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    J.J. Abrams Plainly Refuses to Kill C-3PO in 'Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker'

    WENN/Sheri Determan

    During an appearance on ‘The View’, Anthony Daniels gets candid about the director’s reaction to his suggestion to put his iconic humanoid robot to sleep for good.
    Mar 11, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Director J.J. Abrams refused to listen to “Star Wars” actor Anthony Daniels when he suggested it was time to kill off his robot character C-3PO in “Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker”.
    The veteran Brit is the only “Star Wars” actor to have appeared in all nine of the main films in the sci-fi franchise, and, as Abrams was preparing to wrap up the third and final installment in the Skywalker saga last year (19), Daniels proposed having his humanoid robot put “to sleep” – for good.
    But Abrams wasn’t having any of it.
    “I said to J.J. when we were filming, ‘Maybe it’s time to put C-3PO to sleep, to give him an end,’ ” Daniels shared on U.S. talk show “The View”, “and he said, ‘Not on my watch!'”
    The 74-year-old is famed for his work as the gold droid, but Daniels admits he came close to missing out on the iconic role when he was first approached back in the 1970s, because he thought it would be disastrous for his acting career.
    “I wasn’t apprehensive – I just didn’t want it! I was insulted!” he confessed.
    “I was a serious actor. The thought of being in a robot suit, disguised, in science fiction? Back in the day, that wasn’t very popular.”
    However, he was soon convinced to give the movie a shot after being presented with artist renderings of George Lucas’ creation, and the rest is history.
    [embedded content]
    “What I did see was… a production still of how the character might look…,” Daniels said. “I stared at that picture and it’s totally changed my life.”

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    'Peter Rabbit 2' Follows 'No Time to Die' Lead in Postponing Release Date Over Coronavirus

    Sony Pictures

    Initially scheduled for a theatrical release of March 27 across the country, ‘Peter Rabbit’ sequel ‘The Runaway’ has been pushed back for more than four months by Sony chiefs.
    Mar 11, 2020
    AceShowbiz – The release of family blockbuster “Peter Rabbit 2: The Runaway” has reportedly been delayed until August due to the coronavirus outbreak.
    With the crisis caused by the disease escalating across Europe, and Italy placed under lockdown, Sony chiefs are said to have decided to put the release of the film, the follow-up to 2018’s hugely successful “Peter Rabbit”, on ice for more than four months.
    According to The Hollywood Reporter, the movie will no longer debut on March 27, as planned, and will instead receive an international and U.S. release on August 7.
    The move follows the delay to the release of the latest James Bond film, “No Time to Die”, also distributed by Sony, until November.
    “Peter Rabbit” and its sequel star James Corden as the voice of author Beatrix Potter’s mischeivious bunny, with Margot Robbie and Elizabeth Debicki also voicing characters, and Rose Byrne, Domhnall Gleeson, and David Oyelowo in live-action roles.
    The move comes after Italian officials announced that all its cinemas were to be closed, and other European governments advised people to take precautions to avoid the spread of the virus.
    According to The Hollywood Reporter, Sony chiefs made the decision as the first “Peter Rabbit” made $236 million (£180 million) of its $351 million (£269 million) box office outside North America, and that the U.S. release of the follow-up has reportedly been shifted to avoid piracy.

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    Tracy Letts Spills How He Joined Wife Carrie Coon in 'Ghostbusters: Afterlife'

    WENN/Instar

    The ‘Lady Bird’ actor claims to be in the right place at the right time when writer/director Jason Reitman was looking for someone to fill a small part in the new movie.
    Mar 10, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Tracy Letts has snagged a “small part” alongside his actress wife Carrie Coon in the new “Ghostbusters” movie.
    The “Lady Bird” actor and playwright reveals he was in the right place at the right time when writer/director Jason Reitman was looking for someone to fill a role in “Ghostbusters: Afterlife”, which was filmed in Calgary, Canada.
    “My wife Carrie is in… the new ‘Ghostbusters’ movie coming out in the summer, and we were there in Calgary while she was shooting it, and a role became available, and so I was able to jump in and play a small part in it myself,” he said.
    The project will also feature Paul Rudd, “Stranger Things” star Finn Wolfhard and “Gifted” actress Mckenna Grace, as well as guest appearances by original franchise stars Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, Sigourney Weaver and Annie Potts, but Letts is unable to share any details about the film’s plot or the character he plays.
    Joking about the secrecy surrounding the movie, he told U.S. breakfast show “Today”, “Here’s what I can tell you: nothing! Absolutely nothing!”

    “Ghostbusters: Afterlife” is set to launch in July.

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    Billie Lourd Deals With Bittersweet Emotion Standing In for Carrie Fisher in 'The Rise of Skywalker'

    WENN/Joe

    The Lieutenant Connix depicter in the latest ‘Star Wars’ movie reminisces the time she helped director J.J. Abrams and his team complete the sequences involving her late mother’s iconic character.
    Mar 10, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Actress Billie Lourd endured a full rollercoaster of emotions on the set of “Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker after agreeing to stand in for her late mother Carrie Fisher.
    The veteran star, famed for her role as Princess Leia, died unexpectedly in December, 2016, but director J.J. Abrams was able to cut together unused footage of Fisher from 2015’s “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” to resurrect her character for key scenes in the recent “The Rise of Skywalker”.
    Lourd, who portrays Resistance member Lieutenant Connix in the sci-fi blockbusters, helped Abrams and his team complete the sequences by taking part in the Leia shoots, and she admits it was truly bittersweet to fill in for her mum.
    “It’s literally like a gift from her, or her forcing us to make her the star of the movie – probably both!” she laughed in new behind-the-scenes documentary, “The Skywalker Legacy”.
    Lourd added, “Being back has been incredible, painful, surreal – all of the adjectives that you can come up with, probably, I felt.”
    Abrams later used Fisher’s earlier film clips to digitally replace the 27 year old’s face with that of her mother.
    Production on “The Rise of Skywalker”‘s Princess Leia scenes was also an emotional experience for leading lady Daisy Ridley, who needed to collect herself after filming.
    “The reality of having to do a scene with someone who isn’t actually there was very difficult,” the Brit shared. “I sort of had to walk off and have a moment.”
    And Abrams insists he will forever be grateful to Lourd for giving him her blessing to bring Fisher back from the dead onscreen.
    “To know that we were doing this with her at our side, that’s something that I will always be grateful to her for,” the director said.

    “The Skywalker Legacy”, which details how filmmakers incorporated unused Fisher footage into the latest movie, will be released to coincide with the digital launch of “The Rise of Skywalker” on March 17.

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    Eva Green Claims to Be Clueless About 'Doctor Strange 2' Casting Rumors

    WENN/Mario Mitsis

    While she denies involvement in ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’, the former Bond girl can’t help but admire the Marvel franchise for ‘the humor in them.’
    Mar 10, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Eva Green has denied hearing the rumours she’s joining the cast of the upcoming Marvel movie “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness”.
    The 39-year-old French actress has been tipped for a role in the film, but during an interview with Total Film magazine she insisted she knew nothing about a potential part.
    “Me? No! Not that I know of. Not at all,” she said.
    However, Eva did express her admiration for the Marvel franchise, gushing, “I like the humour in them. I saw the trailer for ‘Black Widow’… I’d like to see that one.”
    Production on “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” will begin in May, with Benedict Cumberbatch returning to the fold as the titular sorcerer.
    Sam Rami is reportedly in talks to direct the film, which is expected to drop next year (2021).

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    'Parasite' Makes History by Becoming U.K.'s Highest-Grossing Foreign-Language Film

    NEON

    Banking $14.59 million since it opened on February 7, the Bong Joon Ho-directed movie breaks the box office record set by Mel Gibson’s ‘The Passion of the Christ’ in 2004.
    Mar 10, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Oscar-winning drama “Parasite” has set a new record as the highest-grossing foreign-language film in British box office history.
    The South Korean movie, directed by Bong Joon Ho, has so far banked $14.59 million (£11.1 million) since it opened on 7 February, dethroning Mel Gibson’s “The Passion of the Christ”.
    The biblical film, which featured dialogue in Hebrew and Latin, had held the title since 2004, with a total gross of $14.56 million (£11.08 million).
    Officials at Parasite’s distributor, Curzon Artificial Eye, announced the news via Twitter after the figures were unveiled on Sunday, March 08.
    “This weekend we’re celebrating the fact that Bong Joon Ho’s universally acclaimed #Parasite has now become the highest grossing foreign language film in UK box office history!”

    Curzon Artificial Eye announced the milestones on Twitter.
    “Parasite” claimed four Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director, at Hollywood’s big night last month (February), and has taken in more than $257 million (£195.5 million) across the world to date.

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    Daniel Craig Gets Candid About Why He Came Close to Quitting Bond After Filming ‘Spectre’

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    Daniel Craig Gets Candid About Why He Came Close to Quitting Bond After Filming 'Spectre'

    Universal Pictures

    Set to return as the 007 agent for one final time in ‘No Time to Die’, the ‘Knives Out’ actor opens up in a new interview why it took five years for him to go through the whole thing again.
    Mar 10, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Daniel Craig nearly quit as James Bond after making “Spectre” due to the toll the role takes on his physical and mental health.
    The “Knives Out” star had to finish filming the last instalment in the espionage franchise in a knee brace due to an on set injury in 2015, and after finishing filming said he’d rather “slash my wrists” than make another 007 movie.
    He is, however, set to return as Bond one final time in “No Time to Die” – but tells GQ magazine he meant it when he hinted he’d quit – as making the films took so much out of him.
    “I was never going to do one again,” the 52-year-old star explains. “I was like, ‘Is this work really genuinely worth this, to go through this, this whole thing?’ And I didn’t feel… I felt physically really low.”
    “So the prospect of doing another movie was just, like, off the cards. And that’s why it has been five years.”
    Revealing that preparing for the role harmed his mental health, Daniel explains, “With Bond, you don’t get the script, so the physicality of it is a preparation, in a way. It’s making my head go, ‘This is what it’s going to be.’ ”
    The actor adds, “I have suffered from it (anxiety) in the past. I have suffered because it’s been like, ‘I can’t cope, I can’t deal with this.’ ”

    “No Time to Die”, which is directed by Cary Joji Fukunaga, was scheduled for release next month (April 2020). but its debut has been pushed back until November due to the coronavirus which has spread across the globe, forcing the cancellation of numerous concerts, conferences and sporting events.

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    Max von Sydow: Where to Stream 13 of His Best Movies

    The international film star Max von Sydow died Monday at age 90, after a career that spanned over half a century. With his lean, imposing frame and commanding voice, Von Sydow had the presence to square off against Death in “The Seventh Seal,” the first of his 11 collaborations with Swedish director Ingmar Bergman.Though von Sydow would continue to regularly work with Bergman for another 14 years, his command of the English language opened up horizons in Hollywood and elsewhere, including roles for top-flight directors like William Friedkin, Steven Spielberg, John Huston, David Lynch and Martin Scorsese, as well as turns in franchise smashes like “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” and “Game of Thrones.”Here are 13 movies that highlight his best work with Bergman, his consistent attraction to epics of immigration, and his effective turns as men of God and pitiless heavies.1957‘The Seventh Seal’It’s the most famous image of Ingmar Bergman’s career — and von Sydow’s, for that matter: A knight, returning from the Crusades to a country ravaged by the Black Death, playing chess with the Grim Reaper in an effort to bargain for his own life. This allegorical scene on the beach sets the stage for “The Seventh Seal,” which opens up into a larger pursuit of religious meaning at a time when mortality was being cut cruelly and arbitrarily short. As the knight and his squire roam a countryside gripped with fear, Bergman ponders divine justice on the precipice of human oblivion.Where to watch: Stream it on Criterion Channel; rent it on Apple TV, Amazon, Vudu, Google Play and YouTube.1960‘The Virgin Spring’Three herders rape and murder a virginal young woman as she passes through the forest to deliver candles to the church. When they inadvertently seek shelter in the girl’s home, carrying an incriminating piece of her clothing with them, her parents come to grips with the situation and have their revenge. As the girl’s father, von Sydow’s anguish and desperation turn to cold resolve, but Ingmar Bergman hasn’t fashioned anything like a typical rape-revenge scenario. Like in a fairy tale gone amiss, the forest itself takes on a mythical quality. The religious significance of this tragedy is never far from the surface, leading to a moment of startling transcendence.Where to watch: Stream it on Criterion Channel; rent it on Apple TV and Amazon.1966‘Hawaii’George Roy Hill’s three-hour epic is a strange beast, at once an austere historical drama about the folly of missionaries trying to convert Hawaiian “savages” to Christianity in the early 1800s and an escapist spectacle involving a love triangle and scenes of adventure, like a natural disaster and a shark attack. But von Sydow brings a fascinating earnestness to the role of a stiff reverend who volunteers for this important religious endeavor, but needs to find someone to marry first. To that end, he begins an awkward courtship with a younger woman (Julie Andrews) that’s complicated by her open-ended relationship with a seaman, who happens to resurface once they’re on the island.Where to watch: Rent it on Apple TV and Amazon.1968‘Shame’With his 1966 classic “Persona,” Ingmar Bergman dove headlong into an experimental period that reflected the dramatic changes in European cinema at the time and political upheaval around the globe. Produced as the Vietnam War was in full effect, Bergman’s “Shame” is a radical war movie of sorts, set largely in a rural idyll where two former violinists, played by von Sydow and Liv Ullmann, have holed up to escape a civil war. When the conflict comes to them, however, they’re forced to make decisions that reveal difficult truths about their individual integrity and their relationship. In terms of style and substance, “Shame” represents Bergman’s attempt to break out of his hermetic bubble and let the tumult of the outside world come in.Where to watch: Rent it on Apple TV, Vudu, Google Play and YouTube.1969‘The Passion of Anna’The final part of an informal trilogy that began with “Hour of the Wolf” and “Shame,” Ingmar Bergman’s “The Passion of Anna” casts von Sydow as a recently divorced loner who gets enmeshed in a pair of complicated relationships — one with a deceitful widow (Ullmann) who loses her husband and son in a car accident, the other with a married woman (Bibi Andersson) who lives nearby. Meanwhile, someone in their rural community has been mutilating animals. Bergman presents this disturbing juxtaposition through a semi-experimental lens, commenting on the action through voice-over narration and occasionally breaking the fourth wall altogether. At one point, von Sydow even pauses to reflect on the challenges of playing his own character.Where to watch: Stream it on Criterion Channel; rent it on Apple TV, Vudu, Google Play and YouTube.1971‘The Emigrants’In the first of two three-hour-plus epics from director Jan Troell, shot in close succession, von Sydow and Ullmann teamed up again as a couple from rural Sweden in the mid-1800s who are facing too many cruel harvests to feed their family, which is up to four children and counting. So they and other family members decide to emigrate to a farm in the Minnesota territory, a journey that Troell documents with painstaking ardor. Though they arrive in Minnesota by the end of the film, “The Emigrants” mostly lingers on their time in the Swedish province of Småland, where they suffer from drought and hunger, and their long passage across the Atlantic, where they’re beset by spoiled food and an outbreak of lice and disease. Troell emphasizes hardship and authenticity above all, but there’s no denying the sun-touched beauty of his images, too.Where to watch: Rent it on Apple TV, Amazon, Google Play and YouTube.1972‘The New Land’“The Emigrants” ends with the promise of a Swedish family finally arriving in the Chisago Lakes area, where the soil is rich and deep, but the miseries they face in America are equally daunting. Beyond the language and cultural barriers, their new home rests on unsettled territory, full of false promises, like the gold rush luring some out west and hostilities from the local Sioux. The cumulative impact of Troell’s two-part epic stands alongside the first two “Godfather” films as immigration stories writ large, but “The Emigrants” and “The New Land” stand alone in their austere realism. When the Sioux come calling in “The New Land,” for example, it’s treated not as a mass movement but one intimate, harrowing piece of a more comprehensive terror.Where to watch: Rent it on Apple TV and Amazon.1973‘The Exorcist’For his horror classic, based on William Peter Blatty’s novel, director William Friedkin cannily seized on the religious gravitas of von Sydow’s performances in Ingmar Bergman’s film to make him the wedge between a possessed girl (Linda Blair) and the Devil incarnate. As Father Merrin, von Sydow plays an exorcist who’s essentially tasked with putting to rest an evil he inadvertently summoned on an archaeological dig, joining a younger priest in an effort to expel the demon that’s taken residence in Washington, D.C. Friedkin’s technical mastery accounts for much of the reason “The Exorcist” is held in such high esteem, but performances like von Sydow’s add a human dimension to the shocks.Where to watch: Rent it on Apple TV, Amazon, Vudu, Google Play and YouTube.1975‘Three Days of the Condor’One feature of the post-Watergate political thrillers of the 1970s — like “All the President’s Men,” “The Conversation,” and “The Parallax View” — is that ordinary people are up against faceless, unaccountable, conspiratorial forces that cannot be identified or defeated. Yet von Sydow proves the exception in “Three Days of the Condor,” appearing as a fedora-donning hit man who leads a daytime massacre of a C.I.A. office that kills all but Robert Redford’s intrepid code breaker. But just because he makes himself known doesn’t mean he can be stopped: von Sydow’s calm, implacable villain makes it chillingly clear that escape is impossible.Where to watch: Rent it on Apple TV, Amazon, Vudu, Google Play and YouTube.1986‘Hannah and Her Sisters’Woody Allen’s admiration for Ingmar Bergman made it an inevitability that he would cast Bergman’s favorite actor in one of his films, and he chose one of his best — a sophisticated comedy-drama about siblings whose familial bonds are strained by their love lives. Ranting about Auschwitz and the debased value of American culture, von Sydow’s aging artist has worn down his former-student-turned-lover (Barbara Hershey), who wants to leave him while she still has a shot at romance. Von Sydow’s dyspeptic intellectual speaks like an Allen mouthpiece, but he also conjures the deep hurt and rage of an older man who’s lost his fountain of youth.Where to watch: Rent it on Apple TV, Amazon, Vudu, Google Play and YouTube.1988‘Pelle the Conqueror’Winner of both the Palme d’Or at Cannes and the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film, “Pelle the Conqueror” found von Sydow in familiar territory as an immigrant in the 1800s facing terrible conditions in his new home, which is also the premise of “Hawaii,” “The Emigrants,” and “The New Land.” Compared with the others, this Bille August’s drama is more scaled-down and sentimental, focusing on the relationship between an elderly father (von Sydow) and his young son (Pelle Hvenegaard), neither of whom are of ideal working age. At the end of the 19th century, they travel from Sweden to Denmark in search of a living wage, but wind up on a farm where they’re treated with relentless harassment and abuse. Their resilience, buoyed by a powerful father-son bond, lifts the film from the dirge of ceaseless trauma.Where to watch: Rent it on Apple TV, Amazon, Vudu, Google Play and YouTube.1992‘The Best Intentions’Written by Ingmar Bergman and directed by Bille August, “The Best Intentions” exists in multiple cuts, a 323-minute TV mini-series version and the 174-minute version that won the Palme D’Or, but even the three-hour abridgment is a coherent and affecting treatment of Bergman’s semi-autobiographical script. Telling the story of his parents, renamed Henrik (Samuel Fröler) and Anna (Pernilla August) for the film, Bergman frames their relationship as a Romeo-and-Juliet pairing between a poor minister and a young woman of greater wealth and stature. Von Sydow plays Anna’s father, who conspires to keep the two apart until mortality intervenes. As the title suggests, Henrik and Anna’s partnership falls short of their ideals, but the intensity of their devotion — and the intensity with which it’s tested — gives the film a warmth and emotional sweep that’s closest to Bergman’s “Fanny and Alexander.”Where to watch: Rent it on Apple TV, Amazon, Google Play and YouTube.2002‘Minority Report’In the year 2054, the “PreCrime” unit in Washington, D.C., operating from the visions of three psychics called “precogs,” is in charge of arresting killers before they commit the crime, a system that has effectively wiped out all murder in the city. Based on a Philip K. Dick short story, “Minority Report” begins just as PreCrime is poised for a national rollout, and the program’s nefarious director, played by von Sydow, works hard to suppress some serious flaws in the system. The director, Steven Spielberg, takes advantage of von Sydow’s thunderous voice and imposing stature, particularly as it contrasts with Tom Cruise’s hero, who threatens to expose the program as he runs from his own precog-determined fate.Where to watch: Rent it on Apple TV, Amazon, Vudu, Google Play and YouTube. More