‘Green Book’: Will Word of Mouth Save the Wobbly Oscar Contender?
It’s getting crowded at the pre-holiday box office, and there will be blood on the tracks before the season is through.
It’s getting crowded at the pre-holiday box office, and there will be blood on the tracks before the season is through.
Exclusive: In a new clip from Joel Edgerton’s gay conversion drama, the Oscar nominee must answer to his parents, played by Russell Crowe and Nicole Kidman.
Netflix continues to confound as we read the tea leaves of its first-ever platform release, soon to be followed by anticipated “Roma.”
Composers Danny Bensi and Saunder Jurriaans toned down their usual darkness in scoring Joel Edgerton’s sensitive drama about gay conversion therapy.
Numbers tell the story: for every robust limited release (“Beautiful Boy”) there’s a disappointment down the line, from “Suspiria” to “The Sisters Brothers.”
Setting out to recreate history, three top filmmakers found themselves in the crosshairs of unforeseen relevance.
With “Boy Erased” opening this week, the busy actor unpacks his stresses to IndieWire, from getting close to tough roles to avoiding Daniel Day-Lewis comparisons, and only getting better with every part.
Hedges has a packed awards season ahead of him, thanks to both Joel Edgerton’s true-life tale and another tough turn in “Ben Is Back.”
“I recognize myself as existing on [a] spectrum: Not totally straight, but also not gay and not necessarily bisexual,” Hedges tells Vulture in an honest new interview.
With its focus on the family of origin, Edgerton’s film also gets the best out of Xavier Dolan, Russell Crowe, Flea, and Troye Sivan.
These days, when booking a fall festival, there’s little room for error.
Hedges has starred in recent best picture nominees such as “Manchester by the Sea,” “Lady Bird,” and “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.”