You think it’s all sunshine and bubble gum but then the teaser trailer for Fox’s Scream Queens gives those who aren’t prepared for something weird to happen something to scream about. The new 22-second teaser trailer features Emma Roberts looking sassy while chewing away, and then the bubble she’s blowing takes on a sinister form.
Roberts is reuniting with American Horror Story creators Ryan Murphy and Brad Falchuk for the new Fox series that also features Jamie Lee Curtis, Lea Michele, Abigail Breslin, Keke Palmer, Skyler Samuels, Nasim Pedrad, Billie Lourd, Oliver Hudson, Diego Boneta, Glen Powell, and Lucien Laviscount.
Scream Queens will premiere this fall. Season one will revolve around a college campus which is rocked by a series of murders.
Director Michael Dougherty has begun shooting Krampus, the Christmas holiday-themed horror comedy starring Adam Scott, Toni Collette, Allison Tolman, David Koechner, Conchata Ferrell, Emjay Anthony, Stefania Owen, and Krista Stadler. The Legendary Pictures production is currently shooting in New Zealand, with Weta Workshop and Weta Digital on board to handle creating the creatures and visual effects.
Dougherty (Trick R Treat) co-wrote the script with Zach Shields and Todd Casey. Universal Pictures is aiming for a December 4, 2015 theatrical release.
“Krampus is the kind of ‘once-in-a-blue-moon’ project that the creative teams at Weta Workshop relish and that, on a personal level, makes my heart beat a little faster,” commented Weta Workshop co-founder and creative director Richard Taylor. “The pre-production phase on this film has been one of the most enjoyable of our career.”
The Plot: Krampus tells the story of young Max, who turns his back on Christmas as his dysfunctional family comes together and comically clashes over the holidays. When they accidentally unleash the wrath of Krampus–an ancient entity from European folklore–all hell breaks loose and beloved holiday icons take on a monstrous life of their own. Now, the fractured family is forced to unite if they hope to survive.
Freddie Highmore and Vera Farmiga in A&E’s ‘Bates Motel’ (Photo by James Dittiger / Copyright 2015)
The third season of A&E’s drama series Bates Motel kicked off on March 9, 2015 with Vera Farmiga and Freddie Highmore back as Norma and Norman Bates. The relationship between mother and son promises to get even more complicated and twisted in this new season, as secrets have been revealed and Norma acknowledges that Norman has problems.
In support of the new season, Farmiga joined executive producers Kerry Ehrin and Carlton Cuse for a conference call to talk about what fans of the critically acclaimed series can expect and to provide a little insight into Norma and Norman.
Norma became, oddly, sort of a stronger and more confident woman in season two. Will we continue to see signs of her personal growth throughout season three?
Kerry Ehrin: “Yes. I think Norma’s whole plan in going to White Pine Bay was to have a normal life. Although she had a hell of a lot of trouble since she got there, it has forced her to have to deal with a lot and interact with a lot of people and find parts of herself that were stronger than she probably ever knew. And that, actually, has had the affect of making her stronger.”
And has it made it more interesting to play that Vera?
Vera Farmiga: “To say the least, yes. You know, Kerry’s taken the lead on writing Norma, and she writes Norma for me like I’m some sort of a demigod. But I’m not man, I’m just a mere mortal and I’m mortally wounded from what she has me go through.
It’s pretty nutty to see now what we explore with this character this season, like the height of righteousness that she possesses and the depths of manipulation and depravity almost that she is capable of. And there just is so many antics and adventures for me to explore. It’s an outstanding role. I have never been challenged the way I am with this story in this particular character. And even as we speak, I swear it’s like I’m heavily medicated right now with tremors and spasms and a torn shoulder and neck muscles and the like. I am broken in smithereens.”
Kerry Ehrin: “It’s a physical role.”
Vera Farmiga: “It’s not even that. It’s like a mental role that is frankly so not healthy for me, with all due respect to everyone. But it’s formidable. It’s torturous to us all to hit the notes that are required emotionally and to do it earnestly. And Kerry really keeps us on point like that. But it just requires the tenacity of ten f’ing tornadoes, and I only had about 9-1/2 in me. I didn’t get to finish that last day on set.”
Kerry Ehrin: “But what we have is pretty amazing.”
Now that Norma knows about Norman’s blackouts, will she ever let him back out into the regular world again or is she going to try to just trap him at home?
Vera Farmiga: “Well, yes. I mean, you’re going to see a more unraveled Norma this year. I mean, there’s mammoth stress in dealing with Norman’s mental state, you know? It has a whopping physical and emotional torn toll on Norma the way it would on any parent of a ‘special needs’ child. And I think following the events of last season, Norma is more aware, she’s more circumspect, she’s more attentive to Norman’s fragility. I think you’re going to see her playing her cards really close to her chest in the beginning of the season but she’s got to reach out.
I think she’s at a point where yes, to answer your question, she’s protective of him as ever and determined to help him as best as she can. But she doesn’t always know how. And I think she’s going to start reaching out to others. I think that relationship evolves as they allow more people in their lives, and you’re going to see how the mother-son bond kind of withstands those pressures.”
You’ve got some great guest stars lined up for this season, one of whom is Joshua Leonard who Vera directed in Higher Ground. What was your experience getting to work with Joshua again? And also from the writing point of view, could we get a little tease of how Joshua’s character will play into the storyline of season three?
Vera Farmiga: “Well, let me explain James Finnegan. I think that Norma’s determined to make her business a success and so she starts enrolling in business classes at the local community college. And so there she meets James Finnegan and he kind of launches her into a whole new path of discovery. I rooted for Joshua to get this role. You know, it’s very interesting though in Higher Ground he played a husband in a relationship that I’m leaving, and this is more of a romantic role. Yet we’re very close friends.
It was a very interesting and bazaar dynamic between the two of us. It’s a character that Norma bonds intensely with. And, you know, he’s just phenomenal. It was a quirky experience to embarking on. We were so close and this is just a weird twist. It was amazing but odd at the same time to work so closely in a different capacity.”
Carlton Cuse: “You know, the quirkiness of it is great. I mean, it’s exactly the right word. Kerry and I strive to create characters who are quirky and odd but yet believable within our sort of larger than life pulpy world of White Pine Bay. Joshua did such an incredibly great job of fitting that mold exactly. He’s odd but he’s really compelling. And over the course of a few episodes, I think the audience will find themselves incredibly engaged in this relationship with these two characters as it starts to deepen and unfold.”
How do you manage to keep the dynamic between Vera’s character and Freddie’s character fresh and inventive and innovative? In some ways, it’s the easiest thing in the world to have it grow stale and run out of new ways to keep audiences riveted by it.
Vera Farmiga: “It’s a really great question because it’s an acting challenge for me and for Freddie as well. I think, you know, as they sort of head towards what seemingly is going to be their inevitable Hades, these emotional scenes also come at such high frequency and duration that sometimes I honestly am just sort of running out of ideas.
It’s really interesting the closeness and the best friendship and the respect and the trust between Freddie and myself. And Kerry, you can talk about the writing aspects of this but from an acting perspective, it’s really intense work. Freddie has become really particularly adept at sort of instigating me and knowing my soft spots emotionally and treading like a bulldozer over them. It’s like in this last season in particular he can be a real prick when it comes to helping like that endurance and the emotional [earnesty].
But I’m going to say it’s hard. It’s hard. And sometimes it’s just nutty. I literally get angry at Kerry for writing this bat sh*t craziness and then you just kind of find it and just because of endurance, man. Sometimes I just don’t know where it’s going to come from and you find a way to transfer it into the scene. Sometimes it’s just the panic of not knowing where to drill that wellspring of emotion to quench the scene. Sometimes that’s enough to set me off. But it comes down to what Freddie and I have together as colleagues and as team players.
There’s so much trust that we can get pretty wily with each other. And certainly that goes for the entire cast and with every year we just draw nearer and dearer to each other and can push each other’s limits. And we push each other for better, for more, for deeper.”
Kerry Ehrin: “Well, I mean it’s similar in writing. Carlton and I like to change up the storytelling a lot. And so you are telling a very intimate story of two people over a very specific and somewhat small period of time. So it does require a lot of thought about how is this going to be different. I think what personally is so fascinating is that it is a psychological thriller. If you’re in a bad marriage let’s say for like two years, every single day is going to be specific and different and fascinating, and it’s going to feed into what happens the next day.
So I think the joy of it is getting under that and playing with it and exploring it so that it’s constantly growing and moving forward in ways that surprise us because Carlton and I like to be surprised. So, yes, it’s fun. Not so much fun for Vera.”
Vera Farmiga: “No. But despite that, look, I’m not going to lie. Like especially this season there’s some big dingy, stingy ordeal in store like we’re going to wade through and drown in some agony. But there’s also so much joy and burlesque and absurdity and buffoonery and above all love. There’s so much love there. And that’s what makes this show so special that there’s so much [love], so much darkness and yet so much humor watching these characters navigate in some ludicrously improbable situations, you know? But that’s what makes it for me so exhilarating. It’s acute, it’s intense, it’s agonizing most of the time but it’s balanced so beautifully. There’s a lot of joy and beauty and friendship and love.”
Carlton Cuse: “Yes. I think, you know, ostensibly the label of the show would be that it’s about a guy who’s growing up to become a serial killer. But we strive really, really hard to make it feel so human and real, and part of that is humor. I think that that’s something that really the sort of the humor and heart of our show is what distinguishes it from other shows in the genre.”
This season Norman is starting to manifest himself as Norma. How much of that are we going to see and is Norma oblivious to it?
Carlton Cuse: “Well, she’s certainly not oblivious to it. You know, we try to make the relationship between Norma and Norman different every season. And, we’re watching a progression here. It’s the story about a mother who desperately loves her son and is trying to prevent him from becoming this guy that’s he inevitably going to become.
This season he starts to slide much more significantly into that character. He becomes less able to the kind of modulator or be conscious of his decline. And that causes just really serious consequences in his relationship with his mom. I think we explore that in a lot of different ways and that’s really the journey of the season.”
Norma really doesn’t realize that what she and Norman are doing and have done all summer is so strange until Dylan mentioned it to her. Will we see her try to find more of a balance in her relationship with Norman because of what Dylan has to say?
Vera Farmiga: “Yes indeed. I think she’s relying on Dylan in a way that she’d never expected to, and that relationship really deepens. They both share the same concern. They both want to help Norman. So I think she is relying on him for a male perspective on how to care for Norman and that’s going to trigger something in Norman.”
Do you have an idea of how many seasons you’d like to see Bates Motel last?
Carlton Cuse: “Yes, five seasons. I mean, Kerry and I have a pretty clear roadmap. We’re just finishing the third season right now and we feel pretty strongly that there’s two more seasons in the show. We have a pretty clear plan of where we want to go and we want to bring this story to its inevitable conclusion. I think Bates is not its best version if it’s an open-ended series and I think the audience is sort of waiting for the conclusion and we’re heading there. We have that mapped out.”
Dwayne Johnson’s taken a step closer to being a member of the exclusive five-time host club with the announcement that he’ll host Saturday Night Live for the fourth time on March 28, 2015. Johnson’s got both Furious 7 and San Andreas heading to theaters in the coming months, and he’s also busy working on the HBO series Ballers which centers around football.
Johnson will be joined on the March 28th episode of SNL by musical guest George Ezra. Ezra, who’s currently out on tour, will be making his SNL debut in support of his first studio album, Wanted on Voyage.
Sony Pictures Animation’s Hotel Transylvania 2 is heading to theaters on September 25, 2015 and the studio’s released a new trailer for the animated sequel. The trailer features Dracula (voiced by Adam Sandler) attempting to teach his young grandson how to fly like a vampire.
Directed by Genndy Tartakovsky, the voice cast also includes Andy Samberg, Selena Gomez, Kevin James, Fran Drescher, Steve Buscemi, Molly Shannon, David Spade, Keegan-Michael Key, and Mel Brooks.
The Plot: Everything seems to be changing for the better at Hotel Transylvania… Dracula’s rigid monster-only hotel policy has finally relaxed, opening up its doors to human guests. But behind closed coffins, Drac is worried that his adorable half-human, half-vampire grandson, Dennis, isn’t showing signs of being a vampire. So while Mavis is busy visiting her human in-laws with Johnny – and in for a major cultural shock of her own – “Vampa” Drac enlists his friends Frank, Murray, Wayne and Griffin to put Dennis through a “monster-in-training” boot camp.
But little do they know that Drac’s grumpy and very old, old, old school dad Vlad is about to pay a family visit to the hotel. And when Vlad finds out that his great-grandson is not a pure blood – and humans are now welcome at Hotel Transylvania – things are going to get batty!
The CW’s released the first official photo of The Flash‘s Tom Cavanagh in his full costume as the Reverse Flash. The Reverse Flash will be introduced in the Tuesday, March 17, 2015 episode airing at 8pm ET/PT and titled “Out of Time.” The network’s revealed an official synopsis for the upcoming episode directed by Thor Freudenthal and featuring guest star Liam McIntyre as The Weather Wizard.
The Plot: “Mark Mardon aka The Weather Wizard (guest star Liam McIntyre) appears in Central City intent on avenging his brother Clyde’s death, and sets his sights on Joe (Jesse L. Martin), who shot Clyde. When Mardon attacks Joe and Barry (Grant Gustin), Barry is able to super-speed them to safety but Mardon gets away. Barry warns Joe not to go after a meta-human alone but Joe doesn’t listen and ends up in grave danger.
Meanwhile, Cisco (Carlos Valdes) looks into the night the team captured the Reverse Flash and realizes something doesn’t add up and begins to wonder whether Joe was right about Dr. Wells (Tom Cavanagh). Barry and Linda (guest star Malese Jow) end up on an awkward double date with Eddie (Rick Cosnett) and Iris (Candice Patton).”
Warner Bros. Television announced they’ll be bringing cast members from Gotham, The Flash, iZOMBIE, and Teen Titans Go! to the 2015 WonderCon in Anaheim, CA. This year’s event will take place Easter weekend, April 3 through April 5th, with Warner Bros. Television holding screenings of their spotlighted shows on Friday, April 3rd. Saturday’s events include panels with iZOMBIE‘s Rose McIver, Malcolm Goodwin, Rahul Kohli, Robert Buckley, David Anders, along with executive producers Rob Thomas and Diane Ruggiero-Wright; Gotham‘s Ben McKenzie, Donal Logue, Robin Lord Taylor, and executive producer John Stephens; and Teen Titans Go!‘s Greg Cipes, Scott Menville, producer Michael Jelenic, and Aaron Horvath. And on Sunday, WonderCon attendees will get to participate in a Q&A with The Flash‘s Danielle Panabaker, Candice Patton, Carlos Valdes, executive producer Greg Berlanti and executive producerAndrew Kreisberg.
Here’s this year’s schedule, courtesy of Warner Bros Television:
FRIDAY, APRIL 3
2:30–5:30 p.m. Special Screenings — WonderCon and Warner Bros. Television proudly continue our annual Special Screenings tradition, with episodes of The Flash and Gotham, plus advance sneak peek screenings of new episodes of iZOMBIE and Teen Titans Go!.
The Flash is a fast-paced super hero drama that follows the high-speed adventures of the Fastest Man Alive. After the unexpected and devastating explosion of the S.T.A.R. Labs Particle Accelerator, Central City Police Department CSI Barry Allen finds himself suddenly charged with the incredible power to move at super speeds. While Barry has always been a hero in his soul, his newfound powers have finally given him the ability to act like one. However, Barry was not the only one affected that fateful night, and there is now a rash of super-powered villains popping up all over Central City. With the help of his friends at S.T.A.R. Labs and foster-father, Detective Joe West, Barry works to keep his city safe from these “metahumans,” while at the same time working to uncover the secrets of and defeat his arch-nemesis, The Man in Yellow, who is responsible for the death of his mother and wrongful imprisonment of his father. The Flash airs Tuesdays at 8/7c on The CW.
Before there was Batman, there was Gotham. The origin story of the great DC Super-Villains and vigilantes has only just begun. Gotham follows Jim Gordon’s rise through the Gotham City police department and the spawning ground of the world’s most iconic villains. Gotham airs Mondays at 8/7c on FOX.
iZOMBIE makes its WonderCon debut with an advance screening of a brand-new upcoming episode. Olivia “Liv” Moore was a rosy-cheeked, disciplined, overachieving medical resident who had her life path completely mapped out…until the night she attended a party that unexpectedly turned into a zombie feeding frenzy. Now stuck somewhere between half-alive and undead, Liv transfers her residency to the coroner’s office for access to the brains she must reluctantly eat, but with each brain she consumes, she inherits the corpse’s memories. With her medical examiner boss and a police detective, she now solves homicides to quiet the voices in her head. Based upon characters created by Chris Roberson and Michael Allred, published by DC Entertainment’s Vertigo imprint, iZOMBIE airs Tuesdays at 9/8c on The CW.
The Teen Titans are back at it again in Teen Titans Go! with all-new comedic adventures both in and out of Titans Tower. We’ll have your Titans craving covered by screening a brand-new episode. Based on DC Comics characters and produced by Warner Bros. Animation, Teen Titans Go! airs Thursdays at 6/5c on Cartoon Network.
SATURDAY, APRIL 4
11:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Teen Titans Go! Screening and Q&A – Super-sized laughs and super hero adventures await you as the Titans once again take over WonderCon. Greg Cipes (voice of Beast Boy) and Scott Menville (voice of Robin) along with producers Michael Jelenic (Batman: The Brave and The Bold) and Aaron Horvath (MAD) will be on hand to answer your questions as well as screen an all-new episode. Teen Titans Go! airs Thursdays at 6/5c on Cartoon Network.
2:30–3:30 p.m. iZOMBIE Special Video Presentation and Q&A — Olivia “Liv” Moore was a rosy-cheeked, disciplined, overachieving medical resident who had her life path completely mapped out…until the night she attended a party that unexpectedly turned into a zombie feeding frenzy. Now stuck somewhere between half-alive and undead, Liv loses all traces of her former drive and ambition. She transfers her medical residency to the city morgue in order to reluctantly access the only real form of sustenance left available to her — and the only thing that allows her to maintain her humanity — human brains. But there are side effects to Liv’s new diet: With each brain she consumes, Liv experiences “visions” — flashes of the corpse’s memories — including, in some cases, clues as to how they were killed.
iZOMBIE makes its WonderCon debut with a special video presentation, followed by a Q&A with series stars Rose McIver (Masters of Sex), Malcolm Goodwin (Breakout Kings), Rahul Kohli (newcomer from the UK), Robert Buckley (One Tree Hill) and David Anders (Once Upon a Time), as well as executive producers Rob Thomas (Veronica Mars) and Diane Ruggiero-Wright (Veronica Mars). From Bonanza Productions Inc. in association with Spondoolie Productions and Warner Bros. Television and based upon characters created by Chris Roberson and Michael Allred, published by DC Entertainment’s Vertigo imprint, iZOMBIE airs Tuesdays at 9/8c on The CW.
3:45–4:45 p.m. Gotham Special Video Presentation and Q&A — Before there was Batman, there was Gotham. The origin story of the great DC Super-Villains and vigilantes has only just begun. Join Ben McKenzie, Donal Logue, Robin Lord Taylor and executive producer John Stephens for a Q&A discussion and special video presentation, and be among the first to find out what’s in store for the exciting conclusion of the first season. Gotham follows Jim Gordon’s rise through the Gotham City police department and the spawning ground of the world’s most iconic villains. From Warner Bros. Television, Gotham airs Mondays at 8/7c on FOX, with all-new episodes returning Monday, April 13th.
SUNDAY, APRIL 5
1:30–2:30 p.m. The Flash Special Video Presentation and Q&A — The Flash is a fast-paced super hero drama that follows the high-speed adventures of the Fastest Man Alive. After the unexpected and devastating explosion of the S.T.A.R. Labs Particle Accelerator, Central City Police Department CSI Barry Allen finds himself suddenly charged with the incredible power to move at super speeds. While Barry has always been a hero in his soul, his newfound powers have finally given him the ability to act like one. However, Barry was not the only one affected that fateful night, and there is now a rash of super-powered villains popping up all over Central City. With the help of his friends at S.T.A.R. Labs and foster-father, Detective Joe West, Barry works to keep his city safe from these “metahumans,” while at the same time working to uncover the secrets of and defeat his arch-nemesis, The Man in Yellow, who is responsible for the death of his mother and wrongful imprisonment of his father. Join Danielle Panabaker, Candice Patton, Carlos Valdes, along with executive producers Greg Berlanti and Andrew Kreisberg for a special video presentation and Q&A. From Bonanza Productions Inc. in association with Berlanti Productions and Warner Bros. Television, The Flash airs Tuesdays at 8/7c on The CW.
“I’m here asking for my son’s life, Shawn. He’s a good kid. He’s got a family; he don’t deserve this,” pleads Jimmy Conlon (Liam Neeson). “You know how this has to end. I’m coming after your boy with everything I got,” replies Shawn Maguire (Ed Harris), the Irish mob boss of New York City. Jimmy is Shawn’s oldest and closest friend and a former employee, but all bets are off after Jimmy killed Shawn’s son who was about to murder Jimmy’s son, Mike, in the action thriller Run All Night.
Back in the day, Jimmy was a professional hitman and enforcer for Shawn, but more recently, he’s been trying to forget the faces of all those he murdered by drinking himself into oblivion. Barely on speaking terms with his estranged son, Mike (Joel Kinnaman), a former boxer who now drives a limo for a living and has never had anything to do with his father’s business, Jimmy is surprised to get a call from Shawn asking him to go and talk to Mike on his behalf. It seems Mike witnessed Shawn’s son, Danny (Boyd Holbrook), murder two possible business associates when a deal fell through. Unwilling to do what his father has instructed him to do (stand down and leave it alone), Danny goes to Mike’s home and tries to kill him but is shot dead by Jimmy before he can pull his trigger.
Knowing how this will play out after so many years of working for Shawn, Jimmy convinces an unwilling Mike to trust him for just one night in an effort to try to save his son, his son’s pregnant wife, and their two daughters. Together the two of them must go on the run in New York City, avoiding corrupt cops, contract killers, and mob informants, all while trying to get Mike’s family out of town and safely hidden. While struggling to keep Mike alive, Jimmy must use what few options he has left (and his own particular set of skills!) to find a way to stop Shawn from killing his only son.
Gritty and suspenseful, Run All Night is a dark and slick crime thriller that’s a cut above the usual Neeson action films with its furious direction by Jaume Collet-Serra (Unknown, Non-Stop) and the strong performances by Neeson and Harris. Liam Neeson delivers a pitch-perfect performance as Jimmy, a former expert hitman who regrets his life choices and is determined to save his son at all costs.
Ed Harris delivers a strong and deeper-than-expected performance as Shawn, the Irish mob boss seeking vengeance for the murder of his son by his best friend. The pain and heartbreak he subtly shows while telling his wife about the death of their son is uncomfortable and emotional. Some of the best scenes in the film are between Neeson and Harris.
The car chases, shoot-outs, a fight to the death in a bathroom, the escaping of a burning building, and other action scenes are extremely fast–paced and filled with tension. The hectic, almost frenzied camera work covering different parts of New York City adds an intensity and urgency to the pacing of the film.
Perhaps the only drawback to Run All Night is that it starts to become predictable in the third act, borrowing and following the last act formula from other great gangster films such as The Public Enemy starring James Cagney and Road to Perdition starring Tom Hanks. Still, with its intense direction, exhilarating action scenes, and solid performances by Neeson and Harris, Run All Night is one of the better, more enjoyable crime thrillers to hit the big screen in the last few years.
GRADE: B
MPAA rating: R for strong violence, language including sexual references, and some drug use
I read in the promotional material prior to Cinderella‘s release that this would be a different take on the classic fairy tale. The promotional material was lying. There are no real surprises in the story laid out on screen, as this live-action version of Cinderella sticks to the tale we’ve all heard and love.
If you were worried any 21st-century sensibilities would make this Cinderella anything different than the abused stepdaughter who only attends the ball and meets her prince because of help from her fairy godmother, fear not. This is your mother’s – and grandmother’s – Cinderella, and it’s a gorgeous (and safe) fairy tale adaptation.
Lily James (Downton Abbey) takes on the title role and while she’s lovely and a fine actress, the chemistry between her and her onscreen prince was lacking much spark. The prince is played by Richard Madden who had plenty of time to tackle Cinderella after his aborted reign as the King of the North in Game of Thrones.
Madden’s prince isn’t called on to do much other than look terrific in his royal attire, dance, and chase after the poor servant girl with whom he falls in love during their first meeting in the woods. Madden’s prince does stand up against his father’s chief advisor and follows his heart, but he’s still not that engaging of a character on screen.
Cate Blanchett plays wicked well, with icy glares and scathing putdowns that would make the strongest heart shrivel. And Blanchett’s wardrobe alone is enough to earn three-time Academy Award winner Sandy Powell another Best Costume Design Oscar nomination. But if one performance needs to be singled out in this ensemble, it’s Helena Bonham Carter’s Fairy Godmother. Although her screen time is less than 10 minutes, Bonham Carter lightens the tone of the film and was the perfect choice to play the quirky character who makes Cinderella’s dreams come true.
With a running time of 112 minutes, Cinderella does try the patience of younger audience members, and even adults may get a bit squirmy halfway through. But at least the stunning sets and beautiful costumes remain pleasant to look at throughout the film even when the pacing lags. Directed by Kenneth Branagh (Thor, As You Like It) from a script by Chris Weitz (About a Boy), this Cinderella isn’t flashy and doesn’t forge a new path, but it does have adorable mice to cheer for and a villain to hiss.
Is it the best live-action adaptation of Cinderella? No. My vote still goes to Ever After with Drew Barrymore, Dougray Scott, and Anjelica Huston, but this 2015 Cinderella will be adored by audiences of all ages ready to embrace a poor girl who falls for a prince and the prince who reciprocates that love and comes to her rescue.
President Obama and Jimmy Kimmel on ‘Jimmy Kimmel Live’ (Photo by Randy Holmes / ABC)
President Obama took a trip to the West Coast and stopped by Jimmy Kimmel Live to chat with Kimmel about current events. And while on the March 12, 2015 show, President Obama followed in the footsteps of Kimmel’s celebrity guests by reading mean tweets.