Showing posts with label Fred Hechinger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fred Hechinger. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 22, 2025

Hech of a Summer


And lo, another thing to look forward to! Actors Billy Bryk and Finn Wolfhard (yes he of Stranger Things twinkdom) have written, directed, and are co-starring in a campground slasher film called Hell of a Summer that is coming out in April! That's cool but the thing that makes me happiest about this is the actual lead of the film is my wee little snausage Fred Hechinger of The White Lotus and Thelma fame. MNPP is a Fred Hechinger Fan Club...

... and we support any and all things him. I admit I'm a little wary that thing movie was completed and screened at TIFF two years ago (I am refraining from looking up reviews) but wer're in no matter what! Here's the trailer: 


Hell of a Summer comes out April 18th!


Wednesday, December 11, 2024

Kraven the Hunter in 450 Words or Less


You know that scene in the fourth Indiana Jones movie where Indiana finds himself inside the fake small town in the middle of the desert and realizes all of the families therein are mannequins and the fruit is plastic and it's really just a staged world that the military has set up in order to drop a nuke on? Sometimes I wonder if we sneaked past the security guards and got into the offices of Sony Pictures if it might not be just like that. Nothing but cardboard walls and doors that open onto bricks. Because it boggles the mind that there could actually be human beings behind the decisions they keep making for their superhero movies. They feel like the "monkeys with typewriters" scenario brought to life, or perhaps a league of Coneheads pretending to be Earth people but getting each step just a hair off, one after another, until a smorgasboard of gibberish spills out its ass-end. This is textbook Bad Movie behavior.

But that doesn't mean there's not a good helping of true WTF fun to be had out of Kraven the Hunter anyway. Yes, Sony's latest and opposite-of-greatest stab at the genre somehow manages to make the glory days of Madame Web feel fonder. But none of these actors are to blame. This troupe of thesps know what they're up against and dammit they keep fighting the fight, one camp whisper to another, winding through the marauding CG mayhem. Leading man slash abdominal billboard Aaron Taylor-Johnson is ultimately done in by the movie's frankensteined incoherence, but our boy tries his damndest to yank it together with every one of those big beautiful muscles of his. He does not succeed! But he's having fun most of the time, and he manages to get some of that across whenever the movie lumbers out of his way for a split second. 

But best of all -- Alessandro Nivola as the ridiculous baddie is legit great, lifting the movie unto absurdist heaven whenever he appears. (And not for nothing he looks as hot as he's ever looked on-screen, his tight white dress shirt and strappy little backpack doing the lord's work.) Nivola is a real riot, chewing every dumb line of dialogue right up, and when he does this silent scream thing about halfway into the movie it instantaneously paid for my ticket in full. (Well okay I didn't pay for a ticket thankfully, but this moment would have had I.) None of this is enough to save the movie from itself, but I wasn't angry when I left the theater. Just deeply suspicious about those Sony offices filled with outer space mannequins, is all...

Pics of the Day


I attended the premiere of Sony's latest stab at superhero dominance Kraven the Hunter last night here in NYC and above are a few photos I snapped of the film's cast introducing the film -- that includes MNPP faves Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Alessandro Nivola, and Fred Hechinger. (If only Christopher Abbott had shown and given me a full quartet of crushes.) Not the greatest quality snaps since I was in the balcony but better than they have any right being -- the latest iPhone camera really is a wonder of modern technology. Anyway Kraven is finally out on Friday, and I suppose I'll have some words to share on the movie itself before the week is out so stay tuned...

Tuesday, November 19, 2024

2 Sissies 2 Gladiator


This isn't a review of Gladiator II -- I don't think I am writing one since somebody more enthusiastic about the property was assigned it at Pajiba. I could write a proper review of it here if I felt like it but take all of this blathering as proof that no, I do not feel like it. There's a lot of fun silliness to the movie to enjoy -- for one Denzel Washington is, as you've likely heard by now, having the time of his life. Every second he's on-screen is a blast. And the battle scene where they fill the Colosseum up with water, ships, and SHARKS -- that shit is bananas. Probably worth the price of admission alone. 

But I left the movie in the most foul of moods despite that excessive goofiness (and Paul Mescal's thighs) because in Joseph Quinn's Emperor Geta and especially in Fred Hechinger's Emperor Caracalla the film trades in a nasty retrograde throwback to the sorts of vile queer villains we haven't seen since the simpering faggot prince in Mel Gibson's Braveheart. You can't even call Geta and Caracalla queer-coded since they've got a harem of made-up lady-boys in waiting. The boys are big ol' sissies. Sneering sissy stereotypes.

They're awful, pasty, deceitful, cruel, sickly, and most of all weak. Caracalla is going mad from syphilis and anoints his monkey to be his number one advisor. Brothers, they turn on each other in a split second. They are jokes meant to be laughed at, and we're meant to celebrate their downfalls brought on by their lascivious queerness. It's crowds cheering on Mel Gibson killing the perfumed fag all over again.

I suppose that, in the interest of widening the queer window, Denzel Washington's Macrinus is meant to be bisexual since in the final film he has a throwaway line about being with men. But it could be read in a couple of ways -- he could be saying women are a lot of bother, and not that he's actually been with any men. And of course Denzel made headlines this week when he said he'd had a kiss with a male actor that got cut out of the film -- this seemed to me to be an early strike out because they knew they were going to get headlines on this subject. (I personally told the PR people I was offended by the movie's throwback queer representation, and I spoke to several other critics who felt the same way.)

But Macrinus, as much fun as Denzel is having playing him, is still a villain. And his comeuppance is the film's biggest cheer moment of all. But since he's a much more rounded-out character if it had been just him as the queer villain I would've been fine with it. I don't hate a queer villain when done right! 

Honestly -- and this bit is probably crucial in my read of the movie -- I also just don't think Ridley Scott has earned the benefit of the doubt in his career on this subject. What has he done for us? Michael Fassbender making out with his clone-twin in Covenant? My point exactly. More of the same. Ryan Phillippe in soaking wet tighty-whities in White Squall? Okay, well I will give him that one.

In all seriousness though the problem is that all of Gladiator II's main villains are the queer people. And all of the film's heroes are boring straights, pining for their ladies. At first there are a bit of homoerotic Midnight Express vibes happening between Paul Mescal's imprisoned character and the doctor who tends his wounds and I thought okay, maybe they'll queer him up too. But their conversations inevitably devolve into talk of their lady loves, almost to the point where it feels like the script having its own moment  of gay panic -- there doesn't seem much reason for the conversation except to define them as two lady-loving bros just shooting the shit! No homo!

I know the argument exists that there's "historical accuracy" to some of these characterizations. (As if this movie feels much fealty to history!) That doesn't take into mind the fact that history has been written by the homophobes for centuries. We have been cast as the villains for as long as storytelling has existed. The stray cards that will knock the whole hetero family unit down for good, et cetera.

And given what just happened in this country election-wise, I do feel it's especially important right now to point this shit out. But I'll be curious to hear what y'all think when you see the movie -- if you're offended or if you think I'd read too much into it. So come back and comment down below once you have.

Tuesday, October 22, 2024

Paul Mescal Getting In Gladiator Shape


The time has come for the Gladiator II workout videos! A staple of the PR push for movies where our favorite hot ass actors get into fighting shape we knew we'd be getting these for Paul Mescal beekcake-ening and sure enough, here they be. Well it's just one now but I foresee myself also making gifs out of like a Men's Health cover story video at some point in the near future and I am not mad about it. But for now just an official video!


Gladiator II is out on November 22nd -- pretty much the perfect Thanksgiving movie -- and you'll hear more from me when the time comes on it. Because oh right I saw it last night?


Yes as I "hinted" at yesterday I was in the presence of Mr. Mescal himself, and saw the movie and the whole deal. You'll hear my opinion about the movie when the time comes but Mr. Mescal in person? All you could hope for. Funny, charming, somehow really genuine-seeming even though he's very much in the period of time where we're all staring dumbly at him not hearing a word he's saying. Honestly though I don't remember a single word he said. I was just like, "Look at that profile... those eyes... swoon..." Although I will say -- it was 80 degrees here in New York yesterday so the fact that he wore pants felt like a slap in the face. I don't care if this is a fancy movie premiere thing -- they make dress shorts now, Paul. Okay my leering aside let's hit the jump for more gifs so we can all leer at Paul together...

Thursday, August 01, 2024

NYFF Ahoy!


Although it seems nuts to be onto the fall festivals already (not that I will miss this hellfire summer in the slightest, mind you) it is indeed the perfect moment for me to take stock of my hometown beloved, the New York Film Festival, since they've officially announced all three of their Gala films now. We'll start with the end, or is that the middle -- today they announced their Centerpiece film screening and it will indeed be Pedro Almodóvar’s first English-language full-length film The Room Next Door starring Tilda Swinton, Julianne Moore, John Turturro, and Alessandro Nivola. See all my previous posts on this one here -- we've been rather excited about this for some time, because of course we have. 

This will be its U.S. premiere -- it's premiere-premiering in Venice in September. The NYFF screening is October 4th, right in the middle of the fest -- hence it being the "Centerpiece film" duh -- which runs from September 27–October 14. And speaking of those dates -- the Opening Night film that they announced a couple of weeks ago is Nickel Boys from Hale County This Morning, This Evening (a truly spectacular movie, that) director RaMell Ross -- an adaptation of Colson Whitehead's Pulitzer-winning novel, Nickel Boys stars Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor, Hamish Linklater, Daveed Diggs, Fred Hechinger, and two young actors named  Ethan Herisse and Brandon Wilson in the leads; it's about "two Black teenagers who become wards of a barbaric juvenile reformatory in Jim Crow–era Florida." Anybody read the book? 

And then there's our Closing Night movie -- Steve McQueen's Blitz! I've been jonesing for this ever since I first heard about it -- the Hunger and Shame and 12 Years a Slave director is tackling the World War II bombings that devastated London from the ground level, with Saiorse Ronan playing a working-class mum who gets seperated from her little boy in the underground. Blitz also stars, among many others, Harris Dickinson, Stephen Graham, and Hayley Squires -- I have been a massive fan of Squires ever since she wowed in Ken Loach's 2016 film I, Daniel Blake, so I hope her role is juicy too. A lot of people think this might be the movie to finally get Saoirse her Best Actress Oscar, but I don't think enough people have actually seen it yet to know that much. (Having seen her in The Outrun at Sundance though I can already tell you that this is going to be a very good fall for her.)

Anyway that's three films down, dozens more to come -- I daren't even conjecture, they always surprise me, but I find myself getting giddy thinking about it already. If you're planning on attending you can buy packages right here right now; single tickets go on sale in the middle of September. 

Tuesday, July 09, 2024

Thumbs Up Or Thumbs Down, Gladiators


They really should have titled this movie Gladiators, now that I think about it. Harumph! Anyway this new Gladiator II poster isn't one I would hang on my wall like I would the up-skirt one they dropped yesterday -- an instant classic, that one! -- but it's never not nice tos ee Paul's face, Paul's eyes, et cetera et cetera. Anyway that goes along with this, the first trailer for the movie, which is hella action and Paul pec packed, although honestly a fair bit on the long side and feels as if it gives 75% of the movie away. But still...

... it might have sold me on the film even though I hate the first movie with a passion and I think Ridley Scott has been a genuine hack, give or take a couple of bright spots, for the past couple of decades. And I have to say -- excited about Paul Mescal obviously, and Pedro Pascal and Connie Nielsen as well. But the thing I walk out of this trailer feeling is...

... Fred Hechinger, ladies and gentlemen! I've been enamored with Fred since The White Lotus and the Fear Street movies and then of course Thelma but his pasty, something-riddled villain here is making me swoon with glee. I guess him and Joseph Quinn are splitting the Joaquin role from the first one -- heck I don't think I even knew Fred was in this? What a delight. Here is said trailer:

Gladiator II is out on November 22nd.



Wednesday, March 09, 2022

Super People Doing Stuff


I am at this point having trouble keeping up with who's who in the cast of the forthcoming superhero flick Kraven the Hunter -- I know that Aaron Taylor-Johnson is playing Kraven (sidenote: did you see the new hot ATJ photoshoot yesterday?), but this one appears to have about a half-dozen other villains involved (Alessandro Nivola is one, Ariana DeBose is another, Russell Crowe and Fred Hechinger are somebodies too) -- and today yet another! Christopher Abbott has finally gotten sucked up into the superhero nonsense, as Deadline reports he'll be playing "The Foreigner," a character who's some sort of assassin slash mercenary-type in the comics. If you care read about the character here. I don't really, so I have not! I like Abbott a lot though -- this silly movie's got one hell of a cast at this point. We'll see if that translates to anything of substance!



Friday, March 04, 2022

Alessandro the Big Bad Hunter Man


Ecstatic news for those of us who've been banging the Alessandro Nivola drum for so many years that our beating hands have gone bloody -- he's just been cast as the villain in a superhero movie! Okay okay so playing the villain in a superhero movie is not, contrary to what the movie business would have us believe in 2022, the be-all end-all of movie acting, and as Nivola's proven in two decades of movies like Junebug and Disobedience and Laurel Canyon and on and on he is a seriously talented actor above all else. That said I am damn happy to see him get paid, and this will probably be a lot of fun. For him to shoot, for us to watch -- fingers crossed anyway. Oh right, the movie, I should mention what movie it is -- he's going to be the villain in Sony's Kraven the Hunter movieand yes indeed... 

.... THAT MEANS HE IS GOING TO BE FIGHTING WITH BEARDED BRAWNY AARON TAYLOR-JOHNSON. See all my previous posts on this movie here -- we don't know who Nivola's playing yet, just that he's the villain -- if any of you are nerd enough to name some names that he could be that'd be super. My guess is it will be somebody similar to the character that Corey Stoll played in Ant-Man but that might just be all of my lingering feelings about all those times we saw Corey & Alessandro in the same location for The Many Saints of Newark. I mayyy be projecting. Anyway the movie is being directed by JC Chandor who Nivola worked with before on A Most Violent Year (never forget them tennis shorts); other people who've joined the cast of Kraven within the past couple of weeks include West Side Story breakout Ariana Debose and White Lotus cutie Fred Hechinger! We love furry lil' Fred! Kraven is turning out to be a very furry movie actually, and natch we dig.


Thursday, August 12, 2021

Fred Hechinger Four Times


I first posted about Fred Hechinger just about exactly one month ago, right as Mike White's brilliant series The White Lotus was beginning to air on HBO and as the Fear Street trilogy of films was ravaging Netflix, knowing right off the bat that I was going to be in the Fred Hechinger business -- Fear Street was obviously hit-and-miss but he was the clear stand-out of the first part, and if you've kept up with Lotus then you know he's been one of the gems in its many-gemmed crown. (His character's arc is probably the best arc on the entire series, but I'll let y'all decide that when the show finishes this Sunday.) And what's next for Fred, you might be asking? Well he's got a meaty role in that Pam & Tommy miniseries with Sebastian Stan & Lily James uncannily capturing those 90s icons -- Fred is playing the sleaze-ball Seth Warshavsky who leaked their sex tape, and it looks like he's in all eight episodes. Promising! Anyway this new photo-shoot is via Flaunt Magazine; there's also a brief chat with him, so check it out there. And hit the jump for the photos...

Wednesday, July 14, 2021

Don't Fear the Fred


A fresh obsession in my household is the actor Fred Hechinger, who's had a big few months popping up unexpectedly in front of me with Joe Wright's (rightly-excoriated) The Woman in the Window, Steven Soderbergh's Let Them All Talk, an episode of Barry Jenkins' The Underground Railroad, Paul Greengrass' forgotten Oscar-contender film News of the World, the Tribeca film Italian Studies (which I reviewed right here), and finally the biggest ongoing two-fer real reason for this post -- the Fear Street horror trilogy on Netflix and Mike White's HBO series The White Lotus (which I wrote about over here). This is an astonishing run, y'all -- most of us only saw him for the first time in Bo Burnham's Eighth Grade just three years back...

... and now he's everywhere! And I'm great with that! Most of those roles I just rattled off were small but those last two especially, Lotus and Fear Street, have proven him a delight. He played such a fun weirdo in Fear Street: 1994, far and away my favorite thing going on in it, and in Mike White's hands he's... well he's also a fun weirdo there but the performance is dialed down and surprisingly introspective, and I found his whole arc, without getting spoilery, pretty moving. 

Anyway he is very much somebody we should all be keeping our eyes on, and learn his name if you don't know it already. He's good stuff! In related news here's the trailer for the final part of the Fear Street Trilogy, subtitled 1666, which premieres on Netflix this Friday. Have y'all been watching these movies? I think they're a lot of fun -- don't take them seriously, just enjoy the ride.