Tag: Olivia Colman

  • Olivia Colman in talks to join ‘Paddington 3’ cast 

    By PTI

    LOS ANGELES: Oscar winner actor Olivia Colman is in negotiations to join the cast of the third part of the popular British movie series “Paddington”.

    Actors Antonio Banderas, Rachel Zegler, and Emily Mortimer are also in talks to board the threequel, titled “Paddington In Peru”, reported entertainment news outlet Deadline.

    Besides, Julie Walters, Jim Broadbent, Madeleine Harris, Samuel Joslin, and Imelda Staunton are also in talks with Studiocanal to reprise their roles in the new movie.

    The project, which will mark the directorial debut of Dougal Wilson, known for his work as a commercial and music video director, will be filmed in the UK, Peru, and Colombia.

    The film franchise features Ben Whishaw voicing Paddington and Imelda Staunton lending her voice for Aunt Lucy.

    Based on the best-selling book of the same name by British author Michael Bond, the movie series tells the story of the eponymous character Paddington, an anthropomorphic bear who migrates from the jungles of Peru to the streets of London, where he is adopted by the Brown family.

    “Paddington in Peru” will see the bear embark on a new adventure that will take him from Windsor Gardens to Peru.

    It will follow Paddington as he returns to Peru to visit his beloved Aunt Lucy, who now resides at the Home for Retired Bears.

    With the Brown Family in tow, a thrilling adventure ensues when a mystery plunges them into an unexpected journey through the Amazon rainforest and up to the mountain peaks of Peru.

    The third part has a story by ‘Paddington 1’ and ‘Paddington 2’ collaborators Paul King, Simon Farnaby, and Mark Burton with the screenplay by Burton, Jon Foster, and James Lamont.

    It will be produced by David Heyman and Rosie Alison with Rob Silva as co-producer.

    LOS ANGELES: Oscar winner actor Olivia Colman is in negotiations to join the cast of the third part of the popular British movie series “Paddington”.

    Actors Antonio Banderas, Rachel Zegler, and Emily Mortimer are also in talks to board the threequel, titled “Paddington In Peru”, reported entertainment news outlet Deadline.

    Besides, Julie Walters, Jim Broadbent, Madeleine Harris, Samuel Joslin, and Imelda Staunton are also in talks with Studiocanal to reprise their roles in the new movie.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    The project, which will mark the directorial debut of Dougal Wilson, known for his work as a commercial and music video director, will be filmed in the UK, Peru, and Colombia.

    The film franchise features Ben Whishaw voicing Paddington and Imelda Staunton lending her voice for Aunt Lucy.

    Based on the best-selling book of the same name by British author Michael Bond, the movie series tells the story of the eponymous character Paddington, an anthropomorphic bear who migrates from the jungles of Peru to the streets of London, where he is adopted by the Brown family.

    “Paddington in Peru” will see the bear embark on a new adventure that will take him from Windsor Gardens to Peru.

    It will follow Paddington as he returns to Peru to visit his beloved Aunt Lucy, who now resides at the Home for Retired Bears.

    With the Brown Family in tow, a thrilling adventure ensues when a mystery plunges them into an unexpected journey through the Amazon rainforest and up to the mountain peaks of Peru.

    The third part has a story by ‘Paddington 1’ and ‘Paddington 2’ collaborators Paul King, Simon Farnaby, and Mark Burton with the screenplay by Burton, Jon Foster, and James Lamont.

    It will be produced by David Heyman and Rosie Alison with Rob Silva as co-producer.

  • Biweekly Binge: Of faces and self-respect

    Maggie Gyllenhaal directed a short in Homemade, a Netflix anthology reflecting living and filmmaking during the peak of COVID-19. The film is an adaptation of the novel by Elena Ferrante. Gyllenhaal set it in a future that is far and yet feels so near where a man deals with a life stripped of togetherness and community in the shadow of an unknown threat. The film defined the solitude of the lockdown even for the privileged. 

    Leda Caruso (Olivia Colman, Jessie Buckley playing the younger Leda) arrives on a solo holiday in seaside Greece. A professor from Cambridge, Massachusetts, she is a scholar of poetry and their Italian translations.

    She observes Nina (Dakota Johnson) and their big family vacationing in the same beach, where Nina is overwhelmed by her toddler Elena and an aggressive looking husband. Like an impulse, what she observes triggers an anniversary trauma in Leda, the trauma of being a mother and living with the complete knowledge of her limitations or even complete disregard for the relationship. Leda looks on as Nina suffocates under the weight of a daughter and a husband while Lyle (Ed Harris) the caretaker at the inn and Will the assistant – generations apart – try to win Leda’s affection. 

    The film ebbs and flows in two tracks, one with Leda making up for lost time, not finding the right words with both Will and Lyle and another swinging between saviour and destroyer in Nina’s life as a mother. Gyllenhaal shifts between the life of a young academic in flux with two little daughters and a partner, often struggling to gain a foothold in either of the roles. Leda in Greece goes through the motions of remembrance of days past as the “unnatural mother” (her words), who is both irritable and awkward when pushed to deal with areas outside of her academic expertise. 

    The Lost Daughter is a film full of faces, the most important weapon according to Gyllenhaal. Colman, Johnson and Buckley are almost always in close-ups, their disposition conveying the stress, trauma and disinterest in playing the mother.

    All the three faces at various moments express unexpected joy, unadulterated disgust, complete contempt and, rarely, a caring glance. The Lost Daughter, therefore, needed the best actors to pull off Gyllenhaal’s vision for the adaptation and with this lot she’s in great hands.

    It’s also a film that establishes something Joan Didion wrote on self-respect, “In brief, people with self-respect exhibit a certain toughness, a kind of moral nerve; they display what was once called character, a quality which, although approved in the abstract, sometimes loses ground to other, more instantly negotiable virtues.”

    Leda may have doubts floating in her mind, but she retains that brand of self-respect – one that allows her to remain indifferent and not be swayed by any other life force, until she meets her double, Nina, a younger self.

    Quoting Didion again, “..one lives by doing things one does not particularly want to do, by putting fears and doubts to one side, by weighing immediate comforts against the possibility of larger, even intangible, comforts.”

    Leda’s preoccupation with her intellectual outlet over more mundane familial obligations were seldom a threat to her self-respect. She tells Nina how amazing it felt to walk away from her kids for three years. She was never in doubt and weighed the immediate comforts and vocations against the arguably long term investment of parenting. She’s not incapable of love. Her self-respect instils in her the ability to choose what to love.

    (The Lost Daughter is now streaming on Netflix)

  • ‘The Lost Daughter’: Of faces and self-respect

    Express News Service

    Maggie Gyllenhaal directed a short in Homemade, a Netflix anthology reflecting living and filmmaking during the peak of the Covid pandemic. Gyllenhaal set it in a future that is far and yet feels so near where a man deals with a life stripped of togetherness and community in the shadow of an unknown threat. Above all, the film defined the solitude of the lockdown even for the privileged. Gyllenhaal returns with her feature directorial debut in The Lost Daughter, another film on solitude but one created by the threat of care and intimacy.

    Leda Caruso (Olivia Colman, Jessie Buckley playing the younger Leda) arrives on a solo holiday in seaside Greece. A professor from Cambridge, Massachusetts (the place suggesting incredible academic accomplishment), she is a scholar of poetry and their Italian translations (the film is an adaptation of the novel by Elena Ferrante). She observes Nina (Dakota Johnson) and their big family vacationing in the same beach, where Nina is overwhelmed by her toddler Elena and an aggressive looking husband. Like an impulse, what she observes triggers an anniversary trauma in Leda, the trauma of being a mother and living with the complete knowledge of her limitations or even complete disregard for the relationship. Leda looks on as Nina suffocates under the weight of a daughter and a husband while Lyle (Ed Harris) the caretaker at the inn and Will the assistant—generations apart—try to win Leda’s affection. 

    The film ebbs and flows in two tracks, one with Leda making up for lost time, not finding the right words with both Will and Lyle and another swinging between saviour and destroyer in Nina’s life as a mother. Gyllenhaal shifts between the life of a young academic in flux with two little daughters and a partner, often struggling to gain a foothold in either of the roles. Leda in Greece goes through the motions of remembrance of days past as the “unnatural mother” (her words), who is both irritable and awkward when pushed to deal with areas outside of her academic expertise.

    Young men in boats make her uncomfortable and a taunting group of drunk men in a movie theatre test her patience. “It’s like talking about a film I saw in a language that I didn’t quite understand”, Leda tells Will during an awkward date, a line that captures her parenting disarray. The date soon turns into this monologue for Leda who takes light jabs at her daughters and her relationship with her own mother, the lightness only conveyed by the tipsy frivolity in Colman’s mood but the words flowing with the force of a gauntlet. It’s a scene with great writing and acting, conveying the essence of the film purely with the face.

    The Lost Daughter is a film full of faces, shallow focus with only the countenance to play with, the most important weapon according to Gyllenhaal. Colman, Johnson and Buckley are almost always in close-ups, their disposition conveying the stress, trauma and disinterest in playing the mother. All the three faces at various moments express unexpected joy, unadulterated disgust, complete contempt and, rarely, a caring glance. The Lost Daughter, therefore, needed the best actors to pull off Gyllenhaal’s vision for the adaptation and with this lot she’s in great hands.

    It’s also a film that establishes something Joan Didion wrote on self-respect, “In brief, people with self-respect exhibit a certain toughness, a kind of moral nerve; they display what was once called character, a quality which, although approved in the abstract, sometimes loses ground to other, more instantly negotiable virtues.” Leda may have doubts floating in her mind, but she retains that brand of self-respect—one that allows her to remain indifferent and not be swayed by any other life force, until she meets her double, Nina, a younger self. Quoting Didion again, “..one lives by doing things one does not particularly want to do, by putting fears and doubts to one side, by weighing immediate comforts against the possibility of larger, even intangible, comforts.” 

    Leda’s preoccupation with her intellectual outlet over more mundane familial obligations were seldom a threat to her self-respect. She tells Nina how amazing it felt to walk away from her kids fort three years. She was never in doubt and weighed the immediate comforts and vocations against the arguably long term investment of parenting. She’s not incapable of love. Her self-respect instils in her the ability to choose what to love.

    The Lost Daughter

    Now streaming on Netflix

  • Olivia Colman, Rowan Atkinson, Sally Hawkins join star cast of ‘Wonka’

    By ANI

    WASHINGTON: Actors Olivia Colman, Rowan Atkinson and Sally Hawkins have joined the cast of ‘Wonka’, a big-screen musical reimagining Roald Dahl’s classic children’s book ‘Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.’

    As per Variety, actor Timothee Chalamet is set to play the lead role in the upcoming project. The star will essay the world’s most famous chocolatier in the musical based on the early life of the fictional character Willy Wonka.

    Atkinson is best known for his work in the ‘Johnny English’, ‘Black Adder’ and ‘Mr. Bean’ franchises. Colman is an Oscar winner for ‘The Favourite’ and a nominee for ‘The Father’. She just captured an Emmy for playing the role of Queen Elizabeth II on ‘The Crown’. And Hawkins earned Academy Award nominations for ‘Blue Jasmine’ and ‘The Shape of Water’.

    Other cast members include Tom Davis, Simon Farnaby, Rich Fulcher, Kobna Holdbrook-Smith, Paterson Joseph, Keegan-Michael Key, Calah Lane, Matt Lucas, Colin O’Brien, Natasha Rothwell, Rakhee Thakrar and Ellie White.

    Though the plot details have been kept under wraps, the Warner Bros. prequel film will explore the upbringing of the man who later created the famous house of confectionary treats.

    Dahl’s popular book ‘Charlie and the Chocolate Factory’ follows a poor boy named Charlie Bucket, who wins a golden ticket to tour the world-famous and heavily guarded chocolate factory run by one Willy Wonka. Since the upcoming movie takes place before the chocolate factory opened, Charlie and the company won’t be making an appearance in ‘Wonka’.

    Paul King, widely known for ‘Paddington’ and its sequel, is directing ‘Wonka’. David Heyman, a driving force behind the ‘Harry Potter’ franchise and the beloved ‘Paddington’ movies, will produce the film, based on a script by Simon Rich.

    Gene Wilder portrayed the candy man in the 1971 movie adaptation titled ‘Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory’, and Johnny Depp later embodied the role in the 2005 reboot ‘Charlie and the Chocolate Factory,’ directed by Tim Burton.

    Burton’s retelling briefly explored Willy Wonka’s backstory, including his candy-hating, dentist father, as well as meeting the Oompa Loompa’s that keep his factory running.

    ‘Wonka’ is scheduled to release on March 17, 2023.

  • Netflix bags rights for Maggie Gyllenhaal’s ‘The Lost Daughter’

    By PTI

    LOS ANGELES: Streaming service Netflix has acquired the rights for actor Maggie Gyllenhaal’s directorial debut “The Lost Daughter”.

    The deal, negotiated with Endeavour Content, covers US and remaining territories, Netflix said in a press release.

    The acquisition comes ahead of the film’s world premiere in competition at the Venice Film Festival.

    “The Lost Daughter” is based on the 2006 novel of the same name by Italian author Elena Ferrante.

    The film also stars Olivia Colman, Jessie Buckley, Dakota Johnson, Peter Sarsgaard, Paul Mescal, Oliver Jackson-Cohen, Ed Harris and Dagmara Dominczyk.

    The movie will follow Colman’s Leda, an elegant college professor who, while on a seaside vacation, becomes obsessed with a young woman, Nina (Johnson), and her young daughter, as she watches them on the beach.

    Their compelling relationship forces Leda to confront the trauma surrounding her own motherhood.

    Gyllenhaal has adapted the screenplay and also produced the feature film with Talia Kleinhendler and Osnat Handelsman-Keren for Pie Films, Charles Dorfman for Samuel Marshall Films and Endeavor Content.

    Gyllenhaal, who previously featured in “The Kindergarten Teacher” for Netflix, said she is excited to work with the streamer again.

    “They have supported so much of the work I am most proud of, and this is no exception. Netflix has consistently championed filmmakers that excite and inspire me and I’m delighted to be included in that company,” she said.

  • Micheal Ward joins Olivia Colman in Sam Mendes’ film, ‘Empire of Light’

    By Express News Service
    Small Axe-fame Micheal Ward will star opposite Oscar winner Olivia Colman in British filmmaker Sam Mendes’ upcoming feature Empire of Light.

    Ward, a Jamaican-born British actor, is famous for starring in Lovers Rock, which is the second part of Steve McQueen’s highly-acclaimed anthology movie series Small Axe.

    Produced by Searchlight Pictures, Empire of Light is a romantic drama set in and around the South Coast of England in the 1980s. The film marks Mendes’ first solo outing as a screenwriter.

    The filmmaker, known for critically-acclaimed movies such as American Beauty, Skyfall and Revolutionary Road, had penned his most recent film, war drama 1917, with Krysty Wilson-Cairns.

    For Empire of Light, Mendes is once again collaborating with legendary cinematographer Roger Deakins, who won an Oscar for best cinematography at the 2020 Academy Awards for his work on 1917.

    The filmmaker will also produce the project through his Neal Street Productions along with Pippa Harris. Ward is currently busy with the second season of his hit Netflix series Top Boy. He will also feature in the streaming platform’s upcoming film Beauty, co-starring Giancarlo Esposito and Sharon Stone.

  • Olivia Colman in negotiations to join Marvel’s Secret Invasion

    By Express News Service
    Oscar-winning British star Olivia Colman is in negotiations to join Marvel’s next series, Secret Invasion.Though plot details are under wraps, according to The Hollywood Reporter, the series will focus on Samuel L Jackson’s secret agent Nick Fury and a character from the shape-shifting alien race called Skrulls (played by Ben Mendelsohn). As of now, no details are available about the role Colman will play in the series.

    One Night in Miami star Kingsley Ben-Adir is said to play the villain in the upcoming series. Kyle Bradstreet, who worked on the thriller series Mr. Robot, is writing and executive producing the series with a shoot planned in the UK and Europe later this year.

    Colman, who won an Oscar for her work in The Favourite, more recently starred as Queen Elizabeth II in Netflix’s The Crown. She is nominated this year for the Best Supporting Actress Academy Award for her role in The Father.

  • Anthony Hopkins’ Oscar-nominated ‘The Father’ to hit theatres in India on April 23

    By PTI
    MUMBAI: “The Father”, starring Oscar winners — veteran actor Anthony Hopkins and Olivia Colman — will release in the theatres in India on April 23. The film, directed and co-written by Florian Zeller, is nominated in six categories at the upcoming 93rd Academy Awards.

    Adapted from Zeller’s critically acclaimed play “Le Pere” (“The Father”), the movie takes a raw and unflinching look at dementia, examining how the lines between reality and delusion blur as the disease takes over.

    It revolves around an ageing man Anthony (Hopkins) who battles his own diminishing mind. When his caring daughter (Colman) is forced to choose between the ailing parent and moving to Paris with her new found love, the duo’s bond is put to the ultimate test.

    The film also features actors Mark Gatiss and Imogen Poots PVR Pictures is releasing “The Father” in India.

  • ‘The Crown’ stars Olivia Colman, Matt Smith to voice star in BBC’s ‘Superworm’

    By PTI
    LONDON: BBC has roped in British star Olivia Colman and Matt Smith to lead the cast of animated special “Superworm”.

    The half-hour show, based on the book of the same name by author Julia Donaldson and illustrator Axel Scheffler, will also feature “Sex Education” star Patricia Allison and actor Rob Brydon.

    Sarah Scrimgeour and Jac Hamman will direct the special from a script by Max Lang and Suzanne Lang, BBC said in a statement.

    The show follows Superworm (Smith), who is a hero always on hand to help out all the other animals and insects, whose latest challenge is to fight the wicked Wizard Lizard and his servant Crow.

    ALSO READ | ‘The Crown’ actress Emma Corrin to star alongside Harry Styles in Amazon’s ‘My Policeman’

    “I’m delighted to play the part of ‘Superworm’. And join such a fabulous cast of actors, artists and storytellers. What fun to be part of the BBC’s Christmas line up in this great children’s tale,” Smith said. Colman, who will narrate the show, said, “This is such a lovely project to be involved with.

    “When reading the script, and imagining all those things going on at the end of the garden, I could really get a feel for the pure fun and joy that the film will bring. I’ve always loved these charming productions at Christmas and I’m delighted to be voicing the narrator.”

    Barney Goodland will produce “Superworm” with Martin Pope and Michael Rose serving as executive producers.

    The show will air on BBC One on Christmas this year.