire is the wire running through Hitchcock’s work. Oddly enough, biographies of artists can inspire a similar feeling. As readers, we can expect to see the life neatly documented and the work analyzed, but the connection, the filament between the two? White never forces an explanation or coherence. The radial structure vibrates, like Hitchcock’s best films, with intuition and mystery. More

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    Beyond WandaVision and Justice League: Superhero Streaming for Every Taste

    Even if Avengers and Justice Leagues leave you cold, there’s probably some superpowered champion out there for you. Here’s a guide to the best nontraditional superhero stories available to stream.We get it: Superheroes have overrun pop culture.Even though last summer’s blockbusters were thwarted by the coronavirus, Warner Bros. still brought an Amazon warrior to our TVs and laptops in December, and Disney+ has shrunk the Marvel Cinematic Universe to fit the smaller screens as well, with “WandaVision” and “The Falcon and the Winter Soldier.” If you thought the capesters’ reign was irksome back when Avengers were dominating multiplexes, you’re probably even more exasperated now. You’ve seen one guy in a mask and cape, you’ve seen them all, am I right?Well, not exactly. The surprisingly meta, genre-bending “WandaVision” was one example of a superhero show that tried something different, delivering knowing sitcom parodies and, in the process, offering something for people besides M.C.U. fans.And “WandaVision” isn’t alone. For years, superhero stories have branched beyond action-hero conventions, within many different genres. Whether you like noir, horror, spy thrillers or teen dramas, we’ve got a TV or movie pick for you — that just also happens to be about heroes.I’m really into film noir … More

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    ‘Giants Being Lonely’ Review: Indie Filmmaking Being Twee

    The feature-directing debut of the artist Grear Patterson paints a hazy picture of adolescence.Starting with its title, appropriated from a Carl Sandburg poem, “Giants Being Lonely” aims to capture something precious about adolescence and American beauty. (Unlike in Sandburg, the “Giants” in question are a high school baseball team.) But nothing concrete emerges from this haze of oblique editing and barely written scenes, acted by cast members who are not up to making the dialogue sound convincing or filling the voids left in place of their characters.In his feature writing-directing debut, the mixed-media artist Grear Patterson mines a vein of twee indie lyricism that recalls the early films of David Gordon Green (“George Washington”) and a hint of the prurience of another art-world figure turned filmmaker, Larry Clark (“Kids”). The movie is set in a Southern town where inhibitions run low. It’s the sort of place where a teenager casually climbs up onto a rusty pipe bridge, strips naked and jumps into the stream below, in front of his peers.“Giants Being Lonely” is not an especially plot-driven film, and describing what happens does it no favors. Bobby (Jack Irving), the Giants’ hot shot pitcher, is the ensemble’s marginal first among equals — so talented and magical that Patterson has him pitch a perfect game midway through.By that point, Bobby has already started sleeping with a teammate’s mother (Amalia Culp). Notwithstanding the queasy age and power imbalance between them, the affair is a bad idea because she’s married to the coach (Gabe Fazio), an abusive father to Adam (Ben Irving, Jack’s brother), Bobby’s fellow ballplayer. The coach’s profanity-fueled pep talks are so over-the-top they suggest overcompensation, either by him or by Patterson as a screenwriter.Then there is Caroline (Lily Gavin), who wholesomely flirts with Bobby (“Bobby, did you listen to the rain this morning?” she asks. “Yeah. Did you?” he replies) and whom Adam plans to ask to the prom.When Bobby requests a sick note from the school nurse so he can skip practice and re-bed the coach’s wife, it becomes difficult to take “Giants Being Lonely” seriously, although the trancelike mood (replete with indiscriminate zooms and shots that dwell on natural scenery) could be cited as a defense against claims of implausibility. Another problem is the casting of brothers as non-brothers: The blond-maned jocks Bobby and Adam are, in personality and appearance, tough to distinguish. Both look like they’ve been run through a McConaughifer that left out the charisma.The most glaring flaw, though, is the ending, which is so horrific and unearned as to be grotesque. Its suddenness is arguably part of the point: Patterson has said he was inspired by a traumatic event from his own time in high school. But if what happened is anything like what’s onscreen, the film’s inability to make sense of it is all the more pitiable.Giants Being LonelyNot rated. Running time: 1 hour 21 minutes. In theaters and on FandangoNow, Vudu and other streaming platforms and pay TV operators. Please consult the guidelines outlined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention before watching movies inside theaters. More

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    Report: Chris Hemsworth Begs Russell Crowe to Make 'Gladiator 2'

    WENN/Lia Toby

    The ‘Avengers: Endgame’ star, who is bonding with his fellow Australian actor during the making of ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’, is allegedly interested in co-producing a sequel to the Oscar-winning film.

    Apr 6, 2021

    AceShowbiz –
    Chris Hemsworth and Russell Crowe, who has reportedly landed a cameo role in “Thor: Love and Thunder”, could be teaming up for another movie. Rumor has it that the two actors have be in talks about making “Gladiator 2”.

    According to New Idea, the 37-year-old hunk is trying to convince the Oscar-winning actor to let him co-produce the sequel. They have reportedly spent hours talking and exchanging script ideas for the unconfirmed project.

    Interestingly, the site reports that it’s actually Hemsworth’s wife Elsa Pataky who initiated the talks about the “Gladiator” sequel. “She’s often joked they could easily pass off as father and son – and Russell thinks he could be the only man to credibly play his son in a ‘Gladiator’ sequel,” a source tells the site.

    As for Hemsworth’s personal relationship with Crowe, the site notes that their “binding romance” was on full display during the “Thor: Love and Thunder” cast’s outing at a rugby game in Sydney, Australia in late March. At the time, they were joined by Hemsworth’s wife as well as his co-stars Natalie Portman, Tessa Thompson, Jeff Goldblum as well as the movie’s director Taika Waititi.

    “Chris is in awe of Russell,” the so-called insider close to the Byron Bay-based star additionally dishes. “He hangs off his every word and Russ has really taken him under his wing.”

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    Crowe portrayed Roman general Maximus Decimus Meridius, who is betrayed when Commodus, the ambitious son of Emperor Marcus Aurelius, in 2000’s “Gladiator”. Reduced to slavery, Maximus becomes a gladiator and rises through the ranks of the arena to avenge the murders of his family and his emperor.

    The role in the Ridley Scott-directed film earned Crowe an Academy Award for Best Actor, while the film was named Best Picture. It also bagged awards for Best Costume Design, Best Sound and Best Visual Effects at the 73rd annual Academy Awards.

    In 2018, reports surfaced that Scott had “begun forward progress” on “Gladiator 2” with “The Town” and “Top Gun: Maverick” scribe Peter Craig. Asked about the potential sequel, star Connie Nelson told Collider last month, “I know that it’s on the ledger, so let’s just see when Ridley – I know he had to do one or two other movies, and then I think it’s on the ledger after that, but I’m not quite sure where it’s at right now.”

    While she’s unsure about the film’s status, the actress is eager to reprise her role as Lucilla, Maximus’ former lover. “It would obviously be amazing, and I know that a lot of people want to see more of that. And I think that all of us are just gonna have to look at that as a separate, different film, you know?” she shared.

    She went on explaining what’s interesting about the film and how it will resonate with today’s issues, “But with some of the emotions and values that made ‘Gladiator’ so powerful for so many people, which I really think were the underlying values that we were talking about. Tyranny versus freedom, and the willingness to do what needs to be done in order to free a people. And I don’t think that it would have been the same if it had just been a spectacle. It had to exist within a sphere of values.”

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    Kate Winslet Admits to 'Sharing Private' Things With Saoirse Ronan for 'Ammonite'

    NEON

    When talking about Francis Lee’s historical drama, the actress portraying British palaeontologist Mary Anning also highlights on the fact that the ‘balance is off’ when it comes to equality on screen.

    Apr 6, 2021

    AceShowbiz –
    Kate Winslet and Saoirse Ronan shared “private things” from their own lives to better understand their lesbian characters in “Ammonite”.

    The actresses portray lovers Mary Anning and her close friend Charlotte Murchison in Francis Lee’s historical drama and the 45-year-old star admitted they had an intimate conversation about their “own paths” when discussing the issue of whether straight actors should play LGBTQ+ roles.

    Asked if she was aware of the criticism her casting could have faced, Kate told Attitude magazine, “I was aware of that, yeah. I would be foolish to say that I wasn’t aware that people may feel that way.”

    “You know, I can tell you that there were private things shared between myself and Francis and Saoirse connected to our own paths et cetera that we felt were relevant to add to these characters — and those aren’t things that I’d be really sharing publicly.”

    The Oscar-winning star admitted the “balance is off” when it comes to equality on screen but she hopes that simply by telling more LGBTQ+ stories in cinema, more casting opportunities will ultimately be created.

    She said, “It’s like I said before, the balance is off, right? I mean, let’s be real here: there are a lot more known straight actors in the mainstream than there are LGBTQ actors, and we definitely need to right that balance…”

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    “I still think there is a serious lack [of] LGBTQ films that make their way into our mainstream,” she mused. “I think we still feel so compelled to compare the few that do exist and that’s what I hope is going to change.”

    “I also hope that by telling these stories, that perhaps queer actors who might feel some degree of fear that they may not get roles because there just aren’t enough parts for LGBTQ actors, I hope that by bringing more of these stories into the mainstream and into cinemas for audiences to enjoy, then perhaps LGBTQ actors might feel a little bit more, I don’t know, included, welcomed, celebrated. It’s really important to me.”

    Kate hopes she can “contribute” to a shift in storytelling attitudes with her own work. She added, “I hope that by being a part of this film and normalising a same-sex connection in this way, I really, really hope it will inspire LGBTQ performers to feel… just to feel more celebrated, and to hopefully change this.”

    “It would be amazing if we could really see these big shifts and changes in cinema. And for my part, I wanted to contribute.”

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    Naomi Scott Reveals How She Made Peace With Being Cut Out of 'The Martian'

    Instagram

    Being cast in a supporting role as Ryoko in the Ridley Scott-directed film, the ‘Aladdin’ star shares her advice to those who had been in a situation where they wanted the ground to swallow them up.

    Apr 6, 2021

    AceShowbiz –
    Naomi Scott “choked” on her one scene of dialog before she was ultimately cut from Ridley Scott’s “The Martian”. The actress, 27, was cast in a supporting role as Ryoko in the flick, but had the majority of her scenes axed after a mishap on set.

    “There was one dialog scene and then I was in scenes, but just there,” Naomi tells Collider. “So there was this one dialog scene. It was this science jargon. Ridley Scott was behind this curtain and I was just, mate, I just choked.”

    She reflects, “I think it’s so important to just talk about moments where you choke, because they really do inform your experiences and they really do force you to kind of reconcile whatever those insecurities that you have are and face them.”

    “Anyone out there, in whatever field of work, and you think of that time that you wanted the ground to swallow you up, let me tell you, we’ve all been there. I’ve been there in front of Ridley Scott.”

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    Although Naomi was eventually able to get the dialog out, her scene ended up getting cut out of the movie – but it did become a deleted scene in the extended version.

    “I was just this little role. They didn’t care. Maybe if you’re the lead in something. I wouldn’t take that stuff too personally, do you know what I mean?” shrugs the “Aladdin” star. “I laughed it off.”

    “I came back to my mother-in-law – this is the best thing – I got back home, I went to hers because we were there and she opened the door and she went, ‘You’re an extra?’ Because literally in the movie, there’s one shot of me in this cap and I’m like this. It’s like one second!”

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