Connect with us

Entertainment

‘The Kitchen’ is closing: Food Network stars react to the cooking-themed talk show’s cancellation

Published

on

‘The Kitchen’ is closing: Food Network stars react to the cooking-themed talk show’s cancellation

It’s almost a wrap for “The Kitchen.”

Food Network announced Monday that its long-running weekend culinary talk show “The Kitchen” is coming to an end. The final episode of the series, co-hosted by network favorites Sunny Anderson, Katie Lee Biegel, Jeff Mauro, Geoffrey Zakarian and recurring guest Alex Guarnaschelli, will air Dec. 13.

“It’s the end of an era,” Biegel said in her Instagram story sharing the news. “Thank you so much to all of our fans. The Kitchen was the was the greatest professional honor of my life and I will be forever grateful.” Biegel has served as one of the show’s co-hosts since its 2014 premiere.

Mauro, who has also been with the show since the beginning, echoed her sentiments on his own Instagram post.

“I always knew what we had was special — rare, a unicorn, an anomaly,” Mauro said in a lengthy caption thanking fans and colleagues. “I got to spend a dozen years with my best friends — cooking, laughing, and eating life-changing bites from some of the world’s greatest chefs and cooks.”

Advertisement

Currently in its 40th season, the Daytime Emmy-nominated cooking-themed talk show featured its hosts and guests sharing recipes, discussing food trends and offering other food tips. In addition to celebrated chefs and culinary personalities, “The Kitchen” opened its doors to various actors, musicians and celebrities.

“For over a decade Sunny, Katie, Jeff, Geoffrey and more recently Alex have engaged audiences with their individual and distinct food sensibilities and sense of humor that together make ‘The Kitchen’ a delicious way to spend an hour,” Warner Bros. Discovery head of food content Betsy Ayala said in a statement.

“Everyone knows all good parties end up in ‘The Kitchen,’ where the conversation, laughs and food flow; the best parties probably end a little bit earlier than some guests would like, but we’ve got twelve years of memories and wanted to celebrate this team’s hard work during one final holiday season.”

Food Network titan Bobby Flay congratulated the show’s team for “an iconic run” in the comments on Food Network’s Instagram post sharing the news.

“Thank you to the Kitchen and its fabulous chefs and hosts for holding it down in daytime on [Food Network] for the last decade,” Flay wrote.

Advertisement

Other Food Network stars also chimed in with tributes in the comments responding to the announcement.

“I loved this show because it reminded me of why I fell in love with cooking in the first place,” wrote Aarti Sequeira, Season 6 winner of “The Next Food Network Star,” “lots of voices and hands working together in a kitchen with equal servings of love and sass!!!!”

“[C]ongrats on an incredible show — one of my favorites to watch and to be part of,” “Chopped” judge Marc Murphy wrote. “You’re all legends.”

Fellow “Chopped” judge Tiffani Faison also congratulated the show’s staff for “a run worthy only of this team.”

Advertisement

Movie Reviews

Thamma Movie Review: The Ultimate Mythical Masala From Maddock Verse!

Published

on

Thamma Movie Review: The Ultimate Mythical Masala From Maddock Verse!

Director: Aditya Sarpotdar

Writers: Niren Bhatt, Suresh Mathew, Arun Falara

Cast: Ayushmann Khurrana, Rashmika Mandanna, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Paresh Rawal, Sathyaraj, Fasial Malik, Geeta Aggarwal, Rachit Singh

Add Zee News as a Preferred Source

Duration: 149 minutes

Advertisement

Rating: 4/5

 

Every now on then, a crossover yet original franchise movie takes everything by surprise and storm, Thamma is one of those movies, the film not only elevate the standard of whole franchise but has enough easter eggs to future instalments as well. This epic saga has everything going for itself, it is fun, wild, original, unique, relatable and above all packed with stellar acting, outstanding VFX, smashing numbers, it is something we have never seen before in mainstream Indian cinema.

The film kick-offs in this lush, mythological forest where ancient legends live and breathe — literally. But there is one cardinal rule, no one ever harm a human, and their sole purpose is to protect human race against evil forces. And one fine day is cardinal rule is broken which leads to many chaos, some centuries old and some set in present and future. Thamma is the prefect mix of folklore, fantasy, sentiment, and action into one thoroughly engaging ride.

Ayushmann Khurrana as Alok, who stars as a small-town reporter who gets into something much, much bigger than he could ever have dreamed. His character is so likable at the beginning — goofy, chatter box, inquisitive, and  pure hearted. The arch of his character is something to watch out for, he goes undergoes many transformation and each one is deeper, darker, and incredibly emotional. You just feel what he’s experiencing.

Advertisement

Rashmika Mandanna as Tadaka, is a revelation. She’s hot when she needs to be, but the thing is, she comes off as so real and grounded. She doesn’t play the typical “horror heroine” cliche of screaming all the time or being eye candy. She has a genuine emotional center to her character, and her chemistry with Ayushmann is natural and organic.

Most of the first half goes away rather quickly establishing new characters, with back stories, and it is really smooth and engaging.

And then comes the second half, where the film goes into supersonic overdrive. Dramatic plot turns, action on a high level, major reveals, comic relief and love, but amidst of all the chaos, everything makes sense, everything has a meaning, even the dance routine has deep rooted back story, and then comes an epic showstopping fight between Ayushmann’s character Alok and Bhediya himself (yep, Varun Dhawan returns!).

Betaal Vs Bhediya, this is straight-up big-screen magic, outstanding choreography, amazing VFX, roaring music and towering performances, this is moment where you’re just glued to the screen, and do not want to miss a thing. It’s not just a faceoff, it is perfectly timed epic cinematic moment which will etched forever in fans memory.

And if this wasn’t enough, there is more coming. Thamma is loaded Diwali bonanza, You’re left with all awe and more questions — such as what is the precise relationship between Alok and Bhediya, There’s a big twist which gives you clues, but doesn’t give away everything. It’s maddeningly delicious — in a positive sense. You crave to know more.

Advertisement

And then there is one and only Sar Kata, making a sneaky comeback. A perfect goosebumps experience. It’s also a giveaway that all these movies are setting up to become part of one big, shared universe. Thamma is just a tasting, there is more coming, much more.

After from the leading duo, the epic saga is packed with outstanding performances by entire ensemble. Paresh Rawal is a comedy scene-stealer as he plays Ayushmann’s grumpy yet clever dad with just the right mix of wit and sarcasm. The film also marks debut of Nawazuddin Siddiqui in MHCU and he is such a seasoned performer that it feels like he has always been part of the world..  He is hilarious, witty, evil, intense, brooding, and unmistakably ambitious, qualities that makes him a formidable enemy.

Veteran actor Sathyaraj is also back as (Hand Of God) Mr Elvis, the quirky supernatural authority. And he is the pivotal point where tow mega franchise make an epic cross-over, he’s more than a comedic relief role. Die-hard fans of the universe may even glimpse one of his subtle disclosures that foreshadows a huge upcoming twist.

And then there is ever so gorgeous Nora Fatehi, her cameo is not just a mere glam flash. Her moment actually contributes to narrative substance and is directly connected to the original story which started it all, Stree. She brings emotional depth, and the makers smart adapted the item song as one more cross-over point. Nora will change entire universe. She a secret to world’s mysteries or not, or something much more complex, either way, we’re excited.

Also Read | Thamma Trailer: Ayushmann Khurrana And Rashmika Mandanna Star In Bloody Love Story This Diwali – WATCH

Advertisement

Apart from the poignant BGM, the album is a banger, it’s not loud numbers but serving a bigger purpose. There are no random dance-number-in-the-middle-of-the-woods nonsense, the songs are verry specific, even a dance routine is also a hint to the origin of Betaal and Rakhtbeej story.

And all of this doesn’t make you jump with joy, there is one epic faceoff between Thamma and Bhediya, a visual and action spectacle, which will leave you gasping for air.

Thamma is not just another addition to a superb franchise, it’s a genre-defying breakthrough for Indian genre films and shared universe storytelling, which is rare feist to accomplish. The film is smart, intelligent  emotional, humorous, and ridiculously entertaining. Packed with exceptional performances, clever writing, and some serious world building, this movie is able to juggle big laughs, emotional moments, and high-fantasy action without any loss of momentum.

If you’re already a Stree fan, or Bhediya, or of the wider Maddock horror-universe — hold onto your seats. Thamma’s not just a good time at the cinema. It’s the start of something very, very much bigger.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Movie Reviews

Movie Review – Bugonia (2025)

Published

on

Movie Review – Bugonia (2025)

Bugonia, 2025.

Written and Directed by Yorgos Lanthimos.
Starring Emma Stone, Jesse Plemons, Aidan Delbis, Stavros Halkias, Alicia Silverstone, J. Carmen Galindez Barrera, Marc T. Lewis, Vanessa Eng, Cedric Dumornay, Charita Momma, Cherri Jones, Fredricka Whitfield, Rafael Lopez Bravo, Yaisa, Teneise Mitchell Ellis, and Roger Carvalho.

SYNOPSIS:

Two conspiracy obsessed young men kidnap the high-powered CEO of a major company, convinced that she is an alien intent on destroying planet Earth.

Advertisement

A film about kidnapping a CEO feels downright cathartic for these unfortunate times we live in. In the gonzo hands of writer/director Yorgos Lanthimos, Bugonia (supposedly a remake of South Korea’s Save the Green Planet, although to what extent I’m not qualified to comment on) is an acerbic comedy/thriller not content with meeting one moment, but several throughout its absurd concept.

The kidnapping duo here aren’t ordinary citizens or wholly righteous. Instead, one is a conspiracy theorist quack. The other is his extremely autistic longtime best friend (and before one starts clutching their pearls that his dopey and dimwitted interjections are played for confused hysterical humor, he’s the more intelligent one of the two and hasn’t completely abandoned reality), who is loyal to a fault and easy to manipulate into eyebrow-raising schemes and a brainwashed way of living (which includes cutting themselves off from anything fun in the world, as they are hypnotic distractions from what needs to be done to save the planet from dying).

That’s one way of saying Teddy (Jesse Plemons, committed to playing a wacko, tapping into some real life lunatic energy of people that sadly walk among us) is an idiot; he is the type of guy to willfully castrate himself (and force his friend Don also to do so) because attractive humanoid aliens might use their sexuality and lust to their advantage. Then there is the unhealthy and equally loony amount of research he has put into telling aliens apart from humans, with sketches of what their motherships look like.

Teddy is also convinced that big shot pharmaceuticals CEO Michelle (may Emma Stone and Yorgos Lanthimos never stop working together) is a high-ranking alien with world domination plans, which can lead him and Don (newcomer Aidan Delbis, who has an outstanding knack for comedic timing) to her leader. They hatch the flimsiest plan possible to snatch her while pulling up into her driveway, and shave her head during the getaway process, as Teddy genuinely believes that her species can somehow track her and communicate through hair follicles. That’s the level of conspiracy theory shenanigans we are dealing with here. 

Of course, Michelle is no saint. She exhibits a lack of self-awareness when it comes to overworking her employees, stating that they can go home when their shift ends if they feel like it, while also heavily pressuring them to put in overtime. Michelle can recite a speech about diversity for brand imaging, but doesn’t seem to be invested in such progressive causes. In other words, for as scarily insane as Teddy is, Michelle doesn’t exactly come across as sympathetic either. However, she is held hostage by an increasingly unstable man who believes that influential figures like Michelle are responsible for some of his problems, such as his recent beekeeping issues (the film also uses that element as a commentary on society), so there is much concern over her well-being.

Advertisement

Bugonia also isn’t interested in reducing Teddy to nothing but stupidity. Yorgos Lanthimos weaves in brief explorations of his past (and without interrupting the narrative’s momentum) to find an empathetic side of this man, and what caused him to fall into a deranged online rabbit hole and snap away from reality. There is pain and grief inside him, and seemingly unprocessed trauma (a childhood police officer friend worms his way near Teddy not only to do his job investigating the kidnapping, but also to gradually find the words to apologize for something that we can only assume is reprehensible, considering he has to dance around whatever the incident is when talking about it).

With that said, Jesse Plemons’ performance is not only hilariously pathetic and outrageously dumb and gullible (all things he spends his time preaching to his friend that they aren’t, and that they are more enlightened than the rest of society), but it’s also sad. There is a point where Michelle realizes how she can manipulate him right back, which comes with a twisted punchline that is simultaneously depressing, horrifying, heartbreaking, and funny. Moments of insecurity and fragility occasionally give way to strikingly shot bursts of violence (courtesy of cinematographer Robbie Ryan), such as a leap and a crawl across the dinner table when he feels his intelligence has been insulted.

The only thing stopping Yorgos Lanthimos from reaching masterful territory once again here is himself: it’s not the lack of restraint to go where Bugonia goes in its final 10 minutes, but the mixed messaging. Even then, he hits you with a bleak, dark montage that almost makes jumping the shark worth it. Everything else here is wickedly sharp.

Flickering Myth Rating – Film: ★ ★ ★ ★ / Movie: ★ ★ ★ ★

Robert Kojder

Advertisement

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=embed/playlist

 

Continue Reading

Entertainment

How the men of ‘Task’ see the show’s troubled fathers and the damage they’ve caused

Published

on

How the men of ‘Task’ see the show’s troubled fathers and the damage they’ve caused

Brad Ingelsby knew after the breakout success of HBO’s “Mare of Easttown” — a crime drama about a police detective (Kate Winslet) investigating the murder of a teenage girl in a fictional working-class town — he didn’t want his next series to be another whodunit.

“That’s Mare’s thing,” he says on a recent late afternoon. “So, you start to go, if you’re going to write another story in the crime genre, what would get the audience to keep clicking to the next episode? I just thought, ‘Well, maybe a collision course show, where [in] every episode, we get a little closer, a little closer, a little closer, until things collide.’ ”

In “Task,” which concluded Sunday on HBO, Mark Ruffalo stars as Tom Brandis, a priest-turned-FBI agent leading a task force investigating a series of robberies in Delaware County, Pa., an area commonly referred to as Delco that was also the setting for “Mare of Easttown.” (And with references to Wawa and Scrapple, along with visits to Rita’s Water Ice, it slips into its role of expanding the universe.) It leads Tom to Robbie Prendergast (Tom Pelphrey), a sanitation worker who robs drug houses at night to provide for his family. Both men are emotionally tortured by life events — Tom’s wife was murdered by their adopted son, who is incarcerated; Robbie’s brother was killed by a member of a motorcycle gang — that have set them each on different, but destructive paths.

In “Task,” Mark Ruffalo, left, Alison Oliver, Thuso Mbedu and Fabein Frankel portray law enforcement officers who are part of an FBI task force investigating a string of robberies.

(Peter Kramer / HBO)

Advertisement

“ ‘Mare’ was about the moms — the damage that all the guys have caused and the women are kind of having to pick up the pieces of that,” Ingelsby says. “This [show] is all about the fathers and being left behind, seeing the damage they’ve done to their kids, how they’re going to fix that in their lives — or not be able to fix it. The guys who are actually doing the damage without knowing.”

Ingelsby says his uncle, who was an Augustinian priest, helped inspire the throughline of the series.

“I’ve always been very intrigued by his idea of faith in God over the years, and how it’s changed over time, and what he believed once and what he believes now,” he says. “I was intrigued by the idea of a guy who, everything he held as truth, all the pillars of his life, have come crumbling down. And Robbie has a much different faith. And it’s through the gauntlet of the story, how their lives intersect, that they both get to navigate their own journeys of faith.”

Over dinner at a West Hollywood hotel, The Times sat down with Ingelsby, Ruffalo and Pelphrey to discuss their faith journeys, economic inequality, fatherhood — and Wawa, too. Here are edited excerpts from the conversation, which contains spoilers about the finale.

Advertisement
A man in a suit jacket poses for a photo in a chair.

After the success of “Mare of Easttown,” creator Brad Ingelsby wanted his follow-up, “Task,” to feel connected, but not repetitive: “ ‘Mare’ was about the moms,” he says. “This [show] is all about the fathers and being left behind, seeing the damage they’ve done to their kids, how they’re going to fix that in their lives — or not be able to fix it.”

(Bexx Francois/For The Times)

The themes of the show involve forgiveness and faith. Every person has experienced something in life that has tested those ideas. How has your own relationship to faith and forgiveness evolved as you’ve lived more life or taken on roles that ask you to live different experiences?

Pelphrey: My faith, to me, is when I got sober. God willing, Oct. 1, which is three days from now, it’ll be 12 years. That’s truly by the grace of God — you hear that phrase, but I genuinely, I mean that. That’s how I’ve experienced faith, through my sobriety. I was raised Catholic, but the experience I had at 31 was like in a different dimension to what I thought of religion or ideas. It’s one thing to have an idea, it’s another thing to have your heart opened. It’s definitely an important part of my life. And I think Brad did such a beautiful job conveying that. My grandma used to have one of these things when I was a kid — not a real gem, but like a glass cut thing so if you put it in the window, the sun shines through a million different ways, and the color goes everywhere. I feel like you [Brad] did that with some themes in the show where you’re like, “Let me just hold it up, and we’ll just look at it a few different ways.”

Ruffalo: My journey with faith is probably very similar to Tom’s. When you get a job or something, it can take you on a journey that you’re ripe to take. It touches your life at a very moment where you need it. I’d say, after my brother died, the whole notion of faith just went out the window for me. But oddly enough, I have a lot of addiction, alcoholism in my family. I say, either you are one or you love one. When you love somebody who’s struggling with that, it takes a lot of faith to let them go and to trust it will be OK. My friend says to me, “They got a God and you ain’t it.”

Advertisement

My faith has been renewed, actually, through Tom [the character] — he is an alcoholic. It’s touched my life in so many ways, even with my brother, that it’s like where I lost my faith and where I gained my faith again has been through this journey with alcoholism and drug addiction. And I waver. You look at the world and you’re like, “Where is God in this? Please show yourself. ” But the thing about faith is it requires you to believe without any evidence of its existence. I’d rather believe in that than nothing. Although, I fought him [Brad] all the time. I was like, “He’s [Tom] not really praying here. He’s trying to pray. He’s going through the actions of praying, but he can’t quite get to the opening sentence, which is “ … God …” He does pray, eventually, but it’s a journey.

There’s the powerful moment in that car when Tom and Robbie finally meet in Episode 5. Robbie says, “I don’t think I’ve ever experienced God in my life.” This is a man that hasn’t felt hope, and he has this glimmer of it with this goal of escaping to Canada. Tom, how was it getting into the mindset of this guy just trying to get out of this life?

Pelphrey: It’s heartbreaking. We’re articulating an American dream that far too many people don’t get to experience, and maybe are starting to lose the hope of ever experiencing it. That’s a very real thing — unfortunately, way too real and increasingly way too common. It was just constantly reminding myself: What does this character want? And at the end of the day, regardless of how extreme some of the things Robbie’s doing, he just wants a decent life for his kids. And the fact that he’s having a hard time getting it is heartbreaking.

That scene and in the car, the first time I read it, I was like, “Oh, he’s [Brad] got some balls.” You have so much s— boiling over — the plot lines, the violence, the stakes are through the roof for everyone now in the show, and we are going to sit in a car for half an episode? And two dudes are gonna talk?

A man stands behind another man who is surrendering with his hands up

In Episode 5, Robbie Prendergast (Tom Pelphrey), left, and Tom Brandis (Mark Ruffalo) finally meet.

(HBO)

Advertisement

Ruffalo: There’s no chase! And when they finally face each other, they’re not even [actually] facing each other! They’re both pushed to the edge and you don’t know where it could go. Tom certainly doesn’t know where it will go. Tom’s kind of at that point, like, “F— it. Go ahead.” We talked about it a lot, I was like, “I think Tom should die.”

[They break into laughter]

Ingelsby: Every single day he was pitching it.

Ruffalo: I was pitching Tom should have a heart attack at the end and he literally sees God and he says to God, “I’m ready.” He finally finds his faith. It’s finally paid off and he says [gasping], “I’m … reaaady.”

Advertisement

Ingelsby: Enough people die here. But that particular episode has always been very special to me. That’s when the show is operating at the peak of its powers. It just felt like, how do we subvert the expectations of the audience and do that in a way that still feels true to who these characters are? I remember talking to you [Tom] about this. You were like, “As soon as I know Cliff’s done, I’m on a one-way street. I have a plan.” But with you [Mark], once they get out of the car and you feel like you’re going to die, you’re like, “I want to call my family.” That’s when you get activated in a way. You’ve been going through the motions in life, but that’s when it gets very real.

Ruffalo: It’s like being reborn. It opens his heart. He sees how life can be taken away.

We’re in a political and cultural moment where the mood of the country is simmering — there’s anger and rage on all sides, and a lot of it stems from class and systemic issues that are in place that put people in certain positions. There’s that layer, but there’s also the grief element both these men are facing.

Ingelsby: With Robbie in particular, I was interested in a guy that felt really stuck. What I liked about Robbie was, if he didn’t take action, what would happen to Robbie? He’d be a trash man in too deep his whole life. Who cares about Robbie and his family? Nobody. He was left behind. In early versions of the script, I very explicitly said, “He wants his bite of the apple.” There are lots of people like that now. I loved writing Robbie because it felt like he was raging against being left behind and and I felt, in many cases, in the script, why wouldn’t you do something? Whether you agree with the actions or not —

Pelphrey: He had his f— life stolen from him. What he’s going after is a very specific thing. He’s not lashing out blindly against anybody to get any money at any cost. He’s like: “I’m gonna take it from these mother f—, who are bad dudes.” Even within that, he has principles. No one’s gonna die — obviously, the rules all go out the window Episode 2, but we’re not going to take the drugs, we’re not going to sell the drug. We’re going to destroy the drugs. We’re going to take the cash. Even within his brand of lashing out, he actually has a set of principles that he’s operating by.

Advertisement
A man in a sweater gazes into the distance.
West Hollywood, CA October 28, 2025 - Tom Pelphrey of "Task" in West Hollywood, CA on Sunday, Oct. 28, 2025. (Bexx Francois/For The Times)

Mark Ruffalo, left, and Tom Pelphrey star as two troubled men on a collision course in “Task.” Ruffalo portrays an FBI agent recovering from a family tragedy, while Pelphrey plays a garbage collector and criminal involved in a series of robberies. (Bexx Francois/For The Times)

Mark and Tom, as sons and fathers, how did you think about the father-child relationships of these two men and the collateral damage of their choices?

Ruffalo: It’s so hard to be a father, especially now because this generation is like, “We’re not going to do it the way our parents, our fathers did. We see that there’s another way to do it. We’re actually talking about it.” At the same time, we don’t exactly know what it is that we should do differently, plus we have the responsibility of, financially, keeping it together. It’s obviously hard to be a mom too. These guys are doing the best they can.

Pelphrey: Becoming a dad two and a half years ago now, it’s just the most f— awesome, wild, intense, crazy s— I’ve ever experienced in my life. It’s like getting struck by lightning. I’m so in love and I feel so vulnerable and I feel so happy — it’s all the feelings. Then suddenly, when you’re thinking about how you feel, you go, “How do I balance this? How do I protect her, but make sure that she’s brave and experiencing things? And you quickly realize there is so much to this that I will have no power over and the realization of that, in the deepest sense — and I’ve already had moments of that and we’re just getting started here. You imagine what it’s like, when you don’t have kids, but you have no f— clue. One of the things I could say without blinking, ever, is, “I totally understand why he’s doing what he’s doing.”

Advertisement

Was there a version where Robbie lived?

Ingelsby: No, I felt like structurally what needed to happen was Tom had to witness Robbie’s kindness, then his sacrifice. It felt very necessary to be like, “Oh, wait. Robbie — he went up to the woods…” Because he’s always like, “What’s the plan?” Tom realizes, “Oh, I know what the plan was. He went there to die.” Part of Tom’s journey to getting rid of the anger and to believing in something at the end, was to have witnessed the goodness in Robbie. He [Robbie] also gets in so deep eventually, he has pushed himself into such a corner and there’s no good way out of this. What’s an audience gonna think if he gets out of this unscathed? Even if he were to survive, he’s gonna be in jail for the rest of his life. The idea of sacrifice would speak to Tom as a character and get him to his ultimate decision to give the boy [Sam] up, but also forgive his own son and, quite literally, get the house ready for him.

Mark, how did you feel about the statement that Tom winds up giving at the hearing in the finale?

Ruffalo: He had to sit down and write that. I don’t think he really knew what he was going to be writing. He’s taking stock of his life and his son’s life and the story of the life. It’s connecting him to the whole story. It’s not just the loss of my wife, but also we raised that boy. We made this life together and, even in the hard part of it all, that’s where we learned what love is. Then when he gets in there, he doesn’t even know that he’s gonna say it. He doesn’t know he’s going to confront him with it and say [to his son], “Look at me.” But the whole journey, leads us there.

There’s something, too, about his composure in that moment.

Advertisement

Ingelsby: That’s the genius of Mark. That was the first or second take, what we used.

How many versions of it did you write? Was there an overly emotional or dramatic version?

Ingelsby: There was a longer version. But I think what was important about it was — and Mark does such a beautiful job — was that he had to be honest about how hard it was. I was always worried it would be a bit maudlin, if he just went in and said straight away, “I love you.” It was almost like he had to be really honest with everybody, like, “Hey, this was f— horrible.” And the shame of changing your name —

Ruffalo: Yes. To be that honest and to say that I pretended like I wasn’t his father. It’s so shameful. It’s so honest.

Ingelsby: I think because he’s so honest, it makes the forgiveness even more impactful. When he says, “I forgive you,” you believe because he’s earned the trust in the speech by admitting the things that were so shameful .

Advertisement

Ruffalo: It doesn’t just go one way — forgiveness. There’s a lot of shame on it on the other side, that’s where the anger comes from. There’s always this question: What could I have done? The backstory was I left, knowing that he was in an episode, but I had to go. I left her with him, thinking it would blow over. And it didn’t. He has to also be honest about his part in it. What dad says, “That’s not my kid. You’re in retreat already.”

Ingelsby: That’s what we want the ending to be. It’s not that everything’s going to be easy. I think the same for Mare — it wasn’t like Mare’s life was so great at the end of the show. There was a lot of going on.

Ruffalo: She’s going to an AA meeting. Tom and Mare can meet at an AA meeting.

A shirtless man gazes out at a river bank.

Tom Pelphrey as Robbie Prendergrast, a garbage collector trying to avenge his brother’s death by hitting trap houses belonging to a local gang before getting caught in a deadly standoff. (HBO)

A man in a suit and tie sits alongside two young women

Mark Ruffalo, Silvia Dionicio and Phoebe Fox in “Task.” Ruffalo plays a priest-turned-FBI agent who hasn’t confronted his feelings about the murder of his wife at the hands of their adopted son. (HBO)

Advertisement

To that point, was there thought about whether to incorporate “Mare” characters in this show, if they’re in the same universe?

Ingelsby: It’s funny you say that. [In] one of the early scripts, we had a scene where Emily (Silvia Dionicio), at the end of the show, went to a concert with her boyfriend, Leo, the guy that’s a magician. And Mare’s daughter, Siobhan (Angourie Rice), was playing. And there was another connective piece I’m missing. I think Leo’s brother was in the band. And they had a moment together, because I felt like Emily and Siobhan were very, very similar. That they had the weight of the world on their shoulders in some way, Emily especially —

Ruffalo: They’re well suited for each other. They could just sink to the bottom of the lake together.

Advertisement

He’s got a crossover season mapped out for you.

Pelphrey: If we hold hands, we can sink faster.

Ingelsby: But we did have something connecting them. But I’m glad HBO read it and were like, “Is it a bit much?” It felt like maybe we were reaching to do something that the story didn’t require. And when we took it out, I felt like this story exists on its own, and we didn’t need that. If we had threaded it through the story in a more interesting way, maybe it would have worked, but it would have felt really tacked on and kind of just fan service for the sake of fan service, which I didn’t want.

Can we talk about the Phillies cup? It’s seems like such an obscure detail, but that cup triggered me. I know it well. A father trying to hide his vice.

Ingelsby: That’s another detail of my own life that I can repurpose, steal. That’s my dad. He drinks out of that. He watches every Phillies game. There’s 162 games. And if he can’t watch, he’s listening to it in a radio in the car. I feel like we always talk about in the specific, is the universal. And Mark did the swirly thing.

Advertisement

Ruffalo: That’s what made me want to do the show. That he was drinking out of that. And then he swirled his hand. I said, “This guy is writing character like nobody is doing that I’ve seen in television.” I only read the first episode and I was like, “I want to go. I trust this journey with him.” And it was from that nuance thing. I know that guy. He’s a priest who swirls his vodka and tonic with his finger. In a Phillies cup. And he thinks he’s pulling it over. That’s my family. It’s so honest.

The accent was such a feature of “Mare of Easttown.” I imagine that had its own expectations or pressure for this show.

Ingelsby: “Mare” was more a community — very, very specific community. I felt like, in that show, we had to go all in and Kate did. A lot of Mark’s character was driven by my uncle, who has no accent at all. Because he went to the seminary, then he went to Merrimack College, he was a teacher — he bounced around. And even me, there’s a couple words I’ll say that you can’t pick up a heavy accent. There’s a couple words, where maybe you could pick it up.

Ruffalo: We tried. I tried it. I kept kicking it out, it just didn’t feel right. He does hit some of those words. He does say woodercheery wooder ice. We kept some of it in, but we didn’t go as hard at it because he goes another way. I feel like he might have ended up in South America at some point. I was thinking he traveled the world.

Did you pay many visits to Wawa? I remember Kate telling me about her Wawa experiences.

Advertisement

Pelphrey: I grew up going to Wawa. I was Wawa all the time because I was living out in the suburbs.

Ingelsby: I think Kate ate hoagies or something.

Pelphrey: They make a good sandwich.

Ruffalo: Oh, bro. I started with a fat suit and then I had to take it off. I just kept getting fatter. My wife saw me and she’s like [to the kids], “huh, your father’s eating his way through Philly.” But, man, I’d be like, “How about a sandwich for the scene?” [Mimics scarfing down a sandwich.] Like a troll.

Ingelsby: He is an amazing sandwich eater. We were talking about it.

Advertisement

Pelphrey: We were.

Ruffalo: Oh, I knew I was going to be eating a sandwich that day [in a scene], so I starved myself so I could just plow that thing.

Are you interested in a Season 2, Brad?

Ruffalo: No one wants a Season 2. [the trio laughs] No, I’m kidding. That would be amazing.

Ingelsby: It would be amazing. If people respond and we get a chance to do it.

Advertisement

Could we get that “Task”-”Mare” crossover?

Ingelsby: A lot could happen.

Ruffalo: Some “Mare” people could show up. There could be a love affair.

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending