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ISBN: 0957-4948

Год: 2023

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Editor NICK DE SEMLYEN Creative Director CHRIS LUPTON Photography Director JOANNA MORAN Deputy Art Director GRAHAM JONES Editor-In-Chief (Digital) JAMES DYER Features Editor ALEX GODFREY Deputy Online Editor BEN TRAVIS Executive Editor CHRIS HEWITT Social Media Editor SOPHIE BUTCHER Reviews Editor JOHN NUGENT Editorial Assistant WHITNEY JONES News Editor BETH WEBB Editor-At-Large HELEN O’HARA CONTRIBUTING EDITORS MARKETING Hayley Campbell, Ian Freer, Boyd Hilton, Dan Jolin, Bill McConkey, Ian Nathan, Christina Newland, Kim Newman, Nev Pierce, Paul Shipper, Adam Smith, Amon Warmann Senior Marketing Manager Susan Litawski Product Marketing Manager Madeleine Munro-Hall CONTRIBUTORS CEO of Bauer Publishing UK Chris Duncan EA to CEO Vicky Meadows EA to CFO Stacey Thomas Group MD – Lifestyle & Entertainment Helen Morris Publisher – Premium And Entertainment Lauren Holleyoake Chief Financial Officer, Bauer Magazine Media Lisa Hayden Business Analyst Tracey Pickering Managing Editor — Premium and Entertainment & PA to Group MD Elisha Thomas Words: Alex Avard, Tom Ellen, Emerald Fennell, Steph Green, Michael Jones, Matt Kamen, Jordan King, Ella Kemp, Barry Levitt, Iana Murray, Olly Richards, Alice Saville, Amelia Tait, Laura Venning, Photographers: Marco Vittur Illustrations: Arn0, Matthew Brazier, Selman Hoşgör, Jacey, Bill McConkey, Justin Metz, The Red Dress, Peter Strain Design: Russell Moorcroft Subbing: Julie Emery, Lucy Williams Picture assistance: Giuseppe Frusteri PRODUCTION Print Production Controller Carl Lawrence 01733-468858 Ad Production Controller Jackie Doran 01733-468107 ePublishing Production Director Alan Kindell 020-7859 8604 ADVERTISING Head Of Magazine Media Clare Chamberlain Head Of Magazine Brands Anu Short MD — Bauer Media Advertising Simon Kilby Commercial Director — Entertainment Gemma Dick Brand Director Joel Stephan 020 3879 2125 Head Of Film Sarah Clarke 020 7295 3576 Head Of Magazines — Regional Katie Kendall 020 7295 8560 Media Planner Ricky Duff 01733 648062 Head Of Classified Imogen Jackaman 01733 459278 Inserts Manager Simon Buckenham 020 7075 0812 Imogen Jackaman 01733 459278 Inserts Manager Simon Buckenham 020 7075 0812 Newsstand cover: Image Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Editor’s photo: Marco Vittur Production Editor (Entertainment) LIZ MOODY H BAUER PUBLISHING MEMBERSHIPS AND SUBSCRIPTIONS To ensure you don’t miss an issue visit www.greatmagazines.co.uk. To contact us about subscription or membership orders, renewals, missing issues or any other subscription queries, please email bauer@subscription.co.uk or call us on 01858 438884, or if overseas call +44 1858 438884. To manage your account online visit www.greatmagazines.co.uk/solo INTERNATIONAL AND SYNDICATION syndication@bauermedia.co.uk COMPLAINTS H Bauer Publishing is a member of the Independent Press Standards Organisation (www.ipso.co.uk) and endeavours to respond to and resolve your concerns quickly. Our Editorial Complaints Policy (including full details of how to contact us about editorial complaints and IPSO’s contact details) can be found at www. bauermediacomplaints.co.uk Empire is published every four weeks by H Bauer Publishing. 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This issue on sale 26 October. “Oh sweet God no, the bed bugs have infested the link!” LONDON, FILMS AND festivals are all indisputably good things. So when the three are combined, in the form of the London Film Festival, it’s always a magical time. This year’s LFF was no exception, with my personal highlights including the hilarious The Holdovers, the truly wild Poor Things, and the floods-of-tears-inducing All Of Us Strangers. I was also lucky enough to get a seat at Martin Scorsese’s Screen Talk, in which the great man rapped with Edgar Wright about cinema for an all-too-short 90 minutes. Aged 80, he had more energy than the rest of the room put together, reeling off film titles faster than one could punch them into Letterboxd. Fun fact: Scorsese has only seen Titanic once. Equally thrilling was Empire’s special LFF presentation: this year, we were delighted to host a screening of Molly Manning Walker’s How To Have Sex (pictured right), an outstanding British film that tackles themes of consent, friendship and selfdiscovery. Our Beth Webb spoke to Walker and her team on stage, and the atmosphere was electric. Make sure to seek the film out when it arrives in cinemas in November. But learn from my mistake — be careful when typing that title into Google. Meanwhile, if there are any film festivals underwater, five fathoms deep and attended mostly by scallops, chances are one will soon be headlined by this issue’s cover story: Aquaman And The Lost Kingdom. DC movies may be going through a major metamorphosis, but James Wan is ending the era in style, with an octopus-laden, go-for-broke bonanza that promises to make major waves this Christmas. Tom Ellen attached a Dictaphone to a trident and headed to LA to meet Wan; you can read all about it from page 48. Enjoy the issue. This month’s exclusive subscriber cover by Justin Metz Winner of a 2022 D&AD Pencil and two ADC Silver Cubes, talented illustrator Metz has become a renowned creator of digital art, pouring (geddit?) his exceptional talents into this issue’s super-cool and super-watery Aquaman subs cover. TURN TO PAGE 8 TO LEARN HOW TO SIGN UP FOR AN EMPIRE MEMBERSHIP Empire, ISSN 0957-4948 (USPS 6398) is published every four weeks by H Bauer Publishing Ltd, Media House, Peterborough Business Park, Lynch Wood, Peterborough, PE2 6EA, United Kingdom. Airfreight and mailing in the USA by agent named World Container Inc, 150-15, 183rd Street, Jamaica, NY 11413, USA. Periodicals postage paid at Brooklyn, NY 11256. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Empire, Air Business Ltd, c/o World Container INC 150-15, 183rd St, Jamaica, NY 11413, USA. 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BETH WEBB HOSTED OUR SCREENING OF HOW TO HAVE SEX AT THE LFF “I’ve been to many LFF screenings in my time, but none have felt more lively, rowdy and warmly received than How To Have Sex, our sponsored film at the festival this year. The two standing ovations for filmmaker Molly Manning Walker and star Mia McKennaBruce were a total joy to behold.” Love me tender: Jacob Elordi and Cailee Spaeny in Priscilla. Below: Billion-dollar big bad Thanos (Josh Brolin). 10 ALL OF US STRANGERS The first look at Andrew Haigh’s new movie. Hankies at the ready. 12 ARGYLLE Matthew Vaughn on how he turned his cat into the star of his new spy movie. Nepo pussy! 20 ON A ROLE Jason Isaacs on filling Cary Grant’s shoes, and glasses. 22 DOCTOR WHO The Doctor will see you now. David Tennant and showrunner Russell T Davies on their unexpected return to the TARDIS. 26 THE HOLDOVERS Alexander Payne tells us all about the Christmas movie that reteams him with Paul Giamatti for the first time since Sideways. “I am not drinking fucking Shloer!” 31 PINT OF MILK The Fonz himself, Henry Winkler. Has Pint Of Milk jumped the shark? 4 DECEMBER 2023 SALTBURN Fincher. Fassbender. Effin’ fantastic? The Oscar-winning Emerald Fennell writes for Empire about her follow-up to Promising Young Woman. What a gem. 34 80 32 THE KILLER LOKI: SEASON 2 They’ve given the God Of Mischief a second series. Better than ‘Monkey Tennis’? 41 MAY DECEMBER Natalie Portman and Julianne Moore are Todd Haynes’ calendar girls. 48 AQUAMAN AND THE LOST KINGDOM Director James Wan on making sure that the DCEU goes out on a high (tide). 56 PRISCILLA Another year, another movie about Priscilla Presley that ignores The Naked Gun. 62 SOCIETY OF THE SNOW The story of J.A. Bayona’s survival drama. 68 WONKA Paul King swaps marmalade for chocolate. WERNER HERZOG The legend speaks. And no, we can’t do the voice. 88 THE DEEP DIVE Meet the raven with more films than Eric Roberts. 94 AMON WARMANN TALKED THE COLOR PURPLE WITH BLITZ BAZAWULE “Blitz had energy and passion for days when we spoke on a sunny morning in the Rosewood London hotel. He also casually mentioned that he regularly talked to Spielberg, Oprah and Quincy Jones while working on the film. As contacts go, he’s set for life. Hope he never loses that phone!” BEN WHEATLEY The British indie king on going full blockbuster with Meg 2: The Trench. 98 POWELL AND PRESSBURGER Legendary editor Thelma Schoonmaker on the equally legendary filmmaking partnership. Legends. 102 THE RANKING Billion-dollar movies. Sorry, Jumanji: Welcome To The Jungle, you were just $45 million shy. CHRIS HEWITT CHAIRED A Q&A WITH THE CREATOR DIRECTOR GARETH EDWARDS “I hadn’t seen Gareth in the seven years since Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, so I was delighted to host the Empire VIP Club screening of his comeback movie, The Creator. It was like he hadn’t been away; he was funny, candid, and filled with great insights into the making of the movie.” Craig Gibson/Still Moving, Alex Godfrey. Spine lines issue 420: Newsstand: “Boyfriend. Killer. Boyfriend. Killer” is from Scream 2. Subs: “Killer Slinkys!” is from Monster House. 74

ON THE HUNGER GAMES: THE BALLAD OF SONGBIRDS & SNAKES: A Hunger Games prequel? Why isn’t it called ‘The Peckish Games’ — or ‘The Rumbly Tums’? THIS MONTH WE A SKE D: WHAT TITLE WOUL D YOU GIVE A T HEOR E T ICA L ‘CH ICK E N RUN 3’? PETER NORTHEDGE HE’S JUST KEN My bottom lip quivered at the Ken Loach interview [issue #419], and him giving David Bradley’s shoulder a squeeze after he announced they’d been friends for 55 years tipped me over the edge. Gutted that The Old Oak will be Loach’s final film. RYAN GASCOYNE, SHEFFIELD DESERT POWER The latest Empire issue [issue #419] made for great beach reading, particularly the double feature on the upcoming Dune: Part Two and the chaotic behind-the-scenes story of Lynch’s version. The issue was made even better by how good the subscriber cover looked covered in sand. Thankfully there were plenty of places to get a drink and I didn’t have to resort to drinking my own… well, you know. DAVY FALKNER, VIA EMAIL The spice must flow! Enjoy this Picturehouse membership, Davy — their cinemas serve actual drinks so you do not need to resort to drinking your own, erm, stillsuit run-off. Empire’s star letter wins a Picturehouse Membership, valid for one year at all Picturehouse Cinemas across the UK, including the flagship Picturehouse Central in London’s West End. The Membership comes pre-loaded with five free tickets, and gets you access to exclusive discounts on food, snacks and drinks. And until 31 December 2023, enjoy the extra perks of free entry for up to two curated films every week, plus free tea and filter coffee weekdays before 5pm! When you write to us, please include your full contact details so we can arrange delivery of your prize. He’s a true legend. Thanks for all the letters about this feature — it was a special thing to put together. On a spooky Exorcist cinema date and the Halloween III Silver Shamrock music was playing. So naturally all I could hear was @ChrisHewitt singing it on the @empiremagazine podcast every Halloween… @ODE_OLLIE SPIT TAKE Have to hold you responsible for a bit of public humiliation. Having a drink whilst reading the latest issue, I spat my drink across the room while reading the words “a nincompoop in a cinema” in a (totally accurate) piece by Alex Godfrey [‘The Platform’, issue #419]. Don’t know why it tickled me so much. ‘Chicken Run 3: The Fellowship Of The Wing’ ‘Chicken Run 3: Hell For Feather’ @LIVAS_NIEKI @CHADBOFFIN ‘Beginner’s Cluck: A Chicken Run Prequel’ ‘Chicken: Run — Roast Protocol’ @JONSPAREY @THEWILDPAUNCH ‘Chick3n Run’ is the only option. Normalise numbers in film titles ‘Chicken Run 3: Never Say Feather A Hen’ @CHARLES29684035 @ELLIOTPERRY1 ROSALIE NEWTON-VAN DEN BERG, WAKEFIELD To reiterate: anyone who records films in cinemas is a nincompoop, a saddle-goose and a ninnyhammer. AQUAMAN ISN’T THE first watery hero to make a splash on an Empire cover. Nearly 30 years ago, we did a literal deep dive into Kevin Costner flop Waterworld, including a blow-by-blow account of the unfolding cinematic disaster, decorated with a curious choice of pull-quote (“We love Kevin Costner, he’s handsome and nice” — Shopkeeper, Hawaii). There’s a report on rumours from the set (one suggests Costner bought himself a portable solarium to get an all-over tan, “only to burn parts of a sensitive nature”), and then a somewhat testy Q&A with the man himself, offering some frank reflection. The film’s reported $150 million budget — the most expensive film ever made at the time — was, Costner acknowledges, “an embarrassing amount of money to be spent on a movie, in a sense.” Ouch. CONTACT US VIA: EMPIRE MAGAZINE, THE LANTERN, 75 HAMPSTEAD ROAD, LONDON NW1 2PL LETTERS@EMPIREMAGAZINE.COM / @EMPIREMAGAZINE (#EMPIRELETTERS) / FB.COM/EMPIREMAGAZINE 6 DECEMBER 2023 Davy Falkner, Netflix WATERWORLD FEATURE , SEPTEMBER 1995
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YOU CAN’T REFUSE PODCASTS BESPOKE COVERS FREE CINEMA TICKETS VIP MEMBERSHIP FOR ONLY £7.99 PER MONTH Worth over £130 per year INCLUDES: Exclusive live events, including preview screenings and Q&As 13 print issues of Empire a year Picturehouse or Cineworld Cinemas’ My Cineworld Plus membership, with two free cinema tickets Access to the Empire Spoiler Special Podcast Exclusive collectible covers Digital edition of Empire Access to back issues of Empire Empire Insider newsletter THE WORLD’S BIGGEST MOVIE MAGAZINE Terms & Conditions: We can currently offer the Empire VIP Club Membership to UK customers only. Your magazine will start with the next available issue. Prices quoted apply when paying by recurring payment. One-off payments are also available, please see website for details. The minimum term is 13 issues. After your first 13 issues your Membership will continue at this offer price unless you are notified otherwise. You will not receive a renewal reminder and the recurring payments will continue to be taken unless you tell us otherwise. This offer closes on 25.10.23 and cannot be used in conjunction with any other offer. *Details of how to redeem your Picturehouse or My Cineworld Plus membership and tickets will be sent to you via email once payment has been received and after the 14-day cooling off period has passed. Please note this can take up to 16 days. NB: To sign up with Picturehouse you will need to be 16+ years old. MONTH 2023 9
DECEMBER 2023 | EDITED BY BETH WEBB The love story that will break you AND REW HAIGH ON HIS TENDER , TEAR-INDUCING ROMANCE, ALL OF US STRANGERS WORDS OLLY RICHARDS ANDREW HAIGH WAS hoping for an emotional response to his latest film, but even he was not prepared for the reactions All Of Us Strangers is generating. When the film had its first public screening at the Telluride Film Festival on 31 August, audiences were largely rapturous, with five-star reviews from critics across the world and countless social-media posts about the enormous volumes of tears shed. “I would meet someone in the street who’d seen the film three days ago and they’d be talking and just start crying,” says Haigh, seemingly delighted if slightly Britishly embarrassed. “I just want the film to have an effect, without being manipulative.” It is not manipulative at all, and as for effect, it would be shocking if All Of Us Strangers isn’t a major contender come awards season. Haigh has long been a director capable of stirring emotions through his character work, from Weekend, about an intense two-day affair, 10 DECEMBER 2023 to his Oscar-nominated 45 Years, about a longmarried couple whose happiness is shattered by a secret from the past. All Of Us Strangers is no exception. Very loosely adapted from the novel Strangers by Taichi Yamada, it follows Adam (Andrew Scott), a 40-something writer who lives alone in a brand-new tower block in London. Adam resists intimacy, rebuffing an advance from the block’s only other resident, Harry (Paul Mescal). But everything changes for Adam when, while writing a personal project, he goes to visit his childhood home. Though his parents died before he was a teenager, Adam walks through the door and finds them (Claire Foy and Jamie Bell) existing just as he left them, delighted their ‘boy’ is home. The film becomes a dual love story: about Adam resolving his relationship with his parents, who never knew him fully, and a growing romance with Harry as Adam risks putting his heart in the hands of someone else. Haigh calls this a very personal story. While his own parents are still alive, he says, “I had a very complicated childhood, I suppose, so this idea of a family falling apart — in this case with a death — made a lot of personal sense to me.” It was so personal that he even shot the scenes of Adam’s childhood home in his own childhood home, which his family hasn’t lived in for decades. He hadn’t originally intended it, but in preparing for the film he decided to try to find the place where he grew up, to see what feelings it brought up. He found it virtually unchanged and decided he had to try to shoot it. “We knocked on the door and the man who lived there was like, ‘Okay, yeah, sure. I love 45 Years.’ He was amazingly happy for us to film there.” The romance between Harry and Adam is entirely invented — Haigh has been with his partner for years — but it expresses feelings Haigh knows well, about growing up in a generation of gay men who felt love might not come their way. Adam’s first experience of
Clockwise from above: Neighbours Harry (Paul Mescal) and Adam (Andrew Scott); Jamie Bell and Claire Foy as Adam’s long-dead parents; Love blossoms; Director Andrew Haigh. genuine intimacy is brought intensely to life by Scott and Mescal, actors who’d only ever met in passing but show an extraordinary connection on screen. “It was so clear that they had chemistry early on,” says Haigh. “Paul so wanted to work with Andrew, and Andrew with Paul, that it felt like I was watching a love affair happen. That’s what good casting is. You watch a love affair blossom.” As personal as it is to him, All Of Us Strangers is no autobiopic (“Nobody wants to watch a film about me”). Haigh’s intention was that it would touch something in you even if your life bears no direct comparison to Adam’s. “I hope it’s going to speak to [all sorts of people],” he says. “Because we all want the same things. We want to feel loved. We want people to be compassionate to us. We want to be there for other people.” And sometimes we want to see something that will so deeply move us that three days later we’ll cry at a stranger in the street. ALL OF US STRANGERS IS IN CINEMAS FROM 26 JANUARY 2024 DECEMBER 2023 11
The cat that gave Matthew Vaughn paws for thought THE AR GYLLE DIRECTOR INTRODUCES TH E FAM OUS FE L IN E W ITH FAMILY TIES WORDS CHRIS HEWITT THE EARLY MARKETING campaign for Matthew Vaughn’s new spy thriller, Argylle, is not what you might have imagined. It’s not focused on Henry Cavill as the flat-topped title character, a super-spy who makes Bond look like Bourne and Bourne look like Bananaman; nor is it built around Bryce Dallas Howard as Elly Conway, novelist and creator of said super-spy, who finds herself entangled in an actual espionage plot and going on the run with bona fide Bond/Bourne/Bananaman Sam Rockwell. It is, instead, all about a cat. But not just any cat. This is Chip, who belongs to Vaughn’s wife, Claudia Schiffer, and his daughters, and who has found himself starring in one of next year’s biggest blockbusters. It wasn’t the plan. For the role of Alfie, Elly’s cat who accompanies her on her adventure, Vaughn had originally hired a professionally trained feline. One of the best in the business. “It was a very expensive cat,” says Vaughn. “But a) it wasn’t very cute and b) was useless.” So Vaughn, with utter ruthlessness, fired the cat, which meant he needed a replacement. Luckily, he had one in mind. “I went home that night, and went up to my daughter’s bedroom where Chip sleeps in a little house that looks like a big tin of tuna,” explains Vaughn, “and said, ‘I hope you don’t mind me UNTITLED MARTIN LUTHER KING BIOPIC Chris Rock is directing and producing a biopic about the revolutionary activist and philosopher, with Steven Spielberg as executive producer. The film will adapt Jonathan Eig’s celebrated biography King: A Life, which chronicles Dr King’s lifelong public — and private — fight for civil rights. WORDS JORDAN KING 12 DECEMBER 2023 AZRAEL Distribution rights have been snapped up for this high-concept actionhorror. Samara Weaving is Azrael, a young woman living in a world where no-one speaks, who finds herself fighting for survival when a female-led cult tries to sacrifice her to an ancient evil. FRANKENSTEIN Christoph Waltz is the newest addition to the cast of Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein, a longgestating adaptation of Mary Shelley’s classic Gothic novel. Waltz will star alongside Andrew Garfield, Mia Goth and Oscar Isaac in the Mexican fabulist’s film, which starts shooting in February.
Clockwise from far left: Bagpuss, literally; Aiden (Sam Rockwell) and Elly (Bryce Dallas Howard); Cat’s entertainment — director Matthew Vaughn with Chip, the family pet and star of Argylle. borrowing your cat for the next three months.’ I would literally drive to work with a cat in the back of the car with me, and then the cat would live with me in my trailer, and I would bring the cat to set when he had a scene. I became an animal handler.” Unlike the previous cat, Chip turned out to be a natural, really getting his claws into the character. “I don’t want to be rude about some of the actors I’ve worked with, but sometimes Chip was easier,” says Vaughn. “He would always look at the right place, which amazed me. If an actor was speaking, he would look at the actor. If the camera was moving, he would look at the camera. His eyelines were always, mysteriously, A-plus.” All of this despite the fact that Vaughn, by his own admission, is a dog person. “[Having both] German Shepherds and cats is a really fucking intelligent combination,” he laughs. “But he’s a cool customer, and I enjoyed spending that time with him. I wouldn’t say I’m a cat lover, but I love Chip. I love this cat.” The decision to put Chip front and centre of the marketing campaign — complete with his little bubble backpack, which Vaughn decided to incorporate into the film after seeing one in a Taylor Swift documentary he watched with his daughters — was, Vaughn admits, Universal’s. “They showed me the cat poster and I said, ‘You know what? People are going to remember this!’ But it’s meant that Chip has become something of a celebrity. “My daughters think it’s hysterical.” And the celebrity won’t end there: Schiffer — who also produced Argylle as Claudia Vaughn — is bringing out a book in January called Blue Chip: Confessions Of Claudia Schiffer’s Cat. “And we’ve got Chip toys,” adds Vaughn. “He’s going to be the Natalie Portman of cats.” Right now, Chip has returned to something approaching normality. But if Argylle (which is actually about the humans) hits big, Vaughn has plans apaw for more movies which might see Chip called back into action. “Chip is definitely in the sequel,” he promises. “As long as my dog doesn’t eat him.” ARGYLLE IS IN CINEMAS FROM 2 FEBRUARY 2024 THE NAUGHTY NINE UNTITLED VINCE GILLIGAN SCI-FI SERIES Better Call Saul showrunner Vince Gilligan and star Rhea Seehorn are headed back to Albuquerque for a new series. But ‘Better Call Kim’ this ain’t. “There’s no crime, no methamphetamine,” Gilligan has promised of the project, which he describes as “mild science-fiction”. HEAT 2 Michael Mann has confirmed his next film will adapt the critically acclaimed sequel novel to his 1995 crime classic, set both before and after Heat. Adam Driver — star of the director’s latest, Ferrari — is in talks to take over the role of Neil McCauley from Robert De Niro. UNTITLED DARIO ARGENTO MOVIE Speaking at Lucca Film Festival, Isabelle Huppert confirmed she will star in genre master Dario Argento’s next horror movie. Details on the project are scarce, but we do know it’s a remake of a classic 1940s Mexican film, set to shoot in Paris. PEPPA PIG WEDDING PARTY SPECIAL With the 20th anniversary of the Tarantino-approved Peppa Pig fast approaching, Orlando Bloom is the latest star joining the show’s upcoming three-part spectacular. He’ll be voicing jeweller Mr Raccoon, who helps Peppa and pals. Whether Tarantino will cameo remains to be seen. Getty Images Ho-ho-hold onto your hats, folks — Danny Glover is playing Santa Claus in Disney’s latest festive family offering. Releasing this Christmas, the film will see Glover facing a band of disgruntled grade-school naughty-listers as they attempt a daring North Pole heist. ‘Snow-cean’s Eleven’, anyone? MONTH 2023 13
All busy on the Western front THE MULTIFACETED VIGGO MORTENS E N ON HIS MANY ROLES IN BRINGING T HE DEAD DON’T HURT TO T HE SCREEN TO CALL The Dead Don’t Hurt “a Viggo Mortensen film” would be an understatement. For his second outing as director, the man who mastered Minas Tirith also wrote the screenplay and the music, and appears in front of the camera as hardy wanderer Olsen, too. Speaking to Empire at the Toronto International Film Festival, where the film premiered, he explains how he did it all. WRITING From the beginning, the heart of the story was Vicky Krieps’ Vivienne, a steadfast woman undeterred by the patriarchal dominance of the time, inspired by Mortensen’s own mother — whose pioneering spirit also influenced the Western-frontier setting. “From the first draft, [Vivienne] was central to the story,” says Mortensen, “but she became more so. I started trimming things away that had to do with Olsen on his own.” That included his character’s time fighting in the Civil War. “The woman — or, whoever’s left behind — can become incidental. You might cut back to them once or twice,” he notes. “But this story is about her.” DIRECTING While Vivienne is a woman ahead of her time, Mortensen’s directorial style was about tradition. “The photographic approach,” he says, “is not calling attention to itself by trying to do some fancy, crazy, quote-unquote ‘new’ sort of shot. 14 DECEMBER 2023 It’s classically shot, with an unusual structure, and unusually focused on a woman as the central figure.” Working on both sides of the camera took serious multitasking, though. “When I lock the door, pick the boy up on the horse and ride out, it’s all in one shot,” he recalls. “There’s lots of little things that could go wrong. But if you’ve prepared it well, it should look naturalistic.” ACTING In front of the camera, actor-Viggo got the ultimate gift from director-Viggo: getting to star alongside Krieps, as Vivienne and Olsen form a tough but tender relationship. “It’s very satisfying,” he says of acting opposite her. “When she has a reaction or does something really unusual, it’s different to just be outside the scene watching the monitor. If I’m in the scene, then I really can see everything.” Mortensen found himself able to be truly present. “Because I wrote it all, I know the lines. I’m not worried about remembering what I have to do. I’m more conscious of what she’s saying and doing, and how she reacts.” SCORING Mortensen has an extensive relationship with music in his movies, whether he’s singing a soulful solo as Aragorn in The Return Of The King or composing the score for his directorial debut, Falling. He returns to creating music here. Rather than composing the string- and piano-led score towards the end of the filmmaking process, Top to bottom: Writer-director-star Viggo Mortensen behind the camera; The fiercely independent Vivienne Le Coudy (Vicky Krieps); Vivienne was inspired by Mortensen’s mum. Mortensen started it early on, using the music to shape the movie. “It was helpful to plan how we would shoot things, what the duration of certain sequences should be, or transitions. And that helped in the editing.” And yes — there will be an Extended Edition of the soundtrack. “I wrote and recorded more music than we ended up using,” he says. “Eventually a soundtrack record will have longer versions of some of the pieces.” Score. THE DEAD DON’T HURT DOES NOT YET HAVE A UK RELEASE DATE Daniel Anguiano, Marcel Zyskind, Getty Images WORDS BEN TRAVIS
AN OUTBACK THRILLER DRIVING WOMEN TO THE EDGE T HE ROYAL H OTE L DIRECTOR KIT T Y GRE E N ON THE TOILS OF TRAVE LLING AND T OXI C MASCU LINIT Y WHEN KITTY GREEN speaks with Empire she’s in Barcelona, where she’s travelling with a friend. It’s a fitting setting to talk about The Royal Hotel, her pressure-cooker thriller about two holidaying friends (Julia Garner and Jessica Henwick) who take jobs in a pub in the Australian outback to make some much-needed cash. “I feel like naturally when you travel, someone has to take charge and be more cautious, and the other person can drink a little more and have more fun,” says Green sheepishly, the latter in this instance. The characters are out of their element, a dynamic which is exacerbated by the pub’s patrons, largely male miners, whose misogynistic behaviour curdles from jokey asides into violence. During a busy night, leering local Matty (Toby Wallace) asks Liv (Henwick) for a “Dickens Cider”, which when spoken quickly sounds like “a dick inside her”. “That happened to me in a bar in Australia,” Green remembers. “It immediately made me feel like I didn’t belong in that space.” She uses these moments to underscore the girls’ early shifts with a creeping sense of dread, drawing on small but uncomfortable interactions she had while travelling around her home country (she hails from Melbourne). She also references Top to bottom: Too close for comfort: Hanna (Julia Garner) and Liv (Jessica Henwick) meet the locals; Hanna, Macca Hotel Coolgardie, a 2016 documentary about two Finnish girls working in a similar Australian pub, as a major influence. “I’d seen the outback represented on film before, but I hadn’t seen it through the eyes of some foreign women,” Green recalls. “It [was] really interesting, the way that the two of them navigated the space.” Green is no stranger to transforming mundane spaces into waking nightmares; her fiction debut The Assistant saw Garner’s meek employee working in the high-tension office of an offscreen Weinstein type. Where that setting was designed to swallow up its protagonist, however, the claustrophobic pub in The Royal Hotel puts its two leads uneasily on display. Wake In Fright and Straw Dogs were touchpoints for the film, but Green mostly relied on her gut instinct when it came to visualising the girls’ ordeal. And it’s her gut that will continue to drive her into making stories like this one. “A woman in the world? That’s a scary place to be,” she says. A toxic trilogy could be on the cards. BETH WEBB (Adam MacNeill) and Kev (Nic Darrigo) are distracted; Billy (Hugo Weaving) with Carol (Ursula Yovich). THE ROYAL HOTEL IS IN CINEMAS FROM 3 NOVEMBER TOM HANKS’ LUNAR LOVE LANGUAGE A NEW E XHIBITION IS JUST THE LATE ST COLLABORATION BE T WE E N THE ACTOR A N D THE MOON JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO (1990) An early milestone in Hanks’ long journey with our neighbouring celestial orb, this romantic comedy sees his dying character have an epiphany under the giant, glowing moon. A telltale sign of things to come. APOLLO 13 (1995) Hanks was cast as astronaut Jim Lovell partly due to his space knowledge, which stems from childhood. “From Apollo 7 on up, I lived this stuff,” he said at the time. “I got A’s in physics, thinking maybe I could be one of those guys. I was Space Boy.” FROM THE EARTH TO THE MOON (1998) Hanks hosted, cowrote and codirected this series on US space history, before pivoting to the big screen with 2005 doc Magnificent Desolation: Walking On The Moon 3D, about the first humans on the moon. ALAN BEAN PLUS FOUR (2014) The actor wrote a New Yorker short story about four enthusiasts who build a spaceship out of Home Depot supplies. The tongue-in-cheek tale is named after the fourth astronaut to walk on the moon. THE MOONWALKERS (2023) A NASA exhibition is London-bound and who’s behind it? Yes, Hanks will fly you to the moon with this project, which mixes NASA footage and astronaut interviews. Another small step for man, another giant leap for Space Boy. BETH WEBB THE MOONWALKERS: A JOURNEY WITH TOM HANKS IS AT LIGHTROOM FROM 6 DECEMBER DECEMBER 2023 15
John Waters’ treasure trove of trash THE INFAMOUS DIRECTOR NOW HAS HIS OWN MUSEUM EX HIBITION. HE TALKS US THROUGH SIX KEY ITEMS WORDS IAN FREER LIKE ’80S POPSTERS Mel and Kim, John Waters was never going to be respect-a-ball. But, now aged 77, his career-long war against good taste and decency has landed him an exhibition at the prestigious Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in LA. “It just means there’s hope for everybody in the world that anything can happen,” he laughs about the news. “I look at it very proudly. I don’t use it as revenge or irony. I’m just thrilled it happened and I’m alive to see it.” In light of Female Trouble’s high heels now sharing space with Dorothy’s ruby slippers, Waters shares the stories behind some of the prized artefacts on display. Exhibitionist: director John Waters. POLYESTER ’S ODORAMA CARD BELL & HOWELL CAMERA To create the snatch-’n’-sniff card for 1981’s Polyester, Waters drew upon the library of smells created by company 3M. “We couldn’t order a million farts,” he recalls. “We had to disguise what the smell was, so we ordered a million rotten eggs.” When Polyester was reissued as a Criterion Blu-ray, it included a card with the artier “essence of a fart”, he laughs. “I kept saying, ’Let’s do the Criterion library. Let’s do Bergman — what’s the smell of depression? Cabbage?’” Waters bought his first 16mm camera to shoot 1968 short Eat Your Makeup. “It was a silent camera and you had to keep winding it up — it would only last one or two minutes.” For the Academy exhibition, the short itself has also been restored to its former glory. “It looked a lot better than it ever did, without losing the original quality of the film — which is basically I didn’t know what I was doing when I made that movie.” SERIAL MOM ’S LEG OF LAMB Beverly Sutphin (Kathleen Turner) using a leg of lamb to bludgeon her latest victim is rooted in a Waters family memory. “My mother made a really good leg of lamb,” he levels. “We had it every Easter and Christmas.” Before the exhibition, the prop meat, made out of rubber, had pride of place in Waters’ office. “I think Serial Mom is my best movie,” he says. “I always wanted my movies to look like Hollywood movies. That’s one of the few that did.” 16 DECEMBER 2023
FEMALE TROUBLE ’S HIGH HEELS “If you’ve a shoe fetish, they’re probably pretty good,” says Waters about Edith Massey’s footwear from Female Trouble. “They were a big-budget item ordered from Frederick’s of Hollywood. They might have been $50 even then. They sat on my bookshelf for years and years.” Also on display from Female Trouble is the electric chair that fries Dawn Davenport (Divine) in the film’s finale, which used to live in Waters’ front hall. “It’s something we’d decorate at Christmas, like the tree.” A MONGOOSE FILM WITH NO MONGOOSE? NANDOR FODOR AND THE TALKING MONGOOSE PROMISE S A SNAKE -ANTAGONISING CRIT TE R BUT DOE SN ’ T DE LIVE R. WE VE NTURE D ON SE T TO FIND OUT WHY NOTEBOOKS Greg Gorman, © Academy Museum Foundation The exhibition’s collection of Waters’ notebooks reveals a little-known facet of his personality. “I am overly organised to a fault,” he reveals. “I think my father taught me about organisation and running a small business.” Finding the ledger that listed his receipts and box-office grosses was a delightful surprise. “I forgot I had it and just seeing it was touching to me. I turned in receipts twice a week to my accountant. I still do that.” BALTIMORE BUMPER STICKER Baltimore is to Waters what New York is to Martin Scorsese. “Baltimore is certainly a character in my movies,” he says. “My outsiderism helped me have a Hollywood career. If I lived there, I’d be like everybody else.” Waters has managed to turn the city into a tourist attraction. “They even tried to put a statue up where Divine ate dog shit,” he laughs. “One of the mayors was for it.” For now, Waters will have to settle for a stunning exhibition. JOHN WATERS: POPE OF TRASH IS ON VIEW AT THE ACADEMY MUSEUM OF MOTION PICTURES UNTIL 4 AUGUST 2024 “MY AGENT SAID, ‘I don’t know if you’ll like this: it’s about talking animals,’” says Simon Pegg of the moment when he first became aware of his new movie, Nandor Fodor And The Talking Mongoose. That agent’s scepticism seems misplaced — Pegg, as Narnia’s Reepicheep the mouse and Ice Age’s Buck the weasel can attest, is a man who knows his way around a talking animal. So, naturally, when Pegg read Adam Sigal’s script, he signed on — but not to star as the titular creature but as Nandor Fodor, a real-life Hungarian-American paranormal investigator who, in the 1930s, found himself on the Isle Of Man, trying to confirm the existence of a supernatural talking mongoose called Gef which had, apparently, rocked up on a local farm. “I read it and really loved it,” Pegg tells Empire on location, across a table in Leeds pub The Victoria Hotel. He touches on the film’s combination of faith, mythicism and existential dread. “Gef was obviously fake but made a lot of people quite happy, and quite delighted to believe that there was more to life,” he says. “Nandor was in this really weird place where he knows that’s not the case, but he desperately wants it to be.” Today, Empire watches as Pegg — sporting an accent that has shades of Christoph Waltz — runs a long dialogue scene with Christopher Lloyd, playing a fellow scientist. It’s towards the end of the film, so we’ll spare you spoilers, but they wax philosophical, laugh, exchange wisdom and witticisms and clink their glasses together. At one point, Lloyd accidentally smashes his so hard against Pegg’s that the latter’s drink Top to bottom: Nandor Fodor (Simon Pegg) is on the hunt; With fellow scientist (Christopher Lloyd) in the pub; Writer-director Adam Sigal with Lloyd. vessel smashes. Great Scott. But it’s a scene that, for Sigal, captures perfectly the tone he’s hoping to spread across the movie: wryly humorous, but with plenty on its mind. “It’s awkward to say this with Simon sitting here,” laughs the writer-director. “But the character fluctuates almost crazily between dramatic and comedic in the span of a scene, and that’s one of my favourite things about Simon. He’s been doing this at such a high level for so long.” Then Sigal returns to his monitor to watch another take, not a talking mongoose in sight. Or is there? CHRIS HEWITT NANDOR FODOR AND THE TALKING MONGOOSE IS OUT NOW ON PRIME VIDEO DECEMBER 2023 17
Creating a new rhythm for a radical classic BL ITZ BAZAWULE ON BRINGING HIS MU S ICAL ROOTS TO A NEW ADAPTATION OF THE COLO R PURPLE WORDS AMON WARMANN ALICE WALKER’S SEMINAL 1982 novel The Color Purple is a story that warrants retelling. Following the trials and triumphs of Celie, an African-American woman living with an abusive husband in 1900s Georgia, it was first adapted for the screen as a drama by Steven Spielberg in 1985. Now it’s the turn of filmmaker Blitz Bazawule, who takes the story in a fresh, new musical direction, with Spielberg on producing duties alongside Oprah Winfrey, Scott Sanders and Quincy Jones. Bazawule recalls an early phone call with Spielberg. “I told him, ‘We’re going to give Celie a big imagination. She’s going to see things like a 50-piece orchestra,” he remembers. “He was just like, ‘Go make your movie.’” Here, he tells Empire how he did just that. 18 DECEMBER 2023 FINDING THE STARS Bazawule sought out an eclectic mix of performers for the film, from Taraji P. Henson as flamboyant blues songstress Shug Avery to Danielle Brooks as the bold, frequently hilarious Sofia (played by Winfrey in Spielberg’s adaptation). Then there’s Colman Domingo, whose lengthy musical career has seen him nominated for Tony and Olivier awards. His role of Albert ‘Mister’ Johnson — Celie’s violent, cruel partner — is a challenging one, but Bazawule worked with the actor to make him multidimensional. “When we first got together, I said, ‘We’re going to make this character human,’” says Bazawule. “In my opinion, he is truly one of the greatest actors working today.” Yet the breakout star is R&B singer Fantasia Barrino, making her big-screen debut. “Fantasia had never done this before, and to this day I can’t believe this woman’s brilliance and genius,” says Bazawule. “She’s truly a thespian. The small
“It’s time to start seeking out new high concepts” choices she makes, from the body language to the non-verbal scenes, are unmatched.” FINDING THE MUSIC The director inherited all the catchy numbers from the The Color Purple’s hit Broadway musical, which encompasses 40 years of African music, from gospel to blues to jazz. For Bazawule, who is also a rapper and record producer, it gave him a chance to lean into his musical roots. “I come from hip-hop, which is sample culture,” he says. “So the blues, jazz, funk, Afrobeats… these things are all just part of the lineage.” Making it all the more authentic is that the Ghana-born director drew on his lived-in experience. “My Africa goes to the heart of an authentic, real tribe. So the thing that I know we brought to this film was just knowing the nuance of Black music, and its depth.” Alamy, Marco Vittur FINDING THE MOVES Bazawule studied as many musicals as he could lay eyes on in preparation. The key to the ones that worked? Synergy between the music and the narrative. So when it came to the film’s choreography, he made it so that every foot-stomp and finger-snap had a purpose: to serve the story, and to draw the audience in. Take one riotous, juke-joint-set sequence centred around jazz number ‘Push Da Button’. “My big note to everyone was: ‘We are not going to be voyeuristic. We’re going to be immersive. That means you can brush against my camera, because we’re in it!’” This may not be The Color Purple that people are familiar with, but there’s no denying that Bazawule went out and made his movie. THE COLOR PURPLE IS IN CINEMAS FROM 26 JANUARY Clockwise from main: Fantasia H E L E N O ’ H A R A ON WHY HOLLYWOOD NEEDS TO MOVE ON FROM ENDLESS RE BOOTS AND FIND SOME FRESH ID E AS Barrino as Celie; Sofia (Danielle Brooks) and Harpo (Corey Hawkins); Colman Domingo as Mister; Taraji P. Henson and Barrino with director Blitz Bazawule between takes; Bazawule with the cast. THIS YEAR ALONE has seen action films led by Tom Cruise, Sylvester Stallone and Harrison Ford. You might have watched Transformers: Rise Of The Beasts, Super Mario Bros. or Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem in cinemas. Coming up, there’s a new Ghostbusters movie, another Sonic The Hedgehog, another Karate Kid. Director Chad Stahelski is working on another Highlander; Taika Waititi is trying to make a new Akira; studios keep trying to make He-Man happen. Even aside from the regular attempts to reboot Die Hard, Predator and Terminator, the ’80s seems to exert an intractable hold on our collective imagination — but it’s time, maybe past time, to move on. Some nostalgia is inevitable. Many of the people bringing back these characters, stars and franchises grew up in the 1980s and have strong feelings for those films, just as ’80s filmmakers often harked back to the 1950s (see: Back To The Future, Stand By Me, Dirty Dancing). You might expect ’90s nostalgia to have taken over, working on the same 30-year gap, but that hasn’t happened because the Boomers never retired, Gen X loves their childhood films and elder Millennials have yet to rise to the top. Cruise, Stallone and Ford are still leading films because we still turn out to see them, even if not, judging by Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning Part One, Expend4bles and Indiana Jones And The Dial Of Destiny’s box-office performances, in quite the same numbers as before. But a bigger reason for our eternal backwardness is this: the ’80s were a time when ‘high-concept’ filmmaking ruled the Earth, stories built around striking and original ideas, anchored on characters cool enough to attract a big star lead. And those original concepts meant that the characters of that era became tightly connected to the stars who played them: no-one has had any luck in recasting Indiana Jones, Pete Mitchell, Sarah Connor or Rambo. Of course, cinema has always played with ideas that already worked and is always going to reference its own greatest hits, but the cultural dominance that the ’80s still wields suggests that we’re taking the wrong lessons from the era. It’s not that these films, these ideas, these stars even, are the only reliable source of big-budget success. It’s that these kinds of strong, original concepts led by charismatic stars make for great movies, and that is what we should still be striving for. The ’80s still dominate pop culture because that’s perhaps the last time — at least on the big screen — when there were so many fresh ideas being given proper budgets and big stars, and because we always want to see something new. But it’s time to start seeking out our own, new high concepts. Apart from anything else, how else will we have anything to reboot in 2049? DECEMBER 2023 19
On A Role differently.” Isaacs also learned that Grant had his suits made to very specific instructions, with extra-large pockets to put his hands in. “I have my hands in my pockets all the way through this show, because he did.” JASON ISAACS AS CARY GRANT THE FACE To morph Isaacs’ own fizzog into one of the most famous faces in old Hollywood required hours of make-up and prosthetics, ranging from 90 minutes in the chair to five hours, depending on the era. “I play him in his eighties, so that’s lots of prosthetics. When he’s much younger, there’s lots of architectural things pulling me up with hooks and strings.” They also added the famous dimpled chin, but the most challenging part was the contact lenses. “He had very beautiful, big, milky brown eyes, and I don’t, so some poor lady was hired to poke me in the eye every morning. I saw the whole world through a slightly dull sepia filter the entire time.” THE ACTOR ON HIS TRANSFO R MATION INTO THE DEBONAIR HOLLYWOOD ICON F OR BIOPIC SERIES ARCHIE WORDS HAYLEY CAMPBELL Jason Isaacs was not a fan of Cary Grant prior to being cast in Archie, an upcoming show that charts the Hollywood leading man’s early life as Archibald Leach. It was his deep research that changed him. “I’ve been through quite a journey,” he tells Empire. “The more films I watched, the more I realised that the reason he became the biggest star in the world was that you couldn’t take your eyes off him.” Isaacs read every biography available and had long, candid discussions with Dyan Cannon, Grant’s ex-wife, and his daughter, executive producer of the show, Jennifer Grant, who gave him home videos. “I’ve always found that you never get a fuller picture of someone than by talking to the people who love them, or who had their hearts broken by them.” 20 DECEMBER 2023 Top to bottom: Suits you, sir: Jason Isaacs as Cary Grant in Archie; Grant with wife Dyan Cannon and their daughter Jennifer in 1966; Isaacs gets a touch-up between scenes. THE SUITS Grant’s suave Savile Row suits not only helped Isaacs look the part through the decades, but made him feel it, too. “It makes your posture so much better. If you feel different, you talk differently.” Isaacs pushed his knees out to mimic Grant’s bow-legs, but more than anything physical it was a mental trick to engage with the world like Grant did. “Walking into a room thinking, ‘Everybody wants me,’ just makes you strut differently, and look them in the eye Grant was born in Bristol, but had an amorphous accent that changed from film to film. Isaacs wanted to find out how the real Archie Leach spoke, so he did some detective work online, and found a man who had secretly recorded an interview with him in 1986, as a student. “Grant wouldn’t allow recorded interviews. He didn’t want to give anything of himself away in public.” The former student, feeling guilty, had not played it for anyone in 37 years until Isaacs begged him. “It’s that single recording that made me feel like I had heard who he was, and the ghosts and demons that continued to haunt him into his eighties.” You can’t be a true Hollywood legend, it seems, without a few skeletons in your closet. ARCHIE IS ON ITVX FROM 23 NOVEMBER Getty Images THE VOICE THE MAN
WHEN HITCHCOCK MEETS HATHAWAY WILLIAM OLD ROYD ON HIS ’ 60 S -SE T P SYCHOSE XUAL T HRI LLE R E ILE E N IT’S NO COINCIDENCE that the driving force in William Oldroyd’s psychological thriller Eileen is named… Rebecca. Adapted from her own novel by Ottessa Moshfegh, it’s set in 1964 Boston, as downtrodden, wide-eyed prison secretary Eileen (Thomasin McKenzie) meets glamorous, no-bullshit new counsellor Rebecca (Anne Hathaway). Moshfegh’s book was inspired by Hitchcock’s take on Daphne du Maurier’s classic, and Oldroyd duly follows through — to the nth degree. “It’s funny, because a few years ago I got a script through, a remake of Rebecca,” the Lady Macbeth director says. “But would you ever go near it? Would you ever want to remake a Hitchcock?” Well, Ben Wheatley went there. But horses for courses. “With Eileen,” says Oldroyd, “I thought there was an opportunity to make an original story in the spirit of Hitchcock.” He did so on practically every level, with playful self-awareness and attention to detail. “We drew a lot of stuff from the early ’70s,” he says. “I’m a big Alan J. Pakula fan, and Ari [Wegner, cinematographer] is a huge Gordon Willis fan. We actually took lenses from the ’60s. They’re really scratched and battered, but we love the imperfections in the glass.” Above: Come on, Eileen: Thomasin McKenzie and Anne Hathaway. Right: Director William Oldroyd with Hathaway. The movie leans heavily into the filmmaking style of the era, with cannily deployed zooms, a killer freeze frame at the end, and a consciously melodramatic score. Eileen never, though, feels stuck in the past, because of the material itself. “I needed the attitude to feel contemporary, because Eileen and Rebecca are out of time,” explains Oldroyd. Indeed, the men are stunned by Rebecca, who scoffs at cultural norms, and turns Eileen’s life upside down. “She’s as rare to those men in that prison as she is to Eileen, who’s never ever encountered anybody like this in her life,” says Oldroyd. “It’s like an alien lands.” With this heady stew, he ultimately wanted audiences to be thrilled. And to pay tribute to the heyday of 1960s and ’70s cinema — with balance. “It’s a fine line,” he says. “Because you’d never want to fall into pastiche. How far can you push it? How bold can you go with it? We really tried.” Hitchcock wouldn’t want it any other way. ALEX GODFREY EILEEN IS IN CINEMAS FROM 1 DECEMBER WE WISH WOO A MERRY CHRISTMAS MASTE R OF MAY HE M J OHN WOO IS RE TURNING WITH FE STIVE ACTIONE R SILE NT NI GHT. HE RE ARE FOUR THINGS WE ’D LIKE TO SE E … HEROIC BLOODSHED! A STANDOFF! SLOW-MOTION! FLYING DOVES! In Woo’s Hong Kong movies, his heroes often put their lives on the line for their beliefs. Expect Joel Kinnaman’s mute, vengeful father (pictured right) to lose a pint of blood or two. But if he’s wearing a nice red Christmas jumper, we won’t notice. Not a face-off (that’s a different John Woo movie), but a moment where two guys — diametrically opposed, yet drawn to each other — point guns at each other and stare intensely. Perhaps Woo could stage one during a blizzard, to make it more Christmassy. No Woo action sequence is complete without mayhem unfolding at speeds so fast that the maestro simply has to slow things down for our benefit. (Also, it’s much cooler.) Expect slo-mo galore in Silent Night — Christmas With The Overcranks, if you will. Woo does like his understated religious symbolism, and thinks nothing of flinging a dove or two into action sequences to symbolise peace and the cost of violence. But it’s Christmas, so perhaps he’ll toss some turkeys into the fray instead. Gobble gobble! CHRIS HEWITT SILENT NIGHT DOES NOT YET HAVE A UK RELEASE DATE DECEMBER 2023 21
Reuniting the TARDIS dream team DAVID TENN A NT AND RUSSELL T DAVIES ON A DOCTO R WHO COMEBACK LIKE NO OT HER “IT’S LIKE THE band getting back together for one last hurrah,” says David Tennant. The band, in this case, led by Tennant himself as the hugely popular one-time frontman of Doctor Who, with backing from Catherine Tate as his companion, Donna Noble, all orchestrated by Russell T Davies, the returning showrunner. The last time this particular trio worked together was the hugely popular 2010 New Year’s Day episode, which also featured a host of cameos from Doctor Who seasons past. Now this band of three Who legends is reuniting for three special episodes to celebrate the show’s 60th anniversary. “It was a very casual conversation between us initially,” Tennant tells Empire ahead of the SAG-AFTRA strike earlier this year. During lockdown the three of them took part in Doctor Who ‘Tweet-alongs’, watching old episodes together, and according to Davies, it was Tate who was the first to say, “Wouldn’t it be a laugh if we made some more?” “I never thought anything would come of it,” Davies says, “but I had to email the BBC and let them know David and Catherine were up for doing something.” A few months later, Davies was invited to a Zoom meeting with BBC Drama big cheeses, hoping they’d commission a 60th anniversary special. “The next thing I know, they’re asking for 22 DECEMBER 2023 three specials and also if I’d like to show-run it again,” says Davies. “But this time on a bigger platform, working with a streamer. And much to my surprise I said, ‘Yes!’” Davies’ first big creative decision was that Tennant would play the 14th Doctor, following straight on from Jodie Whittaker’s number 13, before Ncuti Gatwa’s 15th Doctor arrives this Christmas. “That was the first exciting piece of mischief that Russell created,” says Tennant. “That I was going to be Doctor No. 14 rather than Doctor No. 10 again. You’ll just have to wait and see why the 14th Doctor is so much like the 10th.” Intriguingly, the first of the specials, which also feature Neil Patrick Harris in a villainous role, is based on The Star Beast, a Doctor Who comic strip from 1980 centred on a fluffy little alien known as ‘The Meep’ (to be voiced in the special by Miriam Margolyes). “I needed to bring Donna back into the story,” Davies explains. “Which meant setting it in London, which meant something alien landing on top of London, and I automatically thought of Star Beast as the best way to tell that story.” Yes, Davies is so steeped in Who lore, he immediately thought of a 43-year-old comic strip as inspiration for his first story as returning showrunner. “I was surprised,” admits Tennant, also a Who fan since Clockwise from left: Big returns: David Tennant as the Doctor; Villain Neil Patrick Harris; Donna Noble (Catherine Tate); New addition ‘The Meep’; Russell T Davies. childhood, “when I saw what that first script was based on, then I read the second script, which is unlike any Doctor Who episode ever. These new specials are Russell off the leash.” Expect a blazing encore, then, for this band’s last hurrah. THE DOCTOR WHO 60TH ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS WILL BE ON BBC ONE AND BBC iPLAYER IN NOVEMBER Alistair Heap and James Pardon/Bad Wolf/BBC STUDIOS, BFI, Disney, Getty Images WORDS BOYD HILTON
‘DOO DOO DOO DOO DOO (HEARTBREAKER)’ THE ROLLING STONES THE BIKERIDERS A toe-tappingly good tune that is perfectly synced to the first trailer for Jeff Nichols’ Midwestern motorcycle-club drama. Give the editor a raise. ‘HUMBLE.’ KENDRICK LAMAR DUMB MONEY A catchy banger from a hip-hop great that goes so hard, every significant character in Dumb Money dances along in unison. You will, too. ‘GREATER TOGETHER’ JOHN PAESANO MARVEL’S SPIDER-MAN 2 Combining the Miles Morales and Peter Parker signature musical motifs makes for a seamless treat here, while the Venom’s theme teaser is appropriately dark and eerie. ‘IGYAH KAH’ KEVIN KINER AND SARAH TUDZIN AHSOKA Andor had ‘Niamos! (Morlana Club Mix)’. Ahsoka has this. Sabine’s perfect introduction is set to this headbanging piece of space punk, which slows down just enough to incorporate the character’s theme. ‘GRAVITY’ STEVEN PRICE AND KATHERINE ELLIS GRAVITY Starting off peaceful before building to a rousing conclusion, Katherine Ellis’ powerful vocals combine with the percussive rhythm in this special track. Worthy of its Best Score Oscar win and just as powerful on its tenth anniversary. LISTEN NOW! HEAD TO THE ‘EMPIRE’ SPOTIFY ACCOUNT TO HEAR ALL OF THE ABOVE THREE WOMEN IN A WORLD OF PRIVILEGE AND PAIN LULU WANG INTRODUCE S THE TRIO OF CH A RACTE RS HEADING UP HE R NEW SHOW, E XPATS “EXPATS” IS A tricky word, with many thorny connotations. But it’s a word Lulu Wang is determined to unpack in her new six-part TV show. Expats is the story of three American women living in Hong Kong, part of a community that’s been rocked by a child’s disappearance. Wang tells Empire how she wove together a trio of perspectives. MERCY JI-YOUNG YOO Mercy — a Korean-American central to the story’s tragedy — was Wang’s entry point into the story. Working odd jobs and with a group of rich friends, Mercy carries within her a “self-deprecating darkness”, the product of guilt stemming from her involvement in the disappearance. To secure the right actor, Wang searched for someone who could bring an unreadable mystery to the role. She landed on up-and-comer Yoo. “As soon as I saw her, I knew that she was the one, because I love somebody where [when they’re acting] you don’t know if you’re supposed to love them or hate them,” she explains. “I feel like that’s very true to life.” HILARY SARAYU BLUE Though Hilary is white in Lee’s book, Wang cast Blue as she wanted someone to represent Hong Kong’s large Indian population. Hilary enjoys a life of luxury, but also faces discrimination, while feeling pressure to have children in spite of her failing marriage. “It was really great to be able to depict another kind of privilege, which is motherhood,” Wang explains. “It’s seen in our society that if you’re a mother, that’s the Holy Grail.” “Expat” may be a tricky word to unpack, but Wang has found three voices to help make its meaning a little clearer. IANA MURRAY EXPATS IS ON PRIME VIDEO FROM 26 JANUARY 2024 MARGARET NICOLE KIDMAN Kidman, who also produces the show, optioned Janice Y. K. Lee’s novel, The Expatriates, after feeling inspired by her sister’s life in Singapore. The actor was torn between playing Margaret or Hilary, but Wang (whom Kidman asked to direct the series) suggested she take on the former: a grief-stricken mother who is extremely privileged. “She was incredibly open to portraying a character that [isn’t] always likeable,” says Wang. “Margaret is the face of what you think of when you think of an expat, and she was game for that.” Main: Clarke (Brian Tee) and Margaret (Nicole Kidman). Above, top to bottom: Ji-Young Yoo as Mercy; Sarayu Blue as Hilary. DECEMBER 2023 23
Brace for a new one-man army EMPIRE SPE A KS WITH THE F IL MMAKER BEHIND WILD SAM RAIMI-PRODUCED THRILLER B OY KILLS WOR LD WORDS BEN TRAVIS ALL IT TOOK was a director daring enough to ask: what would happen if a knuckleduster was also a gun? In Boy Kills World, the unhinged, ultraviolent feature debut from German filmmaker Moritz Mohr, the answer finally arrives. “We call it the punch-gun. Which is really not that great a name,” Mohr laughs, after debuting the film as part of the Midnight Madness strand of the Toronto International Film Festival. “We were like, ‘We need to spice up this fight.’ Guns are fun, knives are fun and all that — but how about we create something better? Something fresh?” And lo, the punchgun was born. That kind of anything-goes wildness gives Boy Kills World its unique tone — a ferocious martial-arts revenge thriller set in a dystopian world, with a huge dollop of surreal humour. 24 DECEMBER 2023 There is a trippy vision of bubbling eyeballs. A pirate cereal mascot, Captain Frostington, sponsors televised murder. A delicious macaron is consumed hands-free mid-brawl. And battling through it all is Bill Skarsgård’s deaf, non-verbal ‘Boy’, trained in the jungle by a mysterious shaman (The Raid’s Yayan Ruhian, “always the reference [for the character] right from the beginning,” Mohr notes) to take down a nefarious family dynasty, soundtracked by his own quip-laden inner monologue. “I’m still waiting for somebody to write, ‘This fucking tone is all over the place!’” the director admits. “But that was really, really intentional.” No wonder the combination of brutal action and loopy Looney Tunes energy attracted Sam Raimi, on producing duties after being blown away by the Boy Kills World proof-of-concept trailer Mohr and friends made in Berlin seven years ago. “It was complete insanity,” Mohr recalls of learning his hero was about to watch his short. “I was showing my phone to everyone around me. ‘You see that?!’ Two hours later, we were all hanging out at a Five Guys in LA. The email arrived and it just said, ‘Sam flipped.’ It became our battle cry for the next few weeks.” Having snuck Evil Dead references into Top to bottom: Bill Skarsgård’s ‘Boy’ versus Yayan Ruhian as his shaman mentor; Boy set to go ballistic; The film also stars Sharlto Copley, here with director Moritz Mohr on set. his earliest shorts, it was all the permission he needed to cook up something groovy, gross and gratuitous. “Meeting him and getting to work with him was just the absolute dream come true. It was ridiculous, man.” Load up the punch-gun. BOY KILLS WORLD DOES NOT YET HAVE A UK RELEASE DATE
THE DISNEY SIDEKICK AIMING TO BE THE G.O.A.T. Top to bottom: Goat Valentino (voiced by Alan Tudyk), charming the birds from the trees; WISH ’S DIR ECTORS BREAK DOWN HOW THEY CR EATE D A NEW MATINÉ E ID OL IN VALE NTINO A welcome support for Ariana DeBose’s Asha; Concept DISNEY’S HALL OF Fame of talking-animal buddies is vast. The pressure was on, then, for directors Chris Buck and Fawn Veerasunthorn to create a creature companion for Wish, Disney Animation’s feature-length celebration of the studio’s 100th birthday. They explain why confident goat Valentino — furry friend to Ariana DeBose’s hero Asha — is a worthy new addition. art for the cute caprine star. “Then Alan said, ‘What about a gentlemanly know-it-all? A sophisticated goat?’ We all laughed, but something special had happened.” HE’S A DISNEY HOMAGE HE’S GOT PLUCK The culture of Wish is rooted in the Iberian peninsula, so a goat fitted Asha’s rural home — and story. “Baby goats love to climb,” Veerasunthorn says. “It’s a movie about pursuing your wish, so it’s good to have a character who is not afraid.” HE HAS A KILLER OUTFIT What’s cuter than a baby goat? One in frilly yellow pyjamas. “Valentino is very proud of his pyjamas,” grins Buck. “At one point it was Asha’s mother who we saw knitting them [and] we still assume that’s where they came from. He had many different garments, but that got whittled away.” Fingers crossed for a fashion-montage spin-off short. HE’S ONE SUAVE BILLY Valentino doesn’t talk in the first act; he simply baahs. But when he starts, Disney’s lucky charm — Alan Tudyk, who has lent vocals to Frozen, Wreck- It Ralph and Encanto — emerges. Tudyk was always first choice, but the voice took some figuring out. “We tried a small, cute voice because of how he looks,” says Veerasunthorn. “The best sidekicks support the theme; they’re not just there to give one-liners,” claims Buck, and the filmmakers went deep into Disney history to seek inspiration. Buck mentions The Little Mermaid’s cranky crab Sebastian as a favourite, while Veerasunthorn loves opinionated horse Maximus in Tangled — and the DNA of both is in the mix. “He pretty much knows what’s going on in every situation, he feels,” says Buck of Valentino. “But he’s endearing.” And impossibly cute; seems the year of the goat has come early. HELEN O’HARA WISH IS IN CINEMAS FROM 24 NOVEMBER SOPHIE BUTCHER IS THINKING ALEX GODFREY IS THINKING BETH WEBB IS THINKING A B O U T. . . G O N Z O P R S T U N T S A B O U T. . . R O T T A T H E H U T T A B O U T. . . G L E N P O W E L L ’ S D O G The Nun II’s demonic sisters trotting about the UK coastline? A giant hand made of fake cash with its middle finger up to promote Dumb Money? Masked figures on a gondola, roaming the canals of Camden for A Haunting In Venice? Enough with the creepy, real-world-invading film tie-ins, people! I’ve been having bad dreams recently. Night terrors. For Ahsoka has plunged me back to 2008’s The Clone Wars: specifically the appearance of Jabba The Hutt’s son, Rotta. A creature that can only be described as a little penis slug. I want him banished from my brain, but no go. Slither off, foul demon! A Hollywood star isn’t defined by awards or reviews but their dog. Chris Evans has Dodger (with his own Knives Out jumper). Channing Tatum made a film about his former pal, Lulu. Now there’s Powell’s pup Brisket. If that cute face doesn’t see the Hit Man actor hit the A-list, frankly nothing will. DECEMBER 2023 25
An education in Alexander Payne THE FILMMA KING OUTSIDER CHANNELS HIS LONG AND WINDING ACA DEMIC JOURNEY INTO THE H OL D OVERS WORDS ALEX GODFREY ALEXANDER PAYNE IS on-brand from the off. He’s with family in Athens, which is a glorious city, we comment. He fixes us with a deadpan stare: “People suffer here, too.” From the beginning of his career, with 1996’s Citizen Ruth and 1999’s Election, and later taking in the likes of Sideways and Nebraska, Payne has carved a wry and acerbic path. His films chronicle desperate, broken human beings, with hope always trying to break through the cracks, and his latest, The Holdovers, follows through. Pitting together an unlikely pair in an all-male boarding school — unruly student Angus Tully (Dominic Sessa) and the grumpy, unpopular history teacher Paul Hunham (Paul Giamatti) charged with supervising him over Christmas — it’s set almost entirely in the prestigious Barton Academy. Payne has education in his bones. “I’m so stupid, I was in school until I was 29. Like, half my life,” he laughs. “Yeah, I didn’t get 26 DECEMBER 2023 out of graduate school with my master’s degree ’til I was 29.” The idea for The Holdovers came to him after he watched Marcel Pagnol’s 1935 film Merlusse, which has the same premise. Payne was excited about the idea and, having let it percolate for years, commissioned writer David Hemingson to work on a screenplay, Payne inputting his own ideas and rewriting it. His own experiences found their way in. “I didn’t go to an elite boarding school, but I did go to an all-boys Jesuit prep school in Omaha,” he says. “That Ancient History class is a lot like my Latin class was. Those Latin buddies are still my closest friends from high school. So there are a bunch of in-jokes in there just for them.” The Holdovers is set in 1970 — it needed to be a period film, as most prep schools are not single-sex anymore. But the main thing that
Illustration: Russell Moorcroft, Getty Images, Sphere Entertainment GET UP TO SPEED ON DA R R E N A R O N O F S K Y ’ S SPH E RE MOVIE excited Payne about setting it then was the formal exercise. It genuinely feels and looks like 1970s cinema. “That little parlour trick I was trying to pull off... I wasn’t trying to make a period film, I was trying to make a contemporary film set in 1970,” he says. “I’ve been asked, ‘Were you trying to make it like Hal Ashby or Robert Altman?’ And I’m like, ‘No, I was trying to make it like Alexander Payne, had I been working then.’” He infused himself into the film, making it as personal as he could. Did he allow the cast to feed their own education experiences into it too, or is the script done and that’s it? “The script is done,” he retorts without hesitation. “‘Please hit your marks and recite the dialogue exactly as written.’ That’s my direction. ‘Feel free to consult the screenplay.’” He’s not one for improvisation, then. Nearly 30 years on from his debut, it’s heartening to see Payne still doing what he does best and, arguably, better than ever. His characters may be jaded, but he doesn’t seem to be at all. “Well, I’ll tell you this, man — I’m 62 years old, and there’s nothing I like better than making movies, and I feel so richly privileged to be able to do it,” he says. “And as you get older and you see darkness come a little bit closer and closer, I just want to keep doing it.” If he does, he’ll be in good company. “Kurosawa used to say he wanted to be buried feet-first off a movie set. He almost was. Then there’s Manoel de Oliveira, the Portuguese director who was making films until he was 105. I want to make it to 106.” Time will tell, but he’s still going strong. Maybe his extended period in education paid off, after all. IT’S HAPPENING IN A BONKERS LAS VEGAS VENUE Clockwise from main: Not-so-happy holidays for rebellious T H E M O V I E C E L E B R AT E S student Angus EARTH’S BEAUTY Tully (Dominic Some may dismiss 4D cinema as a gimmick. But Aronofsky is taking it deeply seriously. Postcard From Earth is set in the future, seen through the eyes of two humans, and use a mix of fictional and non-fictional footage filmed on all seven continents. He’s told the Hollywood Reporter that he wants to “pluck people from the bling and thrum of the Vegas strip in all its humanconstructed madness and immerse them as fully as possible in the wonder, awe and beauty of the natural world”. Sessa), head cook Mary Lamb (Da’Vine Joy Randolph) and cranky history teacher Paul Hunham (Paul Giamatti); Director Alexander Payne on set with Giamatti and Randolph; Mary reaches YOU NEED TO out to Angus; U N D E R S TA N D H O W Payne gives direction; Student and teacher experience THE HOLDOVERS IS IN CINEMAS FROM 19 JANUARY 2024 Seemingly bored with old-fashioned rectangular screens, Darren Aronofsky’s latest project is the first film to be specially commissioned for new globeshaped Vegas venue MSG Sphere. Postcard From Earth, which is part narrative, part documentary, has been made with experimental technologies to fit the world’s largest high-definition screen, which wraps both over and around audiences. Totally tubular! a cold front. HUGE THIS PLACE IS Okay, let’s chuck some stats at you. The MSG Sphere is tall enough to fit the Statue Of Liberty inside, and boasts a 157-metre-wide LED display — that’s more than six times bigger than the UK’s BFI IMAX. It’s got a whopping 160,000 speakers, ready to create the ultimate in surround sound. Plus, 4D bells and whistles galore, including vibrating seats, shifting temperatures, and even scents to delight jaded moviegoers’ nostrils. ANDROID USHERS WILL GREET CINEMAGOERS Human staff are so last century. Visitors to the MSG Sphere are greeted by what’s been billed as the world’s most advanced humanoid robot, Aura. Five robo-ushers provide directions and answer questions. Apparently, they also recognise guests’ facial expressions and give lifelike responses, no doubt transporting them to the darkest, creepiest depths of the uncanny valley. And they even help run MSG Sphere’s social-media channels. W H AT H A P P E N S I N V E G A S S TAY S I N VEGAS, RIGHT? No. The MSG Sphere feels like the kind of folly that could only exist in kitschy Vegas. But proposals for a second building are currently ruffling feathers in London, meaning that Aronofsky’s flick could head to the UK. Further programming is TBC, but likely to be commissioned films only, so thank your lucky stars that an immersive 4D rendering of the vomit scene from Stand By Me probably isn’t heading our way. ALICE SAVILLE POSTCARD FROM EARTH IS PLAYING AT THE MSG SPHERE NOW DECEMBER 2023 27
Clockwise from main: Summer Joy Campbell, Ayo Edebiri and Rachel Sennott; Marshawn Lynch as Mr G; Edebiri, writer-director Emma Seligman and actor-writer Sennott on set. EM MA SELI GMA N ON HOW HER TEEN COME DY BOTTOMS IS CRACKING SKULLS WORDS BETH WEBB A QUEER HIGH-SCHOOL fight-club film influenced by everything from Shaun Of The Dead to 1917 is certainly uncharted territory for Hollywood. But for Emma Seligman, the filmmaker behind American summer hit Bottoms, this was the perfect project to follow up the brazenly funny Shiva Baby, which launched her career. We convinced her to break the first rule of Fight Club and talk about fight clubs (specifically, how she created one for her movie). 28 DECEMBER 2023 Seligman originally wanted a heroic story for her leading lesbian duo PJ and Josie, played by Shiva Baby star Rachel Sennott and The Bear’s Ayo Edebiri. Yet Sennott, who co-wrote the film, had other plans. “Rachel was interested in the characters being really flawed and selfish and deceitful,” the filmmaker remembers. And so they landed on the girls kickstarting a fight club, using a fake mission for empowerment to get in with their popular peers. “They’re just trying to look cool,” says Seligman. ROUND 2: BOOT CAMP PJ and Josie’s classmates take the bait, and a crew of motley misfits and cheerleaders alike unite over a desire to defend themselves. Ahead of the shoot, the cast attended a week-long boot camp. “It felt very much like the kind of fight club that the girls were [pretending] to create sometimes. They genuinely had a lot of support for each other,” says Seligman. What started with falling on gym mats ended with the girls learning to throw and take impressive fake punches. Yet with Bottoms being a comedy, the fighting also had to be funny. Seligman cites Edgar Wright’s movies as a major influence. “The World’s End [was] a big reference because of the way the fight sequences are designed, [where] the camera goes back and forth between mini-fights within a big overall fight sequence,” she explains. “There’s a lot of humour and style in the way that he does his fight choreography.” ROUND 3: COMBAT The fight club’s newfound skills were put into practice, not least in a climactic sequence that Seligman says was inspired by Sam Mendes’ World War I epic 1917. It was an ambitious step up given that Shiva Baby is set almost entirely in one location, and was met with reservations during development, but the filmmaker fought to give the group a grand, cinematic finale. “There was a lot I died on a hill for [when it came to] that sequence,” she laughs. It paid off, not just with the film’s impressive box-office performance, but with its dedicated Stateside fanbase, some of whom turned up in costume to watch the film. “I snuck in once or twice, and I had never seen such a highly concentrated amount of young queer people in a movie theatre,” the filmmaker says happily. It turns out that Seligman has created her own club. One with significantly fewer black eyes. BOTTOMS IS IN CINEMAS FROM 3 NOVEMBER Courtesy of 30WEST/Christopher Katsarov Luna Welcome to highschool Fight Club ROUND 1: INSPIRATION
FINN WOLFHARD GOES HARD T HE STRANGE R THINGS STAR T URNS FILMMA KE R FOR HORRORCOME DY H E LL OF A SUMME R FINN WOLFHARD’S CHILDHOOD was largely spent around monsters and ghouls. Demogorgons, Pennywise, ghosts — he’s busted the lot. So, no surprise that his feature directorial debut, Hell Of A Summer, which he’s co-directed, co-written and stars in alongside Ghostbusters: Afterlife actor Billy Bryk, is a bloody affair — a summer-camp slasher with tongue poking firmly in cheek. “The energy was crazy,” Wolfhard beams of the film’s Midnight Madness debut at the Toronto International Film Festival. With axes swinging, knives slathered in deadly peanut butter (it’s an allergy thing), and guitars used for more than just campfire singalongs, the body-count is high. “We had a lot of fun,” says Wolfhard of devising fresh kills. “It was years of going over what should be the ones to go in the film.” From their first meeting — before being cast together on Ghostbusters: Afterlife — the pair found a shared wavelength (“It felt almost like a camp friendship,” Wolfhard explains), and soon began cooking up screenplays together. Bryk thought their first feature should be a slasher, something with “a little bit of gore in it”, that was “fun and spooky and funny”, while Wolfhard was particularly influenced by Scream (“It really changed everything for me”). “I was a big fan of Evil Dead II, Night Of The Living Dead — anything that Greg Nicotero did,” he adds. “My mom showed me this documentary called Nightmare Factory. It starts with calling it “a horror-comedy, or comedyhorror, depending how you spin it”. The result is a balance of fun and fear. But with a story concerning Fred Hechinger’s camp leader Jason, who’s overseeing camp counsellors including Wolfhard and Bryk’s happy-go-lucky pals Chris and Bobby, realising he’s stuck around in his youthful gig a little too long, there’s substance there too. As Stranger Things prepares to wrap for good, Wolfhard says the film is “definitely, 100 per cent” reflective of him starting to move beyond Hawkins, Indiana. “It’s weird to think about it as being such a personal film — but it is, because it’s such a time capsule of where we were when we wrote it, and when we were making it,” he says. “I would say it’s the first evolution of growth for me, and for Billy as well. It was something that we talked about a ton.” Beware: even stranger things are coming. Top to bottom: Shining a new light on the summer-camp slasher genre: Billy Bryk and Finn Wolfhard; Co-writers, costars and co-directors Wolfhard and Bryk between takes. [Nicotero] as a kid making movies by himself, and then goes into him meeting George Romero. I’m very inspired by that era of horror.” The result is camp-based carnage, delivering Gen Z-skewering gags while Gen Z-ers literally get skewered. “The whole film was just us trying to make each other laugh over Zoom as we were writing,” Bryk says, BEN TRAVIS HELL OF A SUMMER DOES NOT YET HAVE A UK RELEASE DATE ARE YOU TIKTOKING TO ME? MARTIN SCORSE SE : THE KING OF CINE MA AND SOCIAL ME DIA, AS RECE NT VIDE OS P ROVE THE SLANG QUIZ In early October, Scorsese’s daughter Francesca tested her dad on modern slang via a TikTok video. The director brought his A-game, guessing the definitions of “tea” and “hits different” while jumping on the term “slept on” to talk about The King Of Comedy’s critical reception in 1982. As Francesca put it, “He low-key slayed.” THE FLEA A TikTok trend in which one person tricks another into holding an imaginary flea’s invisible jacket was turned on its head when Scorsese chose to believe that the flea, and its jacket, were real. And who are we to argue with him? Rumours suggest that the flea will have a leading role in the director’s upcoming crime drama, ‘The Fleaparted’. THE FAKE FILM The internet’s love of Scorsese peaked when fans created a fake gangster film by the director on Tumblr, called ‘Goncharov’, complete with a detailed synopsis and artwork. Francesca took to TikTok to share her dad’s reaction to learning about the faux movie: “Yes. I made that film years ago.” THE SCRUNCHIE Sure, he’s a master of celluloid, but can Scorsese name a “hair doughnut” or nipple covers when he is shown them as part of a quickfire test on feminine products? Apparently not, because he thought that they were a pillow and earbuds respectively. If you’re ever in need of a bobbypin or an eyelash curler, though, this guy’s got you sorted. BETH WEBB DECEMBER 2023 29
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Henry Winkler CAN THE FOR MER FONZIE KEEP HIS COOL AS HE ANSWERS EMPIRE ’S BURNING QUESTIONS? WORDS CHRIS HEWITT When have you been most starstruck? Every time I meet somebody who sings. I met Elton John, and I said [mistaking his first name], “John, I have all your albums!” And then I slunk away. But then I took a selfie with him and his husband at the Emmy Awards. Bruce Springsteen, I go numb. Brandi Carlile, she’s a fellow fisherperson. She’s a fly fisher-person. Oh my God, I love her. Bruno Mars, I was in the middle of an interview in a glass room at Sirius radio in New York City and Bruno Mars walked by. I said, “Ladies and gentlemen, I am so sorry, I have to go now.” And I immediately left and brought him into the glass room, and I said, “I will take a grenade for you.” What did he say? He said, “I hope you do. You’re the man.” Steve McQueen walking down Rodeo Drive. We passed each other, acknowledged each other, and kept walking. It bothers me to this day that I did not stop him and say, “I love you. I think you’re the greatest.” How much is a pint of milk? Well, a quart of milk, I want to say, is $3.15. Who is the most famous person you could text right now? Adam Sandler. Ron Howard. Bill Hader. And they would all text back. In weeks, but they would text back, yeah. Do you do your own shopping? I do. Not often, but I love to go to the market. I love pushing the cart, no matter what country I’m in, up and down the aisle. Cheese would be my favourite aisle. And here’s what I know — if you go hungry to the market, you will buy 14 per cent more than you need. Go in with a snack already in your tummy. Which movie have you seen the most? The Great Escape, Love Actually, The Sting, The Godfather. I once met Richard Curtis, and the man has not hired me. I just want to say that. I don’t know what he’s thinking. And I once saw Do you have a favourite member of The Fellowship Of The Ring? I think the ring itself. It would look great on my finger. I don’t wear any jewellery, no watches, nothing. But if I have to say someone, I would go with the old guy in the beard with the white robe. Gandalf. Ian McKellen, yeah. I saw him do Macbeth here in LA. He’s a very lovely man. What’s the best advice you’ve ever been given? Garry Marshall [Happy Days creator], who was a genius and I miss him every day, put me in my place during the making of an episode. I asked him to speed up what he was doing because I had to leave to make my first personal appearance. He was introducing the guest cast and I said, “Just hurry up.” And then he put the microphone down, grabbed me by the shirt, and put me against the wall and said [adopts strong New York accent], “Don’t ever interrupt me when I am introducing the guest cast. They have every right to be introduced like you.” I said, “Garry, I will never do that again.” This gorilla that came out of him was so unexpected, it was so shocking. But the bigger lesson was how to be part of an ensemble, as opposed to thinking that you might be important. What’s the most memorable holiday you’ve ever had? Each one. I just came back from Idaho, where I fished for trout. It is my passion, away from my family and my work. It makes me so happy. I’m just going to show you the brown trout I caught… [holds up his phone to the camera; it is a picture of Henry Winkler, beaming with joy, holding a huge trout] But it’s catch and release. I won’t even eat a trout in a restaurant. Can you play a musical instrument? I cannot. In my mind I play the guitar, and I sound like Bruce Springsteen. Which book have you read the most? Here it is: I’m dyslexic. I am not a good reader. I’ll tell you, the most difficult part of my entire professional life is reading a book on tape. Now, with Lin Oliver, I have written 40 children’s books, and they were hard. But reading the memoir, most people do a book in two days. I was allotted 100 hours. It really is difficult, but I’m very proud of it. BEING HENRY: THE FONZ... AND BEYOND IS OUT AS AUDIOBOOK, EBOOK AND HARDBACK FROM 31 OCTOBER DECEMBER 2023 31
26 OCTOBER - 22 NOVEMBER 2023 Michael Fassbender as ultra-focused hitman The Killer. 32 DECEMBER 2023 | EDITED BY JOHN NUGENT
THE KILLER I AM JACK ’S COMPLE TE E LATION AT A NEW DAVID FINCHE R FILM ★★★★ OUT 27 OCTOBER (CINEMAS), 10 NOVEMBER (NETFLIX) / CERT TBC / 119 MINS DIRECTOR David Fincher Fassbender, Tilda Swinton, Charles Parnell, Kerry O’Malley, Sala Baker, Sophie Charlotte CAST Michael PLOT A killer-for-hire (Fassbender) lives his life in the shadows. When a job goes wrong, he is forced to take revenge on his employers, one by one. Top to bottom: Man on a murderous mission; Tilda Swinton as the enigmatic Expert; Killing as craft. “WWJWBD. What would John Wilkes Booth do?” THE KILLER (MICHAEL FASSBENDER) DAVID FINCHER IS back on familiar terrain. His last film, 2020’s Mank, felt like an unusual left-turn: a deeply personal period passion project, co-written with his late father, it was as sweepingly romantic as it was slyly cynical — but, with such a narrow focus and such niche preoccupations, it held less mainstream appeal than his usual fare. With The Killer (adapted from the French graphic novel Le Tueur, by writer Matz and artist Luc Jacamon), the director returns to the kind of material that cemented his status as one of Hollywood’s most singular, incisive, ingenious genre filmmakers: bringing his unique artistic rigour to familiar blockbuster components. It’s thrilling to see him back in the thriller world. A sweatily suspenseful opening sequence (the film comprises six chapters, plus prologue and epilogue; even the structure is neat) establishes the universe with ferocious clarity. As that prosaic title suggests, our focus is almost entirely on one assassin, a hitman-for-hire never named, and played with unblinking, icy intensity by Michael Fassbender — his first screen role in four years. When we meet him, he’s in the midst of a job: to take out a wealthy target in a luxury Paris hotel. Through Fassbender’s coolly delivered, dry-as-dust voiceover, which falls somewhere between first-person novelistic narration and the character’s own internal monologue, we learn a little of what it takes to do what he does. He is pure efficiency, methodical to the nth degree; every scenario gamed, every outcome foreseen. He practises yoga and repeats meditative mantras (“Stick to the plan... Weakness is vulnerability”), which would sound like new-agey corporate motivation techniques, if they weren’t in service of murder. He listens to The Smiths to slow his resting heart rate, Morrissey’s morose warbling penetrating the film’s soundtrack throughout (and now, hilariously, forever associated with sociopaths). He is, in short, a well-oiled machine. And then… something goes wrong. His Parisian hit — a simple “Annie Oakley” job, as The Killer puts it — goes awry, seemingly down to a very human distraction, sowing the first shred of doubt that this cold, heartless man is as robotically detached as he claims. It sets in motion a series of events that sees his stockin-trade violence seep into his private life, initiating a jet-setting revenge yarn that recalls everything from Death Wish to Kill Bill. Though nothing quite matches that opening salvo for pure cut-glass tension, some brilliantly staged sequences soon follow. Particular shout-outs must go to a staggeringly wellchoreographed fight with another man known only as ‘The Brute’, played by Sala Baker (aka Sauron from Peter Jackson’s The Lord Of The Rings), which could jostle John Wick: Chapter 4 for best fight scene of the year; and a more cerebral stand-off with a fellow assassin, played with typical intrigue by Tilda Swinton. Throughout it all, as you might well expect, Fincher’s filmmaking is immaculate. It is pure pleasure to luxuriate in imagery made with such obvious, deliberate care. You feel his precise framing, his careful composition, his notorious multiple takes. It seems, too, like Fincher is drawing on his past strengths: you can recognise the patient procedural plotting of Seven or Zodiac, the nihilistic themes and sardonic narration of Fight Club, the ruthless, unsettling violence of The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo, the outlandish moral relativism of Gone Girl. But what does it all amount to? To the very end, The Killer remains something of a cipher, a blank canvas of a human. We are welcomed inside the head of this unthinkable perspective, without ever truly learning the whys or the wherefores. Is Fincher pondering the soul-cost that such a vocation might bring, a theme even the most recent Bond films have toyed with? Is it another angry screed on capitalism and masculinity? Should we even draw parallels between The Killer’s diligent approach to work and Fincher’s own fastidiousness (a lazy comparison, perhaps, but one the director seems to invite)? Or should we just take it all at face value — simply a slickly made genre exercise, enough on its own merits? After such a strong build-up, the film’s ultimate arm’s-length aloofness might feel frustrating, especially in its muted finale. For a director who crafted two of the best endings in cinema history (Fight Club and Seven), The Killer’s climax, ultimately, proves to be curiously anticlimactic. David Fincher is unarguably a master filmmaker, so with every new film of his, fairly or not, you expect a masterpiece. The Killer doesn’t quite reach that level — but even then, most filmmakers would kill to make something this good. JOHN NUGENT V E R D I C T A riveting revenge riot, with gobsmacking levels of film craft, and a performance from Michael Fassender to make your blood run cold. It’s not quite top-tier Fincher, but it comes damn close. DECEMBER 2023 33
Top to bottom: Mischief-maker Loki (Tom Hiddleston) makes his charismatic return; Loki’s variant Sylvie (Sophia Di Martino); Ravonna Renslayer (Gugu Mbatha-Raw) does some time-travelling. LOKI: SEASON 2 T H E GOD OF MISCHIE F IS BACK — A ND H E ’S ANYT H ING BUT LOW-KEY ★★★★ OUT 6 OCTOBER (DISNEY+) / EPISODES VIEWED: 4 OF 6 SHOWRUNNERS Michael Waldron, Eric Martin Hiddleston, Owen Wilson, Sophia Di Martino, Jonathan Majors, Gugu Mbatha-Raw CAST Tom PLOT With the multiverse exploding and the TVA in chaos, Loki (Hiddleston) starts time-slipping, and seeks his variant, Sylvie (Di Martino), for answers. IT’S FAIR TO say that Marvel’s sacred timeline has had a little wobble. 2023 is the first year that the seemingly unstoppable superhero studio has looked vulnerable, after disappointments on both the big screen (Ant-Man And The Wasp: Quantumania) and small (Secret Invasion). What a sharp intake of fresh Asgardian air Loki is, then, the first of the MCU’s Disney+ shows to earn a second run, and one that still feels distinctive, in a multiverse sometimes in danger of feeling samey. 34 DECEMBER 2023 Loki’s first season — which included among its delights an alligator Loki, a talking clock, and the literal end of all time — proved one of the studio’s better forays into the streamingverse. Season 2 picks up seconds later, dealing with the fallout from Loki (Tom Hiddleston) and his stubborn variant Sylvie (Sophia Di Martino) encountering the man behind the curtain, ‘He Who Remains’ (Jonathan Majors): the Kang variant who, it turned out, founded the Time Variance Authority. Sylvie’s decision to kill him set off a chain reaction of events that could, in classic Marvel-sized stakes, threaten the existence of the entire universe. But Loki generally swerves those cookiecutter comic-book concerns. For one thing, this is a gorgeously made piece of television, the second season — largely directed by indie heroes Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead — retaining the unique visual language established by Season 1 director Kate Herron, with rich, grainy cinematography and lush, retro-futuristic production design. In a genre that can feel increasingly homogenous, this show has forged its own singular, solidly crafted identity, the TVA’s Soviet-esque cosmic bureaucracy remaining a singular pleasure to spend time in. Time remains the name of the game, too, with more Doctor Who-esque timey-wimey fun across the centuries, along with an apt sense of mischief for a show about the god of it, and a propulsive story — a battle for control of time itself — driving along at a breezy pace. With just six episodes, there’s rarely filler. Some exposition is lengthier than necessary — dialogue is chock-full of sci-fi word salad like “throughput multiplier” and “temporal radiation” — but it’s generally delivered by new character Ouroboros, played with such giddy, thrilled-tobe-here glee by the newly Oscar-winning Ke Huy Quan that it’s hard to care too much. In fact, everyone seems to be enjoying themselves — most of all Hiddleston. Having donned the green horns for well over a decade by this point, his Loki remains endlessly charismatic. Hiddleson still imbues him with that delicious sense of playful moral ambiguity, but there’s a clarity to the character at this point that feels fresh: that somehow, by trying to save the universe, he finally found the glorious purpose he was looking for. JOHN NUGENT V E R D I C T With the multiverse teetering all around it, Loki is one strand of the timeline that is sustaining its originality and intention — and actually thriving. It’s about time.
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Above: A whole SALTBURN new world: working-class student Oliver Quick (Barry E M E RALD F E NNE LL IS BACK FOR A SPOT OF BRIDE SHEAD REANIMATE D Keoghan) enjoys the high life. Left: ★★★ Revising for OUT 17 NOVEMBER / CERT TBC / 131 MINS exams was pretty tough. Emerald Fennell CAST Barry Keoghan, Jacob Elordi, Archie Madekwe, Rosamund Pike, Richard E. Grant, Alison Oliver DIRECTOR PLOT Oxford University, 2006. Outsider Oliver (Keoghan) becomes friends with the wealthy Felix (Elordi), and assimilates into his world. WITH HER FEATURE debut Promising Young Woman, Emerald Fennell took a scathing swipe at themes including rape culture, misogyny and violence against women. Her follow-up, Saltburn, sees the writer-director set her sights on class, social mobility and the über-rich, delivering a satirical thriller that leaves you holding your breath and rolling your eyes in equal measure. 36 DECEMBER 2023 Barry Keoghan is the brilliantly named Oliver Quick, a working-class lad from Merseyside heading to Oxford University on a scholarship. A lone wolf, he immediately finds himself shunned, skirting around the edges of the central cliques, observing them from afar. Once he connects with the most popular guy on campus, Felix Catton (Jacob Elordi), Oliver finds himself part of that elite world — and when Felix invites him to stay at his stately family home of Saltburn over the summer, Oliver’s obsessions with Felix and his life take a toxic turn. Appropriately for such a decadent setting, Saltburn looks divine. Fennell’s eye is extraordinary, and alongside cinematographer Linus Sandgren, she captures the grand beauty of her architectural locations impeccably.
Here: Anyone up for a Jigsaw? Below: Shawnee Smith as Amanda Young. Top to bottom: Saltburn — just your one up, one down stately pile...; Rosamund Pike as Elspeth, enjoying a suitably decadent drink. Reflections, overhead angles, kaleidoscopes and more put you in Oliver’s fractured state of mind. Intense close-ups quickly create an incredible sense of intimacy. Fennell swings between rapidly edited montages, static moments and sweeping oners with ease. The direction oozes confidence, and the noughties setting is brought vividly to life by nostalgic pop bangers. The cast is inordinately charismatic — particularly Elordi (whose turn here, along with the upcoming Priscilla, is sure to elevate him from teen heartthrob to all-out movie star) and Archie Madekwe, on scene-stealing form as Felix’s snobby, snarky American cousin Farleigh. Rosamund Pike, playing vapid, glamorous matriarch Elspeth, is having a ball, firing off hilariously “Oliver, I have judgmental one-liners that make up a complete and the film’s funniest moments. utter horror of Where Saltburn ultimately ugliness, ever since falters is its writing. The I was really young. performances are great, but they’re I don’t know why.” working with paper-thin characters, ELSPETH and as the runtime ticks on, the (ROSAMUND energy and tension that Fennell PIKE) summoned so masterfully in the first half dissipates into relentless rug-pulls and shocks that feel inserted for the sake of it. Scenes often build to reach the cusp of something truly electric, but are let down by clunky dialogue. There is innate satisfaction in watching this group of unbearable people come undone, but it comes at the cost of real emotional connection to what’s happening on screen, and the film’s musings on class are befuddling by the end. There’s much to chew on here, but it’s a shame something so initially delicious eventually leaves you with a bit of a bad taste in your mouth. SOPHIE BUTCHER V E R D I C T Fennell’s second feature is both evocative and provocative, with lashings of style but questionable substance. It doesn’t stick the landing, but the ride right before the nosedive is a properly enjoyable one. SAW X DO YOU WANT TO PLAY (YE T ANOTHE R) GAME ? ★★ OUT NOW / CERT 18 / 118 MINS DIRECTOR Kevin Greutert Bell, Synnøve Macody Lund, Shawnee Smith, Steven Brand, Renata Vaca CAST Tobin PLOT John Kramer (Bell), the ‘Jigsaw Killer’, is dying of cancer. When he discovers a radical new treatment is a lie, he exacts revenge on the doctors behind it. DEATH ISN’T THE worst thing that can happen to you in a Saw film. Why, you can die and still return again and again, like Tobin Bell’s original bad guy here. Despite expiring in Saw III, he’s back with more horrible traps in this tenth film, a prequel, and if it should still be plenty gross enough for fans, the horror is as tired as his poor, cancer-riddled bones. Set shortly after the events of the first film, sociopathic moralist John ‘Jigsaw’ Kramer (Bell) is in his last months of life when he learns of a hopeful new treatment over the border in Mexico. After extremely cursory research from a man known for his meticulous selection of victims, he heads down to the remote location and meets a friendly and apparently professional medical and support team, who tell him they have successfully treated his tumour. Alas, they’re lying. When Kramer realises he’s been duped, he sets about punishing all those responsible. Gruesomely. Cue the usual combination of self-surgery and sadism in a series of grotesque traps involving a novel bit of radiation therapy and, inevitably, amputation. As with many of these films, you may wonder how survivable these traps are meant to be; a subject of ongoing debate between Jigsaw and his even more psychotic apprentices. These contraptions seem overly reliant on delicate mechanisms, which cannot have been subjected to extensive testing, performing exactly as intended, but then, that’s pretty much assumed in this franchise. There are at least nods to the philosophical and ethical gap between Jigsaw and his followers, even if no-one mounts a serious challenge to his hardline philosophy of moral corrective surgery (and you really wish someone would). Still, Kramer is a more compelling bad guy than most of his later substitutes, gently working from a demented moral core, and he gets fiery opposition from Synnøve Macody Lund’s formidable Cecilia, the unshakeably confident head of the ersatz clinic. There are even a few laughs at the absurd bad luck the fraudsters had in choosing this patient as their patsy. But beyond that, little here feels fresh or new, apart from the decision to let Bell himself dominate proceedings for once. If only that didn’t lead to the film’s biggest blunder. In a series of last-act turns, Kramer is almost portrayed as a hero righteously standing up for the little guy against a corrupt establishment instead of a demented torturekiller. It makes this feel ultimately as though the filmmakers, led by franchise editorturned-three-time-Saw director Kevin Greutert, have drunk their own Kool-Aid — but perhaps they were force-fed it by some awful contraption, so maybe we shouldn’t judge. HELEN O’HARA V E R D I C T The blood and gore is all present and correct, but the focus on Kramer’s vulnerability and human side sits at odds with his awful judgmentalism. Let monsters be monsters. DECEMBER 2023 37
Hurrah for Big Pharma! PAIN HUSTLERS SIDE E FFECTS MAY INCLUDE DIZZINE SS, CONST IPATION AND A DE SIRE TO WATCH SOME THING E LSE ★★ OUT 27 OCTOBER (NETFLIX) / CERT TBC / 122 MINS DIRECTOR David Yates Blunt, Chris Evans, Andy García, Catherine O’Hara, Jay Duplass, Brian d’Arcy James, Chloe Coleman CAST Emily PLOT Liza Drake (Blunt) finds security working as a drug rep — only to be embroiled in a criminal scheme at the heart of America’s opioid epidemic. “I WILL MAKE my life count,” Liza (Emily Blunt) tells herself at her lowest ebb — or at least she thinks it’s her lowest; her car gets towed the next morning. When we first meet Liza in Pain Hustlers — a new drama from Harry Potter stalwart David Yates — she lives in her sister’s basement with her daughter Phoebe (Chloe Coleman) and mother Jackie (Catherine 38 DECEMBER 2023 O’Hara). Her kid’s newly suspended from school, and Liza’s just quit her job at the strip club — but shortly before resigning, she receives an offer from Pete (Chris Evans). He presents Liza with an opportunity in pharmaceutical sales, promising riches beyond her dreams and a chance for the stability that’s always eluded her. The film doesn’t seem interested in exploring who Liza is beyond her desire for money and her relationship with her daughter and mother. She must have a life beyond parenthood and work, but Pain Hustlers never considers that, removing the humaninterest element this story desperately needs. A rise-and-fall story about the opioid crisis, which has had such a significant impact on human lives, needs to connect through its characters, but the screenplay by Wells Tower is so concerned with pharmaceutical companies and vague power structures that it loses sight of Liza, and everyone else. The characters feel more like thin sketches than real people, which makes the whole experience feel cold and distanced. Blunt does the best she can to breathe life into Liza, a fictional character in an inspired-bytrue-events story. But around the halfway point, it becomes clear there’s no space for her to add any dimension to her character — though she still delivers the strongest performance. Chris Evans has done well playing jerks in the past (see: Knives Out), but Pete is detestable to the point of unbearable, and Evans is unable to find any nuance in the role. Pain Hustlers plods along through an entirely rote interpretation of the opioid crisis. The visual majesty of director Yates’ Harry Potter films is nowhere to be found here — everything is shot with logic but devoid of style. It’s a film that badly wants to be the next Wolf Of Wall Street, with one scene in particular coming across as a hollow carbon copy; unlike Scorsese’s film, though, Pain Hustlers plays things frustratingly safe. It’s not raunchy enough, not devastating enough, and not willing to tell us anything new. There have been so many compelling stories about this subject in recent years, from the documentary All The Beauty And The Bloodshed to miniseries like Dopesick and Painkiller. Unfortunately, Pain Hustlers isn’t creative enough to stand out from the crowd. BARRY LEVITT V E R D I C T It offers the bones of a compelling story, but one-note characters, riskless storytelling and creaky pacing prevent this film from making an impact. This is a prescription best left unfilled.
M O NA R C H: LEGACY OF MONSTERS ★★★ OUT NOW (APPLE TV+) / EPISODES VIEWED 5 OF 10 SHOWRUNNER Chris Black Russell, Wyatt Russell, Anna Sawai, Kiersey Clemons CAST Kurt You’ve seen Godzilla Vs. Kong. Now there’s Russell vs. Russell. This TV take on the kaiju mythology takes a more humanlevel approach, headlined by the inspired casting of father and son Kurt and Wyatt Russell, both playing Monarch military man Lee Shaw at different ages. While its occasional deep-cut references demands a familiarity with a franchise most audiences are ambivalent about — who remembers Godzilla: King Of The Monsters? — its ambitious time- and globe-trotting storytelling makes the most of the universe’s giant canvas, even in smallscreen size. Some characters feel like filler, but the kaiju, when they come, are satisfyingly epic. JN Here: “Will you please stop talking about Fight Club?” Below: Cheer up, you two. BOTTOMS THE SHIVA BABY TEAM ARE BACK — AND THEY ’ VE COME OUT ON TOP ★★★★ OUT 3 NOVEMBER / CERT TBC / 91 MINS DIRECTOR Emma Seligman Sennott, Ayo Edebiri, Havana Rose Liu, Kaia Gerber, Ruby Cruz, Nicholas Galitzine, Marshawn Lynch CAST Rachel PLOT Sick of being the school losers, PJ (Sennott) and Josie (Edebiri) start a ‘self-defence’ club to get close to their crushes. T H E E XO RCIST: BELIEVER ★★★ OUT NOW / CERT 15 / 111 MINS DIRECTOR David Gordon Green Odom Jr, Lidya Jewett, Olivia Marcum, Ellen Burstyn CAST Leslie Having completed his Halloween trilogy, David Gordon Green turns his attention to The Exorcist, another masterpiece tarnished by a trail of mostly unworthy sequels. It’s a mixed bag, full of interesting ideas that don’t always develop into cohesive, satisfying conclusions. It begins well, with a creepy set-up about a single father (Leslie Odom Jr) whose daughter (Lidya Jewett) and friend (Olivia Marcum) go missing in the woods, then re-emerge as hosts to something terrible. Green creates a mood where everything seems just slightly off. Then Ellen Burstyn arrives, reprising her role as Chris MacNeil. As good as Burstyn is, her appearance feels gimmicky — more cheesy tribute than franchise reinvention. OR THE FIRST RULE of Fight Club is that you do not talk about Fight Club. The first rule of Bottoms, the sophomore feature from director Emma Seligman, is to not take it too seriously. This is a film with barely a sincere moment in its 91-minute runtime, instead focusing on building an off-kilter, heightened high-school world, and having a helluva time playing with it. PJ (Rachel Sennott) and Josie (Ayo Edebiri) are outsiders, looking to level up their social status. They’re pining after hot cheerleaders Isabel (Havana Rose Liu) and Brittany (Kaia Gerber) — both seemingly into boys, and way out of PJ and Josie’s league. After a bizarre and hilarious incident involving Isabel’s boyfriend Jeff (Nicholas Galitzine) and Josie’s car, she and PJ launch a female fight club, ostensibly to teach girls self-defence — but in actuality, to try to get lucky, and shed their reputation as the “ugly, untalented gays”. But plot isn’t really Bottoms’ main concern. While you’re still trying to figure out just how exactly setting up a fight club saves the girls from expulsion, the film has moved on to another sequence, another joke, another piss-take. In her stress-inducing debut Shiva Baby (which also starred Sennott), Seligman masterfully ratcheted up tension — here, she seems to delight in undercutting it, maintaining a propulsive pace and energy. This makes the narrative mechanics hard to keep track of at times, and there’s not much by way of character development to keep you grounded — but once you settle in to Bottoms’ eccentric vibe, you won’t care much either. In an all-round brilliant cast, The Bear’s Ayo Edebiri is the standout. Unleashed in her full comedic form, she amps up Josie’s awkwardness to almost unbearable levels, as well as making the more dramatic moments ring true. Rachel Sennott, also on co-writing duty alongside Seligman, delivers her usual spiky, sarcastic persona, and the pair’s chemistry as long-time best friends is the glue holding Bottoms together. Special shout-out to Nicholas Galitzine as man-child jock Jeff — often seen playing the leading man in the very type of movies that Bottoms is poking fun at, he commits entirely as a handsome, privileged idiot. As wonderfully daft as most of Bottoms is, there is a strange catharsis to it, too. Seeing the girls figure out how to throw — and take — a punch, deriving giddy glee from bloody noses and black eyes, feels fresh and subversive, as they indulge in a kind of rage and violence that women are typically expected to shy away from. It sets up a brilliantly batshit action ending, the influence of Quentin Tarantino and Edgar Wright evident. Plus, stick around for that much-loved, mostly forgotten movie sign-off — a blooper-reel credits sequence. SOPHIE BUTCHER V E R D I C T An incredibly silly, sapphic, gloriously weird high-school satire. Bottoms’ ultra-knowing tone might be a struggle for some — but it’s hilariously rewarding. DECEMBER 2023 39
Iron Man brings it in 2012’s Avengers Assemble. MCU: THE REIGN OF MARVEL STUDIOS T H E RE WAS AN IDE A … TO GATHE R A GROUP OF RE MARKABLE PAGE S… ★★★★ AUTHORS JOANNA ROBINSON, DAVE GONZALES, GAVIN EDWARDS / OUT NOW / 528 PAGES NOW 15 YEARS young, the Marvel Cinematic Universe encapsulates 32 films (and nine Disney+ series), whose combined worldwide box office tots up to just under $30 billion. Its fans are legion, while its most vocal detractors include Martin Scorsese (“not cinema”) and Francis Ford Coppola (“despicable”). It is a massive subject with a cast (and crew) of thousands, but writers Joanna Robinson, Dave Gonzales and Gavin Edwards have taken it all in with this hefty yet breezily written studio biography. While bagging north of 100 interviews with an intention to create “the most thorough, authoritative history of Marvel Studios to date,” these Writers Three aren’t simply putting out some official puff tome. They note in their intro that after about a month of interviews, Disney started “asking people not to talk to us”. So, as they pick at Marvel’s knotty corporate origins, the irresistible rise of nerd-done-well Kevin Feige, and the astonishing way a troubled, bankrupt outfit became the dominant force in mainstream cinema, they don’t gloss over the warts. Marvel Studios’ origin as a subsidiary of Toy Biz, for example, receives much scrutiny, in terms of how a push to make the movies “toyetic” 40 (a truly egregious word) continually stymied their creativity, and resulted in a focus on more testosterone-driven heroes, where for years female characters couldn’t lead films because the perception was their action figures wouldn’t sell. The patchy expansion into streaming services with the advent of Disney+ is also covered in some detail: “When asked a few years earlier why no other studio had been able to match Marvel’s track record, Joe Russo said, ‘Simple. They don’t have a Kevin.’ In the Disney+ era, Marvel didn’t have enough Kevin to go around.” There are also some shocking incidents, such as CEO Ike Perlmutter’s alleged assertion that nobody would care about the casting change of James Rhodes between the first two Iron Mans because “Black people ‘look the same’”, and Jeremy Renner’s off-colour joke about Black Widow during an Age Of Ultron junket. But Robinson, Gonzalez and Edwards are clearly themselves fans, so while the book — even at this girth — doesn’t give them space to really dig into the movies themselves, it is buoyed by an appealing and measured sense of affection. Whether you love Marvel 3000 or you’re a Scorsese sympathiser, MCU is worth your time, being a pacy, lively account of — for better or worse — the single most important studio of the century so far. DAN JOLIN V E R D I C T Less about the movies, more about the people and mechanisms behind them, this account of Marvel Studios offers a wealth of insight even for the superhero nut. E V E R Y M A N FOR HIMSELF AND GOD AG A I N ST A L L SPI E L BE RG: T HE FIRST T E N YE ARS PA NDORA’S B OX ★★★ ★★ ★ ★ ★★ ★ ★ AUTHOR LAURENT BOUZEREAU / AUTHOR PETER BISKIND / OUT 11 NOVEMBER / AUTHOR WERNER HERZOG / OUT NOW / 368 PAGES OUT 24 OCTOBER / 256 PAGES 368 PAGES “The lamentations ended about noon.” So begins Werner Herzog’s first memoir, a book impossible not to read without hearing the director’s famously grave German accent in your head. Philosophical and eccentric, it sees Herzog’s hot takes on everything from ski-jumping to prehistoric building methods. A unique account from a unique mind — one best consumed, perhaps, on audiobook. JN This Spiel-book by a long-time chronicler of the director is heavyweight: John Williams and George Lucas offer forewords, and the centrepiece is a huge film-by-film interview with the man himself. Bouzereau knows his stuff, and it crackles along, but many of the stories will be familiar to fans. Also, it’s technically the first 11 years covered — but hey, it’s not the years, it’s the mileage. NDS Best known for Easy Riders, Raging Bulls, a juicy account of cinema’s ’60s and ’70s mavericks, Peter Biskind’s latest details the era of ‘Peak TV’, exploring the rise of the streamers and unstoppable splurge of ‘content’, from Breaking Bad to The White Lotus and beyond. The emphasis on the often gnarly relationships between showrunners and execs is both fun and enlightening. BH DECEMBER 2023
Elizabeth (Natalie Portman, right) channels Gracie (Julianne Moore) via ‘I’m A Little Teapot’. Todd Haynes and composer Marcelo Zarvos borrow MAY DECEMBER A NEW TODD HAYNE S ME LODRAMA; E XPECT HE AV Y WE E PING ★★★★ OUT 17 NOVEMBER / CERT TBC / 113 MINS DIRECTOR Todd Haynes Portman, Julianne Moore, Charles Melton, D.W. Moffett, Piper Curda, Elizabeth Yu CAST Natalie PLOT Years after embarking on a scandalous agegap affair, a couple rakes up the past when an actor arrives to research a film based on their lives. IN TODD HAYNES’ bitingly camp new film, two acting titans play manipulative women desperate to get what they want at any cost — all under the guise of polite respectability. It’s an intriguing approach that, initially, feels at odds with a serious plot that involves child sex abuse and longfossilised trauma. Between spiky silences and lashings of droll humour, May December follows actor Elizabeth (Natalie Portman) as she researches a role and visits a couple, Gracie (Julianne Moore) and Joe (Charles showy piano score, comical zooms some of the score Melton), 24 years after they faced and outrageous, near-cringe dialogue from Joseph a scandal — and Gracie prison time (“You seduced me,” Gracie says to Joe, Losey’s 1971 film — for their relationship, which began straight-faced), the entire thing The Go-Between when Gracie was 36 and Joe was 13. teeters towards a telenovela. What — another film The trip is meant to be mutually elevates May December above about the loss of beneficial: Elizabeth can study an episode of The Real Housewives is a young boy’s Gracie’s mannerisms and peek Haynes’ careful balance of the film’s innocence. behind the curtain to add soapy elements with an icy core of authenticity to her performance, sadness. Joe lives in Gracie’s shadow while Gracie and Joe can try to curry favour in like an obedient, shell-shocked child, while the hope Elizabeth will give them a sympathetic Gracie is stuck in her own state of arrested portrayal. Though they’ve spent the last two development, garbed in frilly, pastel dresses and decades pretending that everything is peachy speaking with a breathy, lisping little-girl voice. and that they have never been happier, the Not everything works, with some symbolism actor’s arrival, and habit of asking pointed perhaps a little too blunt. But it’s the performances questions, causes the couple to erupt like two where May December shines, and opposite two shifting tectonic plates. Purring one moment acting powerhouses, Melton is particularly and sneery the next, Portman plays Elizabeth as impressive: his shrewd, small performance is Machiavellian, arguably just as much of a mess as the film’s emotional nucleus, breaking us out her subject; when the two women interact, their of the salacious stylings and exposing us to the battle of competing hauteur powers the film’s damage these two women — wolves in sheep’s strange, sizzling undercurrent of black comedy. clothing — are inflicting upon him. STEPH GREEN Haynes has already exhibited his flair for V E R D I C T Surface-level funny but with Douglas Sirk-style melodramas with Carol and a well of deeper meaning brewing, May Far From Heaven. Here, he keeps the structure December is not just a skilful satire of but strips out the sumptuous colour and heady suburban propriety; it’s a unique and uncanny atmosphere found in his back catalogue, hewing affair about the nature of performance itself. to the antiseptic vibe of his 1995 hit Safe. With its DECEMBER 2023 41
“Do you feel lucky, cyberpunk?” Government agent CYBERPUNK 2077: PHANTOM LIBERTY Solomon Reed (Idris Elba). FRO M GAMING’S B IGGE ST LE TDOWN TO ITS GREATE ST RE DE MPTION ★★★★★ PC / PS5 / XBOX / OUT NOW THE LAST THREE years have been a long road to recovery for Cyberpunk 2077. The game’s disastrous 2020 launch, in which it arrived littered with bugs and barely playable on console, still haunts the memories of those who had been expecting great things from CD Projekt Red’s follow-up to The Witcher 3. Thankfully, the studio has performed a long-haul course-correction by squashing bugs and streamlining gameplay. The game’s redemption comes to a fitting conclusion here with Phantom Liberty, 2077’s first (and last) paid expansion. Accessible early on during the base game’s main campaign, Phantom Liberty brings players to Dogtown, Night City’s lawless badlands, in search of a downed plane carrying the President, who may be willing to help the player character, V, get rid of the implant manifesting Keanu Reeves’ Johnny Silverhand as the anarcho-punk devil on their shoulder. This high-stakes opener sets the stage for a rich and knotty spy caper, one crammed with plot-twists, hard choices, and world-shifting repercussions that can even impact the ending of the main game, all fuelled by a fierce sense of momentum which the original campaign struggled to cultivate until its later acts. 42 Phantom Liberty’s 20-hour story is elevated further by Idris Elba’s government agent Solomon Reed, whose earthy charisma belies a mercurial moral compass. Elba wasn’t motioncaptured for the role, but it’s a testament to both the gravitas he brings to the voice performance, and CD Projekt Red’s facial animation tech, that you could easily spend every interaction with Reed believing that he was. Another star of the show is Dogtown itself, a pell-mell playground that’s dynamic and dangerous in equal measure, continually revealing new layers to itself as you ascend its skylines and plunder their secrets. Luckily, Phantom Liberty provides V with plenty of new weapons to match their new surroundings, many of which liven up 2077’s combat thanks to unique, gadget-like tricks. Phantom Liberty also launches alongside Update 2.0, a free patch for all Cyberpunk 2077 players that represents a sweeping overhaul of the game’s core systems and mechanics, such as a streamlined progression tree, all of which are exploited by Phantom Liberty to showcase 2077’s rebirth as the sophisticated role-playing game that CD Projekt Red had always intended to make. In this way, Phantom Liberty presents the definitive Cyberpunk experience you probably imagined playing three years ago. Spend a few hours exploring Night City again, and you’ll soon discover why it’s been worth the wait. ALEX AVARD V E R D I C T Phantom Liberty is the perfect invitation back into Night City, cementing 2077 as a must-play RPG finally worthy of its developer’s pedigree. LI ES O F P MORTAL KOMBAT 1 STA RFI E LD ★★ ★ ★ ★★★ ★★ ★ ★ MAC / PC / PS4 / PS5 / XBOX ONE / XBOX NINTENDO SWITCH / PC / XBOX SERIES X|S / PS5 / PC / XBOX SERIES X|S / OUT NOW SERIES X|S / OUT NOW OUT NOW Talk about high concept — Lies Of P casts you as none other than Pinocchio, traversing the steampunk city of Krat, where rampaging clockwork puppets have wiped out humans. The gorgeously Gothic setting is as much a character as the cast of Carlo Collodi’s classic fable, reimagined here in inventive ways. A unique, if unforgivingly difficult, take on a familiar fairy tale. MATT KAMEN Mortal Kombat 1 reboots the outrageously violent fighter series’ continuity, but with yet another interdimensional conflict threatening Earth, and overly familiar gameplay mechanics, it can’t quite escape its past. New and returning Kombatants afford plenty of brutal moves to master, but as a competitive game it’s let down by unstable online play. MATT KAMEN DECEMBER 2023 Bethesda’s latest offers you the freedom to explore the universe — even if it rarely tells you how. This vast, cosmic epic is packed with genuine awe as you hop star systems, traverse alien worlds, battle space pirates, and chase down mysterious artefacts, though it does frustrate with fiddly controls. Nevertheless, its ‘NASApunk’ aesthetic is a delight, and for those with the time to learn its intricacies, Starfield truly soars. MATT KAMEN
Left: John David Washington’s Joshua is faced with a dilemma. Below: Friend or foe? Madeleine Yuna Voyles as Alphie. Bottom: Ken Watanabe as Harun. drawing from Vietnam classics as well as obvious touchpoints: Apocalypse Now and Platoon are as much a part costuming was of the fabric as District 9, Blade created entirely in Runner and Akira, while its lived-in post-production, bringing death from the sky. And environments teeming with battered, director Gareth then, the bomb droids, frenetically beaten-up vehicles are indebted to Edwards didn’t tell waddling towards you like suicidal 1977’s Star Wars. This cocktail works, background actors if dustbins before blowing up. though, Edwards massaging it all into they were playing Gareth Edwards’ distinct vision his own tactile, earthy vision of the humans or robots, to permeates every frame of The future, which is somewhere between elicit more human Creator, and how exciting it is to see genuinely convincing and also just performances. a big genre blast that feels free of unapologetically kickass — and never interference. Above and beyond all without purpose. As America rains the futurism, this is thoughtful sci-fi, with down missiles on New Asia, and its massive, ethical conundrums and moral mindfucks, hulking tech tanks indiscriminately mow down a story that asks what it is to be human in a world villages, the fact that Edwards has managed to where robots often have more humanity than get $80 million of financing for an indictment of people. The plot — in which a formidable AI American militarism feels like a coup. weapon, a sensitive young ‘Simulant’ kid (played It’s all visually flawless too, which is all the emotively by seven-year-old Madeleine Yuna more surprising, considering that budget — Voyles), is shepherded through war zones by there are movies that cost three times more and a conflicted US sergeant (the ever-compelling look like crap. The Creator makes you realise John David Washington) charged to kill it — that there really is little excuse for blockbuster twists and turns, beginning more binary before dross. And while this doesn’t quite hit the diving into shades of grey. Written by Edwards heights of those that inspired it (it is at times before further drafts from Chris Weitz, it blends blunter and broader than it needs to be), it’s its mechanical explorations with Eastern a big reach, with heart and soul to spare. It’s philosophy, aiming to question and provoke uplifting on every level. ALEX GODFREY rather than simply dazzle and thrill. V E R D I C T An inspired, soulful piece of Edwards has said that the reluctant-fathersci-fi, the stunning visuals all in service of a figure narrative was inspired by the 1970s Lone heartfelt, sensitive story. Gareth Edwards is the Wolf And Cub manga novels and films, but The real deal — this is fantastic, enveloping cinema. Creator wears many influences on its sleeves, As the ‘Simulant’ THE CREATOR IF A MACHINE CAN LEARN THE VALUE O F HUMAN L IFE , MAYBE WE CAN TOO ★★★★ OUT NOW / CERT 12A / 133 MINS Gareth Edwards John David Washington, Madeleine Yuna Voyles, Gemma Chan, Allison Janney DIRECTOR CAST After a nuclear bomb is set off in Los Angeles, America bans artificial intelligence. The super-continent of New Asia, meanwhile, is all for AI. And so war begins. PLOT THERE IS TECH to die for in The Creator. On every level. Boasting some of the best sci-fi design in years, there is personality to match each invention — most of which is programmed to kill. We have robot cops, 50 per cent humanoid, 100 per cent total bastards, running amok, stumbling about witlessly when sliced in half. There is the NOMAD, America’s mammoth spaceship, a foreboding, godlike presence, a bird of prey DECEMBER 2023 43
Clockwise from left: Tara (Mia McKennaBruce), angel in holiday hell; BFFs?; Hotel neighbour Badger (Shaun Thomas). in particular occasionally verges on toxic, with Skye’s clear jealousy at the influx of male attention towards on location at the Tara clouding her ability to be there infamous ‘Malia when she’s needed most. Strip’, the main this should be an incredible trip — but Sexual assault as a plot point thoroughfare in when things start to heat up between on screen is so common, postMalia, Crete. It has them and hotel neighbours Badger MeToo, it can feel like we’re been seen on (Shaun Thomas), Paddy (Samuel becoming numb to its impact. But in screen before — Bottomley) and Paige (Laura How To Have Sex, the murky nuances most famously in Ambler), it takes a turn for the worse. of assault are more than just inciting The Inbetweeners Within minutes, the pure energy incidents — they’re woven through Movie (2011). of this film reels you in. The girls head every second, every shot. The film straight from the plane to the beach, takes on these topics in a stark and to their hotel, to the bar, barely stopping for affecting way without ever veering into breath in their search for a good time. Firstexploitation, performed impeccably by the time filmmaker Molly Manning Walker taps young cast — especially McKenna-Bruce, whose into all the senses she can: blasting the eyes tiny stature and big, soulful eyes emphasise her with neon, moving between the deafening vulnerability. This film asks tough questions: booms of nightclubs and the sleepy silence about the line between coercion and consent; of the morning after. You can practically feel about men who know their friends act the sun beating down, the alcohol-induced inappropriately and do nothing; about the headaches, the adrenaline of young lust. The pressure young people feel to lose their immersion veers into sensory overload at times, virginity. It doesn’t offer any clear answers, the girls’ excitable squealing and choppy but its very existence will leave audiences camerawork just starting to grate before the reckoning with their own experiences. second half’s darker narrative kicks in. SOPHIE BUTCHER Walker’s script gets the fraught nature of female friendship at this age absolutely spot-on. V E R D I C T As enthralling as it is important, How To Have Sex neatly There’s undeniable glee shared between the depicts the joy and pain of teenage girlhood. main trio, as we see them singing at the top of A scrappy but impressive directorial debut — their lungs in the sea at sunrise, and chatting and a strong showcase of breakthrough shit while chomping on post-rave chips. It’s British talent across the board. complex, though; Skye and Tara’s relationship The film was shot HOW TO HAVE SEX NOT ACT UALLY A H OW-TO GUIDE — MO RE A STORMING BRITISH DE BUT ★★★★ OUT 3 NOVEMBER / CERT TBC / 98 MINS DIRECTOR Molly Manning Walker McKenna-Bruce, Shaun Thomas, Lara Peake, Enva Lewis, Samuel Bottomley, Laura Ambler CAST Mia PLOT Three teenage friends go on their first holiday abroad. As peer pressure intensifies, the less-experienced Tara (McKenna-Bruce) begins to struggle. STROBE LIGHTS. SWEAT-drenched skin. Head-pounding hangovers, treated with hair of the dog. On a holiday like the one in How To Have Sex, the air hums with possibility. It hangs on every particle, increases with every drink you down, seeps into every stolen glance across the dancefloor. For pals Tara (Mia McKennaBruce), Skye (Lara Peake) and Em (Enva Lewis), 44 DECEMBER 2023
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Here: Roderick Usher (Bruce Greenwood), father of seemingly doomed offspring. Below: Maybe skip dessert? TV THE FALL OF THE HOUSE OF USHER ★★★★ FI NGERNAI LS OUT NOW (NETFLIX) / EPISODES VIEWED 8 OF 8 ★★ ★ ★ Mike Flanagan CAST Bruce Greenwood, Carla Gugino, Mary McDonnell, Carl Lumbly, Kate Siegel, Henry Thomas, Mark Hamill SHOWRUNNER Near the end of his life, Roderick Usher (Greenwood) recounts how his six children met their horrible, supernatural deaths. PLOT IMAGINE IF SUCCESSION were not a prestige drama but a daytime soap, and for some reason it had a Halloween episode. That’s the kind of tone you’re in for with The Fall Of The House Of Usher, Mike Flanagan’s bloody, OTT and highly entertaining take on Edgar Allan Poe. This is no reverent Poe adaptation; instead, it’s more an interpretation of his themes of selfishness and regret, used as the foundation for an entirely invented story. The Usher dynasty is dying. As we open, Roderick Usher (Bruce Greenwood), head of a multi-billion-dollar pharmaceutical empire, is burying the last of his six adult children. At the sparsely populated funeral, ravaged ghosts of the dead, seen only by Roderick, outnumber the living. Shortly after, exhausted by tragedy and terrible visions, Usher sits down with investigator C. Auguste Dupin (Carl Lumbly) to relate the stories of his offspring’s bizarre, horrible ends, and his own litany of awful crimes. Each child’s grim tale is loosely inspired by a Poe story. In ‘The Masque Of The Red Death’, the youngest Usher sibling plans an invite-only warehouse orgy, with very unsexy consequences. In ‘The Tell-Tale Heart’, a surgeon is haunted by her obsession with her work. Flanagan weaves them together so that each story feeds into the others, with an ever-changing supernatural figure (Carla Gugino) stalking through them all, testing each child’s morality and finding them wanting. It’s very smartly done, making for a cohesive epic rather than a disconnected anthology. After four series for Netflix, including The Haunting Of Hill House and Midnight Mass, Flanagan has really found his confident groove. He’s as adept as ever at creating a spooky mood, but his storytelling is defter than it’s been before. Past projects have had a bit of sentimentality about them, but Usher doesn’t allow itself huggy endings or nice guys to root for. Instead, it has the harder job of reckoning with apparently irredeemable people, asking what brought them here and how monsters are created. The answers are often interesting and complicated. The Ushers may not elicit much sympathy, but do (mostly) earn some understanding. Flanagan is assisted by a cast made up of regular collaborators, all well-versed in just how close to ridiculous to pitch their performances. Greenwood, who previously starred in Flanagan’s adaptation of Gerald’s Game and stepped in here after Frank Langella was dismissed during production, is excellent as the family patriarch, as charismatic as he is dreadful. This Poe reimagining marks Flanagan’s last Netflix series before he jumps to Amazon, and he’s certainly departing on a high. His work was nevermore impressive. OLLY RICHARDS V E R D I C T Before the House Of Usher comes crumbling down, Mike Flanagan builds a towering, dark-hearted horror story that’s horribly good fun. “Cut from the same cloth as Yorgos Lanthimos’ The Lobster, Christos Nikou’s sophomore feature earns its heartbreak through vulnerable, all-in performances from Jessie Buckley and Riz Ahmed.” ELLA KEMP EXPEND4BLES ★★ “In one of the most convoluted zingers of the year, Statham’s Christmas is likened to genital warts; like the STD, he is not welcome and refuses to go away. The observation could well be applied to The Expendables franchise.” IAN FREER FRASIER ★★ ★ ★ “Frasier is greyer now, and a little paunchier, but he’s lost none of his passion for pretension. As he proclaims, ‘I feel amalgamated with the hoi polloi,’ only a true grouch would deny that he is still delightful company.” NICK DE SEMLYEN CAT PERSON ★★ “Adapting a relatively uneventful short story was always going to be tricky, and despite some strong performances, Cat Person’s disastrous ending takes everything else down with it.” LAURA VENNING DOCTOR JEKYLL ★★ ★ “The hook is Eddie Izzard in diva outfits as Jekyll and Hyde, who look identical but have different personalities. Only Izzard could get a laugh with the line, ‘Crunchy nutty cornflakes, mmmm?’” KIM NEWMAN DECEMBER 2023 47
OF HE DID N’ T KNOW IT AT FIRST, BUT JA MES WAN’S AQUAMA N A N D TH E L O ST K I N G D O M WOULD BE THE DCEU’S FINAL FILM. T H E DIRECTOR TALKS NAVIGATING CHOPPY WATERS, AND GO ING FOR BROKE WITH HIS DRUMM ING OCTOPUS WORDS TOM ELLEN ▶ 48 MONTH 20232023 DECEMBER THE
DECEMBER MONTH 2023 49
OVER ICED TEA and tortilla chips at a Bel-Air hotel, James Wan is talking Empire through arguably the most significant scene in Aquaman. The one sequence, the director says, “that really cemented in people’s minds exactly what the film was all about.” Is Wan perhaps referring to the emotional moment when our titular hero, played by Jason Momoa, reunites with his long-lost mother Queen Atlanna (Nicole Kidman)? Or maybe the heart-thudding climax in which Momoa’s aquatic vigilante finally wields King Atlan’s legendary trident to become ruler of all seven seas? Guess again. In fact, he’s talking about a six-second shot of an octopus playing the bongos. “Yeah, Topo the octopus is pretty beloved from just that one tiny scene,” laughs Wan of the tentacular tub-thumper that launched a thousand GIFs upon Aquaman’s 2018 release. “I think when people saw that shot — an octopus playing the drums — they were like, ‘Okay — I get what this movie is. They’re embracing the absurdity of the comic books. They’re not afraid to just have fun.’” Five years ago, “fun” was precisely what the DC Extended Universe needed. 2013’s Man Of Steel had set the franchise’s bleakly realistic tone, channelling post-9/11 paranoia and showing us Superman handcuffed in interrogation rooms or brutally snapping enemies’ necks. Batman V Superman: Dawn Of Justice picked up the dark-and-dour baton and ran with it, alienating critics and audiences alike, and by the time the lumpen first iteration of Justice League arrived in 2017, there was already a sense that this particular extended universe was imploding. Then came Aquaman. When Wan’s movie surfaced, in a blaze of surrealist sub-aqua colour, it felt like a breath of fresh, erm, seawater. Largely unmoored from the previous DCEU outings, the movie shone 50 MONTH 20232023 DECEMBER a spotlight on Momoa’s hard-drinkin’ wisecrack-disseminator Arthur Curry and his spectacular sunken kingdom of Atlantis, its cities teeming with giant crabs, skyscrapersized krakens and cephalopod percussionists. The film was, as its director proudly states, “an old-school action adventure — a swashbuckling pirate movie”. It was big, bold and unapologetically silly — and audiences lapped it up. To this day, it remains the DCEU’s most commercially successful outing, having notched up $1.148 billion globally. On release, it seemed like a potential defibrillator for a flailing franchise. Five years later, its sequel arrives as that franchise’s final breath. The combined effects of a highprofile DC regime change and endless schedule rejigging means that Aquaman And The Lost Kingdom will now represent the DCEU’s closing chapter, ahead of new bosses James Gunn and Peter Safran relaunching the whole shebang as the ‘DCU’ next year. There have been reports about Lost Kingdom’s supposedly ‘troubled’ production — rumblings of costly reshoots, disgruntled actors, internal conflict bubbling away throughout the shifting studio dynamics. Yet amid all the gossip and uncertainty, Wan has remained focused on making this second film bigger, bolder and unapologetically sillier than its predecessor. How on Earth to achieve that after the eye-popping weirdness of the first Aquaman? A squid playing the xylophone? A cuttlefish on cowbell? A duck-billed platypus with a didgeridoo? We’ll get to all that. Right now, Wan is in an upbeat yet contemplative mood as he sips his iced tea in the LA mountain breeze. “I’ve been on this movie for four years now, and I’m so happy for it to come out,” he tells Empire. “In many ways I think it’s even more fun than the first one. But it’s been a long, exhausting process. It is definitely,” the director admits with a tired smile, “the noisiest movie I’ve ever worked on.” Both beneath the water — and above it. Fittingly for a pair of films set largely in a world of currents and tides, the first Aquaman was designed to flow directly into the second one. “It’s like they’re one big movie,” Wan explains. “If you watch them back-to-back, they roll right into each other.” At the end of the first film, Momoa’s parthuman-part-Atlantean hero has managed to defeat his nefarious half-brother Orm (Patrick Wilson) and officially become ‘Aquaman’ — ruler of the seven seas. “Arthur is a reluctant king, though,” Wan says. “He’s only taken the job because he’s trying to stop the Atlanteans attacking the surface world. Plus, the Atlanteans don’t trust him yet — they’re not sure if he’s on their side or the surface’s.” To make matters more stressful, as the sequel opens Arthur is enduring not just one
Clockwise from above: Making a splash: Jason Momoa returns as Aquaman; Director James Wan on set with Patrick Wilson (Orm); ‘Buddies’ Orm and Aquaman; Black Manta (Yahya Abdul-Mateen II) and his devastating weapon, the Black Trident; Orm with a Ray Harryhauseninspired Octobot; Black Manta is out for revenge. major life change but two. Having married his love interest from the first film — Atlantean princess Mera (Amber Heard) — Aquaman has now become a father. “Aquababy!” Wan chuckles. “We’re pulling a lot from the ’60s ‘Silver Age’ comics in this film. They had Arthur marrying Mera, and then the birth of ‘Aquababy’. Those early comics were really the adventures of Arthur and Mera.” While the first film was absolutely an Arthur-and-Mera adventure, the sequel reportedly sees Heard’s character make only a fleeting appearance. Indeed, her cameo in the first trailer is very much a blink-and-youmiss-it affair. In her very public court battle with ex-husband Johnny Depp last year, Heard claimed her role in Lost Kingdom was a “pareddown version” of what she was initially pitched, and that Warner Bros. “didn’t want to include her” following her divorce. “It’s fair that [Heard] said that [about the character being pared down],” says Wan, “because she wasn’t in my head as I was working on this movie. Actors don’t necessarily know what we [directors] behind the scenes are thinking about. But this was always my plan. From the start, I pitched that the first film would be a Romancing The Stone-type thing — an action-adventure romantic comedy — while the second would be an outright buddy comedy. I wanted to do Tango & Cash!” The unlikely ‘buddy’ stepping up for this underwater Tango & Cash (‘Tango & Splash’? Anyone?) is none other than the first movie’s antagonist, Arthur’s power-hungry half-sibling Orm, played by Wan’s frequent collaborator on his Insidious and Conjuring horror franchises, Patrick Wilson. Languishing in sub-aqua jail ever since the end of the original film, Orm is called on by Arthur when another returning villain, Black Manta (Yahya Abdul-Mateen II), re-emerges brandishing a powerful new weapon. “Jason plays Arthur larger-than-life; Patrick plays the straight man,” says Wan of the duo’s chemistry. “It’s not unlike what Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones did in Men In Black — like Tommy, ▶ Patrick plays it dry, but very funny.” DECEMBER MONTH 2023 51
As well as a new wingman, Arthur also has a new villain to bump heads with, in the form of Indya Moore’s Karshon. In the comics, Karshon begins life as an anthropomorphic shark — but any Suicide Squad fans wondering whether the DC universe really needs another one of those can rest easy. “This Karshon is not a shark character,” Wan notes. “It’s different to the comic books in that sense. One of the things we wanted to do, now that Arthur is king of Atlantis, is give him barriers within the political world. Karshon comes from the High Council, and is like a political roadblock for Arthur.” Roadblocks aside, Abdul-Mateen’s Black Manta is the sequel’s ur-Big Bad. He and Aquaman have unresolved business from the first film — the former holding the latter responsible for his father’s death. In the interim between films, our old pal Manta has happened upon the fabled ‘Black Trident’ — effectively the Mario Kart ‘Blue Shell’ of the ocean, gifting its wielder god-like powers. All of which spells bad news for Mr Curry. “In his quest to find ways to destroy Arthur, Black Manta... stumbles onto something,” Wan teases. And not just something. Somewhere. For those whose Atlantean geography is a tad rusty: a short recap. According to the comics’ lore, when Atlantis sank into the ocean several millennia ago, it broke off into seven separate kingdoms. In some of these kingdoms — such as Arthur’s Atlantis or Mera’s Xebel — the inhabitants have remained ostensibly human (albeit with the whole ability-to-breathe-underwater upgrade). In other realms, like The Brine or The Trench, the population has evolved into various races of cool-looking but not-overlyfriendly Lovecraftian sea monsters. And then there’s the Lost Kingdom. Referred to briefly in the first film as a colony that disappeared below the Sahara Desert when Atlantis first sank, this mysterious seventh dominion has remained uncharted for aeons. Until now. “This particular story allows us to explore that lost nation,” Wan says. And while Arthur and Orm’s new Thor/ Loki-esque dynamic gives the director the chance to inject some comedy into this sequel, the Lost Kingdom lets him fully embrace his first love. “There was an element of horror in the first film,” says the man responsible for the spine-chilling Saw and Conjuring universes. “But this second movie definitely has more of that.” Wan and his writer, David Leslie Johnson-McGoldrick, pored over “old-school sci-fi and horror” like 1965 Italian-Spanish shocker Planet Of The Vampires, and the work of stop-motion monster maestro Ray Harryhausen. “That became the design foundation,” the director says. “The Lost Kingdom has a very retro, ’60s horror look.” 52 DECEMBER 2023 Right: United front: Orm and Aquaman. Far right: Black Manta is all dressed up and ready for war. Case in point: Black Manta’s “lair” (Wan’s word — and a word that positively screams ‘’60s retro’), which is set deep in the Lost Kingdom, inside a refinery... inside a volcano. “That one’s less Harryhausen, more James Bond,” Wan chuckles. “Very Blofeld. One of my favourite sets was the interior of Black Manta’s hideout. We have this huge action set-piece where Arthur and Orm fight his henchmen, using the ‘Octobot’ — this mechanical squid thing. That was really fun to shoot.” If you’re wondering whether Wan is still “embracing the absurdity”, there’s your answer. Last time it was drumming octopi; this time, mechanical squid in volcanic lairs. And speaking of which — after his showstealing cameo in the first film, Topo the “THIS FILM IS AN OUTRIGHT BUDDY COMEDY. I WANTED TO DO TANGO & CASH!” JAMES WAN bongo-slapping octopus is also back for the second round. “Topo is a real character in this one!” Wan laughs. “In the comics, he’s a big part of Arthur’s life — a sidekick, pet, friend. So, we’re leaning into that. I love the relationship Jason has built with this octopus. It was really fun to watch him ‘act’ with Topo. Sometimes [since Topo is a CG character] we would have an actor standing in by ‘muppeting’ a goofy stick puppet — watching Jason play off that was so funny. I think people are going to enjoy Arthur and Topo’s relationship.” It’s when Wan is riffing on topics like this — the gleeful absurdity of “crafting these characters, creating these worlds” — that he especially comes to life. Growing up in Malaysia and then Australia, he spent his childhood immersed in the fantastical undersea tales of Jules Verne and H.P. Lovecraft, so the chance to construct his own sunken societies has been a blast — even if most of that construction was done via blue-screen. “I’m a big fan of practical effects, and if I could practically build an underwater kingdom then I would fucking do it!” he laughs. “Unfortunately, it’s not realistic. But, still, this really was a fun shoot. Everyone came in already knowing the tone, so it was a much easier film to make than the first one.” If getting the film in the can was fun and easy, though, getting it out into the world would be anything but. “Like living in a house that’s being renovated” is how Wan has described the process of completing Aquaman And The Lost Kingdom during what has been a highly uncertain past year at DC HQ. Ever since October 2022, when James Gunn and Peter Safran were announced as co-chairs of the newly formed DC Studios — scrapping the existing DCEU for a rebooted ‘DCU’ — rumours have been circling about the effect on Wan’s sequel. There have been reports of studio interference, extensive reshoots and schedule shuffling; all of which appear to have conspired to make Lost Kingdom something Wan could never have predicted when he was shooting it — the final film in the DCEU franchise. “I’ve had to learn to be more Zen in dealing with all the noise around me, for sure,” Wan says today, drawing lengthily on his iced tea. “I’m a pretty private person. I don’t get on social media and have fights, but it’s difficult because this narrative has emerged that is not the reality. The noise is fun to write about, and it gets clicks, but people don’t know the truth.”
Left, top to bottom: Momoa and Wan ponder their progress on set; Aquaman with his prized magical weapon, the Gold Trident; Rider on the Storm: Aquaman on his trusty sea horse, plus ride-or-die pal Topo the octopus. So, Gunn and Safran weren’t looking over the director’s shoulder at points, making sure that what he — and Arthur Curry — were doing fit into their new plan? “Look, I’m a collaborative filmmaker — I welcome people’s thoughts and opinions,” Wan says, diplomatically. “But ultimately, I feel I have more than proven myself. So, it was like: ‘This is the movie I want to make.’” Part of the reason he was able to steer clear of any major-scale studio tinkering is that the Aquaman universe has always existed largely in its own space. “I’m so glad I didn’t hook the first film into the bigger DC universe,” Wan says. “My feeling was: we already have so many characters in this world, why bring others in to complicate it? With the sequel, too, it didn’t matter if it was [under] the new [DC] regime or the old one: I was just making my own movie.” As to the reshoot rumours, he says, “We probably did seven or eight days — which is nothing for a movie of this size. It was just spread out because it’s so hard to get your actors back once you’ve finished the initial shoot.” He also points to the strange perception, in some corners of the media, that reshoots must be a negative thing. “I built an entire franchise from a reshoot!” he says of The Nun, his horror juggernaut that has grossed $550 million and counting, and whose titular antagonist was born entirely in last-minute additional photography on The Conjuring 2. “I’m not the kind of person that says, ‘This movie has to turn out exactly how I planned it on day one.’ Your art will never be organic if you’re locked into that mentality.” One rumour there is truth in, though, is that additional scenes featuring Batman were shot for Lost Kingdom. Says Wan, “I was asked to look at Batman stuff during that point where we weren’t sure which movie would come out first — ours or The Flash [in which various Dark Knights pop up, played by Michael Keaton, Ben Affleck and George Clooney]. So, yes — I did shoot Batman scenes.” Can we ask which particular Batman these scenes featured? “I’m going to say, ‘No comment,’ on that,” Wan smiles. He’s remaining equally tight-lipped as to whether these scenes may still surface in the film. But signs point to, ‘Probably not’: “All I’ll say is those scenes were just to have something in the bank in case we needed to explain time continuity if we came out first. But it ended ▶ DECEMBER 2023 53
up with Lost Kingdom coming after The Flash.” So with Lost Kingdom now the final official DCEU film, how does Wan feel about ending this particular slice of comic-bookmovie history? “Ours is the last movie designed under this umbrella, so in that sense we are closing it out,” he shrugs. “But it’s funny... In the comic-book world, nothing ever feels closed. Look how many actors have played Batman. It’s always just the next iteration.” All of which is to say that Wan’s Atlantean adventures may not be over just yet. “I haven’t directed a third movie [in a series] before, so I’d be open to doing another [Aquaman] if I got the same freedom I’ve had on these first two. I’m not sure what direction [Gunn and Safran] are going in, though, so who knows?” He pops a chip in his mouth and grins. “I’ve learned to never say never.” Of course, even if Aquaman — and Wan — do wind up featuring in Gunn and Safran’s DCU masterplan, it’s not certain the director’s schedule would allow it. The man’s fire is currently chock-full of irons — two major horror franchises bulldozing the box office (Saw and The Conjuring), not to mention a “passion project” adaptation of Lovecraft’s The Call Of Cthulhu, which he and Johnson-McGoldrick have been “quietly working on for two years, just for ourselves”. And there’s much-hyped killer doll sequel M3GAN 2.0, on which Wan will return as producer. “It’s early yet, but M3GAN is coming back in a big way,” he teases. “The first film came out just at the right time [when concerns about AI were mounting], and we’re definitely leaning into that on the next one. We’re exploring the AI universe even further.” Also on the horizon is the merger between Wan’s Atomic Monster production company and fellow horror stalwart Jason Blum’s Blumhouse. The deal is, Wan says, “getting there slowly — we’re dotting the i’s and crossing the t’s. The landscape is shifting so rapidly in our industry that it felt right to combine our strengths. It allows me to grow my company, do things I’m not yet big enough to do on my own — like video-games and other areas of multimedia. We’re really excited.” Rightly so — the future looks bright. At present, though, Wan is just elated that his Lost Kingdom is finally ready to be discovered. As we meet in LA, the first trailer has just landed, and the director is “so happy that people are reacting to the film itself rather than the noise around it. That’s the biggest thing I’ve learned from this experience,” he adds. “To filter out the negativity and focus on the film. Because that’s what will live on — in 20 years, no-one will remember the noise. Only the movie.” And the bongo-playing octopus. AQUAMAN AND THE LOST KINGDOM IS IN CINEMAS FROM 20 DECEMBER 54 DECEMBER 2023 1 2 SEA WORLD VIA SOME EXCLUSIVE CONCEPT ART, THE FILM’S DESIGN TEAM TAKE US ON AN ATL ANTEAN DEEP DIVE▶ 1 THE SEAHORSE A Storm is a-coming. Notably, the Aquaman comic fan-favourite of the same name — a giant seahorse, the hero’s noble steed. “In [Lost Kingdom], Storm gets saved by Arthur and becomes his loyal friend,” says production designer Bill Brzeski. The creation of this 25-foot sub-aqua sidekick required some complex CG wizardry. “When he leaps out of the water, Storm is in his albino, white state,” explains VFX supervisor Nick Davis. “But underwater, he turns this beautiful, bioluminescent blue — Aquaman’s light source.” There was also the issue of how Momoa would perch on Storm. “If he sat too upright he looked like he was on a merry-goround,” laughs Davis. “We had to get that balance to make him look natural — and suitably kingly.”
3 3 THE NIGHT MARKET Located in an area of Atlantis we’ve not seen before, the spectacular Night Market is based on the ‘floating market’ of Bangkok, and “has these beautiful jellyfish ‘lights’ strung between the stalls,” says Davis. It’s also the setting for one of the movie’s most eye-popping action sequences. “There’s a scene with Aquaman chasing Black Manta through the whole city,” explains Brzeski. “We went back to classic car chases from movies like Bullitt or The French Connection and thought: ‘How would you do that underwater?’” As well as thundering through the Night Market, this chase will also lead us through Atlantis’ parks, freeways and even the “undersea version of Times Square.” Hold on tight. 4 THE OCTOBOTS Director James Wan cites the work of specialeffects maestro Ray Harryhausen as a big influence on the look of the Lost Kingdom. And nowhere is the Kingdom’s tech more Harryhausen-esque than the aforementioned Octobots. “We wanted them to look retro and simplistic,” says Davis of the tentacled machines. “Whining motors and belching fumes — very muscular, solid and steampunk. Underwater they act like submarines, on land they walk around like spiders. Oh, and they have machine guns too.” These multi-purpose bullet-spraying beasts are an original creation. “They aren’t from the comics,” says Brzeski. Bring on the eightlegged robo-freaks. 2 THE WHALE HARBOUR Lost Kingdom will show us “much more of the [Atlanteans’] day-to-day lives”, says Davis. And since your average Atlantean doesn’t possess Arthur Curry’s underwater hyperspeed, they require another method of navigating their hometown. Namely: the local whale service. “The Whale Harbour is the public-transport hub,” continues Davis. “Whales are parked up, loaded, unloaded — it’s like any big-city train station.” Look closely at this image, and you’ll see two yellow, squid-like machines weaving nefariously through the ‘parked-up’ whales: “Black Manta breaks into Atlantis to steal something,” Brzeski teases. “Those Octobots are pushing along a [vessel] full of... let’s just say, stuff you don’t want in the ocean.” Exactly what, we’ll have to wait and see. 4 DECEMBER 2023 55
C A U G H T 56 I N PRISCILLA PAINTS A PORTRAIT OF A LONELY YOUNG WOMAN IN AN ABUSIVE DECEMBER 2023
A T R A P WORDS CHRISTINA NEWLAND RELATIONSHIP. DIRECTOR SOFIA COPPOLA TAKES US BEHIND THE CURTAIN DECEMBER 2023 57
walks down her high-school hallway. In languid slow-motion, she’s soundtracked to Tommy James & the Shondells’ sinuous, seductively repetitive ‘Crimson And Clover’. This young girl is not yet the famous wife known as Priscilla Presley, signified by the lacquered black beehive and ’60s cat eyeliner: she has lighter brown hair, swept to one side, and she looks her age, a whole 15, for one thing. But she has met — and kissed — Elvis Aaron Presley. Ergo the besotted smile and snagged-a-dreamboat stare. Sofia Coppola knows a thing or two about the interior daydreams and external trappings of girlhood. From her debut feature The Virgin Suicides through to Lost In Translation and Marie Antoinette, her films are often about teenage girls — or teen girls trapped in women’s 58 DECEMBER 2023 P RESLEY WAS AN EXECUTIVE producer on the film, convening with Coppola often on the screen depiction of her. “She still looks on this as the great love of her life,” says the director. “There are a lot of loving aspects there for her in their story, among the other turbulence.” Combining Coppola’s aims with depicting the real life of a living person, though, was a considerable task. “It was a challenge for me to balance my creative freedom and expression with being respectful of how [Priscilla] wanted her story to be told. I wanted her to feel comfortable and respected. And at the same point, I wanted to be sure I was expressing whatever I connected to. In the end, [watching the film] she said she felt she was watching her life, so I felt really glad to be able to do both.” Finding an actor to bring that life to the screen was a daunting task. The 25-year-old Cailee Spaeny, Coppola says, was perfect. “We had to find someone believable to play 14 to 29 with accuracy. And Cailee has the talent to show her emotional state on her face without doing much. Her variability as an actress can convey so Sabrina Lantos/MACK Books, Sofia Coppola/MACK Books Priscilla Beaulieu bodies — who spend time in isolation, consumed by loneliness and fantasy. “When I first read her story, I thought it would be juicy and interesting,” Coppola tells Empire of reading Priscilla Presley’s 1985 memoir Elvis & Me. “She was such a glamorous figure. But it surprised me how deep and touching it was. I didn’t think I could relate to it, but she really revealed her emotional experiences and I was surprised to learn it has everything in it that a girl goes through, just in a heightened way. She talked about her first kiss, the first time in a boy’s bedroom, or becoming a mother in ways that were universal.” Priscilla Presley’s story was one of girlhood fantasy which bled into something far more toxic — a relationship with a famous man a decade her senior who whisked her from her parents into secluded luxury, and increasingly controlled her every move. Yet it also details the complex pleasures and appeal of the situation. “It has so much to do with romantic ideas and the fairy tale that turns into something else,” says Coppola. “I wanted to get her point of view of how it was romantic. Until it wasn’t.”
Clockwise from top left: Burning love — Cailee Spaeny as Priscilla and Jacob Elordi as Elvis; The actors on set; Priscilla’s teen doodlings, as imagined for the screen; Director Sofia Coppola outside the Graceland gates. much; you say one little thing and her whole face would change.” It’s a role that requires an actor to have a certain amount of passivity, but to react beneath that doll-like exterior. It wouldn’t have been possible to portray Priscilla without letting us into Elvis’ world too. That required careful balancing. “I think it’s interesting to have the flip side, looking at Priscilla’s perspective on the same experience,” says Coppola. “But I do have sympathy for him, and an understanding where his frustrations and vulnerabilities came from. And it really was a different time, of how a macho man was supposed to act, the roles of women, everything.” The film also provides an unintended riposte to the adoring portrait of a flashier Elvis in Baz Luhrmann’s biopic last year: Coppola delves into the private Elvis, focusing not on his career trajectory so much as his own vulnerabilities. “No-one looks like Elvis. He was such a beauty,” explains Coppola of her search for an actor. “But Jacob [Elordi] has the charisma and the kind of animal magnetism I imagine Elvis having [had]. That was so important, because ❯ you have to fall in love with him the way that DECEMBER 2023 59
she did, to be able to kind of put up with his darker side and see he was also lovable and vulnerable. I knew that Jacob could also convey sensitivity and that vulnerability.” This casting dynamic works emotionally and physically: the 6’ 5” Elordi towers over the petite Spaeny, a manifestation of Elvis’ long shadow of charisma over her and others in any environment. That power, combined with a raw sexiness, is not always put to good use: Elordi’s Elvis is both ineffably charming and prone to adultery, dark moods, tantrums, and bullying. Perhaps it wasn’t hugely surprising, then, that the famously protective Presley estate did not approve of the less-than-hagiographic depiction of The King, refusing Coppola access to use any of his music. Thus ‘Crimson And Clover’, and not, say, ‘Heartbreak Hotel’. “I always knew that we might not get permission,” Coppola says. “So I wasn’t counting on it. I did have a couple of Elvis songs that I wanted to use that we weren’t able to, but the creative opportunity to work around it was interesting.” Coppola’s husband, Thomas Mars, and his band Phoenix worked on the arrangements for the film’s soundtrack instead, and as she points out, taking a more glancing approach to Elvis’ musical career only further suited Coppola’s focus on Priscilla’s cloistered world. “I didn’t want it to be too much about performance, but to just show, in an impressionistic way, the sense that he has that whole other life outside.” And then there’s the aesthetic — as her husband becomes increasingly volatile and bombastic on and off stage, Coppola wanted to contrast that with Priscilla’s soft, cosseted domestic world. P RISCILLA GOES IN FOR THE KILL right at the start: from the very first frame, we see her on a plush-pink shag rug, applying delicately inky liquid liner, a cloud of hairspray, painted fingernails: the trappings of glamour that the real woman would be both enthralled and perhaps entrapped by for much of her life. Elvis was finicky and particular with his young partner, about what she wore and how she appeared, fashioning her into his own personal ideal. Costuming and cosmetics were not just key to Priscilla’s idea of herself, but also to Coppola’s nuanced mix of the pains and the pleasures of femininity. “It’s such a big part of her persona, all these images of her from her different phases,” says Coppola. “So they were our key, how we worked out what stage she was at. There are some really heightened ones in the ’60s, with the black hair and eyeliner. And then in the ’70s, she’s more natural, kind of coming back closer to her original look. So we were trying to show these different stages based on all the photos of her. Hopefully you see her evolution.” In one memorable sequence, Priscilla lovingly applies her false eyelashes while she’s in labour before leaving to go to the hospital, 60 DECEMBER 2023 entering the building in an impeccable get-up, with go-go-boots. We see no childbirth, no physical struggle, only the camera-ready emergence of the couple from the hospital with baby Lisa Marie, and Priscilla looking lovely in a pink suit. The film’s implication about obsession with appearance is two-fold — both material pleasure and dangerous pressure. “I loved their commitment to dressing up,” explains Coppola. “Priscilla said Elvis would never come downstairs without a full outfit, matching shoes. They were so committed to their look.” She points out the film’s shopping sequence, in which Elvis and his all-male underlings watch as a teenage Priscilla tries on a bevy of expensive clothes in a boutique. “There’s an element of the fun he’s showing her, and all this glamour she doesn’t know about. But then, there’s this pressure on her to be his ideal woman. Priscilla told me that she didn’t even know what her taste was until after she left him. Then she could figure out her taste outside of his.” Coppola’s film is that rare combination of form and content in perfect lockstep. She slows and speeds up the very rhythm of her editing and sound when Elvis is — well — in the building. “The sound is different. We have all this energy and light when he’s around, and when he’s not around there’s a kind of stillness,” she explains. The way a teenage girl lights up around the object of her affections — never mind if that object is Elvis Presley himself — is imitated
by the filmmaking, sweeping us along on the dreamy sighs, and then the crushing loneliness, of its protagonist. P RISCILLA IS ABOUT GIRLHOOD romantic fantasies and toxic macho reality. About the ways we fall into unhealthy dynamics in relationships, and how women try to survive them. “I suppose with my kids’ generation, this might be less so, but I was raised with that idea of, ‘What do men like?’” says Coppola. “I remember in my early twenties, having a crush on a guy, and part of it was just wanting to not have to figure out my own identity. I could just be with them in their world.” Given the time period, there was no contemporary vocabulary to describe some of the worst experiences of Priscilla’s marriage to Elvis. Today, we might describe it as degrees of grooming, gaslighting, and abuse. But the fact that this era did not have terminology for it also gives a certain nuance to the situation. “I think we can all learn from the generation before ours and what it was like,” says Coppola. “And what Clockwise from top left: Idol dreams: the teenage Priscilla in her bedroom; Spaeny in the make-up trailer; Enjoying the ’68 Comeback Special with Elvis and his pals; Spaeny rocks one of Presley’s iconic looks; Dedicated follower of fashion: Priscilla was committed to getting her outfits just right. would you do in that situation? I was trying to show how she experienced it without judgement or putting today’s lens on it. I wanted, visually and emotionally, for people to put themselves in her shoes.” From Priscilla’s time in high school in Memphis — where everyone knew who her boyfriend was — to motherhood in the carefully patrolled Graceland, she was both surveilled and left curiously lonely by the conditions around her. Coppola can relate. “I know what it’s like to be the new kid at school and to have people looking at you. Or, when she has a baby, and the guys go off to work, and they’re gonna have fun and get to do their work. And she’s expected to stay home with the baby. I think so many of us will relate to that moment where you’re like: ‘Wait, I’m supposed to stay here?’ There are stages of womanhood that are universal.” The idea of Priscilla’s identity melding into her husband’s, or her lack of sense of self, is indicated throughout the film. “I was interested in looking at my mother’s generation and how much things have changed — and it wasn’t that long ago. But then, some things haven’t changed,” says Coppola. She does not elaborate, but the passing mention of her mother can’t help but to call to mind her parents: certainly a case of handling a marriage to a famous and lauded man, if ever there was one. Real person though Priscilla may be, her screen iteration is very much a Coppola protagonist. Alienated even from herself, young and unformed until an identity is foisted upon her by the intoxicating romance she finds herself in, Priscilla is another girl in a gilded cage in the style of Marie Antoinette. Here, though, Coppola’s long fascination with suspended girlhood is unfurled: in 1972, Priscilla left Elvis, aged only 29, and began her delayed onset into independent womanhood. In spite of the darkness, isolation and romantic fervour of her past, Priscilla has a beautiful note of optimism to it. “I was always going to tell the story of her arriving [at] and her leaving Graceland. We know she is going to find herself in a new chapter of her life. It was about their relationship that she rode through and left, and I knew that I wanted to show her leaving Graceland and the emotion of that,” Coppola explains of where she leaves Priscilla. “I was really impressed with her strength, too, because it was really hard for a woman with no income to leave a powerful man at that time. She had the inner sense and strength to know she had to find her own identity.” That’s a perfect summary of her film’s pampered viewpoint from within — and without — the palatial marital home. Priscilla captures both the despair and the beauty of womanhood’s travails and the journey to self-realisation. If Sofia Coppola’s work has long explored the tension between the exterior and interior lives of women, Priscilla not only languishes in that grey area, but finds hope there too. PRISCILLA IS IN CINEMAS FROM 26 DECEMBER DECEMBER 2023 61
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OU DIE, AND YOU DON’T notice that you’re dying.” Nando Parrado remembers very little of the plane crash that changed his life on 13 October 1972, but he does remember that. As the airplane — Uruguayan Air Force Flight 571 — that was carrying him, his mother, his sister, his teammates in the Old Christians Club rugby union team, and several other passengers and crew members, suddenly found itself struggling for speed and altitude in the Argentinian section of the Andes, Parrado found himself confronting his mortality. “It’s so fast,” he says. “From the moment I realised that there was something wrong to the moment it crashed, it was maybe two seconds, three seconds. It’s incredible how many things you can record on your mind in the last tenth of a second of your life. There was this huge metallic sound, and instantly, everything went black. I died.” Of course, Parrado didn’t die. He should have — he had a fractured skull and lay in a coma for four days before awaking to find that the crash had killed his mother and his two best friends, and his sister was dying. But 51 years later, he is telling Empire the incredible story of how he, and 15 other passengers — his team-mates, his brothers — not only survived the disaster that day, and later the incredibly inhospitable frozen wasteland that greeted them, the avalanches that loomed out of nowhere to smother unsuspecting survivors, and the aching hunger that threatened to kill them all until they made a choice that helped them keep alive. They somehow found the will and the strength to find a way out after 72 days, long after the world had given up on them. Theirs is a story that has entered into legend. It is a story J.A. Bayona has been waiting over a decade to tell. It is a story that is, quite frankly, impossible. WHEN BAYONA FIRST read Pablo Vierci’s book, La Sociedad De La Nieve (Society Of The Snow), which tells the story of the crash and its aftermath via testimonials from the 16 survivors, all of whom knew Vierci as kids, something occurred to him. “In the first or second chapter, there was this long paragraph where you can read the word ‘impossible’ seven times,” the director tells Empire. From that, Bayona took two things. First, a name for the movie he was then working on — another tale of survival against all the odds, this time focused on a family’s attempts to stay alive after the Boxing Day tsunami of 2004. “I thought, ‘This is a perfect title,’” he says of the film that became The Impossible. “I found myself reading sections of the book to the actors, to Naomi Watts and Tom Holland.” The other was a desire to turn Vierci’s book into a movie, although it proved a difficult nut to crack, partially due to the scale of Bayona’s vision, 64 DECEMBER 2023 partially due to his desire to shoot it in Spanish. “It took us ten years to find the financing,” he says. “Finally Netflix were able to let us shoot the film the way we wanted to shoot it: grand-scale, Spanish-speaking, with unknown actors.” During that decade, Bayona developed his reputation as a director capable of marrying spectacle and high stakes with an emotional kick that never feels sentimental or mawkish, on A Monster Calls, Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom, and The Lord Of The Rings: The Rings Of Power. All of those, to an extent, are concerned with the concept of the impossible, and with invoking a feeling he has had ever since he saw Richard Donner’s Superman as a kid. “It’s very difficult to separate cinema from that sense of awe that I had when I saw Superman flying,” he explains. “And it doesn’t matter if it’s a fantasy or a horror, or if it’s a true story; there’s a sense of awe in seeing your life turned upside down in one second. I’m not that attracted to disaster movies in terms of the disaster itself, but in terms of the reaction of the characters to it.” If the story of Flight 571 seems familiar, it’s because it’s been well-documented over the years, most famously in Frank Marshall’s 1993 movie Alive, in which Ethan Hawke played Nando Parrado (who also acted as the film’s technical advisor). The same Frank Marshall who produced Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom for Bayona. “Frank was very nice to us,” says Bayona. “He said, ‘These [the survivors] are great people. You’re gonna have the time of your life.’” Society Of The Snow is not a remake of Alive. While Bayona has respect for Marshall and his movie, he was very keen to cover new ground. “We ended up recording 600 hours of material,”
he says. “And we kept rewriting the story in editorial because it wasn’t just about telling the facts. Actually, every time we got to a scene that I saw in other movies, I was rejecting it because it felt familiar to me.” One way of breaking new ground was shifting the focus from the likes of Parrado and other characters who were heavily featured in Marshall’s movie, to Numa Turcatti (Enzo Vogrincic), a young legal student who was, essentially, just one of the background players in Alive. “The moment I knew how to tell the story was when I knew that Numa was going to be the narrator,” says Bayona. “Numa comes from a very traditional family, and to me it was all about this story. It’s all about getting into that plane and comprehending, understanding and forgiving what they did. And that forgiveness had to come from the inside.” Clockwise from main: Shellshocked: the cast amid the recreated wreckage of doomed Flight 571; Enzo Vogrincic as the film’s heart and soul, Numa Turcatti; Director J.A. Bayona shouts instructions on the inhospitable, snow-covered location; Desperately seeking help. SO, WHAT DID the survivors do that invoked the very concept of forgiveness? Well, one aspect of their experience is why this story continues to fascinate, enthrall and even appal. With their meagre supplies quickly gone, the survivors quickly found themselves with no food and, thanks to their surroundings, no means of obtaining any. As their bodies began to consume themselves in order to try to meet a caloric quota exacerbated by the high altitude, starvation loomed. Eventually, the survivors decided to stay alive — barely — by eating the flesh of their deceased friends and family. For many of the passengers, who were Roman Catholic and deeply religious, it was the most awful, most sacrilegious, most unforgivable choice. But in the end, it wasn’t a choice at all. When rules no longer apply, you write new ones that do. “I can assure you that in a situation like this, anybody who reads this magazine would have done the same thing,” says Nando Parrado. “It was like being on Venus, or Mars, or the moon. There was nothing. Absolutely nothing. We didn’t have any food. Not knowing when you’re going to eat again, and there’s no food, is the worst fear that a human being can have.” In the wrong hands, a lurid, sensationalist sheen could be applied to this story — see DECEMBER 2023 ❯ 65
Yellowjackets, which was ‘inspired’ by the crash and its consequent cannibalism — but that was never Bayona’s intention. “It’s about fitting the audience into the plane and making them understand that there was no other choice,” he says. “The audience needs to be there to understand, and needs to accept and be part of the ritual.” Bayona was intrigued by the implications, physical, emotional, psychological and spiritual, of the decision taken not just by the survivors, but in certain cases by the dying, who gave their permission for their friends to use their bodies in order to stay alive as long as they could. “When you know you’re not going to make it, it gives you the freedom to give yourself to the other ones,” he posits. “And that’s what they did. It’s so extreme — that level of emotion in that decision is so transcendental that it’s never really been on the screen.” Impossible, has also popped by, and is embraced warmly by Bayona and his producing partner, Belén Atienza. For them, Belón is something of a good-luck charm, and her presence is a welcome one as the production enters its final week with the shooting of the plane crash. Empire watches as Bayona’s cast file onto an airplane set, perched on a gimbal, which is then — over the next hour or so — shunted and shaken around. Later, the crash itself calls for special-effects and stunt people. In Bayona’s video village, Empire looks on as one actor has her head repeatedly smashed into the seat in front of her (all perfectly safely, of course). It’s all harrowing to watch; less so, strangely, to act. “It was like being in a theme park,” laughs Enzo Vogrincic later. “We barely had to act because the plane was moving so much. We filmed that scene right at the end, having gone through the difficult parts, of becoming very thin, of going hungry, of NOVEMBER 2022, AND Empire has flown to Madrid to visit Bayona on set, just outside the city in a giant studio Netflix has custom-built to house its Spanish-language output. We’re not the only visitors on set that day — María Belón, the real-life model for Naomi Watts in The Clockwise from top left: Cinematographer Pedro Luque and Bayona frame an intense close-up on Vogrincic; Numa and fellow passenger Roberto Canessa (Matias Recalt); Gazing out at their terrifying mountainous trap; Subdued downtime at the crash site. 66 DECEMBER 2023 feeling extreme cold. So this was just really fun.” Vogrincic isn’t kidding about the previous months of the shoot (at over 100 shooting days, it was the longest of Bayona’s career). A lot of directors would simply have set up shop on a nice, warm, safe soundstage. Not Bayona. For him, veracity was incredibly important. He wanted a sense of claustrophobia (from that would come a sense of community and camaraderie as the survivors formed the society of the snow), and a sense of cold that could only come from recreating the aftermath of the crash on an actual mountain. Which is how he, Vogrincic and the other members of the cast and crew found themselves shooting the film chronologically (to allow for realistic weight loss, with their diets supervised rigidly by nutritionists), shuttling between three sets in a Sierra Nevada ski resort on which the devastated fuselage of Flight 571 had been
meticulously recreated. One of them was outside, at high altitude, roughly 10,000 feet up. “Every day we had to carry the whole crew up there,” says Atienza. “It was very slow, and there was always a little bit of uncertainty about shooting up there. If there were winds above a certain speed you couldn’t go up there. But that was super important for J.A. — that was an obsession, actually, that the conditions that everyone was working in were similar to what was felt there [on the mountain]. And the actors had a really hard time with that.” They weren’t alone in feeling it. Bayona’s quest for authenticity took him, before filming began, to the crash site itself. “I wanted to know what it was [like] to sleep there,” he says. “Nothing will prepare you for the height of those mountains, the sense of loneliness. There’s not a single thing alive up there. I had to go there in order to know what I had to reproduce in Spain.” It wasn’t to be his only visit — at the start of production, he went back there, with a skeleton crew and, crucially, Vogrincic, to film a scene where Numa has a moment of reflection out there in the bleak, beautiful valley of desolation. “I was filmed walking alone in the Andes as a helicopter filmed me. I felt like Tom Cruise,” Vogrincic laughs. “We were there for two nights and then we woke up in the morning with everything frozen. But that scene for me was like a gift. It was wonderful.” JUNE 2023, AND Bayona is as far away from that godforsaken place as it’s possible to get. He’s in the control room in Abbey Road’s Studio One, where the film’s composer, Michael Giacchino, has Zoomed in (he’s getting married in a week in LA, and so can’t be in London) to oversee recording of the score by a handful of players (“Even I couldn’t go up that mountain with my full orchestra,” laughs Giacchino later). “Michael is a fantastic storyteller,” says Bayona. “He used a chord that felt sometimes like a horror film. But the feeling for the survivors was fear. Fear of not going back, fear of not having anything to eat, and Michael understood that.” As with so much about this story, a fine line has to be trod with the score. A wrong decision could easily lead to a schmaltz overload. “It’s about listening to the movie, really,” says Giacchino. “But it was really emotional writing music to these moments. I found myself, even as I’m writing, crying, because you always want to put yourself in the position of the people you’re writing for. You’re forced to embody those awful, awful feelings, but it’s the only way, I feel, to get to that truth.” Today, though, catharsis is near. It is no spoiler to say that, eventually, the authorities were alerted and a rescue mounted. And the sequence that is being scored today shows that. We won’t go into detail, save to note one incredible — maybe even seemingly impossible — thing. During the sequence, when news reaches Montevideo that some of the passengers are still alive, one man makes a phone call and starts repeating the names of the survivors. When he reaches one — Carlitos Páez — he pauses briefly and says, “mi hijo”: Spanish for “my son”. That man was Uruguayan artist Carlos Páez Vilaró, the father of Carlos ‘Carlitos’ Páez Rodriguez. And when Bayona was looking for someone to play him, he didn’t have to look very far. “Carlos Páez had a very famous face,” explains Bayona. “I was thinking, ‘How can I find somebody that looks like Carlos Páez?’ So I asked Carlitos, ‘Would you mind playing your father?’ So he’s repeating his own name on that list.” In terms of survivor involvement, that was as intense as it got. Nando Parrado spoke to the actor playing him (Agustín Pardella), and was in frequent contact with Bayona, but otherwise didn’t wish to visit the set. “I didn’t want to go to the shooting of the movie in the mountains,” he says. “I had enough in my life of snow and mountains.” But he is more than happy with the finished film, which he has seen three times. “People will now understand what we went through,’ he says. “And when I saw the film for the first time, I went back to that place, to the fuselage and to the avalanche. For the first time in 50 years I recalled every single second and minute I spent there.” For years, the accident and its aftermath have been referred to as either the ‘Tragedia de los Andes’ or ‘Milagro de los Andes’. And that question — tragedy or miracle — is posed throughout Bayona’s deeply felt depiction of events. Parrado — perhaps better placed than anyone bar his comrades to speak on such matters — has his viewpoint. It’s neither. It’s both. It’s everything in-between. “I’m more practical,” he says. “I pray like everybody, but if you pray and you are sitting down, nothing happens.” Now, half a century on from the moment he heard a huge metallic sound and his life changed, he has more than come to terms with what happened on that mountain. “I don’t live with the story every day,” he says. “I have had a fantastic life. When I came back I said, ‘I’m going to have a life. I am so happy to be alive.’” And then the man who said, “When you die, you don’t notice that you’re dying,” echoes that statement in the most beautiful and profound way. “When you are happy,” he says, “you don’t realise that you are happy. I’m happy that I’m alive.” SOCIETY OF THE SNOW IS IN CINEMAS IN DECEMBER AND ON NETFLIX FROM 4 JANUARY DECEMBER 2023 67
AS PADDINGTON’S PAUL KING SPRINKLES HIS MAGIC ON WONKA, HE REVEALS 68 DECEMBER 2023
WORDS CHRIS HEWITT THE SECRET INGREDIENTS HE’S USED TO WHIP UP A CHOCOLATEY CONFECTION DECEMBER 2023 69
ilm directors and chocolatiers have a lot in common. And not just because we need them to have a lot in common in order to make this intro work. Both are in charge of incredibly complex confections, where the slightest misjudgment — a dash too much sugar here, a touch too much bitterness there — can render the whole damn thing indigestible. So, when Paul King — director of both Paddington movies — took on the task of bringing Roald Dahl’s Willy Wonka back to the big screen in a prequel called, simply, Wonka, he had to blend his vital ingredients just so. Starting with… THE HEART OF A BEAR Not literally, of course. That would be awful. Especially when the bear in question is the kindest, gentlest, noblest ursine to ever don a duffel coat. King was, in fact, putting the finishing touches to Paddington 2 in 2017 when his producer, David Heyman, whispered sweet nothings in his ear. “We had just done our last visual-effects review,” recalls King. “We got into a taxi together and he went, ‘I do have a vague idea for something next.’” That was, of course, Wonka, the origin story of the eccentric recluse who, in Dahl’s original novel, Charlie And The Chocolate Factory, and Mel Stuart’s 1971 classic film, Willy Wonka & The Chocolate Factory, was renowned as the world’s greatest chocolatier, despite being several wafers shy of a Kit-Kat. It had been quietly in development at Warner Bros. almost since Tim Burton’s Charlie And The Chocolate Factory (2005), in which Johnny Depp’s Wonka was decidedly wonky. Yet it had never quite picked up the golden ticket. Perhaps there was inherent scepticism about a prequel filling in the blanks 70 DECEMBER 2023 Clockwise from above: Pile in! Willy Wonka’s chocolate dream is a go; The eccentric confectioner (Timothée Chalamet) and young sidekick Noodle (Calah Lane) channel Up; Soaring above the rooftops; Olivia Colman embraces her inner villain as Mrs Scrubitt. of an unpredictable character who, it could be argued, worked precisely because we knew little about him. If King ever felt that way, it was only fleeting. “When David said, ‘Young Wonka,’ I went, ‘Oh, that sounds good,’” he recalls. “It sounded like the sort of film I might want to see.” Very quickly, it turned into the sort of film he might want to make, and he decided to pass on directing Paddington 3, resulting in a slew of hard stares directed his way. “I feel enormously loving and protective of the character, and I would in many ways have loved to do it,” says King. “But also I spent eight years making Paddington movies and thought it would be good to try something else.” Anyone who watched either Paddington will know that King doesn’t shy away from an emotional climax (there are hordes of fully grown adults who cannot hear the words, “Happy birthday, Aunt Lucy,” without immediately sobbing). The director finds joy, he says, in “taking you somewhere that makes you laugh and makes you cry and hopefully sends you back out into the world feeling a bit more positive about it.” And when he and his co-writer Simon Farnaby (another passenger picked up at Paddington station) sat down to plot their Wonka story, in which a young Willy takes his first fumbling steps as a confectioner, porting across the bear’s beautiful, warm, open heart was top of their list. “By the end of [Dahl’s] book, it’s really emotional, which I had forgotten,” says King. “It’s set in a storybook London, and it’s got these heightened villains, but a kind of emotional truth. And I was like, ‘Oh, this is where it all came from; this is what I’ve been subconsciously stealing my whole life.’” For King, connecting Wonka’s story to that emotional truth “possibly was harder” than Paddington, but in the end, he and Farnaby found inspiration, aptly, in food and another Paddington chum, in the form of Sally Hawkins, who plays Wonka’s mother. “Everyone thinks their mum’s cooking is the best,” says King. “I always loved my mum’s roasts, back when I ate animals. And to me, that’s the taste of childhood. And so I really liked the idea that there was a germ of childhood in that childhood chocolate. That was key for me to get into. I felt that Willy
was after the taste of childhood, in a Proustian way, and after the taste of happiness.” Marmalade sandwiches need not apply. WONKA-VISION At one point early during the Wonka shoot, King stepped on set at Leavesden Studios, and looked around in awe at the world he had built. And kept on looking, because that world extended as far as the eye could see. “We built a city,” he says. He built this city on choc Swiss roll. “It was Covid, and I thought we were gonna go on location and find all these things. And then it was just completely impossible to travel. And God bless the Hollywood studios, but I go, ‘I don’t know what we’re going to do,’ and they go, ‘Well, just build it.’ Thank you very much indeed. I shall build it. I shall enjoy building it. I shall call it Paul’s Land.” This was all very much new to the 45-yearold Brit, who has spent much of his career as director working with purse strings so tight they threatened to cut off the circulation. His early days in TV and theatre were spent on the likes of Garth Marenghi’s Darkplace and The Mighty Boosh, shows that demonstrated visual spark and imagination beyond their means. On the big screen he started off with the micro-budget weird-out Bunny And The Bull (starring Farnaby), and while both Paddington movies had budget enough to make sure their CG title star was convincing, he’d never been given the keys to the Kingdom to this extent before. “The sets were quite extraordinary,” he says of Wonka. “There was a sort of great Golden Age of Hollywood vibe to it because of the musical aspect of the film. So you go, ‘There’s a dance studio, and there’s a songwriting area,’ and, as you walk through the studio, ‘There’s the dancers...’ It was exciting.” Oh yes: to further complicate the recipe, Wonka is a musical. Kind of. SWEET MUSIC During its long stint in development hell, the idea that Wonka should be a musical was always floating around. When King came on board, that very quickly became his favoured approach. “For me, the Gene Wilder movie was the Willy Wonka movie,” he says. “And because that movie was a musical, or had songs in it, it always seemed perfectly right.” In fact, Wonka features two of the 1971 movie’s best-known numbers: the Oompa Loompa song sung repeatedly by Wonka’s tiny orange assistants (of whom there is only one in Wonka, played by Hugh Grant), and ‘Pure Imagination’, a dreamlike ode to the wonders of making shit up, speak-sung nicely by Wilder. “Why wouldn’t you when they’re so good?” says King. But the other songs in what King cautions is not so much a musical, more “a film with songs, really”, had to be original. And so, to augment his divine comedy, he turned to Neil Hannon. DECEMBER 2023 ❯ 71
Fans of The Divine Comedy will know that the band’s Northern Irish frontman has been writing songs fit for the West End stage or a big-screen musical for decades now, across albums like Casanova, Absent Friends or Foreverland. “I think his songs do what Roald Dahl does, in that they’re very, very funny, but he’s also a great storyteller, and they have this deep emotional heart,” says King. “There aren’t many songwriters who can make you laugh and cry.” In the screenplay, when it came to the songs, King and Farnaby would write lyrics in verse, “to make the script readable; a bit like Roald Dahl. And then Neil would throw all of that away and start again. We got a few lines here and there, but it was virtually all him in the end.” If there’s one abiding lesson that King has taken from his experience on Wonka, it’s that finding words that rhyme with “chocolate” is exceedingly hard. “We found them all,” he laughs. “I mean, we use ‘pockolate’, as in, ‘Put your hand into your pockolate.’” This soundtrack is going to rockolate. Not least because the guy King hired to play Willy Wonka has got a great set of pipes. WINNING CHARISMA Ordinarily, the search for an actor with all the requisite tools to play Willy Wonka — charm, good humour, a great singing voice, an edge of eccentricity and just enough of a hint of madness to suggest that this person could become wilder and Wilder as he gets older — is the sort of thing that could consume months, with thousands of actors parading past King and his casting directors. But after King saw Timothée Chalamet in Call Me By Your Name, the search was already over. “I was blown away by him,” says the director. “He’s completely brilliant.” Call Me By Your Name — in which Chalamet does things to a peach that would have the Food Standards Agency up in arms — also showed that the actor was already au fait at experimenting with food. All the Wonka boxes were being ticked. Well, almost all. “As the film evolved, I was aware that there was going to be song elements, and little bits of dancing here and there,” expands King. “And I thought, ‘I wonder what he’s like on that?’ And what’s hilarious about fame in the 21st century is that not only is Timothée Chalamet very good at singing and dancing, but his high-school musical performances are on YouTube, and have been viewed by hundreds of thousands of people. Thank fuck my school plays, there is no record of!” Dahl’s dips into Willy Wonka essentially gave Farnaby and King carte blanche to do what they will with his youth. “He didn’t really dig into his past at all, so there was definitely room to explore. The Willy you meet in the book and the movies is a damaged soul who’s retreated from the world, and he’s pulled up the drawbridge. But he’s got to get there somehow. It can be a danger that you go, ‘Oh, it’s all about 72 DECEMBER 2023 how a nice person becomes horrible!’ Doesn’t sound like a great afternoon at the pictures. I think we’ve avoided it.” In the 1971 movie, Wonka is still inventing new sweets and new flavours, but his best days are behind him. In Wonka, as Willy tries to break the chocolate ceiling of an industry that looks down its nose at him, we will meet a man at the height of his powers. There is no chocolatier chocolatier. Speaking of which… WORLD-BEATING CHOCOLATE “There’s obviously a lot of chocolate in this movie,” says King. Understatement of the year. Not only is Willy pumping out chocolate at a rate of knots, but his competitors Slugworth (Paterson Joseph), Prodnose (Matt Lucas) and Fickelgruber (Mathew Baynton) are the undisputed champs of choc when the movie begins. You couldn’t throw a stone in this world without hitting a cat. Made of chocolate. “I just assumed that it would be a prop, and taste like cardboard,” adds King. “But they went, ‘Oh, meet Gabriella [Cugno], she’s our chocolatemaker.’ And they look incredible because this woman is a genius. She’d go, ‘I’ve put a little twist of pomegranate in there to just cut through the sweetness.’ You really don’t need to, but thank you.” King also admits that he and Farnaby had a whale of a time coming up with their own spins on sweets and chocolates worthy of the Wonka name. The bar was a high one, and usually made of chocolate. “I think my favourite one is the ‘Silver Lining’,” he explains. “We thought you could make a silver lining of condensed thunderclouds and liquid sunlight and when you eat it, it makes you see the positive side and see that glimmer of hope beyond the darkness and despair. It’s the sort of thing you can do in a Willy Wonka movie.” It’s also the sort of thing you can do in a Paul King movie. Which brings us to, perhaps, the most important ingredient of all… A BIG DOLLOP OF PAUL KING King, as you might expect of an English gentleman, is the king of self-effacement. He’s a delight to talk to — witty, smart, polite — but when you ask him to describe the element that links all his film and television work together, that binds the Boosh to the bear and beyond, he
Clockwise from top left: Willy has big plans; Sally Hawkins as his dreamer mum; Rowan Atkinson — again at one with the Holy Spigot — laughs with director Paul King on set; Willy chats with Hugh Grant’s very orange — and green — Oompa Loompa. laughs. “Incompetence,” he demurs. “Even though we spend all this money to make it look polished and professional, it still never looks like a proper film that a grown-up would make. I keep trying to erode all traces of my personality.” But they don’t just peek through. They are the work. As Wonka (via Shakespeare) himself once asked, “Where is fancy bred — in the heart or in the head?” With King, it’s both. His sensibilities — that warmth, that wit, that blend of wonder and whimsy, combined with a keen eye for a composition that has seen him compared to Wes Anderson — are precisely the reason why the Paddington movies made such an impact. And Wonka may be as personal and idiosyncratic as you can get from a movie costing over $100 million. “It’s not a wilful attempt to build a brand or a style,” he says. “I want to make films that have, hopefully, some visual fun, and that take you on a ride. I’m not very interested in the real world.” He is a man who wears his influences on his sleeves. For Wonka, there’s Dahl, of course. But there’s also Fred Astaire (“In the days I’d read Roald Dahl, and in the evenings I would watch Fred and Ginger dancing around the place”), who might just be the subject of his next movie, with Tom Holland tapped up for the tapping. There’s the photographer Bill Brandt, “who did these incredible foggy cities and seemed to make the cities feel very storybooky and magical and dark”. And there’s the French director Jean-Pierre Jeunet. “I’m always thinking about Delicatessen, my formative movie,” says King. “Having comprehensively homaged Amélie in the Paddington movies, I’m now homaging Delicatessen. One day I must write a letter of apology. ‘Cher Monsieur Jeunet…’” But all of this comes together in a way that’s utterly unique. Yes, there are bits of Burton in King’s work, and the odd aspect of Anderson (Wes, not Paul W.S.), and a splash of Jeunet. But King is very much his own creation, scrumdidilyumptious in every way. And when he starts fussing over another fantabulous confection, it’s time to start licking those lips. WONKA IS IN CINEMAS FROM 8 DECEMBER DECEMBER 2023 73
FOR HER PROMISING YOUNG WOMAN FOLLOW-UP, DIRECTOR EMERALD FENNELL WAS INSPIRED BY THE SCORCHING DRAMAS SHE GREW UP ON. WRITING EXCLUSIVELY FOR EMPIRE , SHE EXPLAINS HOW SHE BUILT SALTBURN WORDS EMERALD FENNELL 74 DECEMBER 2023
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“The past is another country: they do things differently there.” L.P. Hartley, The Go-Between “You can put it anywhere.” Sarah Michelle Gellar, Cruel Intentions THE BURNING HOT SUMMER MOVIE WAS the genre that obsessed me as a teenager. Bertolucci’s hazy, devastating, erotic masterpieces Stealing Beauty and The Dreamers blazed through our school like a fever: the sole DVDs had passed through so many hands that by the end of term you could barely even get to the Good Bits for the scratches. François Ozon’s Swimming Pool gave us all chronic, lifelong crushes on Ludivine Sagnier, Jude Law’s bottom in The Talented Mr. Ripley nearly finished us off, and Cruel Intentions, our North Star, brought about the immediate loss of virginity of an entire form. Craig Armstrong’s ‘This Love’ on MiniDisc (RIP) has a lot to answer for. I was also a pathological reader of Gothic fiction and poetry; Angela Carter’s stories, du Maurier’s Rebecca, Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights: if there was sex, murder and an enormous house, I wanted to be there. And there was nothing that I loved more than that very specifically British Gothic genre: the Country House Story. Where the twin national obsessions of class and sex collide. Like all Gothic tales, Saltburn starts with an outsider — in this case Oliver Quick. I had seen Barry Keoghan in The Killing Of A Sacred Deer and had wanted to work with him ever since. We never leave Oliver’s side, and so we needed someone as singular and compelling as Barry; someone who could bring both the vulnerability and the dark sex appeal Oliver requires. Felix, the Golden Boy, could easily have been a cipher, but Jacob Elordi came in to audition and made him so devastatingly real. The thing I’d been looking for was someone who looked like a god, but was actually just a fairly straightforward disappointing mortal — a lot of people were tempted to lean into a more arch, Sebastian Flyte style of audition, but Jacob’s Felix felt like the sort of boy you’d do anything to snog in Freshers’ Week. Alison Oliver [as Felix’s sister Venetia] 76 DECEMBER 2023 and Archie Madekwe [as his provocative American cousin Farleigh] floored us all with two of the best auditions we’d ever seen. Rosamund Pike is one of the greatest comic actresses of our time. Her work in An Education, Gone Girl and I Care A Lot is so funny, SO dark, that there was never anyone else who could possibly play Saltburn matriarch Elspeth Catton. When she read the lines at the read-through you saw a room full of people immediately fall in love. And Richard E. Grant — one of the all-time greats — is another comic genius, and his performances have this compelling mixture of a poignancy and madness which Elspeth’s husband Sir James needed. Lastly was Paul Rhys, who plays the butler, Duncan. When I met him I said, “Duncan IS the house.” And I wasn’t speaking metaphorically. Duncan might easily be 1,000 years old, Saltburn in human form, and is perhaps the most outwardly Gothic of the characters. Paul, rather than laughing in my face as he probably should have done, immediately understood, and his performance as Duncan is one of the most unsettling and tragic parts of the whole film. The most difficult casting problem was finding the film’s other character: the house itself. THE PROBLEM WAS WE WERE LOOKING FOR something that didn’t exist. Or rather, it was so rare that it might as well not have existed. Most houses the size of Saltburn have been given
Clockwise from main: Elspeth (Rosamund Pike, far left) and Sir James (Richard E. Grant, far right) lead dinner; Barry Keoghan as alluring interloper Oliver; Sir James: “poignancy and madness”; Director Emerald Fennell with Keoghan and Jacob Elordi on set in Oxford. Felix (Elordi) smoulders. to the National Trust. They are beautiful but preserved in aspic, and we needed somewhere that felt lived-in, alive, in spite of its grandeur. Other similar houses had been converted into hotels, or were falling to rack and ruin, or had been filmed in many times already. Saltburn needed to be completely unseen, a revelation to both Oliver and to us. And to make it even more impossible, I wanted a place that we could film everything in. I hate wasting time (and money) and moving location is always killer for both, but because of the long, Shining-style shots through the house, we needed it all to be in one place. We didn’t want to fake it. And after a lot of investigation we were lucky to come across one such place. A house that had been lived in by the same family for hundreds of years, which had never been photographed, let alone filmed — in fact, part of our deal with them was that we never disclosed the name or location of the house. The moment I stepped into it I knew it was Saltburn. When Linus Sandgren and I first spoke, he asked me which words I thought of when thinking of Saltburn. I said, without thinking, “wet” and “vampire”. And because he is the best person in the world, as well as being the world’s greatest cinematographer, he was in. We talked a lot in the beginning about how we wanted it to feel. For both of us, the cinematography has to come from an emotional place. We wanted to shoot the house like a sex symbol, like a fetish object, which it is. Whether it’s Brideshead, Manderley, or Gosford Park, the country house itself is always as much of an object of desire as the people inside it. A place that is both vast and claustrophobic. Where empty rooms have eyes, where invisible hands wipe away last night’s mistakes, where doors on all sides, secret passages, mirrors and enfilades make voyeurism not only possible but inevitable. We wanted always to have the feeling of looking into a Pollock’s toy theatre, of stealing private moments, the disconcerting thrill of watching and being watched. Suzie Davies, the incredible production designer, and her team were given the go-ahead to rework parts of the house, turning Felix’s suite of rooms into something darkly, almost surreally sexy. Red lacquer, marquetry walls, mahogany and marble. But always a rubber duck, a lurid green bottle of Head & Shoulders, a pair of pants on the floor, to ground us. As always, I’d made psychotically intense mood boards. Peter Greenaway’s colour saturation and Hitchcock’s voyeurism, the use of silhouette in Merchant Ivory. The use of negative space in The Servant and Women In Love. And close-ups: sweat, armpit hair, pores. The beauty had to have a stink to it, a vital-ness. Linus and I talked a lot about chiaroscuro and Caravaggio. We wanted it to feel like a painting, like an extension of the house. This was why we chose the 1:33 aspect ratio — it served a practical purpose as the rooms are very tall and square, but it also worked much better for the more formal framing we had in mind. A party scene might at first glance look like a painting, the saturated colour, the use of shadow, the characters composed as though for a portrait, but the light is coming from a karaoke machine. During prep, each department had a floor of a strange, empty skyscraper in the London suburbs, so I spent each day running between floors, looking at fabric and wallpaper samples with Suzie and Charlotte [Dirickx, set decorator], or marvelling at the horror of the mid-’00s shoeboot with Sophie [Canale, costume designer], or trying to work out the most embarrassing gap-yah tattoo for Felix (“carpe diem”) with Siân [Miller, hair and make-up designer]. The bulk of the film is set in 2006/7. The classic Gothic framing narrative required it to be set in the recent past, but it also had the crucial effect of undercutting the glamour and humanising everyone. 2006 was the time of sideburns, patchy fake tans, bad hair extensions, BlackBerrys and tiny glittery scarves — no matter how sexy or rich you were, it was hard to pull off. It was also the last year you could smoke inside — nothing makes something feel more like a period drama than seeing someone light up in a pub. Each department fell on the period with delicious enthusiasm, toeing the line between Barry Lyndon and ’00s indie sleaze. By the end of production, the art department had what they called ‘Emerald’s Shit Table’ because if a shot looked too artful, it would usually require the addition of a packet of Nik Naks or a poster of Kelly Brook. The only thing we needed to make at ❯ Saltburn was a maze. Suzie and I, in a moment DECEMBER 2023 77
of spooky morphic resonance, texted each other the same New Yorker article at the same time. It was a profile of a man named Adrian Fisher, who is the world’s foremost (maybe only) maze designer. We wanted our maze to feel real, not just physically but emotionally another part of Saltburn. Saltburn is a film about getting to the centre of things, of places, of people, of bodies, and so I asked [of ] Adrian that there be two ways of solving the Saltburn maze: the main path, which should be the most fiendishly difficult route he could think up, and the other route: the cheat’s route, a hidden path which leads directly into the centre. If you pause the movie you can do the maze yourself! Clockwise from right: Archie Madekwe as American cousin Farleigh; The elegant Elspeth in her elegant grounds; Venetia (Alison Oliver), Gucci Envy just out of shot...; The imposing Saltburn — an undisclosed stately pile in real life; Fennell, Keoghan and Elordi confer; One hell of THE SENSE OF SOMETHING BEING ‘MADE’ is important to me. I like to feel the hands that have made things, to know that even if a world is not real, it is nevertheless substantial. That making a film is a human endeavour. Playing with suspension of disbelief, acknowledging the audience’s familiarity with certain genres and story beats, creating mises-en-scène that act as metaphors as well as story devices: these are all the things a film can allow better than any other art form. The opening credits to Saltburn were hand-drawn 78 DECEMBER 2023 a hangover; Chin-chin!.
by our graphic designer Katie Buckley and her assistant. Hundreds of painstakingly handpainted frames that were then scanned in and animated in stop motion. There were more than a few conversations (arguments) with the higher-ups about doing it this way — it was extremely time-consuming and much more expensive than simply having a computergenerated font which I was assured would “look the same”. It didn’t look the same, but more than that, it didn’t feel the same. The detail of Katie’s work, the diligence, the time, each frame shows the hand that drew it, in all its obsessive detail. In the opening credits I think you can feel the relentless, sadomasochistic obsession with beauty: both mine and Oliver’s. The world needed to feel real to all of us working on it, too. When the cast arrived we decked out their trailers like it was 2006. Nuts calendars from that year, Cosmo, shag bands, iPod nanos, Gucci Envy for Venetia, Issey Miyake for Felix. Which was for the best, since it’s important to me that everyone has the same bog-standard, unflashy two-way trailer. This weird culture of the super-trailer is so strange to me — they seem designed to alienate and to set people in competition with one another. It’s so important to me that the cast and crew are together on a film. Everyone eats lunch together — if there’s downtime, cast can hang in the green room or on set rather than alone at base. Making a film is a huge exercise in trust for everyone, and also extremely physically and emotionally demanding, often most especially for the people who are there the longest and paid the least, like the set PAs and runners. So we have to be in it together, not just to make it more equal, but to make the work better. I’m often looking for something not-quiteright, whether it’s a prop or a performance; something that gives you pause. Everyone — including me — needs to feel safe and happy and among friends if they’re going to suggest something that could be construed as “bad”. To really push the envelope and do something special, everybody needs to be comfortable going to those places. When your cast and crew are as talented as ours was, you’re often asking them to do something that goes against their own perfectionism in some way — something silly or ugly or vulgar or unsubtle. That requires a lot of trust. I think subtlety is an immensely overrated quality. We as humans are not subtle; watch any episode of First Dates and it’s painful to see how transparent we all are, even when trying our very best to conceal our feelings. I always want to give the actors the opportunity to do the “bad acting” — I like to get the “good acting” in the can first, the subtle, subtextual, instinctive performances that will almost always make it into the film. But once you have those, once you have the dead certs, then you can get into the mucky business of the bad acting — usually it’s fun but not usable, but sometimes you get something truly delicious. Something strange enough that it feels even more real. The post-production process was wonderful. The incredible Victoria Boydell edited the film and I think early on was a little disconcerted by my refusal to use any music at all for the first few cuts — I need to see the film naked and bald the first few times, just to be sure that the emotional and story beats are working in their own right. To be fair to Vic, when you have ‘Zadok The Priest’ and The Cheeky Girls on the soundtrack, it is fairly devastating to have to put them on mute. Victoria is masterful, with a wicked sense of humour, which meant the tonal work of the edit was much easier. The tension between horror and comedy, of sincerity and cynicism, of real and un-real is always some of the more delicate work, and it helps enormously that the person you’re working with also finds the most diabolical moments the funniest. I feel incredibly lucky to have made this film with so many extraordinary people. We spent every day pushing each other, daring each other, and trusting one another to make something singular. I think their passion and commitment can be seen in every demented, beautiful frame. SALTBURN IS IN CINEMAS FROM 17 NOVEMBER DECEMBER 2023 79
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The filmmaker has travelled to the frozen ends of the Earth where the sun only sets in winter; he has battled Klaus Kinski’s wild ego in the oppressive heat of the Amazonian jungle. He has staged operas, dragged a ship over a mountain, and descended into a pitch-black cave to film prehistoric paintings in 3D. He has stood inside a volcano as it erupted, emerging sooty and sweaty but alive, and eaten his own shoe after losing a bet. There is no one like Werner Herzog — his existence attracts parodies of a number usually reserved for American Presidents. But what is Werner Herzog like, as told by Werner Herzog? At 81, he has published his memoirs: Every Man For Himself And God Against All. He’s a busy guy. He recently self-funded and released Family Romance LLC (2019), a drama about a rent-a-family business in Japan. In 2022 he published a novel, The Twilight World, about Hiroo Onoda, the Japanese soldier who surrendered 29 years after the end of World War II. And his latest documentary, about brains and neurotechnology, Theatre Of Thought, is currently doing the festival rounds. His new book is a hypnotic series of recollections and visions that you cannot help but read in that iconic voice. He writes about his newborn-self surviving a bombing in Munich in 82 DECEMBER 2023 1942, his cradle filled with glass and rubble. He remembers growing up in extreme poverty, and of carrying his comatose friend on his back to the hospital, having just heard the sound of his skull hitting rocks far below a ski jump. There are vivid dreams of weasels. The book stops at the moment he sees a hummingbird at his window, thinking it’s “a stray enemy bullet”. It’s a journey through the heart of Herzog, with Herzog at the wheel. Just don’t call it an autobiography. Let’s start with your autobiogra– — I have to interrupt you. It’s not an autobiography, it’s memoirs. There’s a real distinction because autobiography would be more events, things like this. My memoirs are pure literature. Why did you decide to write your memoirs now? I had just finished a short novel, The Twilight World. My wife saw me looking out the window for two days and she said, “Why don’t you continue writing?” And I said, “Write what?” She said, “Why don’t you write some memoirs? Because someone else will come and do it otherwise.”
Clockwise from main: Werner Herzog with Claudia Cardinale and Klaus Kinski during the filming of Fitzcarraldo (1982); Kinski in Aguirre, The Wrath Of God (1972); Herzog and Christian Bale on the set of Rescue Dawn (2006); Herzog with Ryan Andrew Evans in Encounters At The End Of The World (2007); Nicolas Cage and Katie Chonacas in 2009’s Bad Lieutenant: Port Of Call New Orleans. Some might worry that a book like this signifies an ending. There’s a chapter towards the end about unfinished business with at least half a dozen film projects and writing projects. And while we are sitting here, my next book is being printed, The Future Of Truth. It’s furious storytelling, most of it my encounters with truth, and one chapter goes in detail into what I have coined the term “ecstatic truth”. So not an ending at all. On the subject of truth, in a memoir or a documentary, can you ever be objective or is the storyteller always looking for the best story? I think we never are objective, but that’s fine. And memory is not completely reliable. For example, I write about a furious family that threatened to kill me. There were four DECEMBER 2023 ❯ 83
brothers of my girlfriend at home waiting for me, and all of them were big Bavarian guys. Then I immediately say, “Probably my memory makes the threat bigger than it was — it was probably only three brothers.” But I point it out. We shape our memory — history itself is a construct of the human mind. But it’s good that we have this possibility to delete things from memory, and that we embellish our memory. I try to be stark, and without much mercy for myself. Is it more important to put across the feeling of something rather than the pure fact of it when you’re writing a memoir? Well, if you’re really interested in facts, I recommend you read the Manhattan phone directory. Four million entries, all correct. What about your public self ? When you are writing these memoirs, does the idea of you that other people hold play into how you present yourself ? It would be too crazy because there are too many crazies out there claiming to be me. Nowadays, you have to understand that the 84 DECEMBER 2023 presentation of self is not what it used to be. I appear on YouTube, Facebook, Twitter — all complete forgeries. I don’t even have a cell phone — I don’t want to have a cell phone, for cultural reasons. But if you find my imitated voice giving you advice for decisions of your life, it’s 100 per cent forgery. I made a film in Antarctica [Encounters At The End Of The World]. Before I was finished shooting, when I was still in Antarctica, there was already a parody of my film under my name out on YouTube. So “self” is not what it used to be. Do these fake Herzogs annoy you? No, they are my unpaid stooges. They are my bodyguards. Let them do battle out there. I’ll do my work. The book finishes in the middle of a sentence. How do you feel about death? You can’t plan when you’re going to die, you will probably be in the middle of something. Only if I were on death row — that would give me the privilege to know the exact minute I’m going to die. But no, we don’t. We have to accept it as it is. In your teenage years you were briefly intensely religious, and your new documentary, Theatre Of Thought, goes into the workings of the mind. Do you think that consciousness continues after death? Nobody knows what consciousness is. And all the scientists with whom I had conversations had no clue to even explain what a thought was. I don’t find it alarming that after I’m gone, I’m gone. I don’t even find it alarming that our species is not very stable; that as a species, we are very, very vulnerable and prone to disappear. We will probably fairly soon be one of the next that disappears. And the universe couldn’t care less. What did you learn about brains that has just changed how you feel about this thing in your skull? Well, there are more questions than answers that I could give. I think we are totally unprepared for what is coming at us in terms of research, and how we could be manipulated. And, like with artificial intelligence, we have to be aware that it can turn against us. Warfare is already using artificial intelligence. But the
Clockwise from main: A bite to eat: Klaus Kinski and Isabelle Adjani in Nosferatu The Vampyre (1979); Land ahoy! The steamship SS Molly Aida on its perilous journey in Fitzcarraldo; Herzog ponders life in Lo And Behold, Reveries Of The Connected World (2016). Back to dreams: they recur a lot in your movies and also your novel. In Lo And Behold you asked if the internet dreams of itself. Why the interest in dreams? The strange thing is that I do not dream. I feel the absence of dreams like a void in the morning. Maybe this void is something I’m filling with poetry, or films, or images, or dialogue, or sometimes maybe some wild things that I’m acting. main question for me is, when much of what we are doing is performative: who is the ghostwriter of this? At the very end, I have some military guard of honour outside the Greek parliament doing steps into the air that are completely grotesque. Who is the ghostwriter of this? How does it happen that we do these things? Does it make you feel vulnerable? No, I’m doing alright, I have my defences. But the species is vulnerable. In Bad Lieutenant: Port Of Call New Orleans, Nicolas Cage’s character asks, “Do fish have dreams?” This question comes up again in Theatre Of Thought. Have you settled on an answer? I know that I won’t get an answer. That scene was not in the screenplay. I had the feeling there has to be something with Nicolas Cage at the end, something mysterious, something that puzzles him. There was an aquarium nearby and they allowed us to go in off-hours. So I have him leaning against the glass and he said to me, “What should I do?” And I said, “Think for a long time and then ask, ‘Do fish have dreams?’, because I see them floating behind you. And then you take a very long time, and something makes you chuckle.” We shot it only once. You didn’t write the screenplay for Bad Lieutenant, so that was a very Herzog addition. About 30 per cent I rewrote. Everything that you remember: the iguanas, the crocodile in the road accident, the hallucinations. The silver spoon that he found once and can’t find it anymore, from a treasure of pirates, and he finds it for his girlfriend. It makes him much deeper and more human than the screenplay originally sounded. It was drugs, sex and violence and that was it. But now it’s a much more stratified volume of inner life. Not a single dream, ever? Once a year. Twice a year if it’s a very, very good year. But it’s just banalities. What kind of banalities? The last, which was more than a year ago, I dreamt I had a sandwich for lunch. [Herzog is giggling now] What kind of sandwich? It was a boring one. It was one of these pale Styrofoam-looking, bread triangularly shaped, like you get at fast-food delis. Some people have the opposite and dream too much, acting out their dreams in sleepwalks. I had some furious episodes of sleepwalking, DECEMBER 2023 ❯ 85
but that was much earlier. It has stopped completely. But I was outside and among people, waking people up. When I finally woke up it was very embarrassing because I didn’t know where I was or what the hell was going on. I was just hopping around in my sleeping bag. In your memoirs you say you don’t like introspection. Are you interested in dreams because they’re a window into truth, without conscious introspection? I should be a little bit more specific about introspection. It’s more what you would encounter when you’re with a psychoanalyst. There’s something not right about it. That kind of indiscretion I don’t like. Is it the supposed navel-gazing? The egotism? It’s many things. It’s something to do with the 20th century and the quest for illuminating the very last corners of your darker existence. The darker recesses of your souls. Leave them dark. Leave the corners in your home dark, because if you illuminate everything with brilliant light, your home becomes uninhabitable. Try it. Live like that for a month. Would you agree that the overriding theme of your documentaries is a feeling of awe at something bigger than yourself ? It’s everywhere, all my feature films. When you look at my writing, primarily it’s the awe that comes across. And then of course a sense of style, a sense of poetry. Open the book: there’s a chapter called The Ballad Of The Little Soldier. I was with a commando unit and most of them were child soldiers between eight and 11. And I’m describing in very condensed, very stark prose, the death of one of the soldiers. And I’ve been there — it’s not a figment of my fantasy. I do not know of any other filmmaker who has been on a commando unit with child soldiers, or has been shot several times or shot at several times, or has moved a ship over a mountain. So I have lived a life that is different. And my prose is different. In other words, when you look at the text, there’s no-one who writes as I do. There’s no-one. Do you think a deep obsession or a devotion to a subject is necessary to make a film about it? For me, it’s not obsession — I’m a quiet, professional man. But things come at me with great vehemence. And when something really big is coming at me, I don’t duck into the trenches. Then you can throw anything at me you want — I will face it. What about when things go wrong? Do you thrive on chaos? No, I like a quick orderly shoot of a film, but it doesn’t happen very often because cinema itself is facing obstacles all the time. A film like Les Blank’s [Fitzcarraldo documentary] Burden Of Dreams shows difficulties, but I do not speak 86 DECEMBER 2023 Clockwise from main: He’s behind you! Herzog in Grizzly Man (2005); Yuichi Ishii and Miki Fujimaki in Family Romance, LLC (2019); The Fire Within: A Requiem For Maurice and Katia Krafft (2022); Michael Shannon in My Son, My Son, What Have Ye Done (2009). about them because they are irrelevant. Fitzcarraldo, I shot half the film and then it had to be stopped because my leading actor, Jason Robards, became ill and was not allowed by his doctors to return to the jungle. Mick Jagger, who was in a big role in the film, had only three or so weeks left on my contract. So I wrote his part out of the screenplay because he was so unique and so good. You have to respond to the cataclysms. You have to have an answer. You have to be inventive. That’s life, and that’s movie-making. But you’re willing to put yourself in danger. Sometimes, of course, I knew it was going to be difficult. And sometimes I knew it was going to be dangerous. But I did not allow it to be dangerous for people with me. I would test the rapids, which you see in Aguirre, The Wrath Of God, before I took some actors and extras and crew-members with me. And they were all safe at the end. It looks dangerous — and it was
H E R ZO G TALKS U S T H RO U G H A U N I Q U E ACT IN G CA R E E R THE CLIE NT IN T HE M ANDALORIAN “Jon Favreau was deeply moved by my films. Once he made a remark that he wanted many, many people to know the face of the man who made all these films that he likes. We should not dismiss Star Wars: they are new mythologies and a new way of seeing our role in the universe.” ZEC CHE LOVE K IN JACK REACHE R “I have only my voice, no fingers left or hardly any fingers left. One eye blind, and only a quiet voice, and I spread terror. Some of it is improvised dialogue. I sensed the team was cringing so I knew it was good and I gave even more.” Alamy, Photofest, Shutterstock dangerous — but it was a good assessment of risks. But sometimes I was in situations where things were not in my control anymore. I think, rightfully so, the cover of my book has me at the edge of a volcano. I was down at a lower level, at a second deeper crater, with a very good expert, a volcanologist, Clive Oppenheimer. Lava was ejected, and it came down in glowing lumps, 1,000 degrees hot — some of them the size of a car. Then there was an unexpected, very violent eruption that hadn’t happened in weeks or so. Of course, we withdrew as fast as we could. But what it did was not just show bravado — we got footage that only Katia and Maurice Krafft [the couple from his documentary The Fire Within, who perished in an eruption in 1991] shot through their lifetime. But they almost methodically went too close. There was a certain folly in them. Let’s talk about your drama, Family Romance LLC. It’s a strangely timely film because loneliness, connection, truth and artifice are all themes that are becoming more urgent. Every single thing in the film is a lie, is a performance, is an illusion. And yet the strangest of all things is that there’s one component that is truthful: the emotions. It’s one of my deepest films. But strangely, it hasn’t really sold. I feel a little bit like with Aguirre: nobody saw the film. I was invited to a theatre in Frankfurt, where there was one of the very few good reviews of the film. It was a large theatre, 450 seats or so, and I came out on stage and there were seven people there. I say it again: seven. As a filmmaker, you have to absorb this. I had a wonderful discourse with these seven people. And I remember I told them, “You are the first ones. You are the seven that will grow. Nobody will ever make a film like this again. So it will find its audience.” It took a decade until it really found its audience. And I believe that Family Romance LLC will find its audience. I will not be around, but it’s okay. Do you think of yourself as a filmmaker or a writer? Both. I have a formula I can give you which explains it easily: my films are my voyage, and writing is home. Is that because you have to go out when you make a film whereas you can write at ho– Don’t ask any further. We mustn’t examine it. EVERY MAN FOR HIMSELF AND GOD AGAINST ALL IS OUT NOW KE N JEGGIN GS IN PAR KS AND RECREATION “I said to the filmmaker, ‘Can I add something?’ And I say to the camera, ‘You know, I lived 47 years in my home here. But I’m selling it now because I want to move to Orlando in Florida to be close to Disney World.’ I was absolutely serious. The longing in my voice.” VA R I OUS I N T HE SIMP SONS “I asked ‘How cartoonish does my voice have to be?’ Matt Groening said, ‘No, your voice is good enough.’ I said, ‘You mean cartoonish enough.’ I’ve been on three times now. Such wild anarchy of humour! I think they wanted to have a real wild human being out there with the wildest of accents.” DECEMBER 2023 87
I N OU R R EG U LAR SE RIE S, WE E XPLO RE A SLICE OF CINE MA LORE JIMMY THE RAVEN WORDS AMELIA TAIT THE RED DRESS STARS CAN BE found in the unlikeliest of places. Marilyn Monroe was noticed at a munitions factory and Haley Joel Osment was scouted in Ikea, but the 20th century’s most prolific actor was discovered on a cactus. In the mid-1930s, ex-cowboy Henry Wagstaff Twiford was walking across the red rust of the Mojave desert when he stumbled upon a baby raven in an abandoned nest. He took him home, named him Jimmy, and reared him on boiled eggs, eggshells, and milk. Over the course of the next two decades, Jimmy became a star that needed no surname, billed alongside Bette Davis and Judy Garland during Hollywood’s Golden Age. Before he died, the raven was said to have appeared in more than 1,000 films. That is the extent of what most people know about Jimmy — if they’ve heard of him at all. Despite his vast back catalogue, no biopic has ever been made about Jimmy’s life, and his passing was not marked by a single obituary. Who was this feathered thespian? Was he, as some contemporary accounts suggest, a supercilious virtuoso with a roster of unreasonable demands? Or was he in fact simply mischievous, misrepresented — and even misgendered? Henry Wagstaff Twiford was better known as ‘Curly’ thanks to his mane of tousled hair. A former cowboy and a wounded World War I veteran, Curly ran a gasoline station near Hollywood between the wars. Bored when business was slow, he began training his dog Squeezit to carry parakeets on a stick. One legend has it that a movie executive stopped at the station to fill his tank and, enamoured by the critters, hired Curly to train a squirrel to do a stunt. Less than a decade later, Curly was an in-demand animal trainer capable of getting a lion to lie down next to a baby, but Jimmy the raven was always top dog. Curly said it took him a year-and-a-half to train the bird to “do anything an eight-year-old kid can”. Jimmy could type out his own name on a typewriter, pick flowers, open a zipper, unlock a padlock, turn magazine pages, and deal a hand of poker. Arguably, he could do more than most eight-year-olds, as he was also able to light ❯ a cigarette, fly backwards and ride upon a miniature motorcycle. 88 DECEMBER 2023
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The avian auteur made his Hollywood debut in Frank Capra’s 1938 romcom You Can’t Take It With You, about a rich man who falls in love with a woman from a family of eccentrics (hence their pet raven). Jimmy was filmed helping to manufacture illegal fireworks and letting out the occasional “caw”. Co-star Jimmy Stewart described him as “the smartest actor on the set”, adding that, “They don’t have to make as many re-takes for him as for the rest of us.” Perhaps because of this, Capra became a big fan of the bird — he began offering Jimmy a role in most of his movies, even writing the raven into the script of the 1946 Christmas classic It’s A Wonderful Life. “Capra don’t want no inexperienced boids in the pictures,” Curly succinctly said. By the 1940s, studios were allegedly paying Jimmy $500 a week for his services, and Twiford netted another $200 on top. Adjusted for inflation, this $700 weekly fee would be worth almost $9,000 (£7,400) today. Still, fortune was hardly the most remarkable thing Jimmy found during the war. While the bird’s bank balance grew, so did his brain. By 1948, Jimmy could talk. S mart raven pecks out a living on typewriter,” read a May 1939 newspaper headline about Jimmy’s skills. The light column referred to Jimmy (then ‘Jim’) as a “feathered Einstein” and marvelled at his ability to type with his beak. Yet the report ended with solemn words. Curly, it claimed, “insist[ed] that a raven cannot be taught to speak”. Nine years later in 1948, Lloyds of London wrote an insurance policy for Jimmy, protecting against a “loss of memory”. At the time, Curly claimed that Jimmy knew “53 usable words” (plus, he joked, a fair few unusable ones). The trainer argued that, “If he ever forgets them, I’m out $700 a week.” Although they don’t have vocal cords, ravens can mimic human speech. A two-pronged organ known as a syrinx sits at the bottom of their windpipe — its vibrating walls allow birds to produce sound. On YouTube, you can watch one raven ask, “What’s up now?” and another say, “Hello, Terry” (to himself, because his name is Terry). Curly claimed that it took roughly a week to teach Jimmy a one-syllable word, and a fortnight of training was required for two-syllable offerings. In March 1941, papers 90 DECEMBER 2023 reported that Jimmy would have a five-word line in the screwball comedy The Bride Came C.O.D. — but by the time the film was released in July, no such line appeared in its final cut. Could Jimmy actually speak at length? A year before Curly claimed the bird knew over 50 words, producer and director Irwin Allen claimed Jimmy had “a vocabulary limited to just one coarsely muttered word — ‘caw’.” While it’s unclear whether Jimmy had the gift of the gab, it’s abundantly clear that Curly did. In 1941 he claimed Jimmy had appeared in 200 films and a year later, he said that it was 600. By 1950, the “1,000 films” claim was cemented in print. On IMDb, Jimmy is credited in just 28 films — although many of his known credits are missing, such as 1938’s Spawn Of The North, 1939’s Tower Of London, 1946’s Courage Of Lassie and 1947’s The Red Stallion. Whatever the exact truth, Curly clearly knew what to say to get reporters to listen. Eight years before he claimed to have found Jimmy in an abandoned nest, he told a much less exciting story about studying ravens from a pit mine before deciding to train them. In fact, Jimmy’s origin story sounds a lot like that of Curly’s pet dog Squeezit, who he claimed he’d found “starving” in an abandoned building “with a brood of half-dead puppies”. Meanwhile, the trainer was also fond of claiming that Jimmy would live to be 150 years old, despite the fact that most wild ravens die between the ages of 10 and 15. While birds in captivity can live longer, the oldest raven at the Tower Of London died at 44. Curly may have liked to spin a yarn, but most of Jimmy’s abilities were caught on camera. When filming 1942’s True To The Army, Jimmy was able to not only pick a card but also hide it under his wing. In 1944’s Gypsy Wildcat, Jimmy can be seen handing out playing cards in his role as a fortune-telling bird. In 1939’s The Wizard Of Oz — perhaps Jimmy’s most famous role — he lands on Ray Bolger’s Scarecrow, caws on command and picks hay out of Bolger’s costume before flying off. Photos from newspapers also show Jimmy combing Curly’s hair and putting a cigarette in his mouth. Just like his owner, Jimmy knew how to impress reporters — he’d take a handkerchief out of one’s pocket before hiding a five-cent piece in the cuff of the human’s pants. Most remarkably of all, Jimmy even found Curly a wife. In the midst of World War II, a mother and daughter came into the pair’s railway carriage when they were on their way to
Clockwise from top left: The Enchanted Valley (1948); Two Jimmys, raven and Stewart, in 1946’s It’s A Wonderful Life; The bird could type his name; 1942’s True To The Army; ‘Curly’ Twiford with his son and Jimmy; On the set of You Can’t Take It With You (1938) with Edward Arnold; With the Scarecrow (Ray Bolger) from The Wizard Of Oz (1939). set. Jimmy landed on the shoulder of the daughter and Curly promptly apologised, sparking a romance that resulted in marriage. Jimmy didn’t just perform tricks, though — he really acted. Actor Buddy Mason was impressed by the bird’s skills, noting that, “If Jimmy swipes a key from a villain’s pocket… he’ll cock his head to one side, displaying the key to the camera, and appear to be thoroughly elated with what he has done.” Other birds, Mason said, couldn’t compare. M any celebrities pretend to be down to earth, but Jimmy was never afraid to fly high. By the time he was filming 1941’s The Bride Came C.O.D., he had already become somewhat of a diva, refusing to continue a scene until he got six “gobbets” of meat, instead of his usual three. Like all stars, Jimmy also required a stand-in — a substitute on hand for the boring or dangerous work. The most regular bird for the job was Koko (sometimes styled Coco), who was said to take Jimmy’s more “tiresome scenes”, as well as any risky ones. In The Bride Came C.O.D., Koko was involved in five mock explosions while Jimmy watched from the sidelines, nibbling on apples. Koko commanded just $75 a week. He was also struck by a conjunctivitis-like condition in 1938, ‘Klieg eyes’, which was caused by exposure to excess light on the set of the crime thriller Arrest Bulldog Drummond. (This film is another one missing from Jimmy’s IMDb.) Koko’s normally ink-black eyes turned green and he had to be treated with boric acid. Despite Koko’s difficulties, Jimmy was known to be jealous of the bird, growing contemptuous when he had to wait in the wings. In 1939, Jimmy flew up to the corner of the Tower Of London sound stage and refused to come down after watching Koko in rehearsals. He only relented when his rival was locked away in a cage. Koko wasn’t the only co-star that Jimmy quarrelled with. The bird was ostensibly “supercilious” on the set of 1949’s The Secret DECEMBER 2023 ❯ 91
Left: Louise Allbritton with Jimmy in Son Of Dracula (1943). The bird’s role was ‘Madame Zimba’s Crow’. Right: With his co-stars, Dean Stockwell, Margaret O’Brien and Brian Roper, in The Secret Garden (1949). Below, top to bottom: A poster for 1949’s Call Of The Forest, another Jimmy starrer; Jimmy perched on Johnny Weissmuller (aka cinema’s definitive Tarzan) in ’50s TV series Jungle Jim. Garden, believing himself to be superior to co-stars Baa the lamb, Captain the fox and Rascal the squirrel. Indeed, these actors would often gorge themselves with warm milk and raw meat on set, leaving director Fred M. Wilcox fearful of continuity errors as they grew in size. Captain and Rascal were known to fight for the same tree, but Jimmy would croak at Captain to settle him down. Actor Jerry Colonna also fell out with Jimmy on the set of 1942’s True To The Army, as he got tired of carrying the bird around on his elbow and considered him “careless”. Though there’s no indication they didn’t get on, Jimmy Stewart had to start going by ‘J.S.’ on the set of It’s A Wonderful Life because the raven would fly in front of the camera whenever the name ‘Jimmy’ was called. Jimmy was in fact particularly fond of antagonising his human co-workers. The raven nibbled at the yarn in Wilcox’s socks and was regularly witnessed trying to steal food from the lunchboxes of workmen. Jimmy was even known to mock his fellow actors by imitating them. Curly once called him “a great egotist”. In his downtime, he allegedly enjoyed operating gum dispensers and burying bright objects in the ground. Instead of investing in an Aston Martin, Jimmy’s preferred mode of transport was riding around on the back of a Boston bulldog. Jimmy was also “money mad” — Curly often witnessed him picking up stray coins and saving them for later by swallowing them. The raven opened his own savings account with the Hollywood Building And Loan Association in April 1940, releasing a dime in a deposit box. Jimmy’s growing bank balance meant that he 92 DECEMBER 2023 would regularly receive letters begging for money, with most people telling him their sob stories and others asking him to invest in oil wells. Despite his sometimes curmudgeonly behaviour on set, Jimmy was known to be charitable in private. During the war, the raven regularly visited wounded soldiers in hospital, and spent a total of 200 hours entertaining them with his tricks. In 1947, the American Red Cross awarded him a medal in recognition for his services. J immy the raven does not have a star on the Hollywood Walk Of Fame, but by 1949 his talon prints had been immortalised in cement and displayed in a pet shop nearby. In April 1956, his owner Curly passed away aged 60. Not much is known about what happened to Jimmy, whose last film appears to have been 1954’s comedy 3 Ring Circus, in which he has a caw-ing conversation with Dean Martin, before using three caws to tell him (off camera, in what sounds very, very much like a dub), “You’re in love.” While Jimmy’s death remains mysterious, so do many aspects of his life. In 1941, one newspaper report claimed that Jimmy was in fact a female raven, and was regularly misgendered because she was “cast in roles in which the male characteristics of aggressiveness and courage were dominant”. The articles also claimed that Jimmy was “in the throes of a torrid love affair with Coco, her stand-in”. In subsequent reports, Jimmy went back to being described with “he” and “him” pronouns, but this is another hint that when it came to the
J IMMY THE RAVE N’S VITAL STATS 21 Stand-ins Jimmy had when filming It’s A Wonderful Life, leading one paper to nickname him “the most spoiled actor in Hollywood”. 2 MONTHS The age Jimmy apparently was when he starred in his first picture. $10,000 Amount MGM insured Jimmy for when filming The Secret Garden. Left, top to bottom: Another comfy shoulder — this one Byron Foulger’s — in Ellery Queen, Master Detective (1940); Alamy, Getty Images, Mary Evans, Moviestore Collection, MPTV, Photofest In uniform in 1950; The poster for 1948’s Bill And Coo. raven, the truth was as free as a bird. Regardless of his or her gender, Jimmy may possibly have been a parent. Animal trainer Moe DiSesso claimed that, “In 1944, I was given two raven eggs by a friend” — he placed them under a hen to hatch and one became ‘Jim Jr’. Reports differ as to whether Curly gave Moe the eggs — it is more likely that Jim Jr was simply named after the great bird. Either way, Jim Jr went on to become a movie star in his own right — by 1961, he had starred in over 30 films, and was able to grab cigarettes, croak on cue, and even load a gun. Jim Jr was a veteran of TV — he can be seen in the 1950s shows The Cisco Kid and I Married Joan, as well as ’60s sitcom Bewitched. In 1957, a raven named Jimmy — it’s unclear which — was witnessed demanding sugar on his meat on a set. “Sugar! Sugar!” yelled the bird as he was served his dinner on a “raven-sized banquet table”. Like father, like son? Curly, at least, most definitely was a father — his son, 70-somethingyear-old Greg Twiford, is now head of an animal trainers’ association and spent the summer walking the picket line in support of the actors’ and writers’ strikes. A placard he carried read, “Animal actors are starving.” When he was alive, newspapers called Jimmy “one of the hottest actors in pictures” who “has stolen every movie scene in which he has ever appeared”. Curly’s wife once described the trainer with the words, “Even bees won’t bite the guy.” Together, this unique pairing made movie history — and both live on in classics that are still watched regularly today. It’s an undeniable legacy. Quoth the raven: forevermore. 95 Per cent of animals in movies that belonged to Curly Twiford in 1947, according to one newspaper. 1 Painted portrait commissioned of Jimmy. Curly and his wife displayed the “high-priced” image in their living room. 20,000 Number of ants Curly once had to procure for a movie. He captured them in glass jars in the desert. 16 Years Jimmy starred in the movies. DECEMBER 2023 93
DECEMBER 2023 | EDITED BY CHRIS HEWITT B EN WH EAT L EY TELLS EMPIRE HOW H E WENT FROM LOWBU D GET INDIES TO TAKING A BITE OU T OF MEG 2: THE TRENCH , AND LOVED EVERY SECOND OF IT WORDS CHRIS HEWITT MEG 2: THE Trench (to be said aloud in the same way you would say Step Up 2 The Streets) stands out on Ben Wheatley’s CV like a… well, not exactly a sore thumb, more a 75-foot giant shark. Prior to this summer’s gleefully preposterous Jason Statham-starring sequel, the British director tended to stick to smaller British films, often with short shooting schedules and tiny budgets, that allowed him to indulge his darker sensibilities and mordant sense of humour. Those films included his micro-budget debut Down Terrace, Kill List, Sightseers and A Field In England and, even when big names like Tom Hiddleston, Cillian Murphy, Brie Larson and Lily James began to show up in the likes of High-Rise, Free Fire and Rebecca, Wheatley stayed on this side of the Atlantic. But, after toying with a Tomb Raider sequel written by his wife, Amy Jump, he finally got his feet wet on Meg 2, and took time out from shooting his Channel 4 zombies-versuspensioners TV show, Generation Z (lower budget, check; darker sensibilities, check; 94 DECEMBER 2023 mordant sense of humour, check) to talk to Empire about needing a bigger boat. Now that we’re a few months down the line from Meg 2’s release, how do you look back on it now, stepping into this massive arena? I feel like it’s nice to have some distance from it, but it also feels like a wild fever-dream now. It was a big chunk of time. It was two-and-a-half years, or something, I was on it for, all in all. You’ve shot films in two weeks. So when you realised this was going to eat up the next two years, was there any trepidation involved? Only on a very basic, ‘would I have enough energy for it?’ level. But after the first couple of weeks it was clear what it was gonna be like, and it was fine. Life will come into the movie in a way that it doesn’t in a three-week or four-week shoot. You literally get older as you do it, you have shifts in perspective, you change as a person as you’re doing it, and that was something I hadn’t quite thought about. You have to keep reassessing what you’re doing, and concentrating on it, otherwise you can kind of meander off in your mind. You’d directed a couple of episodes of Doctor Who, but your movies aren’t exactly effects-heavy. I had another life as an ads director. And I’d worked on shows with a lot of effects, so that side of it wasn’t too daunting. But the challenge of it is the weird scheduling. You have to make decisions that are impossible to change six months beforehand. So you’re making decisions on things and it’s getting delivered back to you and you look at it and go, “Oh, that’s what I was thinking back then,” and if you want to change your mind it’s a lot of frowning faces because it’s very expensive. So keeping your nerve doing that is quite difficult.
Above: Director Ben Wheatley at the London premiere of Meg 2: The Trench. Left: Jason Statham goes toe-to-tooth with the film’s gargantuan star. Huge swathes of the movie are set in and around the Mariana Trench, and you have this really bizarre, pulpy, sci-fi world. But you didn’t actually go underwater, so that must have been an interesting challenge. There was some underwater shooting, inside of air locks and stuff filling with water, and then a lot of Statham swimming about underwater. You couldn’t do that in CG because the body reacts in a different way. But the dry for wet along the trench, no-one thought for a single second of doing it for real. There’s no Nolan-ing about on The Meg, you know. To film down that depth would have been suicide, and we would still be filming it now, having replaced half of our cast through several difficult legal battles. [Laughs] What were your conversations like with Statham? Had you crossed paths DECEMBER 2023 ❯ 95
Left: Statham plus jet ski outrun the Meg. Below left: Wheatley checks a shot on set. Below: 2016’s Free Fire. Below right: Wheatley’s debut, Down Terrace (2009). Bottom: The Stath and Sophia Cai in Meg 2: The Trench. with him before? No, I hadn’t. I think he knew a lot of people that I knew. I was thoroughly checked out beforehand. But the first conversations were quite bizarre. You’ve got Statham on the end of the phone, and the first time it’s odd. But I had lunch with him and we got on from there. Is he a big Ben Wheatley fan? His favourite film is A Field In England. I was as surprised as you are about that. He watches it regularly. Genuinely? No. [Laughs] Oh, for fuck’s sake. I thought we’d uncovered something here. It’s a scoop! But he was very much aware of your background. He does his due diligence, so yeah. Did you do yours? You must have been worried about being swallowed up by the machine on something like this. Well, I don’t know. I’ve been moving towards doing a big studio picture for a while, and I fancied it. It’s one of the food groups of being a filmmaker, isn’t it? I did a TV show a couple of years ago [Strange Angel] that was shot on the Paramount lot, and that was amazing. We were shooting that on the same stage that Rear Window was shot on. We were going around in a buggy, and because Paramount also includes the RKO Studios, that’s the stage Citizen Kane was shot on. So yeah, I wanted to do a studio 96 DECEMBER 2023 film. I read a lot of books on film production and I knew there was a potential for things to be difficult. But Lorenzo [di Bonaventura, producer] is a really straight-up guy, and the studio were really cool as well. I wanted there to be no surprises in terms of what we were going to make. It wasn’t like I was making my own film and then they’d discover it and then there’d be a massive fight. We were always pushing towards the same goal, which was to make a big, kick-ass shark film. Yeah. Thinking about it, for years I’ve been making movies that were basically aimed at punishing their audience as much as possible. I started with quite a high bar of Kill List, a film that people were actively angry about in cinemas. And as much as I loved the film, you respond to that. And so, [it was a case of ] moving gently away from that over a series of nine movies to get to this, where it was more out-and-out fun. And the audience seems to have responded to that. There are some moments that feel more Ben Wheatley than others. But by and large, you said, “I’m making a blockbuster with its tongue crammed deeply into its cheek.” There is a progression in your career. There’s Down Terrace and Kill List and Sightseers and A Field In England, but you’ll also do something bigger like a High-Rise or Alamy, Getty Images He’s got this weird arthouse side to him at times. I can imagine him of an evening sitting down with a double bill of Kill List and A Field In England. Yeah, with a big jug of mead.
“If I’d written Meg 2, they’d all have been dead in about 30 seconds.” B EN WHEATLEY a Rebecca. Was that something you were thinking of as a filmmaker, that increased scale? The fact I’ve gone back and forward and done stuff at a lower budget should show that the pattern isn’t a linear progression. The thing I’m doing at the moment is effectively three feature films back to back to back, with zombies and mad, violent gags and satire and comedy. It’s a kind of a Sightseers/Kill List cross. So I would never say that that was the absolute plan. If it was the plan, I’ve an extraordinarily slow way of doing it. Most people just slam out an indie movie and then go straight to a Marvel film. I didn’t make my first film until I was 40, so it’s the same slow route. Top to bottom: Smile! The Meg, ready for its close-up; Lurid larks in the Lake District in Sightseers (2012); A Field In England (2013); Wheatley, Lily James and crew making Rebecca (2020). But you’ve been flirting with movies of this scale for a while. You’ve been attached to things like a remake of The Wages Of Fear, or an adaptation of Frank Miller’s Hard Boiled, and then the Tomb Raider sequel that came very close to getting started. I’ve been writing scripts for studios for seven years, on and off. Stuff that’s been in development and never got made. That relationship has been there for a while. It’s taken a long time, mainly, much to the irritation of my agent, because I’m always working. They’ve lined stuff up for me to do in the States and then I’m like, “Oh, I’ve already got a film to do this year.” That’s why it’s taken a bit of time to do something like this. What was the appeal of Tomb Raider for you? And how close did it come? Well, I’d worked on a version of Gauntlet, a video-game which, ironically, got cancelled because of Dungeons & Dragons, many years before this version came out. I just love tunnels and traps, and Tomb Raider came along. I was like, “Of course! There are tombs!” I wanted to do something like a dungeon crawl but in enclosed spaces and with lots of action. That was a project that had all of those things. But I really got offered it because Amy Jump had written it, and it took them about a year or so to get round to asking me after she’d written this really brilliant script, which I really wanted to do. And then the pandemic fucked everything. But it wasn’t just Tomb Raider that got screwed by that. We felt the whole industry was going to be screwed. So that goes away, and then Meg 2 swims towards you. What was the grabber for you with that one? I liked The Meg, so that was a starter. I was like, “Oh, that’s fucking interesting.” And I like Statham, and then I read the script and what I liked in the original movie was the effort the characters went to to survive. It wasn’t a given that they were going to survive, and that seemed like a breath of fresh air. And in this version, the thing that grabbed me was the idea of dealing with a problem and going on to the next one. That’s like life, that’s like filmmaking. And they’re relentlessly positive in the script. Everything can be sorted out — “Let’s go, guys!”, and all that stuff. If I’d written it, they’d all have been dead in about 30 seconds. So I thought it was an antidote to my pessimism. How much did Down Terrace cost, roughly? It cost £6,000 in 2009. And to complete it so we could sell, we had to have another 20 grand put into it because we put a Karen Dalton track [‘Are You Leaving For The Country?’] on it. Which was, looking back on that, quite naive. We put it in twice as well. So we paid twice for it, like idiots. But yeah, the actual film cost £6,000. Spread across credit cards? There were only three of us, two grand each. I got it back the other day. I finally got it back after 11 years. I mean, I didn’t get the interest on it, so I made a loss there. How did it take 11 years? That’s the industry, you know. We got minimum guarantees at the time when we sold it, so we got about 40 or 50 grand, but with that we paid all the cast and crew, and the estate of Karen Dalton. And that was it. That was all the money, and given the way deals are structured, it’s very hard to get any cash out. That’s wild. But with that, Kill List, Sightseers and A Field In England, we’re talking about films that the catering budget on Meg 2 for one day, for one lunch hour… One sandwich! ... would outstrip in terms of cost. But there must be common ground between those movies. Of course. Because they’re made by the same person. There’s someone essentially in the middle of them making aesthetic and performance decisions. I think there’s a definite link between Meg and Free Fire in terms of how the storyboards were done and how the planning was done for it. But it’s a different kind of thing. People look at the films and see darkness, they see that kind of cynicism in them, and I think that’s the common thread. But there’s also an aesthetic common thread and a line of action that’s similar to all the movies, and a type of editing. You leave your fingerprints all over something, whether you like it or not. MEG 2: THE TRENCH IS OUT NOW ON DVD, BLU-RAY AND DIGITAL DECEMBER 2023 97
A matter of Powell and Pressburger THE GREAT EDITOR THELMA SCHOONMAKER ON WHY THE LEGENDA RY FILMMAKERS STILL E ND URE WORDS JOHN NUGENT THELMA SCHOONMAKER IS one of the world’s most celebrated film editors; her shelves creak with awards from a decades-long collaboration with Martin Scorsese, dating back to his directorial debut, 1967’s Who’s That Knocking At My Door. But she has another, parallel career: as unofficial custodian of the legacy of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger, the British-Hungarian filmmaking duo behind Technicolor masterpieces like The Red Shoes and Black Narcissus. Schoonmaker’s story is uniquely intertwined with Powell in particular. “Marty was training me to look at the Powell and Pressburger films, back when we were working on Raging Bull,” she tells Empire, speaking from her edit suite in New York. “He would send me home with the VHS tapes. I was falling in love with their films.” Eventually, Scorsese acted as an unlikely Cupid. “One day, he said, ‘Michael Powell is coming for dinner. Do you want to meet him?’ And I said, ‘Oh, yes.’ That’s how it all started.” Schoonmaker and Powell married soon after in 1984, and remained so until Powell’s death in 1990. “I have the best job in the world. And I had the best husband in the world,” she says. Schoonmaker’s love of both Powell the filmmaker and Powell the man continues to this day; she even recognises their romance reflected in his and Pressburger’s films. Take, for example, the gorgeous 1946 wartime-romance-sciencefiction epic A Matter Of Life And Death, in which a character is willing to sacrifice her life for love, nobly stepping onto a celestial escalator. “That moment when Kim Hunter steps on the stairway to give her life up — that is so Michael Powell. I would have done it for him, and he would have done it for me. I always burst into tears when we get to that point. It’s so beautiful.” A Matter Of Life And Death was part of an astonishing run of classic films by Powell and Pressburger, what Scorsese has described as “the longest period of subversive filmmaking in a major studio, ever”, which included One Of Our Aircraft Is Missing, The Life And Death Of Colonel Blimp, A Canterbury Tale, I Know Where I’m Going!, Black Narcissus and The Red Shoes. Those films, and more, are being shown in ‘Cinema 98 DECEMBER 2023 Unbound’, a retrospective of the filmmakers’ work by the BFI across the UK and Ireland, in which Schoonmaker — now an important ambassador for their filmography — is deeply involved. But their legacy has not always been so passionately embraced by the film community. Powell’s fetishistic 1960 thriller Peeping Tom (made without Pressburger) was so shocking to pearl-clutching critics of the time that his career never truly recovered. “The period after Peeping Tom was terrible,” says Schoonmaker. “He fell into a terrible financial state. He couldn’t afford fuel for his cottage. But thank God that television had shown these movies to people like Scorsese and Francis Ford Coppola and Brian De Palma and George Lucas.” The New Hollywood generation kept the flame alive, and the pair remain huge figures for a legion of filmmakers (zombie king George A. Romero cited their 1951 opera The Tales Of Hoffmann as his favourite film, and would tell the story of how he kept being frustrated in his efforts to rent a print — only to find the person who kept getting there ahead of him was a young Martin Scorsese). Few have been more vocal than Scorsese, who, with Schoonmaker, has overseen multiple restorations. “We’ve restored six of the Powell-Pressburgers now,” says Schoonmaker, “thanks to Scorsese’s Film Foundation. George Lucas is one of the big funders of that, by the way.” Schoonmaker remains totally driven by this mission. “Michael left a little furnace inside of me burning, to preserve his legacy. So, as much as I can — because my job is very wonderful and all-consuming — I do everything I can to help.” The restoration process, going back to the “original three-strip negatives”, involves watching the films dozens or even hundreds of times. It’s a laborious job, but Schoonmaker doesn’t mind. “The thing about these films is I never get tired
KARINA LONGWORTH, BOB DUCSAY AND ODESSA YOUNG WHY THEY GE T A ME N TI ON AT THE E ND OF FAIR P L AY Clockwise from main: Moira Shearer in The Red Shoes (1948); The celestial escalator of A Matter Of Life And Death (1956); Martin Scorsese, Michael Powell and Thelma Schoonmaker on the set of The Color Of Money in 1986; Emeric Pressburger and Powell making Black Narcissus in 1946; Carl Boehm and Anna Massey in Peeping Alamy, Allstar, Getty Images, Martin Scorsese Collection, Netflix, NY, Studiocanal/BFI Tom (1960). of looking at them,” she says. “I could look at some a hundred times and still enjoy them over and over again. I don’t know how they did it!” It’s the films’ eternal rewatchability, surviving even those wilderness years, that keeps people coming back to Powell and Pressburger, Schoonmaker says. “Michael was once asked about the British film industry, and he said, ‘Why should there be a British film industry? We should make films for the world.’” The universal themes behind their work, and the beauty with which they were made, continues to entrance audiences well beyond their original borders or eras. Schoonmaker remains astonished at how new generations keep discovering them. She attended a recent screening of an early 1930s film by Powell and was stunned to find that she was the only grey-haired attendee. “It used to be when I went to these things that it was just older people — film historians, that kind of thing. Now they’re so young! The appreciation just keeps growing. Which Michael would just love.” The legacy of Powell and Pressburger, in their films, and in the memories of those who knew them, is unabashedly positive. “[Powell] was an optimist,” Schoonmaker remembers. “He had a love of life. It was an amazing thing to live with. He had me put on his grave: ‘Film director and optimist’. Which I did.” Somewhere, on a celestial stairway, someone is smiling. PEEPING TOM IS RE-RELEASED IN CINEMAS FROM 27 OCTOBER, AND IS OUT ON 29 JANUARY 2024 ON DVD, BLU-RAY AND UHD. ‘CINEMA UNBOUND: THE CREATIVE WORLDS OF POWELL + PRESSBURGER’ IS AS IS OFTEN the case with a debut film, the Special Thanks section for Chloe Domont’s savage relationship drama Fair Play is packed with names. Some particularly stand out. There’s Karina Longworth (below centre), for example — host of the excellent movie podcast You Must Remember This, and wife of one of the film’s executive producers, Rian Johnson. “She was one of the first people we showed the cut to, once I was halfway through my director’s cut,” says Domont. “She was someone I was really curious to see what they think, and her notes were invaluable. Some stuff was very small and specific, and some of her thoughts were more about the last couple of scenes.” Later in the process on the movie, which stars Phoebe Dynevor and Alden Ehrenreich as a couple working at a hedge fund whose relationship is tested when she gets promoted, Domont reached out to noted editor Bob Ducsay (below left), who’s worked regularly with Johnson. She wanted to see “from an editor’s perspective if there’s anything that wasn’t working for him... He said something very important which was, ‘You always have to question how much time you want to give to something on screen. If you’re putting too much emotional weight on something too soon, it deflates some of the tension later on in the act.’” But both Longworth and Ducsay were Johnny-comelatelys, giving their advice after the film had wrapped. Odessa Young (pictured here on the right), the star of mini-series The Stand, was an early adopter. “She was the first woman I sent the script to, for her opinion on it,” says Domont. “And the fact that she felt on the edge of her seat reading it, that it felt like a ticking time bomb of a film... hearing that feedback was incredibly important.” Fair play. CHRIS HEWITT PLAYING AT THE BFI SOUTHBANK AND UK-WIDE UNTIL 31 DECEMBER FAIR PLAY IS ON NETFLIX NOW MONTH 2023 99
The Transforming Man TRANSFORMERS PRODUCER LORENZ O DI BONAVENTURA ON THE FRANCHISE’S PROS AND (DEC E P TI)CONS WORDS CHRIS HEWITT OVER THE COURSE of 16 years, Lorenzo di Bonaventura, producer of all seven Transformers movies, has had a front-row seat for one of the biggest franchises in Hollywood history, and has been able to chart its ups and downs, evolutions and — yes — transformations. “I couldn’t imagine anything going on this long, honestly,” he laughs. With Transformers: Rise Of The Beasts performing something of a soft reboot for the series, di Bonaventura sat down on Zoom with Empire to discuss the series with admirable candour. TRANSFORMERS (2007) Produced by Steven Spielberg (along with di Bonaventura), directed by Michael Bay, the first Transformers remains for many the best in the series. Its combination of cutting-edge effects and Shia LaBeouf ’s funny turn as a nerdy hero gave it the AllSpark it needed. “When I first approached Hasbro about the rights, they said, ‘You’re too old to have watched it.’ But I had friends who had younger brothers and sisters who watched it avidly. And at the same time, Steven was chasing the rights, and 100 DECEMBER 2023 Steven understood it from a play level. He really got the fascination of something that can transform. What was interesting about the process was that Paramount passed on it, I think, five times. But I kept coming back. I understood how capable the visual effects were of creating something astonishing. And when we saw our first movie preview, we knew we were gonna have a sequel.” TRANSFORMERS: REVENGE OF THE FALLEN (2009) That sequel, released just two years after the original, is much-maligned and very messy, but in its defence was produced in the middle of — stop us if this sounds familiar — a writers’ strike. “That really screwed us up. I’ve had this happen to me a few times. The problem is you don’t get to evolve your script. At the time, Paramount felt very strongly that sequels should come out every two, max three years. They didn’t have a lot of other assets at that time, so the decision was to plough forward. I think a strike doesn’t affect the bigger ideas or the visuals. What’s hard is the characterisations, the emotional relationships. That’s where it takes a lot of writing.” TRANSFORMERS: DARK OF THE MOON (2011) By now, cracks were beginning to show in the Bay Sturm und Drang template, but the astonishing last act boasts the action highpoint of the series, with its set-piece inside and outside a collapsing skyscraper. “That’s certainly a marquee moment. I’m not meaning to slam other franchises, but I don’t like the fact that they don’t feel real, that you can feel the visual effects in a way that’s very different from what we do. And for me, and for Bay, there’s a certain amount of pride involved in how well executed it looks. When we saw the set and the way it tilted, it was really fascinating. It’s really hard to keep your balance. You couldn’t go past a 35-degree grade — it was too dangerous. It was crazy.”
“Paramount passed on the first film five times.” TRANSFORMERS: THE LAST KNIGHT (2017) Bay’s final Transformers movie, an utterly batshit-insane exercise in maximalism, which throws everything but a transforming kitchen sink into the mix. If you’re wondering how batshit-insane it is, Stanley Tucci turns up as Merlin. Yes, Merlin. It was an underperformer at the box office. Perhaps even something of a wake-up call. “There are, like, five different plots going on. I don’t know if it’s a mistake, but we made a choice, and the choice ended up being, ‘Wait, what plot am I in?’ Anytime you don’t do what you expect, you’d definitely better pay attention. Michael felt like he’d done it now, but it led all of us to say, ‘We have to find a new path.’ I won’t say we were getting bored, but we weren’t getting as stimulated as we wanted to be. And Bumblebee gave us that chance.” BUMBLEBEE (2018) A response to the excess of The Last Knight, another Knight — Travis — directed this charming, lower-budget, lower-key, Hailee Steinfeld-led, ’80s-set love-letter to Amblin movies. It was critically loved, but didn’t connect with audiences the way the Bayhem had. “Bumblebee is its own beast. In some ways, it’s the closest to the first movie, but it’s still not the same. We had to go for a different magic with Bumblebee. It was warmer, it was softer, it was more endearing. Even if Michael had directed it, we needed to have a different direction because we’d kind of played out, in my opinion, the direction we had been going in.” TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION (2014) The first reboot, with Mark Wahlberg coming in to replace Shia LaBeouf as lead, while other aspects also received something of a makeover; it grossed over a billion. “Mark is underestimated as an actor because it seems so natural, but he does embody the everyman. And I loved the moment when he picked up a gun and shot at them [the robots]. It was the first time we’d had a human, in a way, fight back. I remember when we first saw that, it was like, ‘Oh yeah, that’s what we do in action pictures — we have humans fighting back!’” TRANSFORMERS: RISE OF THE BEASTS (2023) Clockwise from top left: Transfomers: Bumblebee in action; Optimus Prime in Revenge Of The Fallen; Dark Of The Moon: Shia LaBeouf and Rosie Huntington-Whiteley; Cade (Mark Wahlberg) Alamy, Getty Images on the run in Age Of Extinction; Optimus Prime in The Last Knight; Charlie (Hailee Steinfeld) makes Steven Caple Jr’s ’90s-set movie introduces giant robot animals, and attempts to blend the Bay-ian bombast with the heart and emotion of Bumblebee. It’s the lowest-grossing Transformers movie to date, but di Bonaventura is hopeful that there’s more to come. “The feedback on Bumblebee was so consistent, which was, ‘Love the movie — where’s all the action?’ So when we set out to make this movie, there were two pillars of determination. One was, ‘Let’s not give up the territory we’ve gained on the emotional level, and let’s give them what they want.’ And that led to the decision to give Optimus an arc, because we’d never done that before. It didn’t take a while to understand that he was important — it took a while to understand how.” a friend in Bumblebee; Rise Of The Beasts. TRANSFORMERS: RISE OF THE BEASTS IS OUT NOW ON DVD, BLU-RAY, 4K AND DIGITAL DECEMBER 2023 101
Billion-dollar movies THE 53 BIGGEST FILMS OF ALL TIME . FOUR EMPIRE WRITERS. LOADSAMONE Y JAMES DYER His favourite TV show (starring Paul Giamatti) is Billions. CHRIS HEWITT His favourite Michael Caine movie is the Billion Dollar Brain. HELEN O’HARA Her favourite Terence Hill movie is Mr. Billion. BEN TRAVIS His favourite dessert is billionaire’s shortbread. 102 Chris: Fifty-three films have grossed over a billion dollars worldwide. Now, some would argue that crossing this threshold means that you have to cater to the lowest common denominator, and that these films must therefore, by definition, be empty tributes to the gods of IP. So, can a movie that appeals to the great masses be a great movie? Helen: I don’t think a movie’s audience has to be limited for it to be good. If you reverse it, it sounds ridiculous — what, a great movie can only be appreciated by a few? A great movie can be appreciated by everybody. James: If these films weren’t good, with, say, five exceptions, they wouldn’t be on this list. They’ve made this money for a reason, by and large. Chris: Are you sure about that? There are 53 films on the list. Quite a lot of them, I would say, are absolute stinkers and shockers and clunkers. Ben: A film that speaks to the masses can be a really powerful thing, and a real force in the world. But sometimes it’s a bit of a head-scratcher to see some films that hit with a big audience in a big way and are not, objectively, good films. Helen: When Alice In Wonderland passed a billion dollars, I said, “That’s it — the billion-dollar mark doesn’t matter anymore.” It used to denote something extraordinary before that, something that had struck a cultural nerve. DECEMBER 2023 Chris: I would agree with that to an extent. But it’s been fascinating watching the way the billion-dollar club has bloomed over the last few years. Titanic was the first one to do it, and then James Cameron did it again, spectacularly, in 2009 with Avatar. He’s the first filmmaker to appeal to five quadrants. And let’s put this into context: three of the top four movies of all time are directed by James Cameron. That is extraordinary. Why has he cracked the code? James: It’s worth noting that the films Cameron has on this list aren’t just in the billiondollar club; they’re in the twobillion-dollar club. Avatar is a Na’vi hair away from being in the three-billion-dollar club. It’s insane. He’s gone for four-quadrant appeal, he makes films for everyone. And it’s repeat visits, too. Avatar was an event because you’d never seen anything like this. And people went again and again. Titanic was similar. You had to experience this thing. Ben: I think something that speaks to all three of those mega Cameron movies is the big, unashamed, sincere romance. Cameron is a master of action set-pieces, he delivers insane visual spectacle, but with those films he really makes you feel something. Helen: He’s a great storyteller. The billion-dollar club vastly over-represents on spectacle. But the good ones have a story that you come away from satisfied. Chris: Cameron has three movies on the list. Let’s turn to the Marvel Cinematic Universe, which has ten. Avengers: Endgame was the biggest film of all time for a spell, and there’s a run between 2014 and 2019 which I think is the most brilliant run of sustained blockbuster filmmaking in history. Now, there are those who would say that this is symptomatic of the decline and fall of Western civilisation. I don’t subscribe to that. Helen: Again, it’s stories. I’ve called the MCU the world’s most expensive soap opera, which is not untrue. They’re telling a story about a group of characters who have heightened adventures, in whom you invest and who you relate with. James: In that run-up to Endgame, people knew something big was coming. Then, after Endgame, it probably didn’t feel quite so essential. Ben: And they were so careful in how they did that for a long time, of never giving you the same thing twice in a row. They were their own competition for so long, because they just continually improved upon what they were doing. Chris: What’s the best one? James: Infinity War, by a substantial margin. It has the perfect ending. The audacity of ending it that way was extraordinary. I remember stumbling out of the cinema going, “I can’t believe they did that.” Ben: It has the best action as well. Endgame is incredible, but Infinity War has so much colour and energy. People were really hooked in on these characters. Chris: Part of the reason we’re doing this now is because of Portraits: Marco Vittur SELMAN HOŞGÖR
Barbenheimer — Oppenheimer isn’t going to make it to a billion, but it’s close. But Barbie did, and then some. And in doing so, not to put too fine a point on it, they, and movies like this, help to save the experience of going to the cinema. Also, some of these billion-dollar movies have given me the greatest moviegoing experiences of my life. I will never forget seeing Endgame for the first time, or Spider-Man: No Way Home. Helen: I felt that way during Barbie this summer. I had the same rush in the cinema, and that sense of discovering something unexpected while surrounded by other people making the same discovery at the same time. Chris: The thing about Barbie’s success that flummoxed me is that it’s such a fucking weird film. Ben: I remember coming out of the first screening of it going, “I can’t believe in a world where we get a film based on the IP of Barbie, this is the film that we got.” It feels miraculous. Helen: I actually think Barbie is the future of this list. I think the model we’ve seen over the past 25 years is fading, and so Barbie and weirdness might genuinely be the way forward, as well as catering to underserved demographics and taking seriously an audience that has not seen themselves, like Black Panther and Captain Marvel. Chris: It’s not easy. If it were, everyone would be doing it. And yes, Barbie has a huge marketing budget, but it appealed to people organically and naturally. People cannot be told what to go and see and when to see it. They have to want it. Helen: It’s not just as simple as dazzle; it has to have weight behind it. It’s an alchemy which is magical when it happens, which makes me think of Top Gun: Maverick. Chris: Tom Cruise’s only billion-dollar movie. And, in fact, this whole thing is grist for the ‘movie stars are dead’ mill. It’s all about the title and the IP now. But that movie succeeded because of Cruise, and the incredible action sequences, and because it was precisiontooled to appeal to the largest number of people while not feeling cynical in any way. Helen: It’s about getting people to the cinema who never go to the cinema. That’s the real trick. James: And it’s repeat visits as well. This is the kind of film you don’t see once, you see it twice or three times. Chris: A lot of the best billiondollar grossers have directors of vision and vigour. Take Christopher Nolan; The Dark Knight is an astonishing piece of filmmaking. He’s not making movies by committee. Peter Jackson has two movies on the list, including a Hobbit movie we shouldn’t dwell on and The Return Of The King. James: That’s comfortably the worst of the original three films. Helen: That’s not really the word to use. James: You’re right. The least brilliant of the three. But those films are magnificent. I think of The Lord Of The Rings as a single cinematic journey in a way that I don’t with Star Wars or Marvel films. Helen: The reason that crossed the billion and the other two hadn’t is because it had the headwind behind it. It was the culmination. Chris: One filmmaker who you might be surprised to learn only has one film on this list, given that he’s arguably the greatest commercial director of all time, is Steven Spielberg. And even then, Jurassic Park didn’t get there on its initial release in 1993. But my God, what a movie. Talk about cultural impact. Helen: It’s the origin of this blockbuster model of massive spectacle put in the trailer. Ben: It’s handy that the best film ever made also happens to be a billion-dollar movie. James: Aliens didn’t gross a billion dollars. Ben: It’s just the epitome of cinematic magic for me. It’s Spielberg magic, it’s movie magic, it’s dinosaur magic all in one. I will never, ever get bored of it. Chris: It has such a huge cultural footprint. Ben: And an actual gigantic footprint, too. Chris: Right, enough squabbling. Let’s vote! JURASSIC PARK (1993) AVENGERS: INFINITY WAR (2018) AVENGERS: ENDGAME (2019) THE DARK KNIGHT (2008) THE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE RETURN OF THE KING (2003) TITANIC (1997) 7 BARBIE (2023) STAR WARS EPISODE VIII: THE LAST JEDI (2017) AVATAR (2009) TOP GUN: MAVERICK (2022) DECEMBER 2023 103
Freaks TOD BROWNING’S MISUNDE RSTOOD MORAL DRAMA CONTI NU E S TO PROVOKE WORDS ALEX GODFREY THE MOST SHOCKING thing about Freaks — the film so supposedly disturbing its own studio tried to shut it down; the film that caused an audience-member at a preview screening to have a miscarriage; the film that with its own marketing campaign boasted of “pure sensationalism” — is that it really isn’t sensationalist at all. From the start it makes the extraordinary ordinary, contextualising the so-called abnormal as normal. As people. Its true subversion lies in the way it challenges our own prejudices, flipping horror on its head, taking society to task. Freaks was — and to some extent still is — ahead of its time. It’s hard to think of another film that has been so staggeringly, wilfully misunderstood. Even its status as a horror is something of a red herring. Tod Browning had certainly served his time with ghouls, and only the year before had directed Bela Lugosi in 1931’s Dracula. But Freaks’ true monsters are the non-disabled bullies fleecing and exploiting the circus sideshow’s more interesting inhabitants, the film only leaning into terror during its final few minutes. Up until then it’s an often convivial peek behind the curtain, introducing us to a fascinating found family of performers. Browning was 16 when he joined a travelling circus in 1896, criss-crossing America with carnival folk, working as a clown, contortionist and carny barker, enthusiastically embedding himself in the community. It was a formidable experience. He went into filmmaking in 1915, establishing himself as a chronicler of outcasts and outsiders, and with 1932’s Freaks he wrapped it all into an unapologetic tribute to fringe society. Hollywood didn’t want that. In the midst of the genre’s golden age — James Whale’s Frankenstein had also hit in 1931 — MGM’s head of production Irving Thalberg asked Browning for “the ultimate horror film”. Instead, Browning delivered the Freaks screenplay, by Willis Goldbeck and Leon Gordon, loosely based on Tod Robbins’ short story ‘Spurs’. “Well, I asked for something horrible,” said Thalberg, head in hands, having inhaled the grim dénouement. Freaks would be a celebration of the 104 DECEMBER 2023 The friends gather as The Bearded Lady (Olga Roderick) gives birth. shunned. Harry Earles, the 3’ 2” German entertainer who had played a murderer disguised as a baby in Browning’s 1925 crime drama The Unholy Three, played Hans, the ` immaculate gentleman infatuated with conniving trapeze artist Cleopatra (Olga Baclanova). Earles’ 3’ 4” sister Daisy is Hans’ fiancée Frieda, broken-hearted at Hans’ wandering eyes, and crushed by his increasing gullibility. There is Johnny Eck, who has no legs but bright eyes and a winning grin; conjoined twins Daisy and Violet Hilton; intersex performer Josephine Joseph; and Prince Randian, ‘The Living Torso’, who we see opening a matchbox, taking one out and lighting a cigarette, all solely with his mouth, filmed matter-of-factly by Browning. He presents them all as such, his neutral gaze never leering or recoiling, as you’d expect from a guy who spent his formative years with circuses. He invites us into their lives. So here they are, getting by, fending off insults from the non-disabled people who deride them. Alas, as production began, life mirrored art, with some MGM employees so disturbed by the cast, they were forced out of the commissary so as not to put people off their lunch, instead made to eat in a separate tent. All the more reason for Browning to soldier on. Freaks bursts into horror at the end, as the gang, now wise to Cleopatra’s murderous scheming, plot revenge: the shot of an only partially lit Prince Randian on the ground behind the wheel of a cart, peering from the shadows as Cleo carries the poisoned Hans into her carriage, is as indelible as any iconic frame. As the circus leaves town at night, rain smashes down, lightning striking, the horse-and-cart convoy dramatically crashing. As chaos takes over, so do the freaks, switchblades in hands, in mouths, wading through the sodden mud, Cleo screaming for her life as they chase her through the woods. Brief as it is, this sequence, so Gothic, so primal, is enough to make Freaks a genre classic, its challenging social commentary complementing its nightmarish aesthetic.
Below, top to bottom: Lovers Hans (Harry Earles) and Cleopatra (Olga CHOSEN BY NICK DE SEMLYEN Baclanova); Prince Randian; The scheming Cleopatra, turned into a duck lady by the vengeful freaks. 1 HOUSEBOUND (OUT NOW, DVD/BR) Everyone knows M3GAN, but director Gerard Johnson’s first film remains underseen. Inspired by a viewing of Ghostbusters, it sets a woman under house arrest against... Well, you’ll see. Peter Jackson, no stranger to Kiwi horror-comedy, called it “bloody brilliant”. We concur. 2 PANDORA’S BOX (30 OCTOBER, BLU-RAY) Not be confused with a double-pack of Avatar Blu-rays (that would be ‘Pandora’s Box Set’), this 1929 German film still hypnotises. Following the intoxicating Lulu (Louise Brooks) as she leaves tragedies in her stylish wake, it’s strange, sultry, and iconically coiffeured. 3 SCROOGED Alamy, Mary Evans (6 NOVEMBER, 4K BR) After that, Browning flashes forward: Cleo is now one of them, performing in a pit, clucking and squawking, a human duck, padding about on her hands, her legs removed. There was originally more context in which, as we meet Cleo the duck woman at this freak show in a London music hall, somebody calls her name. “For a moment, there seems to be a glimmer of intelligence, of recognition in her eye,” reads the screenplay, “but this passes at once.” Meanwhile, her co-conspirator, malicious strongman Hercules (Henry Victor), castrated by the freaks, is now a tenor. He sings on stage as Cleo quacks along. This went, along with a whopping 30 minutes of footage, after disastrous test screenings in which distressed audiences ran out screaming. Thalberg cut the footage himself, and ordered a new, happier epilogue, leaving us with the 64-minute film we have today — a shadow of its deeper, darker self. Yet it still had power. Upon release, Freaks garnered mostly hysterical, hand-wringing reviews by aghast critics. The film bombed; MGM withdrew it; the Making it was, apparently, grimmer than getting a lump of coal in your stocking. Bill Murray himself doesn’t like it. But the truth remains: Scrooged is a hoot. If you like your spins on Dickens to feature Carol Kane wrestling moves, look no further. 4 TALK TO ME (OUT NOW, DVD/BR/4K BR) UK banned it for 30 years. Even with the film itself castrated, it stands apart, a classic shorn by its own studio, but still towering enough to cut through. And amid all the spectacle, beyond the headlining acts, and despite the controversy, it’s the sweetness that makes it endure — Browning’s humble compassion, the film’s sadness matching its joy. A broken heart pulsates through it. Let alone its unabashed ode to the maligned. And in a 2023 where many Hollywood villains are marked by disfigurements, Freaks is still taking us to task. For a 1932 film, it doesn’t seem outdated at all. FREAKS/THE UNKNOWN/THE MYSTIC: TOD BROWNING’S SIDESHOW SHOCKERS IS OUT NOW ON CRITERION BLU-RAY By now, you know the deal: freaky tattooed hand, incantation, demonic possession, yada yada. 2023’s most instantly iconic horror film (expect sequels to join the already rushed-out merch), it’s a fist of fury that can’t be stopped. Watch it. But best not talk to it. GHOST DOG: THE WAY OF THE SAMURAI 5 (OUT NOW, DVD/BR/4K BR) In which Forest Whitaker wields a samurai sword to take on Itchy & Scratchy-loving gangsters. Jim Jarmusch’s crime drama is weird as hell but oddly moving. And it’s a career apex for Whitaker: his oneof-a-kind hitman barks and bites. DECEMBER 2023 105
Elemental D IRECTOR PE TE R SO HN ON T H E E MOTIONA L HIGH POINTS OF H IS PIXAR MOVIE WORDS CHRIS HEWITT 106 DECEMBER 2023 PETER SOHN’S ELEMENTAL, which takes place in a world populated by anthropomorphised versions of fire, wind, earth and water, is one of the feel-good stories of the year: not just because it turned things around at the box office after the slowest start for a Pixar movie, but because the movie itself is a charmer, packed with some of the animation studio’s most beautiful sequences. Here, writer-director Sohn talks us through the film’s key moments. THROUGH THE MIST Elemental is about many things, but it’s certainly concerned with the immigrant experience (Sohn’s parents came to America from South Korea), as seen in the opening shot where the camera pierces a sea fog to find a nervous immigrant couple, the Firish Bernie (Ronnie Del Carmen) and Cinder (Shila Ommi), huddled together as their boat arrives in Element City. “The idea of following the parents coming to a new land was in most versions that we had of the film,” says Sohn. “The concept of light coming through water was always a visual metaphor that hung through all the different versions of the movie.” WATER MEET CUTE It wasn’t marketed as such, but Elemental is, unashamedly and unabashedly, Pixar’s first romcom, detailing the burgeoning relationship between Bernie and Cinder’s daughter, the fiery Amber (Leah Lewis), and the watery Wade (Mamoudou Athie), who we meet when the latter comes crashing into the former’s basement through her water pipes, and then — because he’s so in touch with his emotions — immediately starts crying. As meet cutes go, it’s got Harry and Sally licked, but Sohn says there were concerns. “This idea that this character would come out blubbering and feel sort of weak right off the bat was something very purposeful,” he says. “But some people are shocked by his crying — they were like, ‘I don’t care for him.’ Part of me was excited by that. Could we start off in this place, and still fall in love with him?” WE NEED A MONTAGE Every good romcom needs a montage in which its lead pair begin to fall hopelessly for each other, and Sohn delivers with a fun sequence, soundtracked by Lauv’s ‘Steal The Show’, in which Wade and Ember go to the cinema, play in the park, and generally swoon hard for each other. “That was one of the first things I had [storyboarded] early on,” says Sohn. “This version of the montage was about cracking through Ember, where Wade is slowly winning
through and she’s falling in love with the city and with him.” Any similarities to a comparable sequence in The Naked Gun, by the way, are completely coincidental. “I have never made that connection,” laughs Sohn. “I love that montage. Oh my God, why didn’t anyone on the crew say anything?” This is a job for Police Squad. THE CRYING GAME Don’t worry, parents: Elemental isn’t a remake of the 1996 Neil Jordan movie. Instead, the ‘Crying Game’ is something played by Wade and his family, who, despite being easy gushers, try to make each other cry. Sohn is very open about how the loss of both of his parents during production affected him. “There’s a version of the movie that was really dark because I was going through grief personally,” he admits. “Pete Docter, my EP, was like, ‘Was this always the thing that you wanted to do? I remember your original pitch with heart.’ And so after that I went on a little vacation and drew all these ideas.” That’s where the Crying Game, a way of openly pouring out your heart without fear or embarrassment or judgement, was born. EMBER BEGINS TO SPARK When it comes to the Crying Game, though, the closed-off Ember is a tougher nut to crack than Wade’s family. But crack she does, when Wade reaches her with a heartfelt speech about how their love has transformed him, leading to a beautiful, impressionistic visual flourish in which Sohn changes animation styles to take us inside Ember’s mind’s eye. “We didn’t want to make it feel like Wade was gaming Ember to make her tearful,” says Sohn. “We were hoping that it felt that the world sort of disappears from them.” Sohn credits story artist Anna Benedict with the idea. “She had tried this experiment out, and quickly sketched it out in an evening,” he says. “And we all felt it.” WADE RETURNS Pixar has never been shy about bringing audiences to the edge of the emotional precipice. Just the very mention of Toy Story 3’s furnace scene can reduce grown adults to sodden messes. But Sohn goes a little further with Wade in his dramatic finale, in which the character sacrifices himself, by turning into steam, so that Ember may survive a flood. And just when there isn’t a dry eye in the house, Wade cries himself back into being when Ember repeats his Crying Game speech. “A big death is so sensitive and it’s such a risk, because you could throw your whole audience out,” admits Sohn. “But this idea formed to have our cake and eat it too with the sacrifice that happens for Wade. It wasn’t like, “Let’s fool everybody.” It was a real, sincere moment for Ember to feel the loss.” PUT A BOW ON IT “The event that had triggered this whole movie was, I got invited to a ceremony in New York, because I was from the Bronx and they wanted to honour that,” says Sohn. “I brought my parents and thanked them in front of a lot of people, and it was very emotional. And so a big part of the film early on was Ember, on stage, thanking her parents, but it wasn’t working. It felt so cold.” Which is why the film now ends with Ember mending her somewhat fractious relationship with her father by bowing to him, just before she and Wade leave Element City on their own immigrants’ odyssey. “When my dad left his country in the late ’60s, he did this big bow as a sign of respect,” explains Sohn. “And Ember’s bow was meant to be gratitude towards her father, but it became so much more — a sign of love, a sign of respect — because it was done culturally. It was from a personal place, but it was something that felt like it meant more.” ELEMENTAL IS OUT NOW ON DVD, BLU-RAY, 4K, DIGITAL AND DISNEY+ DECEMBER 2023 107
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FrightFest FR IGHTFEST SINCE THE TURN of the century, I’ve spent August Bank Holiday weekend at FrightFest, arguably the UK’s flagship horror festival. One reason I risk screen blindness to see so many of the 65-ish films scheduled is to get ahead with the review slots of this column. Some FF films turn up on various platforms, formats or in cinemas immediately… others creep out over the months (and, sometimes, years) to come. A few are never heard from again — which means they’re possibly terrible, though occasionally luckless. Several I sometimes think I imagined, only for other festival-goers to confirm that, yes, there really was a Snoop Dogg’s Hood Of Horror… or a riffle through my shoebox of check discs* reminds me that someone remade The Banana Splits as a robots-on-the-rampage slasher film. Inevitably, we focus on one-offs… outstanding achievements in horror and ‘go-straight-to-moviejail’ disasters which creep through. But a festival programme can just drop you in a morass of movies, so you can spot connections or ongoing/ coming trends. Every year, FF is a health-check for horror, a genre which is obliged to track what we’re worried about or afraid of and show it back to us with the addition of a giant, tentacled being from the beyond or a masked slasher lurking outside the cabin in the woods. In the last few years, for obvious reasons, there have been a lot of lockdown-set pandemic-paranoia movies. Now, we’re getting the first what-lessons-didn’twe-learn? horrors, as the world opens up but we THE LEGE NDARY AUTHOR AND CRITIC BRINGS US HIS UNIQUE TAKE S ON CULT CINE MA MATTHEW BRAZIER Top: Otto Baxter’s allegorical The Puppet Asylum. Above: Pandemic-paranoia movie The Moor. remain terrified — two solid films about the claustrophobia of wide-open spaces are The Seeding (set in a Utah desert crater) and The Moor (set in Yorkshire). It’s great to see more than just lip-service being paid to diversity, with films by and about a wider range of people — see Paris Zarcilla’s Raging Grace, Clare Cooney’s Departing Seniors, Alice Miao Mackay’s T Blockers, Ariel Vida’s Trim Season and Otto Baxter’s The Puppet Asylum. Longtime readers will be glad to hear about new (excellent) work from filmmakers I’ve flagged before: Onur Tukel (Poundcake, about a killer rapist targeting straight, white rich guys in New York and the rainbow coalition of New Yorkers who don’t really care); horror collective the Adams Family (Where The Devil Roams, about a strange family of carnival performers in the 1930s); Sean Hogan (folk horror To Fire You Come At Last); Graham Hughes (low-budget multiversal trip Hostile Dimensions); and Junta Yamaguchi (whose Beyond The Infinite Two Minutes follow-up River features another, wholly different two-minute timeslip). Also a word for the festival’s commitment to documentaries, with three outstanding looks at arcane stretches of film history — Sarah Appleton and Jasper Sharp’s The J-Horror Virus, David Gregory’s Enter The Clones Of Bruce (remember the post-Bruce Lee careers of Bruce Li and Bruce Le?), and Jake West’s moving Mancunian Man (about extraordinary Manchester-based VHS megastar Cliff Twemlow). * We focus-grouped ‘Kim’s Shoebox Of Shriek’ as a column title and went with the Crypt one instead. DAMPYR THE KNOCKING HERD THE BEST MAN (DIGITAL) (DIGITAL) (DVD, DIGITAL) (DIGITAL) Italian comics company Sergio Bonelli Editore start a possible Bonelliverse with Dampyr — about the super-powered son (Wade Briggs) of a vampire who battles the undead during the 1990s Balkan Wars. David Morrissey models a heavy-metal haircut and lashes out with CG tendrils as the bloodthirsty big bad. In this Finnish horror, three siblings return to their childhood home in a remote woodland to sort out their inheritance... and one taps into a darker legacy connected with local legends about forest spirits. It’s mostly subtle chills and character beats, but a bark-skinned woodwitch shows up with an axe. Though it has a familiar sense of apocalyptic panic, Steven Pierce’s Herd is a very different zombie picture. An uncomfortable element is characters who have seen too many movies going full ‘shoot-’em-up’ before establishing if the infected are a) dangerous (they only react when threatened) or b) incurable. If you hired an out-ofseason resort hotel and fed AI a prompt to come up with ‘Die Hard At An Upscale Wedding — But Cheap’, you might come up with something as utterly generic as The Best Man. Giving Dolph Lundgren some baddie heads to crack helps a bit — but not much. SYMPATHY FOR THE DEVIL (DIGITAL) Joel Kinnaman parks by the Las Vegas hospital where his wife is giving birth when Nicolas Cage — red hair, demonic beard, gun — slides into his car and tells him to drive into the desert. Threats, violence, a lot of chat, character revelations and a carnage climax ensue. DECEMBER 2023 109
Tom Courtenay THE SEASONED BRITISH ACTOR ON HIS FILM (AND PANEL SHOW ) LIFE IN PICTURES WORDS IAN FREER HAVING RECENTLY WRAPPED on Queen At Sea with Juliette Binoche, Tom Courtenay is taking a well-earned break, doing crosswords, going for walks, training his puppy Nelly and watching sport (“It looked at one time we might come unstuck,” he says about the Ryder Cup). So, to mark the Blu-ray release of his excellent 1964 World War I drama King And Country, it’s a good time to talk through his glittering career in key images. “I saw the pictures you sent on my wife’s computer,” he tells us. “I don’t have a computer anymore. Let’s try this.” JUST DESERT KING AND COUNTRY (1964) 110 DECEMBER 2023 THE RUNNING MAN THE LONELINESS OF THE LONG DISTANCE RUNNER (1962) “This was shot at Ruxley Towers but called Ruxton Towers in the film. I still see the location [when] coming back to London along the A3. It was a very low-budget film. The camera was on a car and if you look closely, you can see the tyre marks on the grass. Sometimes I just ran past the camera. I did some tests before actual filming. They didn’t have to pay me for the tests, but then they put a lot of those shots in the film. They diddled me there.” MILKING IT BILLY LIAR (1963) “I’d played Billy Fisher on stage where I took over from Albert Finney. Billy is choosing between going to London with Liz (Julie Christie) and staying with his fantasy life in Bradford. Ironically, this scene was shot at Marylebone Station in London. Billy gets off the train to get some milk. People always say to me, ‘Why the hell didn’t you stay on the train with Julie Christie?’ The script said: ‘Billy doesn’t get on the train.’ So what was I going to do? Get them to change it?” Alamy, Getty Images “I’d done two other films, but I was still young when I did King And Country. I bought this little tiny house in Chelsea and was having some Norwegian wood — like the Beatles song — put on the wall. So this carpenter, an old boy, came round. He saw I had this huge tape recorder that I was using to learn my lines from this scene, which is where Arthur Hamp is giving testimony about what makes him desert the army in World War I. So I played this story and this old boy had to sit down. He’d been in the trenches and it just overwhelmed him. It was a wonderful moment. I’ll never forget it.”
AN EARLY BATH THE DRESSER (1983) “This was my and Albert Finney’s first shot. I don’t know why we chose that. My hair was going the wrong way so I did it myself after that. That’s all I remember. I had done the play so I knew it backwards. Albert was not in the play but I’m jolly glad he did the film because that’s how we became best friends. When I was in drama school, we were always talking about Albert Finney. Sometimes at dinner during The Dresser, after I’d been winding him up, I’d say, ‘I used to be in awe of him,’ and Albert would say, ‘He still is!’” PRIVATES ON PARADE DAD’S ARMY (2016) “This parade, for the end of the film, was shot in Bridlington. I’m from Hull but we lived in Bridlington for a while. It wasn’t much of a part — I couldn’t do an impression of Clive Dunn — and my wife didn’t think I should do it, but it was up on the coast, staying in Scarborough, and it was quite enjoyable. I worked with the lovely Alison Steadman although our scenes were cut. It was very amiable and I liked Oliver [Parker], the director. It was quite a pleasant experience.” HAPPY IN HATS DOCTOR ZHIVAGO (1965) “Somebody sent this picture for me to sign a couple of years ago and I had never seen it before. It’s Julie Christie [who plays the enigmatic Lara, the female lead] and I having a laugh off-set. It was really nice because Pasha [Antipov, Courtenay’s idealistic character who marries Lara before going missing in action] is quite a grim part, especially later on in the film. You can’t really tell from this image, but I can remember Julie started to feel the pressure that she was in such a big film. But this is just a nice, jolly, friendly picture.” PEERS ON THE PIER LAST ORDERS (2001) “This is Raymondo [Ray Winstone], dear David Hemmings and dear Bob Hoskins — both gone — and me delivering Michael Caine’s ashes on Margate pier. We were a little band of brothers. I remember trying to give Ray elocution lessons. We used to make each other laugh so much, Fred Schepisi [director] had to tell us off for buggering about. After Fred had given us a lecture, they went off and I thought they’d gone out of earshot. I said, ‘Fred. It’s not me. It’s them. But I don’t want them to think I’m a miserable sod so I’ve got to join in.’ Then we did a few days at Pinewood and this lady comes up and takes her coat off. She’s wearing very little underneath — bra, pants — and she starts rubbing herself against me. She said, ‘I hear you’ve been a bit miserable. So I’ve come to cheer you up.’ They worked it on me.” PANEL (SHOW) BEATER WOULD I LIE TO YOU? CHRISTMAS SPECIAL (2016) “I’ve never seen this but people said I was very funny. David Mitchell was very nice. Rob Brydon has become a friend since then. I remember I did an impression of Maggie Smith doing an impression of my dog Stanley, who sadly passed last November. I became friends with Maggie on Quartet. Stanley used to cross his paws so Maggie would cross one hand over the other and go [does pitch-perfect Maggie Smith impression], ‘Oh, Stanley.’ I was dreading doing the show because I was so nervous and then, when we started, I was fine.” KING AND COUNTRY IS OUT ON 6 NOVEMBER ON DVD AND BLU-RAY DECEMBER 2023 111
MERYL STREEP 7 8 She appears, uncredited, as herself in which Farrelly Brothers movie? Her 1988 film, Evil Angels, is known by a different title here in the UK. What is it? 9 10 11 Her highest-grossing movie posted a worldwide total of $694 million. Name it. 1 2 3 How many Oscars has Streep won so far over her career? Name the movie that she won her first Oscar for, in the Best Supporting Actress category. How many years separated her second win, for The French Lieutenant’s Woman, and her third, for The Iron Lady? 4 Streep holds the record for the most acting Academy Award nominations. Is that: a) 17, b) 19, or c) 21? 5 In 1977, she made her feature debut. What was the name of her first film? A clue: it shares a name with another film Streep made in 2009. 6 Streep has played a character with the surname ‘Orlean’ in two different movies. Name them. In which 1990 film does she perform the song ‘I’m Checkin’ Out’? In The Devil Wears Prada, what is the name of the magazine Streep’s Miranda Priestly edits? 12 13 Which Streep film ends with the line, “Do you remember where you parked the car?”? Streep made one movie with her thenpartner, John Cazale, before he died in 1978. What was that film? 14 15 The Bridges Of Madison County is adapted from a novel by which writer? Where does Florence Foster Jenkins’ final performance take place in the 2016 film of the same name? 16 17 She’s played a President and a Prime Minister. But in what film is Streep a queen? She worked with Steven Spielberg on The Post, but prior to that lent her voice to A.I. Artificial Intelligence. Who did she play? 18 19 20 Meryl is not her real name. Is it a) Sophie, b) Mary, or c) Susan? Which British music producer is Streep’s son-in-law? Who directed Streep on film in Silkwood and Postcards From The Edge, on TV in Angels In America, and on stage in The Seagull? ANSWERS 1. Three 2. Kramer Vs. Kramer (1979) 3. Twenty-nine, from 1983 to 2012 4. c) 21 5. Julia 6. Adaptation and Don’t Look Up 7. Stuck On You 8. A Cry In The Dark 9. Mamma Mia! 10. Postcards From The Edge 11. ‘Runway’ 12. Death Becomes Her 13. The Deer Hunter 14. Robert James Waller 15. Carnegie Hall 16. The Ant Bully 17. Blue Mecha 18. b) Mary 19. Mark Ronson 20. Mike Nichols 112 DECEMBER 2023
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 SIX BRAND-NEW CRITERION TITLES 18 19 20 21 22 23 1 7 9 10 11 14 15 17 18 21 22 23 Jude Law and Nicole Kidman star in this Anthony Minghella drama (4,8) Role played by Leonard Whiting and Leonardo DiCaprio (5) Zoe, who is Nyota, Neytiri and a Lioness leader (7) Could be Cassie, Lana or Clubber (4) “The crash was only the beginning” warned the tagline (5) National Lampoon’s — House (John Belushi movie) (6) Certain to be at Cannes — or Carry On with less? (6) Wright, whose micro-budget first feature was A Fistful Of Fingers (5) She’s a young witch with a delivery service (4) See 5 Down Maybe director Lubitsch, maybe Blofeld (5) Person who manages the day-to-day logistics on a movie (4,8) AKA Captain Marvel (5,7) Rebel — (Sofia Boutella) (4) The Little Mermaid villain played by Melissa McCarthy (6) 4 It describes Matt Damon’s Tom Ripley (8) 5/21 Across He made Twins and the original Ghostbusters (4,7) 6 Playwright who adapted The French Lieutenant’s Woman for the big screen (6,6) 8 Pom Klementieff character with antennae and empathic abilities (6) 12 His name is Jean-Claude (3,5) 13 This links Psycho, Raiders and John Wayne (6) 16 Juno’s Jennifer or The Great Escape’s James (6) 19 Multi-Oscar-winning musical with Leslie Caron and Maurice Chevalier (4) 20 If you’re watching The Cincinnati Kid, then it must be Tuesday! (4) 1 2 3 It’s always a pleasure to have Criterion in Crossword Corner, and this month we have not one, not two, but six typically brilliant titles that are coming to the Collection in November and December. First up is After Hours, Martin Scorsese’s romp through nighttime 1980s Manhattan; next, Tod Browning’s Sideshow Shockers, including 1932’s unique Freaks; then 1992 crime thriller One False Move, with Billy Bob Thornton; Peter Bogdanovich’s sultry classic The Last Picture Show; 1928’s The Circus, Charlie Chaplin’s last silent picture; and finally Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio, the Mexican maestro’s new take on an old tale. We’ve got a copy of all six on 4K or Blu-ray for ten winners. So crack the crossword, solve the anagram and follow the instructions below. THE CRITERION COLLECTION IS AVAILABLE FROM SELECTED RETAILERS COMPETITION ENDS 20 NOVEMBER HOW TO ENTER Take the letters from each coloured square and rearrange them to form the name of an actor, director or character. Visit www.empireonline.com/crossword and fill out the form, along with your answer, in the provided field. Entry is free and closes at midnight on 20 November. Winners are selected at random. See below for terms and conditions. NOVEMBER’S ANSWERS ACROSS: 1 Duffer, 4 Grodin, 9 Angel, 10 Seconds, 11 Stan Laurel, 14 Malick, 16 Gollum, 18 Black Widow, 21 Cheadle, 23 Dooku, 24 Nature, 25 Gawain. DOWN: 1 Drax, 2 Fight Club, 3 Ellen, 5 Ricardo, 6 Don, 7 Nostromo, 8 Isaac, 12 La Llorona, 13 American, 15 Chandor, 17 Akeem, 19 India, 20 Dunn, 22 Eat. ANAGRAM BEN AFFLECK TERMS AND CONDITIONS: One entry per person. Entries are free. Entries must be received before 21 November or will not be valid. The Competition is only open to people aged 18 and over who live in the United Kingdom and are not a Bauer employee or their immediate family. One winner will be selected at random from all valid entries. Competition promoted by H Bauer Publishing t/a Empire (“Empire”). Empire’s choice of winner is final, and no correspondence will be entered into in this regard. The winner will be notified, via email, between seven and ten days after the competition ends. Empire will email the winner a maximum of three times. If the winner does not respond to the message within 14 days of the competition’s end, Empire will select another winner at random and the original winner will not win a prize. Empire is not responsible for late delivery or unsatisfactory quality of the prize. Entrants agree to the collection of their personal data in accordance with Empire’s privacy policy: http://www.bauerdatapromise.co.uk/. Winner’s personal details will be given to prize provider to arrange delivery of the prize. Bauer reserves the right to amend or cancel these terms or any aspect of the competition (including the prize) at any time if required for reasons beyond its control. Any questions, please email empire@bauermedia.co.uk. Complaints will not be considered if made more than 30 days after the competition ends. Winner’s details available on request (after the competition ends) by emailing empire@bauermedia.co.uk. For full T&Cs see http://www.bauerlegal.co.uk/competition-terms.html DECEMBER 2023 113
Merrill is asleep on a chair in the den. The television is playing. We hear a female newsreader’s (Rhonda Overby) voice. As she speaks, Merrill wakes up and starts watching the TV. THE A LIEN REVEAL Signs CHOSEN BY BRIAN DUFFIELD Then the camera tracks the kids as they run to another door. The cameraman runs with them. On the soundtrack, eerie music begins to build. Newsreader: The startling footage we’re about Watching the TV, Merrill — fully caught up in the footage — waves his hands at the set. to show you was photographed by a 42-year-old, Romero Valadares. Merrill: Move, children! Vamonos! As Merrill rubs his eyes and sits up, the camera pushes in on him. Newsreader: This video was taken yesterday afternoon at his son’s seventh birthday in the city of Passo Fundo, Brazil. It was sent to the local news bureau there and sent to us via satellite just a few minutes ago. Back on the TV, the cameraman now trains his lens on the side of the house, and an alleyway with the hedge at one side. A young kid starts talking to the camera, in Portuguese… but there is one sentence in English. Kid: It’s behind! (DIRECTOR) Now we cut to the television, and see the newsreader’s face. BRIAN DUFFIELD [director, No One Will Save You]: “One of the best scenes ever in movies is Joaquin Phoenix in Signs, watching the news, and the news plays a pre-iPhone recording of a birthday party, and all of a sudden a tall green alien emerges from the bushes and walks by, Bigfoot-style, and Joaquin loses his mind. I don’t know if I’ve ever seen a bigger jump scare in a movie. It’s so effective and cool, and it’s such an impactful, amazing exposition scene. The alien’s clearly CG, and you don’t care. It’s my favourite Shyamalan scene. It’s everything he’s perfect at.” INT. CUPBOARD UNDER THE STAIRS — DAY After his family has been plagued by what appears to be extra-terrestrial activity, Merrill Hess (Joaquin Phoenix) has fashioned a makeshift den under the stairs in his brother Graham’s house. 114 DECEMBER 2023 Newsreader: All initial opinions are, this is genuine. What you’re about to see may disturb you. We cut back to Merrill, who leans forward as we hear sounds of children playing at a birthday party. He stands up, and moves closer to the TV, bringing his chair with him. The camera zooms in, the music builds… and then a giant green figure, clearly not human, walks out from behind the hedge, looking directly at the camera. The kids scream. Back in the farmhouse, Merrill clasps his hand over his mouth, his eyes widening. But he can’t scream — there are kids in the house and he doesn’t want to scare them. So instead he settles for: Merrill: Oh! Now we see the TV, which is playing footage of a group of children at a birthday party. They are shouting excitedly, but with a note of fear. A dog is barking. We see that they are all indoors, but the party has been set up outside. The children are all at the glass doors, hollering about something. Something that appears to have sent them scarpering inside. The camera zooms in on the hedge, but sees nothing but cake and balloons. He gets up and staggers back towards the wall, placing his hand over his mouth again. On the screen, the footage rewinds and starts to replay. Merrill steps forward, aghast. On the TV, the figure appears again, and this time the footage is paused, leaving us with that image of what seems to be a giant green alien, staring directly at the audience. SIGNS IS OUT NOW ON DVD, BLU-RAY AND DIGITAL

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