Elisabeth Moss Runs on Pain, Real and Imaginary, in ‘The Invisible Man’ and ‘Shirley’
As the powerhouse explains, a neck injury enhanced her demented turn as Shirley Jackson. But other than that, Moss insists she’s no method actor.
As the powerhouse explains, a neck injury enhanced her demented turn as Shirley Jackson. But other than that, Moss insists she’s no method actor.
Major studios dominate VOD charts, but there’s also a lot of love for Russian dystopian thrillers and off-brand titles like “Body Cam.”
“Hellraiser.” “The Others.” “The Night of the Hunter.” When will the remakes stop?
In an unprecedented move amid the coronavirus outbreak, Universal Pictures will make its top theatrical titles available for audiences at home.
Universal’s busted Dark Universe franchise has given way to strong filmmakers with original ideas, and James Wan is the latest to enter the fray as a producer.
With nearly $50 million worldwide on a $7 million budget, “The Invisible Man” is one of the year’s first breakout hits.
Strangely, FUNimation’s “My Hero Academia: Heroes Rising” opened at number four.
“The Call of the Wild” should hold strong for no. 2, followed by “Sonic the Hedgehog,” but the weekend will likely decline from last year’s.
Whannell echoes Scorsese is rejecting director cuts, saying, “I never wanna have another cut sitting somewhere that competes with the original cut.”
“The Invisible Man” centers around a female abuse victim, so its male writer and director knew a woman’s perspective was essential to pulling it off.
“You may think you’ve seen it all but you haven’t,” producer Jason Blum says amidst criticism the trailer for “The Invisible Man” gives away the entire film.
“Saw” writer Leigh Whannell mixes metaphors in this limp remake, using gaslighting and privacy fears for his uneven sci-fi horror.