Tag: Apple TV Plus

  • Matt Shakman to direct, executive produce Apple’s ‘Godzilla and the Titans’ series

    By PTI

    LOS ANGELES: “WandaVision” helmer Matt Shakman has come on board to direct the first two episodes of Apple TV Plus’ “Godzilla and the Titans” series.

    According to Deadline, Shakman is also attached as an executive producer on the show.

    The untitled series continues the story of the Legendary Monsterverse established in films like “Godzilla”, “Kong: Skull Island”, “Godzilla: King of the Monsters” and “Godzilla vs.Kong”.

    Chris Black and Matt Fraction have co-created the series with both executives producing. Black also serves as showrunner.

    “Following the thunderous battle between Godzilla and the Titans that levelled San Francisco and the shocking new reality that monsters are real, the untitled Monsterverse series will explore one family’s journey to uncover its buried secrets and a legacy linking them to the secret organization known as Monarch,” the plotline reads.

    Other executive producers are Safehouse Pictures’ Joby Harold and Tory Tunnell, Hiro Matsuoka and Takemasa Arita of Toho Co.Ltd.

  • Brandon Flynn, Patton Oswalt board Apple series ‘Manhunt’ 

    By PTI

    LOS ANGELES:  “13 Reasons Why” star Brandon Flynn and actor Patton Oswalt have joined the cast of “Manhunt”, a new true-crime series from streamer Apple TV Plus.

    The show, created by writer/producer Monica Beletsky, will take audiences into the aftermath of Abraham Lincoln’s assassination. “The Crown” star Tobias Menzies leads the cast along with Lovie Simone and Matt Walsh.

    According to Deadline, Flynn and Oswalt joined the series along with Betty Gabriel, Will Harrison, Hamish Linklater, Damian O’Hare and Lili Taylor.

    “Manhunt” is a true-crime series based on the astonishing events of the Lincoln assassination, its aftermath and the best-selling book “Manhunt: The 12-Day Chase for Lincoln’s Killer” by James Swanson.

    Menzies will play Edwin Stanton, Lincoln’s War Secretary and friend, who was driven nearly to madness by the need to catch assassin John Wilkes Booth.

    Flynn will play the role of Eddie Stanton Jr., a war department clerk and son of Edwin Stanton. Oswalt has been cast as Detective Lafayette Baker, a war department investigator.

    The series, part historical fiction, part conspiracy thriller, will take audiences into the aftermath of the first American Presidential assassination and the fight to preserve and protect the ideals that were the foundation of Lincoln’s Reconstruction plans–issues that reverberate into the present day.

    The show strongly features Black historical figures whose lives intertwined with the escape, manhunt, and subsequent high-crimes investigation, including Mary Simms, a former slave of the doctor who treated Booth’s injury and gave him safe harbor after his crime.

    “Manhunt” will be produced by Apple Studios, and co-produced by Lionsgate, in association with POV Entertainment, Walden Media, and 3 Arts Entertainment.

    Beletsky, who is best known for her work on “Fargo” and “Leftovers”, will serve as the showrunner and executive producer.

  • Harrison Ford to star opposite Jason Segel in Apple comedy series ‘Shrinking’ 

    By PTI

    LOS ANGELES: Hollywood veteran Harrison Ford has been tapped to star opposite Jason Segel in the Apple TV Plus’ comedy series “Shrinking”.

    The show, first announced in October 2021, will be penned by Segel, “Ted Lasso” co-creator Bill Lawrence and ‘Ted Lasso’ star, writer, and co-executive producer Brett Goldstein.

    According to Variety, “Shrinking” follows Jimmy (Segel), a grieving therapist who starts to break the rules and tell his clients exactly what he thinks.

    Ford will essay the role of Dr.Phil Rhodes, a pioneer in Cognitive Behavioral Therapy who has built a successful practice over the years that he shares with his two young proteges, Jimmy and Gaby.

    He is described as a down-to earth, sharp as a tack blue collar shrink, blunt but with an ever present twinkle.

    “Shrinking” will mark the “Indiana Jones” star’s first ever major television role. Segel, Lawrence and Goldstein all serve as executive producers on the show. Warner Bros.Television is the studio behind the project.

    PTI SHDSegel, Lawrence, and Goldstein all serve as executive producers on “Shrinking” in addition to writing.

    Lawrence executive produces via Doozer Productions, with Doozer’s Jeff Ingold and Liza Katzer also executive producing alongside Neil Goldman.

    Warner Bros.Television, where Doozer is under an overall deal, is the studio.

  • Mick Jagger talks about his theme for series ‘Slow Horses’

    By IANS

    LOS ANGELES: Singer Mick Jagger has written his first TV theme, for the Apple TV Plus spy series ‘Slow Horses’, debuting April 1.

    And it might never have happened if he hadn’t already read and liked the Mick Herron book on which it’s based, reports ‘Variety’.

    “It’s a quite popular series of books, so I knew what it was about,” the iconic Rolling Stones singer tells ‘Variety’.

    “I knew the vibe really well, so as soon as (composer Daniel Pemberton) sent the track to me, I just dashed off a few pages of notes of what I thought it was about. It came very, very quickly, which is always a good sign.”

    Pemberton, the series’ Oscar-nominated composer (‘The Trial of the Chicago 7’), had been working for months on the series, creating what he calls “a very unique sound world, all based on low-fi recording techniques and slightly wonky sounds”.

    He and Jagger didn’t meet due to Covid restrictions, but in December of last year began a whirlwind series of Zoom calls, emails and text messages.

    “I played him the track on guitar,” Pemberton recalls.

    “I’m not even a good guitarist. That was very weird, playing guitar for Mick Jagger on the Zoom line.”

    Adds Jagger: “I just recorded it on my iPhone and sent it to him, and he loved it. And then we had to do a bit of crafting, trying to get a chorus, calling it ‘Strange Game’ and trying to get the verses from the point of view of the main character,” referring to Jackson Lamb, played by Gary Oldman in the series.

    Lamb runs Slough House, the rundown building that is home to all of MI5’s failures, all of whom are eager to redeem themselves and return to the Regent’s Park headquarters as full-fledged agents. Kristin Scott Thomas, Jack Lowden, Olivia Cooke and Jonathan Pryce also star in the six-part series.

    “It’s quite irreverent, but the Gary Oldman character is irreverent,” Jagger explains.

    “It’s also slightly eerie, so it combines those two things. You don’t want to make it too serious.”

    Director James Hawes traces the need for an unusual theme song back to the start of discussions about the score in 2020.

    “It is a resoundingly British show in a very confident British genre, which had to find a flavour of its own,” he says.

    “Right from the get-go, I thought that we could use a song in the opening to help us set the tone, particularly with the first show, which has a very dynamic, perhaps more conventional action opening. Then you have to pivot into a different sort of atmosphere, into the world of Slough House.”

    Hawes recalls having dinner with London music supervisor Catherine Grieves, proposing the idea of a song with “just one name in mind. I wanted somebody that felt like they were London, and had the same gravitas and swagger as Jackson Lamb. It just had to be Jagger. And I think we both laughed about it”, thinking it unlikely that the veteran rocker would even consider it.

    Says Grieves: “Daniel had written this brilliant opening title as an instrumental (but) which totally lent itself to a song.

    The ‘Slow Horses’ company assembled a package to submit to Jagger’s music team, including a three-and-a-half-minute trailer and a page of detail about the series by ‘Slow Horses’ writer Will Smith.

    “We tried to distill the nature and the smell of the show, and discuss what an opening song might be,” Hawes said.

    “This is about the MI5 screw-ups: the ones who’ve left the file on the train, who slept with the wrong person, who kicked down the wrong door, and they’re begging for a second chance. So it needed to be a story about people hoping for a way back to play with the big boys. That was all Mick needed.”

    Jagger is a perfectionist, Pemberton reports: “He wanted to make it better. I’d rework the song to accommodate his new chords…. and when he sang ‘it’s a strange game’ in this soft mysterious voice, I went, ‘that’s the name of the song!’ I started rearranging the song to make that the focus.”

    Parts of the song are heard in the body of the show. And Jagger’s signature harmonica occasionally features in Pemberton’s underscore.

    While many TV series have licensed songs from leading rock ‘n’ roll stars in the past, few of Jagger’s stature have written original themes. The closest comparison may be Paul McCartney’s theme for “The Zoo Gang” in 1974, coincidentally also a six-part English series with an espionage backdrop.

    To Hawes, the song “has a then-and-now about it that feels right. Both Mick and Gary have history that roots them in the ’70s and ’80s where Jackson Lamb was at his greatest strength, at the end of the Cold War. A poet like Mick could take these simple ideas of no second chances and being losers, and then conjure lyrics that give both the edge and the irony to those ideas. And he has.”

  • Amanda Seyfried joins Apple TV+ anthology 

    By Express News Service

    Actor Amanda Seyfried has joined the cast of The Crowded Room. Apple TV+, the streamer of the anthology series made the official announcement.

    Seyfried will play Rya, a clinical psychologist and single mother,  in the upcoming season. His previous work includes  Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini’s Things Heard & Seen and David Fincher’s Mank, for which she was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress. She will also play Elizabeth Holmes in the upcoming Hulu series The Dropout.

    Spider-Man actor Tom Holland will be joining Seyfried in The Crowded Room. He was recently seen in this week’s The Uncharted. He is also an executive producer for the series.

  • Noah Emmerich on playing federal officers: Couldn’t be further from these characters

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: How “The Americans” star Noah Emmerich became Hollywood’s go-to-guy for roles falling in the law enforcement domain is a question that the actor asks himself “not infrequently” as he believes his own personality is quite different from these characters.

    Emmerich, who made a name for himself with performances in movies such as “Beautiful Girls”, “The Truman Show” and “Miracle” (2004), has often found himself essaying characters who don “a badge and a gun”.

    His most noteworthy performance was as the cold war era FBI officer Stan Beeman in critically-acclaimed FX series “The Americans”.

    He also featured in shows and movies such as “The Hot Zone”, “Space Force”, “The Spy”, “Super 8” and “Pride and Glory”, where again he played men who were positions of authority.

    “It’s a question that I ask myself not infrequently — How I ended up becoming the federal agent for hire as an actor? It must have begun with the physicality with my size and my bearing. Somehow we all have these archetypes in our head of what people look like.

    “In reality, I feel like I couldn’t really be further from a federal officer or anyone who carries a gun or a badge. But I seem to have played many of these roles along the course of my career,” Emmerich told PTI in a Zoom interview from New York.

    The 56-year-old actor, who now features in the Apple TV Plus series “Suspicion”, said he is aware how an FBI officer or any other law enforcement official functions as he has observed them up close.

    “I spent quite a bit of time in the research phase of these jobs with policemen, FBI agents, DEA agents and all different sorts of emergency workers. So I came to know them pretty well.

    “I’ve come to understand the culture, language and the physicality and just the essence of what it is like to live in that life. So I guess that informs my work as an actor,” he added.

    Though playing these law enforcement guys has become sort of an easy job for Emmerich, he believes it is now time to take a break from such roles.

    “It’s been a lot of years of research and living in that skin, so it comes relatively easily to me now – that mindset, that perspective and that way of understanding the world.

    “With every new job, you still have all the information and the experience of the previous job. So hopefully it gets deeper, grows and becomes more realistic each time. But I’m ready for a break from law enforcement. I think I need to play a criminal soon.”

    In “Suspicion”, Emmerich will once again be seen as an FBI agent.

    He plays Scott Anderson, who investigates the kidnapping of an American media mogul’s son.

    The Apple Original show follows five people — three men and two women — as their lives turned upside down after being identified as possible suspects by London police in the kidnapping.

    Emmerich said that “Suspicion” will certainly be liked by the audiences, especially those who loved “The Americans” as there are some similarities between the two shows, especially the theme of identity.

    “There is some relationship between the two shows. I mean the dominant connection is this question of identity. This question of ‘who are we’ versus ‘who we are and how people perceive us’. Those questions can be asked in both shows and they’re both central in terms of the tension of the drama.

    “It’s interesting to have these characters confront themselves via the police examination because we all kind of fudge ourselves in terms of perception.”

    Another similarity is the exploration of two opposite Western cultures.

    While “The Americans” was about the American people and their Russian counterparts, “Suspicion” is a transatlantic show, set in London and New York.

    “It’s kind of fun and sexy and international. ‘The Americans’ was also international with two different cultures — America to Russia. Here, it is America and the UK. So there are similarities in a way, and yet it’s a totally different meal.

    “So hopefully people that enjoy ‘The Americans’ will enjoy ‘Suspicion’. And even people that didn’t enjoy ‘The Americans’, maybe they will enjoy this show,” he added.

    “Suspicion”, show run by Rob Williams, also stars Uma Thurman, Kunal Nayyar, Georgina Campbell, Elyes Gabel, Elizabeth Henstridge, Tom Rhys-Harries and Angel Coulby.

    The first two episodes of the series started streaming on Apple TV Plus from Friday.

  • Apple orders limited series ‘Presumed Innocent’ from David E Kelley

    By PTI

    LOS ANGELES: Apple TV Plus has green lit the limited series “Presumed Innocent”, based on a novel by author Scott Turow.

    In a statement, the streaming service said the novel’s story will be “reimagined” for the screen by David E Kelley, the man behind hit shows “Big Little Lies” and “Nine Perfect Strangers”.

    Kelley will serve as showrunner and executive producer alongside executive producers Dustin Thomason, filmmaker JJ Abrams and Bad Robot’s Ben Stephenson.

    The courtroom thriller follows the story of a horrific murder that upends the Chicago Prosecuting Attorney’s Office when one of its own is suspected of the crime.

    Kelley’s take on “Presumed Innocent” will explore the themes of obsession, sex, politics, and the power and limits of love, as the accused fights to hold his family and marriage together.

    The show comes from Bad Robot Productions and David E Kelley Productions in association with Warner Bros Television.

    The novel was previously adapted into a hit film in 1990 with Harrison Ford in the lead role.

  • Gina Rodriguez to star in Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown

    By Express News Service

    Actor Gina Rodriguez is on board the adaptation of the Spanish hit dark comedy Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown. Originally directed by Pedro Almodovar is now being adapted for Apple TV Plus. Rodriguez is expected to play the role of Pepa Marcos, which was originally portrayed by Carmen Maura in the 1988 film. The feature also stars Antonio Banderas and Julieta Serrano.

    It has been reported by Variety that the series will be executive produced by Almodovar for his banner El Deseo. Rodriguez is also one of the executive producers of the show alongside her partner Molly Breeskin. According to reports, the adaptation is said to be a bilingual — a mix of English and Spanish.

    Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown fetched Almodovar five Goya Awards, a New York Film Awards win, as well as Academy Award, Golden Globes and BAFTA nominations.

    At the moment Almodovar is also working on his first English title, A Manual for Cleaning Women, starring Cate Blanchett. 

  • ‘Foundation’ renewed for season two at Apple TV Plus

    By PTI

    WASHINGTON: Streaming service Apple TV Plus has decided to renew sci-fi drama series “Foundation” for a second season.

    The show’s renewal comes after the first season of the show, created by David S Goyer and Josh Friedman, debuted on Apple TV Plus on September 24.

    The ten-episode first season will conclude with its finale on November 19.

    Based on Isaac Asimov’s book series of the same name, “Foundation” revolves around the epic saga of The Foundation, a band of exiles who discover that the only way to save the Galactic Empire from destruction is to defy it It features Jared Harris and Lee Pace in the lead along with Lou Llobell, Leah Harvey and Laura Birn.

    Harris stars as Hari Seldon, a math genius who predicts the demise of the empire, while Pace portrays the role of Brother Day, the current Emperor of the Galaxy.

    Goyer, who serves as the showrunner, said that with the upcoming second season, the audiences will be introduced to “more of Asimov’s indelible characters and worlds”.

    “I’m thrilled that a whole new generation of fans are reading Asimov’s brilliant masterwork.

    We’re playing the long game with ‘Foundation’ and I’m grateful to my partners at Apple and Skydance for entrusting me with this epic. Buckle up. We’re about to fold some serious space,” he said in a statement.

    Matt Cherniss, head of programming for Apple TV Plus, hailed “Foundation” as a “captivating, suspenseful and breathtaking thrill ride”.

    “We know how long fans of these beloved Asimov stories have waited to see his iconic work brought to life as a visually spectacular event series and now we can’t wait to showcase even more of the richly layered world, compelling storytelling and stunning world-building that David S Goyer has created in season two,” he added.

    Also starring Indian actors Kubbra Sait of “Sacred Games” fame and Pravesh Rana, “Foundation” is produced by Skydance Television.

  • Best Picture for ‘The Crown’, Best actor for Jason Sudeikis: Here are the winners for Emmys 2021

    #39;Ted Lasso #39;, a comedy series from another streamer Apple TV Plus, was the second most awarded show winning the trophy of the outstanding drama series at the ceremony, hosted by Cedric the Entertainer.