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Julianne Moore, Nicholas Galitzine revel in the poisonous plotting of 'Mary & George'

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Julianne Moore, Nicholas Galitzine revel in the poisonous plotting of 'Mary & George'

It was supposed to be a somber scene in “Mary & George,” the Starz limited series about an opportunistic Jacobean widow (Julianne Moore) who maneuvers her second-born son, George (Nicholas Galitzine), into the corridors of English power. The moment called for Moore, as Mary, to toss a handful of dirt into the camera lens and onto the casket of her late, abusive husband. But it seems Moore, while one of the best actors around, doesn’t have particularly good aim.

“I’m definitely not an athlete,” Moore said in a recent video interview. “They were like, ‘Just throw it on the coffin.’ When I threw it, it [went off to the sides] like a clock: 12 o’clock, 3 o’clock, 6 o’clock, 9 o’clock. It was so sad.” But also funny enough to give cast and crew a case of the giggles. “Everyone just burst out laughing,” Galitzine said in a separate interview. “She took one handful of soil, and it missed north of the camera. She took another one, threw it, missed south of the camera; two more, one west, one east. And we just could not keep it together. It was just a perfect cross of unathleticism.”

Inspired by Benjamin Woolley’s nonfiction book “The King’s Assassin: The Secret Plot to Murder King James I,” “Mary & George” can get quite macabre as it dramatizes the Machiavellian scheming and bloodshed behind the rise of George Villiers, engineered by his mother, Mary. Which didn’t prevent Moore and Galitzine from having a blast making it. Modern and lurid in its sensibility — this is very much a show for grown-ups, with sex and violence aplenty — “Mary & George” offered more than enough to fire the imagination of its cast.

Starting with the first scene, in which Mary reacts with a combination of resignation, scorn and love to the birth of her second child (his birth order appears fated to ensure his lack of potential), Moore was drawn to the language used by writer-producer D.C. Moore (no relation). “The way she speaks about her child and his lack of possibilities, it’s funny and it’s outrageous, and also strangely tender,” the actor said. “What D.C. did with the language was just modern, forthright and funny, and arresting. There was a heat to it and a directness and a kind of profaneness that I thought was interesting.”

Mary ends up steering George into the court of the sexually voracious King James I (Tony Curran), whom he seduces on his way to gaining power and influence in diplomatic affairs. Rising from their low station, mother and son trample over propriety, make a lot of people angry and even leave a few bodies in their wake. It’s a rags-to-riches story in which the rags are soaked with blood.

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Like many ambitious operators through the ages, Mary makes a path where there is none.

“She’s a person with no agency and no autonomy,” Moore said. “There’s nowhere in her life that’s her own. Any of her agency is through either the men that she’s married to or her male children. This is a woman who came from a middling family and didn’t have a whole lot of luck with her marriages but managed to position her children really well and be buried in Westminster Abbey.”

For all its skulduggery and eventual consequences, “Mary & George” also has a wicked comedic bite, especially as young George finds his footing in the king’s court and aims for the royal bedchamber. “It’s a show that changes quite drastically in genre as it goes along,” Galitzine said. “It starts off with a level of bounce to it and it’s very comedic. And then as the stakes grow, and as Mary and George ascend to power, it becomes much more of a drama than a comedy. It’s a dysfunctional family, and then the royal court is equally dysfunctional, and the king is even more dysfunctional.”

For all the poisonous plotting they shared, Galitzine enjoyed a warm relationship with his onscreen mother.

“Julie is very giving,” he said. “She always has ideas about everything. She’s very knowledgeable about all the realms of an acting performance, whether it’s emotional or physical. Her command of film IQ is impeccable. She’s just an incredibly kind person, as well as being immensely talented. She brings levity to the working day, despite doing really intense pieces of acting.”

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And when the dirt went flying, she took it in stride.

“That just humanized her in such a wonderful way,” Galitzine said.

Entertainment

Blue Note LA reveals opening calendar of acts including Robert Glasper, Charlie Puth and Killer Mike

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Blue Note LA reveals opening calendar of acts including Robert Glasper, Charlie Puth and Killer Mike

The iconic New York jazz club Blue Note announced Tuesday the opening slate of shows for its long-awaited Los Angeles location, which includes Robert Glasper, Charlie Puth and Killer Mike. After delays caused by construction and permitting in the wake of L.A.’s January fires, the venue will open its doors in mid-August with local favorite Robert Glasper christening the new venue Aug. 14 and 15.

Located in Hollywood on Sunset Boulevard and Ivar Avenue, the celebrated jazz institution is rolling out a roster of A-list artists in jazz and other genres. Following Glasper’s two opening shows, Grammy nominee Alex Isley will headline Aug. 16 and 17.

The first month is particularly stacked, as the team behind the Blue Note is taking the responsibility of introducing the ethos and the way they do shows to an L.A. audience very seriously.

Like the New York Blue Note location (the brand has clubs around the world, including in Napa, Tokyo and Honolulu), artists will be doing two shows a night. Both Blue Note Entertainment President Steven Bensusan and Director of Programming/Talent Buyer Alex Kurland have emphasized that the L.A. location will reflect a local vibe, including in the acts they book.

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Among the first run of shows will be a heavy slate of local artists, including Terrace Martin with guest Kenyon Dixon Aug. 19 and 20, Braxton Cook Sept. 9 and 10, Kamasi Washington Sept. 30 to Oct. 5 and Oct. 7 to 12, Keyon Harrold Nov. 18 and 19 and many more.

The rest of the released schedule, which runs into 2026, features a stellar array of jazz luminaries such as Branford Marsalis Oct. 21 and 22, Esperanza Spalding Sept. 2 to 7, Ravi Coltrane Aug. 28 to 31, Kenny Garrett Sept. 11 to 14, Cimafunk Nov. 20 and 21, and a Lady Blackbird residency multiple dates.

Also sticking to the Blue Note ethos, there is a healthy dose of musicians from a variety of genres, such as Charlie Puth Oct. 16 to 19, Andra Day Nov. 28 to 30, Killer Mike Sept. 19 to 21, Slum Village Oct. 20, Ben Folds Dec. 11, Mayer Hawthorne Aug. 25 and more.

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Cranky Craig Movie Review

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Cranky Craig Movie Review

WATERTOWN, New York (WWNY)

What a horrible dilemma, having to choose between Pedro Pascal and Chris Evans, then again who wouldn’t choose Dakota Johnson? Beautiful people struggling to find love. Can love just be a mathematical equation?

Click on the you tube video to see the review

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Pixar had its worst opening weekend ever with 'Elio.' What happened?

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Pixar had its worst opening weekend ever with 'Elio.' What happened?

Aliens may have embraced Elio, but earthbound audiences did not, marking the lowest opening weekend ever for a Pixar film and highlighting the challenges for original animated movies.

“Elio” hauled in $21 million at the box office in the U.S. and Canada through Sunday, according to studio estimates, falling short of Walt Disney Co.-owned Pixar’s previous lowest domestic opening, 2023’s “Elemental,” which made $29.6 million in its debut. (1995’s “Toy Story” had a domestic opening weekend total of $29.1 million, not adjusted for inflation, though it was released ahead of Thanksgiving weekend and reached $39 million over that five-day period.)

The family-friendly film, which centers on an alien-loving boy who longs for a community that understands him, came in third at the box office behind Universal Pictures’ live-action remake “How to Train Your Dragon,” which maintained its grip on theaters, and Sony Pictures’ Danny Boyle-directed horror franchise revival “28 Years Later.”

“Elio” had strong reviews (84% “fresh” on Rotten Tomatoes), but its soft opening underscores the postpandemic difficulty that original animated films have faced in attracting audiences, analysts said. The movie’s performance could also have been hurt by its timing — the film was up against “How to Train Your Dragon” and the long tail of Disney live-action remake “Lilo & Stitch.”

“It feels to me that it’s a good movie that got lost in the shuffle,” said Eric Handler, media and entertainment analyst at Roth Capital. For families, he said, “there’s only so many summer weekends a year, and you have to pick and choose which movies you do. ‘Elio’ just got squeezed out.”

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Marketing may also have played a factor, with analysts noting that audiences may have been unfamiliar with the title, a critical issue especially for an original film with new characters. People grew up with Sonic the Hedgehog long before he got his own movie. A fresh story is a tougher sell with so many entertainment options out there.

Disney said in a statement that it was encouraged by the movie’s audience and critics’ review scores and hopeful “Elio” would be discovered by families and moviegoers throughout the summer, similar to what happened with “Elemental.” Despite a disappointing opening-weekend haul, “Elemental” went on to gross $496 million worldwide, propelled by word-of-mouth reviews.

The company also said it would continue to take swings on original animated intellectual property so it wasn’t reliant only on sequels and existing franchises. Pixar plans to release another original animated film next year called “Hoppers,” about technology that helps humans and animals communicate, followed by a 2027 original film called “Gatto.” It also plans to release “Toy Story 5” next year.

While originals have had a harder time at the box office, animated sequels or films based on existing intellectual property have proved consistent hits. Films like Pixar’s “Inside Out 2,” Disney’s “Moana 2” and Universal’s “Super Mario Bros. Movie” each grossed more than a billion dollars in worldwide box office revenue, with Universal and Illumination Entertainment’s “Despicable Me 4” hauling in $969 million.

By contrast, Universal’s 2023 original animated film “Migration” brought in $300 million worldwide. Even the critically acclaimed DreamWorks Animation title “The Wild Robot,” which is based on a 2016 children’s book, grossed $333 million.

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But industry insiders and analysts have said that focusing solely on sequels and reboots risks making the animation business stale and that fresh stories are necessary for the health of the industry.

“We should celebrate when studios and production companies like Pixar and Disney take their best shot, create a really great movie — an original film — and with everyone decrying the lack of originality out there, at least they went for it,” said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst at Comscore. “It will certainly be a big winner on Disney+. But there’s no sugarcoating the fact that this was an incredibly low opening weekend for a Pixar movie.”

Pixar’s track record with original animated films was nearly flawless for decades, with the occasional miss such as 2015’s “The Good Dinosaur.”

But the box office reception for its latest original films have been muted, largely because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Pixar sent three of its original films — 2020’s “Soul,” 2021’s “Luca” and 2022”s “Turning Red” — straight to Disney+ to give families something to watch during the stay-at-home orders. But as the pandemic waned, families were some of the last to return to theaters as they got used to the ease of watching animated movies at home and were concerned about the health implications of enclosed spaces.

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The reported budget for “Elio” was between $150 million and $200 million, which compounds the opening-weekend problems for Pixar. That number doesn’t include the tens of millions of dollars that go into a global marketing campaign. Studios split box office revenue with theaters.

Disney has said animation budgets are higher for Pixar and Walt Disney Animation Studios films because the work is done in the U.S., as opposed to outsourcing overseas where the work is cheaper.

The low opening weekend may not be the end for “Elio,” even if “Elemental”-esque box office longevity is not in its future. The fact that “Elio” had a theatrical release bodes well for its eventual debut on the Disney+ streaming platform since it will benefit from the additional marketing, Dergarabedian said. And “Elio” could be incorporated into Disney merchandise and theme park events, which could boost its visibility.

“Disney’s big enough and broad enough,” he said. “‘Elio’ will be a well-received film that’s absorbed into the Disney ecosystem.”

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