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Tag: Cinematic
The (Literal) Ralph Fiennes Cinematic Universe
When you want to win an Oscar, it helps to know people who vote for Oscars. And few have that level of familiarity like Ralph Fiennes. Since he burst into our movie consciousness in the mid-‘90’s with central roles in Schindler’s List, Quiz Show and The English Patient (seriously, did anyone that decade have a better few years?), Fiennes has been a fixture in our film firmament.
What’s amazing is not just the consistency he’s had, acting regularly for the past 30+ years, quality roles year in and year out. It’s the diversity. One wouldn’t expect a Shakespeare-trained actor with a Tony Award for playing Hamlet under his belt to turn up in franchises like Harry Potter (or romcoms like Maid in Manhattan), Yet there Fiennes has been, lending his robust dramatic and often droll comedic talents in whatever context he lands. Indie roles like The Hurt Locker, espionage spoofs like The King’s Man, even animated pictures such as The Lego Movie series – Fiennes has graced and often won the day in all of them.
Even when Fiennes is playing to debonair British type he’s often undercutting it (The Grand Budapest Hotel’s “You see there are still faint glimmers of civilization left in this barbaric slaughterhouse that was once known as humanity; indeed that’s what we provide in our own modest, humble. insignificant—oh, fuck it” comes to mind.)
Not surprisingly, Fiennes has been nominated for three Oscars. Surprisingly, he hasn’t won any of them. In fact until this year he hadn’t been nominated since 1997. (Amazingly he hasn’t won a Golden Globe either, going 0 for 7.)
Perhaps it’s the low-key demeanor; perhaps it’s how he all makes it look so effortless. But that Fiennes mantle is as empty as St. Peter’s Square in a thunderstorm.
That Oscar streak could change this year with Conclave, in which Fiennes of course plays Thomas Lawrence, an efficient, buttoned-up cardinal leading the papal conclave as agendas swirl around him. The actor’s performance is layered and subtle enough to land him that elusive statue. But even if it doesn’t, it’s worth cataloging what he’s done, a galaxy of genre planets that he encircles with many movie moons and even more actors. It’s Ralph Fiennes’ solar system. We just live in it.
Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection; Focus Films/Courtesy Everett Collection (3); Columbia Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection; Eric Zachanowich/Searchlight Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection; Buena Vista Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection; Peter Mountain/20th Century Studios/Courtesy Everett Collection; Presley Ann/Getty Images; Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection (2); Nicola Dove/MGM/Danjaq/Courtesy Everett Collection; Donald Cooper/Photostage; Robbie Jack/Corbis/Getty Images; Sara Krulwich/The New York Times; Fox Searchlight/Courtesy Everett Collection; Summit Entertainment/Courtesy Everett Collection; Dreamworks/Courtesy Everett Collection (2)
Oscarola
Many shout to the heavens to win an award. But Fiennes doesn’t need to. Filling his orbit are a host of nominees and winners, all of whom now are part of the Academy that will decide the fate of their north star.
Schindler’s List with Liam Neeson
The Constant Gardener with Rachel Weisz
Quiz Show with John Turturro
Conclave with Isabella Rossellini
Popcorna
You’d think Fiennes only stays in the rarefied air of upscale projects. That would be as misguided as a flat-earther. Loosening that fitted tuxedo, the cosmic wonder shone bright while romancing Jennifer Lopez in Maid in Manhattan, shocked diners in The Menu and asked Rasputin if he’s a monk or a ballet dancer in The King’s Man.
Maid in Manhattan with Jennifer Lopez
The Menu with Anya Taylor-Joy
The King’s Man with Djimon Hounsou
Sundancea
Sometimes you want to sprinkle a little stardust on the smaller rocks. For that, the celestial god descends to the indie planet, bossing around hit men in In Bruges, concierging for fellow nominee Adrien Brody in The Grand Budapest Hotel or going rogue in Iraq in The Hurt Locker.
In Bruges with Brendan Gleeson
The Grand Budapest Hotel with Tilda Swinton
The Hurt Locker with Jeremy Renner
Cartoonium
Sometimes you don’t need to be seen — you just want your voice to boom across the cosmos. That’s why Fiennes has taken so many animated roles, as the rich guy tormenting Wallace and Gromit, enslaving people in The Prince of Egypt and butlering Bruce in The Lego Movie series, all alongside some of the biggest voice actors of our eon.
Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were- Rabbit with Helena Bonham Carter
The Prince of Egypt with Danny Glover and Helen Mirren
The Lego Movie with Will Arnett
Theatricum
Theater is the oxygen of Suffolk, England’s own Ralph Nathaniel Twisleton-Wykeham-Fiennes. That’s why he’s played so many of the Bard’s roles at the Royal Shakespeare Company and won a Tony on Broadway for Hamlet. Awards meteor-showered down on him for playing Francis Hardy in Faith Healer, whose stages he graced on both sides of the earthly Atlantic.
Hamlet on Broadway with Francesca Annis
Faith Healer on Broadway with Cherry Jones
Stratford-Upon-Avon’s King Lear with Sally Dexter
Franchisa
Dominating a galaxy takes talent. It also takes money. For that, there are box office blockbusters. Fiennes has known a few. He’s starred in three James Bond films, two of them as M, and all those Harry Potter films as Lord Voldemort, including Deathly Hallows 2, which grossed $1.3 billion throughout Earth. Only Fiennes can live forever.
Harry Potter films with Daniel Radcliffe
James Bond movies with Daniel Craig
This story appeared in the Jan. 29 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. Click here to subscribe.
The (Literal) Ralph Fiennes Cinematic Universe: Exploring the Versatile Actor’s Diverse RolesRalph Fiennes is a renowned actor known for his incredible versatility and range in portraying a wide array of characters on the big screen. From playing iconic villains like Lord Voldemort in the Harry Potter series to historical figures like Amon Goeth in Schindler’s List, Fiennes has left an indelible mark on the world of cinema.
In this post, we will delve into the various roles that Fiennes has portrayed throughout his career and explore how they could potentially exist within a shared universe. Imagine a world where Lord Voldemort crosses paths with the ruthless Amon Goeth or where the suave spy Gareth Mallory from the James Bond series teams up with the enigmatic Monsieur Gustave from The Grand Budapest Hotel.
The possibilities are endless in the (Literal) Ralph Fiennes Cinematic Universe, where the talented actor’s diverse characters come together in a world of intrigue, danger, and drama. So sit back, grab some popcorn, and prepare to be entertained as we delve into the fascinating world of Ralph Fiennes and his unforgettable roles.
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- Ralph Fiennes movies
- Ralph Fiennes filmography
- Ralph Fiennes characters
- Ralph Fiennes acting career
- Ralph Fiennes iconic roles
- Ralph Fiennes film universe
- Ralph Fiennes on screen
- Ralph Fiennes best performances
- Ralph Fiennes movie connections
- Ralph Fiennes cinematic impact
#Literal #Ralph #Fiennes #Cinematic #Universe
How Billy Idol almost spearheaded a cinematic revolution
(Credit: Alamy)
Few singers cut quite as iconic a silhouette as Billy Idol. The man behind ‘White Wedding’ and ‘Rebel Yell’ is just as famous for his long leather coats and spiky blonde hair as he is for any of his songs. His image was a massive part of his success in the 1980s, given, of course, that his videos were regular fixtures on MTV.
Idol’s memorable visage has also appeared in a few films over the years. He had a small role in Mad Dog Time, featuring Diane Lane, Richard Dreyfuss, and Jeff Goldblum. More notably, he had a memorable cameo in the Adam Sandler film The Wedding Singer as part of a group of passengers on a plane who convinced the main character to go after the girl of his dreams. He also very nearly ended up in one of the most famous films of all time – James Cameron’s action classic, Terminator 2: Judgment Day.
During an interview with Empire, Cameron revealed that Robert Patrick was his only choice for the part of the T-1000, with one notable exception. “The only notion that I entertained seriously, up to and including doing a screen test, which I actually found recently – it actually exists – was Billy Idol,” he said. “I was fascinated by Billy Idol’s physical look. I remembered the lesson of Arnold, and the lesson of Arnold is, ‘What’s that face telling you?’ He had a kind of sneering, sinister quality. It was a bit stylised, but in the right context, with the right direction and the right lighting, this could be interesting.”
Unfortunately, fate had other ideas for Cameron, Idol, and the project. In 1990, the rock star was on his motorcycle when, after running a red light, he got hit by a car. The accident left him with severe damage to one of his legs, which was very nearly amputated. Though his limb was saved, he had lost almost all of his mobility. A planned appearance in Oliver Stone’s upcoming biopic of The Doors was scrapped, as were any plans of him playing the liquid metal assassin.
“He wouldn’t be able to walk without a limp,” Cameron said. “That didn’t work. So then I met Robert [Patrick], and once I met Robert, I really focused on him.”
Had Idol not had his accident and gotten the part, his legacy would be entirely different today. Terminator 2 was the most expensive movie ever made when it was released in 1991, with a large portion of that money going towards its groundbreaking special effects. The T-1000’s ability to transform from solid to liquid was possibly due to the work of legendary VFX artist Dennis Muren, who harnessed the potential of CGI to create something audiences had never seen before.
“I was following what we were doing with the CGI group, and I did the ‘Young Sherlock Holmes’ show a few years before just to see what it was like, but I never really understood it,” Muren explained to Tech Radar. “So I took a year off work and got a massive textbook, about 1,800 pages long, and I sat in the local coffee shop here in California, and I read it.”
The end result of Muren’s hard work was a movie that demonstrated the power of computer graphics over traditional visual effects. Without the success of Terminator 2, the movie industry as we know it would look a whole lot different.
If Idol hadn’t run that red light, he would have become the face that changed cinema forever. He is still a legend in his own right, with plenty of memorable contributions to culture to look back on, but this has got to sting every single time he’s reminded of it.
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Billy Idol, the iconic punk rock musician known for hits like “Rebel Yell” and “White Wedding,” almost spearheaded a cinematic revolution in the 1980s.In the mid-80s, Idol was approached to star in a film that would have combined his signature punk rock style with cutting-edge special effects and a futuristic storyline. The film, tentatively titled “Cyberpunk,” was set to be directed by renowned filmmaker Ridley Scott and would have showcased Idol as a rebellious cyborg fighting against a corrupt government in a dystopian future.
Unfortunately, due to scheduling conflicts and creative differences, the project ultimately fell through and never came to fruition. However, the idea of combining music, fashion, and technology in a visually stunning film was ahead of its time and could have potentially paved the way for a new wave of cinematic storytelling.
While Billy Idol may not have become a movie star in the traditional sense, his brief foray into the world of film almost led to a groundbreaking collaboration that could have revolutionized the way we perceive and experience movies. Who knows what could have been if “Cyberpunk” had made it to the big screen? But one thing’s for sure – Billy Idol’s impact on the entertainment industry will always be felt, both on stage and potentially on the silver screen.
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Billy Idol, cinematic revolution, 80s music, rock star movies, pop culture, movie history, music legends, film industry, music in movies, rock star actors
#Billy #Idol #spearheaded #cinematic #revolutionDavid Lynch Was America’s Cinematic Poet
David Lynch died yesterday at the age of 78, after a career that made him perhaps the most consequential American art filmmaker in the history of the medium. But his singular voice extended far beyond cinema, into television, music, internet fame, coffee making, furniture design, transcendental meditation, and practically any other creative endeavor you can imagine. He was a brand, though a fiercely independent one: Beginning with his debut movie, Eraserhead, in 1977, Lynch became the rare kind of artist whose last name seemed to describe an entire genre. He established a style that offered an otherworldly reckoning with our way of life, incorporating classic Hollywood storytelling, pulpy romanticism, and abstract surrealism all at once.
Lynch’s canon was so tremendous that each of his many fans and acolytes likely had different entry points into it. There was the aggressive midnight-screening oddness of Eraserhead in the 1970s; the frightening mix of throwback folksiness and depraved sexuality in Blue Velvet in the 1980s; and the bizarre-but-incredible TV phenomenon that was Twin Peaks in the early 1990s. Others found him through 2001’s Mulholland Drive, a staggering collision of Hollywood dreamscapes, or 2017’s inimitable Twin Peaks: The Return, which exploded the form of “prestige television” that its predecessor had helped plant the seeds for. These are just a few of Lynch’s achievements in a body of work that spanned big-budget and micro-budget, highbrow and low. His output was also defined by his personal celebrity—a folksy, chain-smoking former Eagle Scout who produced art of high complexity while also rhapsodizing about the simple pleasures of eating a doughnut with a cup of coffee.
The first Lynch film I saw in a theater was Mulholland Drive, at the age of 15. A budding cinephile, I was only somewhat aware of the director’s titanic reputation and of the movie’s circuitous journey to the screen. (It was initially intended as a television pilot, a Twin Peaks successor that ABC ultimately rejected.) Mulholland Drive was an artistic thunderbolt like no other for me, and watching it for the first time is still probably the most transformative experience I’ve ever had in a cinema. I can palpably recall my terror during the early sequence at Winkie’s Diner, in which two men discuss a dream one had involving some ineffable monster out back, and the transfixing mystery of Club Silencio, one of Lynch’s many on-screen environments that seemed to have a foot in multiple realities. The film was at certain times a chilling representation of fear, trauma, and death, but at others hauntingly lovely and funny. It opened my eyes to what movies could be, beyond just the entertaining product they usually were.
Mulholland Drive resisted easy explanation, as did all of the director’s stories. But, boiled down, many had a sweet purity to them, involving battles of good and evil and harsh realities endured by pure spirits. The director had a charmed and normal childhood, by all accounts; he was born in Montana but moved all over the country as a kid, living in Washington, North Carolina, Idaho, and Virginia at various points. Still, he would later recall moments that punctured that idyll. “When I was little, my brother and I were outdoors late one night, and we saw a naked woman come walking down the street toward us in a dazed state, crying. I have never forgotten that moment,” he once told Roger Ebert, evoking an image that would serve as Blue Velvet’s centerpiece many years after the fact.
More adult life events inspired his first feature, however. A quiet, eccentric, ink-black comedy about a peculiar young man who works at a factory in an industrial dystopia, Eraserhead is plainly Lynch’s way of processing his life as an early parent in Philadelphia. Its protagonist struggles to raise a mutant creature while also dealing with nattering in-laws and a mundane job. Most theatergoers were likely to find the film off-putting—what with its clanking, abrasive soundtrack, beautifully cloying interludes of simple songs, and unabashedly nonnarrative strangeness. Eraserhead could have died in obscurity, but it became a cult-movie sensation instead, the kind that circulates among artsy gatherings, comic-book shops, and other underground scenes, as much of Lynch’s filmography now does.
The veteran comedian and filmmaker Mel Brooks saw the movie and, somehow, it resonated with him. He then hired Lynch—over far more objectively qualified, well-known names—to direct a project that Brooks had been nurturing, The Elephant Man. It was a critical smash that landed several Oscar nominations, and Lynch’s industry ascension seemed set. His follow-up was the sci-fi epic Dune, an adaptation of the blockbuster Frank Herbert novel, for which Lynch claimed he had passed on Return of the Jedi. But it was an artistically compromised box-office failure; the director never made a big-budget film again. He instead found greater success once he’d swerved back to his more personal fascinations: His next film was the alternately astonishing and repellent Blue Velvet, a nasty noir fairy tale of gangsters and abuse in a picture-perfect suburban town.
Lynch took many, many creative risks over the years, but Blue Velvet is the movie that perhaps best melded grim violence and white-picket-fence cheerfulness—a vision that came to characterize him in the public eye. The director continued to dig beneath idealism’s rot for the remainder of his career, and the 1990 premiere of Twin Peaks brought his worldview to a broader swath of viewers. Co-created by the writer Mark Frost, the ABC show was an uncanny soap opera, powered by a murder mystery that briefly captured the country’s imagination. Twin Peaks ran out of ratings steam quickly over the course of its initial, two-season run, but it’s since emerged as Lynch’s quintessential work. The series’ legacy was powered by both its empathy—the stark and sincere emotion the director could deploy so beautifully—and the way it transformed between various media over time. Twin Peaks evolved into a larger, decades-spanning project, encompassing the aggressively tragic and beautiful prequel film, Fire Walk With Me, in 1992, and the confounding, hilarious, and formally defiant sequel show, The Return, which premiered 25 years later.
In his later life, Lynch charged into the digital frontier in his typically singular fashion. He used grainy digital video cameras to shoot the bizarre California epic Inland Empire mostly on his own dime; he uploaded original, offbeat episodic projects and crudely animated cartoons exclusively for subscribers to his website. The director was an excellent marketer of himself, despite his preference for alienating themes and aesthetic choices: His trademark non-sequitur-filled humor and rambling sincerity connected both him and his oeuvre to generation after generation. Lynch, more than many of his peers, could expose audiences to the harshest, most discomforting imagery while also balefully commanding them to “fix their hearts or die.” If the American experience had a cinematic poet, it was him. The news that Lynch had left us was shocking only because it seemed that he’d be here with us forever.
David Lynch is widely regarded as one of America’s greatest filmmakers, known for his unique and surreal storytelling style that has captivated audiences for decades. But beyond just being a filmmaker, Lynch can also be seen as America’s cinematic poet, using his films to explore the deepest recesses of the human psyche and the dark underbelly of American society.Lynch’s films often delve into themes of identity, memory, and the subconscious, creating a rich tapestry of images and emotions that resonate with viewers on a deeply profound level. From the hauntingly beautiful landscapes of “Twin Peaks” to the nightmarish dreams of “Mulholland Drive,” Lynch’s work is a masterclass in visual storytelling and atmospheric filmmaking.
Like a poet, Lynch uses the language of cinema to evoke complex emotions and explore the complexities of the human experience. His films are filled with layers of symbolism and metaphor, inviting viewers to decipher their meaning and draw their own conclusions about the mysteries they contain.
In a cinematic landscape dominated by formulaic blockbusters and cookie-cutter storytelling, David Lynch stands out as a true artist, unafraid to challenge conventions and push the boundaries of what is possible in film. His work is a testament to the power of cinema as a medium for exploring the deepest recesses of the human soul, and his legacy as America’s cinematic poet is sure to endure for generations to come.
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- David Lynch
- American filmmaker
- Cinematic poetry
- Lynchian style
- Twin Peaks
- Mulholland Drive
- Blue Velvet
- Surrealism in film
- American cinema
- Visionary director
#David #Lynch #Americas #Cinematic #Poet
Captain America: Brave New World Is One of the Shortest Marvel Cinematic Universe Films
Captain America: Brave New World is not only the shortest Captain America film in Marvel Cinematic Universe history, but it’s one of the shortest MCU films.
AMC Theatres revealed the runtime for Brave New World is one hour and 58 minutes, making it one of the few MCU films to come in under two hours, and the seventh shortest (out of 35 films) overall. The previous three Captain America films are all over two hours long.
While most of the shorter films come in Phase 1 and Phase 2 of the MCU, a handful of outliers came more recently. The shortest MCU film is 2022’s The Marvels at one hour and 45 minutes, for example, followed by The Incredible Hulk, Thor: The Dark World, Thor, Doctor Strange, and Ant-Man.
Brave New World arrives next, alongside Ant-Man and The Wasp which is also one hour and 58 minutes long. For comparison, the longest MCU film is Avengers: Endgame at three hours and one minute, followed by Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, Eternals, and Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3.
Though it’s finally just a few weeks away with a release date of February 14, Brave New World has allegedly been subject to myriad rewrites and reshoots (including of scenes surrounding WWE star Seth Rollins) though it’s unclear how this has affected the overall runtime.
Brave New World is the first Captain America film following the retirement of Chris Evans’ Steve Rogers and instead stars Anthony Mackie’s Sam Wilson in the titular role. He’s promised it continues the Captain America series’ legacy as another grounded, espionage adventure, however.
It’s also set to fold in some deep cut characters from Marvel lore, including the pay off for a tease included in the second ever MCU film, The Incredible Hulk, through the introduction of The Leader. It similarly stars Red Hulk.
Ryan Dinsdale is an IGN freelance reporter. He’ll talk about The Witcher all day.
Captain America: Brave New World may be one of the shortest films in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, but it certainly packs a punch. Clocking in at just under two hours, this action-packed adventure follows Steve Rogers as he navigates a world that is vastly different from the one he left behind.Despite its relatively short runtime, Captain America: Brave New World manages to deliver a thrilling and emotional story that keeps viewers on the edge of their seats. From high-octane fight scenes to heartfelt moments of camaraderie, this film has something for everyone.
So if you’re looking for a quick but satisfying Marvel fix, be sure to check out Captain America: Brave New World. You won’t be disappointed.
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Captain America, Brave New World, Marvel Cinematic Universe, MCU, shortest film, superhero movies, action film, Captain America: The First Avenger, Steve Rogers, Bucky Barnes, Red Skull, Avengers, Chris Evans, Marvel Studios, superhero franchise.
#Captain #America #Brave #World #Shortest #Marvel #Cinematic #Universe #FilmsHayley Atwell to return to Marvel Cinematic Universe and more – Finger Lakes Daily News
Hayley Atwell looks to be returning to the Marvel Cinematic Universe. The actress is reported to be reprising her role as Agent Carter in the upcoming superhero movie Avengers: Doomsday, according to Deadline. The film is being directed by Anthony and Joe Russo, with Marvel president Kevin Feige producing. While plot details remain unknown, the film is expected in theaters on May 1, 2026 …
Anne Hathaway is staying booked and busy. The actress will star alongside Dave Bautista in an untitled action comedy film for Amazon MGM Studios, Deadline reports. Inspired by actual events, the film follows agents who posed as a couple in order to infiltrate a global crime enterprise …
Jim Carrey says he’d return to another one of his famous movie characters, but only under one condition. In a recent interview for Sonic the Hedgehog 3, Carrey said he would reprise his role in a sequel to The Mask if it felt right. “Oh gosh, you know, it has to be the right idea. If somebody had the right idea, I guess … It’s not really about the money,” Carrey said to ComicBook. “I joke about the money … But I never know. You can’t be definite about these things.”
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Exciting news for Marvel fans! Hayley Atwell is set to return to the Marvel Cinematic Universe in an upcoming project. The actress, who is best known for her role as Peggy Carter in the Captain America films, will reprise her iconic role in what is sure to be a thrilling new adventure.But that’s not all – Atwell’s return is just one of many exciting developments in the Marvel world. With new projects in the works and fan-favorite characters set to make a comeback, there’s never been a better time to be a Marvel fan.
Stay tuned for more updates on Hayley Atwell’s return to the MCU and all the latest news from the Marvel universe. Excelsior!
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Hayley Atwell, Marvel Cinematic Universe, MCU, Agent Carter, Peggy Carter, Marvel news, entertainment news, Finger Lakes Daily News, Hayley Atwell return, Marvel movies, upcoming projects
#Hayley #Atwell #return #Marvel #Cinematic #Universe #Finger #Lakes #Daily #News