Game On: Zendaya & Co. Reveal Why “Challengers” Will Be Your New Obsession

From the warm embrace of Call Me By Your Name to the eerie thrill of Bones and All, Luca Guadagnino’s latest film, Challengers, is a culmination of the better parts of all of his earlier work, ending in an explosive (and sweaty) finale.

The film centers on a love triangle, set in the world of high-stakes tennis matches, with three characters who once, at the height of their careers, cared deeply for their sport and each other and have now lost their love not only for their sport but for life.

“I couldn’t define what kind of movie it was,” said Zendaya at a recent press conference, explaining what drew her to the project. “Like, it was funny…but I wouldn’t say it was a comedy. But there was drama. But I wouldn’t say it was just a drama. And it had tennis, but it wasn’t like a sports movie. I think that feeling that it was kind of just like everything at once in this beautiful way was terrifying but equally exhilarating and exciting.”

Zendaya as Tashi in CHALLENGERS, directed by Luca Guadagnino, a Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures film. Credit: Niko Tavernise / Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures© 2023 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved.

A movie that’s somehow completely about tennis and simultaneously not at all about tennis can best be summarized in a short argument in the film where Patrick (Josh O’Connor) asks Tashi (Zendaya), “Are we still talking about tennis?” And she replies, “We’re always talking about tennis.”

“It is very rare that commercial movies are about adult relationships and about sex. And I was sick of it,” said producer Amy Pascal. “So, I thought it was high time that people kiss in movies and more.”

 

But for a film with a lot of sex scenes, there is very little love. Guadagnino uses sex in the film the same way the characters use it on each other — short, passionate bursts, always teasing, but never fully allowing the audience — or the characters — to reach completion. In both their sex lives and in tennis, they are never fulfilled.

“The thing that really stuck out with me about the character [Art Donaldson] was this idea of a person, this craftsman, who’s fallen out of love with his craft,” said Mike Faist of his character, Art.  “And he’s so desperately trying to kind of get back to that place of purity.”

Challengers follows Tashi, Patrick, and Art through their teenage youth, at the peak of their tennis careers, all the way through adulthood, when life has stopped acting in their favor.

 

In a movie where the characters always say the opposite of what they mean and mean the opposite of what they say, the tennis metaphor is almost too perfect. In tennis, whoever serves has the upper hand, and in the film, the three leads are desperately trying to hold their serve.

But what makes this film are the words left unsaid — told through the subtle body language. The stolen glances, racket swivels, head tilts.

Writer Justin Kuritzkes said the idea for the script came to him from watching Serena Williams and Naomi Osaka’s 2018 US Open match.

“There was this very controversial call from the umpire where he accused Serena Williams of receiving coaching from the sidelines,” Kuritzkes said. “And I had never heard of this rule… But immediately, this struck me as this intensely cinematic situation where you’re all alone on your side of the court, and there’s this one other person in this massive tennis stadium who cares as much about what happens to you as you do. But you can’t talk to them. And for whatever reason, it just clicked in my mind; well, what if you really needed to talk about something? And what if it was something beyond tennis?”

 

Challengers jumps between the past and present throughout the film, leading up to the pivotal match and final scene between Art and Patrick, that is told almost entirely without dialogue.

“The final moment had to be basically a silent sequence, or non-dialogue sequence, that was going to be very clear to everyone in the audience to understand the emotional ramp-up that had to be built there,” Guadagnino said. “So it took a long time. I think that sequence, the last 10 minutes, took us eight days to shoot.”

While the film centers around a love triangle, it’s Zendaya’s performance as Tashi Duncan that steals the show. She is the axis that the two boys revolve around (whether they want to admit it or not). Zendaya’s performance is so nuanced and compelling that it leaves viewers wanting more.

“She scared the shit out of me,” Zendaya laughed. 

 

None of the characters in this film are particularly likable — which is precisely why we like them. They feel messy, they feel emotional and they feel real. Zendaya said that she thinks maybe audiences are so enamored with Tashi because it’s “refreshing” that she’s unlikeable.

“It’s a female character that doesn’t have to be likable and doesn’t care about you liking her,” Zendaya said. “And doesn’t ask for forgiveness. And I think that that is probably refreshing, maybe, to some people? And I understand that. And that was refreshing to me when I read her. And that was why I wanted to play her.”

Challengers is in theaters now.

Featured image: (L to R) Mike Faist as Art, Zendaya as Tashi and Josh O’Connor as Patrick in CHALLENGERS, directed by Luca Guadagnino, a Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures film. Credit: Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures © 2023 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved.

 

Challengers opens in theaters on Friday, April, 26.

“The Lord of the Rings” Trilogy Returning to Theaters in Remastered & Extended Version

Peter Jackson’s colossal The Lord of the Rings trilogy, a mighty, jaw-dropping achievement that wowed audiences and fellow filmmakers alike (James Cameron said the trilogy helped inspire Avatar) is returning to theaters this summer. Only this time, the trilogy will be even bigger.

Warner Bros. and Fathom Events are teaming up to release Jackson’s magnum opus in extended versions, including those Jackson remastered for the 4K Ultra HD rerelease that came out in 2020. This will be the first chance for fans to see the purest iteration of Jackson’s vision on the big screen, however.

All three Lord of the Rings films—The Fellowship of the Ring (2001), The Two Towers (2002), and The Return of the King (2003)—will screen over a three day period at participating Fathom Events chains, including Cinemark, Regal, and AMC. The Fellowship of the Ring will screen on June 8, The Two Towers on June 9, and The Return of the King on June 10. Tickets are available here.

A lot is happening in Middle-earth, as season 2 of Amazon’s ambitious The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power is set to be released this year. Then there’s Warner Bros.’ anime film The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrimwhich is due out on December 13, and is centered on the King of Rohan, Helm Hammerhand, and his exploits 250 years before the events depicted in Jackson’s seminal trilogy.

So it’s fitting that it’ll be Jackson’s beloved trilogy that will kickstart our return to the fantasy world dreamed up by J.R.R. Tolkien, a world that is continuing to expand.

For more big film news, check out these stories:

“Deadpool & Wolverine” Official Trailer Unleashes Mutant Mayhem on Marvel

Capturing Cavill & More With “The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare” Cinematographer Ed Wild

“Monkey Man” Mask Designer Eddie Yang Gives Dev Patel a Primal Facelift

Featured image: WELLINGTON, NEW ZEALAND – MARCH 15: Peter Jackson, New Zealand director of The Lord of the Rings trilogy poses with the props from the film set in his Wingnut Films office in Wellington New Zealand. Jackson has been nominated for best director at the 2002 Academy Awards and his film ‘The fellowship of the Ring’ has a further 12 nominations. (Photo by Robert Patterson/Getty Images)

“Monkey Man” Mask Designer Eddie Yang Gives Dev Patel a Primal Facelift

Dev Patel’s directorial debut, Monkey Man, is a kinetic, deeply felt revenge story set in Mumbai, a world that is rarely depicted with such punishing, propulsive energy and passion. Patel stars as the Kid, an anonymous young man nursing a wound so deep it becomes a source of inexhaustible rage and, ultimately, power. The Kid’s mother was murdered by the ruthless, heartless leaders who prey on the poor and powerless in Mumbai, but the Kid aims to change the power structure with a primal audacity inspired by the story of Hanuman, the Hindu monkey god. The Kid dons a mask and begins his bone-crunching revenge journey on Mumbai’s vampiric power players by learning how to brawl and absorb pain in an underground fight club. The hunt is on. 

Of all the talented people Patel assembled to help him pull off his critically acclaimed debut, mask designer Eddie Yang was a crucial asset. Yang began his career as a designer and builder of masks, specialty costumes, creatures, and props, working for the legendary special makeup effects designer Rick Baker, a seven-time Oscar winner, helping Baker on Men in Black, Tim Burton’s Planet of the Apes, and more. Yang’s work on specialty suits and characters has been seen in a slew of iconic films, including Iron Man, Avatar, War of the Worlds, and The Dark Knight Rises.

In Monkey Man, Yang’s charge was straightforward but also the very heart of the film—help design the monkey masks that the Kid will wear on his bloody, bruising path toward vengeance. Here, Yang helps break down his process, his happy shock at seeing the finished film, and what it is about a mask that remains endlessly compelling, even in a world of seamless computer generated effects.

Monkey Man seems like a fairly straightforward job for you, considering all the things you’ve designed over the years, yet it seems safe to say the monkey masks are as important to Dev Patel’s vision here as anything you’ve worked on before.

For a film like Monkey Man, it was a little bit more obvious [than previous films] what the work was going to be. We knew it was going to be a monkey mask, but still, monkeys can come in so many varieties, right? There are apes that can be completely black-skinned, there are chimps that are more flesh-toned, and so on. So you want to know what the director’s vision is, and for this film, Dev was very decisive when it came to trying out variations and steered us in the direction of what we actually see in the film. Because it was going to be shot in India, I knew it would have a lot of cultural influences. I even tried a few masks that were very interesting, more like a blue-painted face, and versions that were more exotic. But Dev didn’t want that. He wanted a straightforward kind of monkey, the chimp faces that we ended up with.

Can you walk me through your design process here?

It began typically like almost any other film that I’ve worked on. You talk to the director, and usually, we’re sent a script. I was not sent a script on this one. This was like four years ago, and Dev showed me a reference of a gorilla mask that was available for purchase, like a Halloween mask. It was a lower quality, which I totally got because Dev’s character in the film probably couldn’t afford an expensive mask. So the question was, does he make the mask? Does he find it? So we had all these conversations just to make sure that the final masks would resemble what his character would have. Using that as one of the parameters and saying, Okay, this is the low-end quality mask, you know you don’t want something ultra-realistic. Obviously, you don’t want the audience to think that it’s a prosthetic or it’s an actual human-like ape, like Planet of the Apes or something. So it was about finding the right aesthetic between how realistic versus how cheap and basic looking we wanted it to be, and we found that happy medium.

You were an early proponent of deploying 3D printing into your work—how has that changed the profession?

I learned 3D printing from Stan Winston Studios. And there’s another artist, Aaron Sims, and we both got into digital models for visual effects. As the printers became more affordable and vendors became more known, we realized, wow! You can take that same model, and instead of us using clay in our hands to sculpt something, there’s software that’s designed to replicate clay. And now you can create things such as the Robocop costume, which, back in the eighties, the original Robocop was sculpted by hand out of clay and then molded in fiberglass. But today, using digital tools, you can get so refined and so accurate so quickly. Then you send it to a machine that prints it, you do some light sanding on it, and then you have this perfect replica of what you designed and built in the computer.

And this was the process for Monkey Man?

Yes, I usually design digitally. I whipped up a few quick digital sculptures of chimp variations and colored them differently. We tried some different colors and skin tones. Dev wanted to see what the masks looked like with blood on them and versions of them that were ripped where we see stitching in them. And what if behind the stitching, we saw some of the fabric that it’s made from, and so on? So we added all those kinds of little details into the mask. Right after the designs were done, we went right into production. We were able to get Joey Orosco, one of the most talented sculptors in the industry. And Aimee Macabeo did the hair on the mask. We had a list of all the top people that you would hire from the studios and makeup effects industry, and we had it all done within four weeks and shipped it out.

What’s the material of the mask that Dev is actually wearing?

Once the design is finalized, I’ll usually go backward in the design process, and I’ll ask how we are actually going to use this mask. Based on the design and what the mask is going to go through, I’ll engineer backward and figure out what materials we’ll need. There are many materials we could use, like silicone and different kinds of rubber. And for something stunt-intensive like this, latex rubber works very well; it’s a very sturdy, strong material. It’s what your typical Halloween mask is made out of. When I talked to Dev about it, he wanted three of them for stunts because we knew he was going to go through a lot. I don’t think he’s necessarily worked with a mask before like this, and we made three, two for the stuntmen and one hero mask for Dev. And then there was one of the white-haired masks after it was bleached.

When we think of film props, masks play such an outsized role in our imaginations, from Batman to Darth Vader to Jason Vorhees and Michael Myers…how much do you consciously think about this broader history when you’re in the midst of a project?

I started very young and my parents wanted me to be a doctor, but I wanted to make monsters. I was inspired by Rick Baker, who has seven Academy Awards. He was my idol, and he said it best—every time he put on a mask, he turned from this shy little kid who didn’t wanna talk to anybody into this creature, and he could do anything he wanted. It’s really interesting what just putting on a rubber mask can do for you. But of course, there, you know, there’s a lot of different ways of changing people into a character. There’s prosthetics, which are rubber appliances that you glue right to your face, and then there’s animatronics, something that’s fully mechanical and which are beyond the human form. But I still love the mask. It was one of the first things I ever did as a kid, and when you step into this industry, making a rubber mask is one of the basic things you start off doing. And they’re still effective.

MONKEY MAN, directed by Dev Patel. © Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.

What did you think when you finally got to see the finished film?

I really, really liked it. And I’m not just saying that because I worked on it—I really didn’t know what to expect. When I first got the call, I didn’t know what kind of movie it was. I just knew that [Dev’s character] was kind of a fighter in an underground fighting ring, and he was masked. When I saw the film, I was like, oh my God, wow! This guy can direct a film! Dev gave us a different view of India and the Indian culture, what the streets look like, and you can practically smell the food. Before Monkey Man, what I’ve mainly seen are mostly Bollywood films, you know, lots of singing and music videos and things like that. Monkey Man has this intense action, like a John Wick movie, and this violence was just unrestrained. I loved it. It just felt like he set out to make the film he wanted to make.

Monkey Man is now available to rent or buy at home.

Featured image: MONKEY MAN, directed by Dev Patel. Courtesy Universal Pictures.

Danny Boyle’s “28 Years Later” Casts Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Ralph Fiennes

When word spread that director Danny Boyle and writer/director Alex Garland were re-teaming 22 years after delivering their now iconic zombie thriller 28 Days Later for a sequel, excitement was high. That film, 28 Years Later, found a home at Sony, and now it’s found its three leads—Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, and Ralph Fiennes.

For the younger readers who still might not have caught that original film, it was a stunner, featuring a breakout by a then little-known Cillian Murphy in a ferocious zombie panic attack that re-energized the genre. Murphy starred as Jim, a young man who wakes up in a hospital in the U.K. to find out the country has been completely overrun by the undead. Boyle directed from a script by Garland, long before the latter was himself the director of such sci-fi stunners as Ex Machina and Annihilation. A sequel in 2007, from director Juan Carlos Fresnadillo, 28 Weeks Later, featured Boyle and Garland as executive producers.

Comer’s star has been rising ever since her breakout performance in Phoebe Waller-Bridge’s excellent series Killing Eve, and will next be seen in The Bikeriders, which revs into theaters on June 21. Taylor-Johnson plays a movie star gone rogue in The Fall Guy, which stars Ryan Gosling and Emily Blunt, and then will head up his own superhero franchise when Kraven the Hunter debuts in August. Fiennes, of course, has had a long and fruitful career, with recent turns in the deliciously demented The Menu and his longstanding role in the Daniel Craig-era James Bond films.

Sony won the rights for 28 Years Later after a bidding war with several other studios, and Garland is also working on a script for 28 Years Later: Part 2. Cillian Murphy, currently riding high after his Oscar win for his work in Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer, is on board as an executive producer. And Murphy might even act in the film, although those details are being kept in a top-secret biohazard facility.

Deadline first scooped the casting news.

For more upcoming films from Sony Pictures, check out these stories:

Tom Holland Slings a Hopeful “Spider-Man 4” Update

Scarlett Johansson and Channing Tatum Orbit Each Other in “Fly Me to the Moon” Trailer

How “Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire” Cinematographer Eric Steelberg Brought Slimer & the Firehouse Back to Life

“Bad Boys: Ride or Die” Trailer Calls Will Smith and Martin Lawrence Back Into Action

Featured image: L-r: NEW YORK, NEW YORK – APRIL 24: Jodie Comer attends the 2024 TIME Earth Awards Gala at Second on April 24, 2024 in New York City. (Photo by Roy Rochlin/Getty Images for TIME). LONDON, ENGLAND – APRIL 22: Aaron Taylor-Johnson attends a special screening of “The Fall Guy” at BFI IMAX Waterloo on April 22, 2024 in London, England. (Photo by Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images). TORONTO, ONTARIO – SEPTEMBER 10: Ralph Fiennes attends “The Menu” Premiere during the 2022 Toronto International Film Festival at Royal Alexandra Theatre on September 10, 2022 in Toronto, Ontario. (Photo by Amy Sussman/Getty Images)

Zendaya Double Feature: “Dune: Part Two” Returns to IMAX as “Challengers” Serves Up Premiere

Zendaya is ready to serve for the win this weekend at the box office.

The megastar will be on the big screen in two critically acclaimed films from major directors. One you likely know all about by now—Denis Villeneuve’s Dune: Part Two returns to IMAX this weekend as it continues its epic run. The second Zendaya film in theaters this weekend is Luca Guadagnino’s romantic comedy Challengers, a sexy new film about three “athletic demigods” (in the words of the New Yorker‘s Justin Chang) who find themselves as committed to their excellence on the tennis court as to romancing each other off of it.

Dune: Part Two will play this weekend in 200 IMAX theaters, topping out at 1,300 theaters in the eighth week of its theatrical run. It’s been an absolute smash hit, critically and commercially. And while we already know that Dune: Part Two, especially in IMAX, is a film that has wowed audiences since it bowed back in early March, the pull of Guadagnino’s Challengers is going to be, at least at the beginning, primarily due to the mega wattage of Zendaya, a star who has improved everything she’s been in (including the blockbuster Dune and Spider-Man franchises) but here gets to shine in a movie unattached to any major IP.

Challengers’ prospects are looking very good—it’s currently sitting at a 95% fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes, with critics reveling in how unabashedly pleasurable the viewing experience is and how Zendaya’s chemistry with her two co-stars, Mike Faist and Josh O’Connor, creates an exhilarating tension.

“A funny, tempestuous, and exuberantly lusty story about how three athletic demigods see their destinies upended. And Guadagnino tells it the way he knows best, with a sometimes exasperating but ultimately irresistible surfeit of style,” is how the aforementioned Justin Chang sums it up in the New Yorker.

“Anchored by three arresting performances and playfully experimental direction, Challengers is fresh, exhilarating, and energetic,” writes Entertainment Weekly‘s Maureen Lee Lenker.

The excitement for Challengers has been growing—the first trailer served up more than 150 million global views, and, at the time, became the most-viewed trailer for an original film not based on pre-existing IP, a reboot, or a sequel in its first 24 hours.

Challengers is, in short, nothing at all like Dune: Part Two save for having a single, crucial Spice-like ingredient at its center—Zendaya.

For more on Dune: Part Two, check out these stories:

Steven Spielberg Anoints “Dune: Part Two” a Masterpiece

“Dune: Part Two” Cinematographer Greig Fraser on Finding Clarity in Chaos

“Dune: Part Two” Cinematographer Greig Fraser on Poisoning the Light of Giedi Prime

“Dune: Part Two” Costume Designer Jacqueline West on Creating a Goth Rock God in Feyd-Rautha

Featured image: L-r: Zendaya stars as Tashi in director Luca Guadagnino’s CHALLENGERS An Amazon MGM Studios film Photo credit: Niko Tavernise © 2024 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved. ZENDAYA as Chani in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure “DUNE: PART TWO,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

Capturing Cavill & More With “The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare” Cinematographer Ed Wild

In Part One of our conversation with cinematographer Ed Wild, we discussed how his documentary filmmaking background worked very well with director Guy Ritchie’s pragmatic and responsive approach. We continue the discussion with the throughline in Ritchie’s latest films, The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare and The Covenant, both of which were lensed by Wild.

To create a lavish ballroom for the extravagant costume party in the third act, production designer Martyn John built a leveling deck in the hallway of a caravanserai, an inn in eastern countries where caravans rest at night. Knowing that Guy would want to be dynamic with the camera once Marjorie started singing, Wild worked closely with John to figure out the best way to light it. “We knew we’d see the ceiling. So, I put festoon lighting all around that gave us a glow on the walls and a base layer to start with. Then, Martyn put chandeliers in, and above those, I hung some 2kW lanterns,” he shares. Once González started singing, they could not pause to augment any lighting configurations. “So, you need to light the entire space and let her flow around and sort out what you can. I’m really happy with how Eiza looks in that scene – she really looks like a 1950s screen goddess in that cream dress.”

To deliver some of the kinetic action sequences on Ministry, Wild worked with the drone team at Skynamic. “We ended up with a lot of drone work. We used the Inspire 3 because of how versatile it is when transitioning from big wide shots to interiors, and it could do it all in one shot. The drones flew off the support boat, and we’d coordinate the wide shots to get as much coverage as possible. When you’re trying to do all that with boats bobbing up and down and bumping into each other, it’s pretty tricky.”

 

Skynamic’s drone team also made the sprawling aerial shots during intense gun battles in Afghanistan’s unforgiving terrain possible in The Covenant, Ritchie’s cinematic exploration of the aftermath of America’s 20-year war. In the film, U.S. Army Master Sergeant Kinley (Jake Gyllenhaal) is compelled to fulfill his nation’s promise to get his Afghan interpreter Ahmed (Dar Salim) to safety after the latter saved his life by dragging Kinley’s nearly-dead body across hundreds of miles of Taliban-controlled territory.

 

Ritchie’s minimalist approach puts the focus squarely on the unspoken bond between these men in a way that is more grounded in emotional reality. “It’s like an old Western, how it evolved with so much communicated between them without any words. Similarly, the camera work was very stripped back, conveying a sense of reality and immediacy. We didn’t use cranes or dollies, just a couple of handhelds, a Steadicam, and a couple of sliders, with a very small electrical team.” When it suits the narrative, Wild rather prefers paring down on the gear. “Sometimes, all the things you have on a film can almost get in the way of storytelling.”

But Wild was glad to have the drone team to capture the vastness of the landscape—with the hilly, arid countryside of Alicante, Spain, standing in for Afghanistan—juxtaposed against the tiny, vulnerable humans in comparison. “Often the cranes really just aren’t big enough or dynamic enough for us, but the drones gave us the scale we needed” to telegraph the horrific perils ahead during Kinley and Ahmed’s harrowing trek. Along with Ministry, these films reveal one of Ritchie’s favorite genres because they examine selflessness, bravery, and what it means to do the right thing. “He’s interested in what makes these people tick under pressure. On Ministry, he spent time with the SBS, the Special Boat Service in the UK, and was inspired by them—who they were and what it means to be one of them,” explains Wild.

Dar Salim (left) as Ahmed and Jake Gyllenhaal (right) as Sgt. John Kinley in THE COVENANT, directed by Guy Ritchie, a Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures film. Credit: Christopher Raphael / Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures © 2023 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Back to Ministry, and a proper spoiler alert is in order here, when it came time for Gus’ crew to sink the Duchessa in the third act, Wild was concerned when he first read the script. “They blow up the generator. So I was like, ‘Oh dear, that’s gonna be hard.’ It had to be dark because they did it in the dark [in real life]. Actually, in the real incident, they got the Duchessa without ever firing a shot.” But, of course, that would have made for a muted ending for an action-adventure. “That harbor is half a kilometer wide—everywhere you look, it’s just loads of space and depth. You want to believe that they’re getting away with it with the Nazis around the edges of the harbor. So, we got the two biggest cranes we could find in Turkey and lit it with three 18Ks and some Vortexes and Dominos, which are moving lights just to pick out stuff. But we’ve only got two places to put the cranes because the set was built a certain way,” says Wild. Fortunately, the Sony Venice’s low light capabilities came in handy. “The Venice 2 is great because we shot everything with 3200 ASA.”

Alex Pettyfer in “The Ministry Of Ungentlemanly Warfare.” Photo credit: Dan Smith for Lionsgate.

The whole sequence became a huge challenge since the three weeks of night shoots took place deep in the winter, and on the last week of shooting, the weather Gods decided not to cooperate. “Just when we thought we were getting somewhere, it started raining, and the wind really picked up, so all the cranes had to go down. But you can’t pretend there are more days, so you still have to shoot and come up with ways to get around it. Some days were really tough.” But that was not the most daunting challenge. When Gus’ crew realizes the Duchessa is unsinkable because the ship’s hull has been reinforced, they have to steal it and blow up other Nazi ships on the way out of the harbor. Since the film opted for practical effects instead of relying on VFX, the full-day setup for all the explosives meant that Wild only had one shot to capture the climactic scene. “It’s a night shoot, and we’ve got one chance to tell the end of the story! The pressure was massive,” he recalls.

“We deployed as many cameras as we could. Jonjo [Stickland, the marine coordinator] said we’ll take them all out of the harbor, and they’ll just keep going back home because we’ll never get them back [into the harbor for a second take]. The sea was pretty choppy at that point, and the Duchessa barely fit in the harbor to begin with, and same with the tug boats. There’s immense pressure on this singular event and you don’t even know if everything’s going to trigger at the same time.” Wild also had to make sure the drones captured developing shots off the boats while trying to get everything in the right place. “We did like 50 or so setups on that last night in the harbor. It was the last location we shot before returning to the UK. That was a pretty tense evening, but we got it done.”

Wild recently finished shooting Ritchie’s upcoming film, In the Grey, which marks yet another reunion for the director’s frequent collaborators, including actors Cavill, Gyllenhaal, and González. You can think of them as their own specialized unit now, the kind that have a plan but are ready for anything and able to adapt on the fly.

The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare is playing in theaters now.

Featured image: Henry Cavill in “The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare.” Courtesy Dan Smith/Lionsgate

Jennifer Lopez Takes on a Lethal AI in Official “Atlas” Trailer

Atlas Shepherd (Jennifer Lopez) is not a fan of artificial intelligence, but in director Brad Peyton’s sci-fi thriller Atlasshe’s going to have to learn how to differentiate the evil AI from the kind that might save humanity. The official trailer puts more meat on the bone (or bytes in the code?) in the Lopez-led thriller for Netflix, who returns to the streamer after delivering a knockout blow with her action hit The Mother last year.

Lopez’s Atlas has a bad history with AI, having spent years of life hunting a rogue, rather rough AI known as Harlan (played by Simu Liu), and in Atlas, she accepts a mission to hunt Harlan down. Her mission goes awry, and she’s marooned on an inhospitable planet—what’s even worse, she has to rely on an AI calling itself Smith (voiced by Gregory James Cohan) to survive.

The official trailer reveals more of Atlas’s struggles on this alien planet (the terrain is not easy to navigate, especially in her massive mechanized suit) and her growing dependence on Smith not only to survive but to neutralize the threat of the rogue Harlan. The more Atlas learns to trust Smith, the more she begins to understand how it—and AI in general—experiences the world. In turn, Smith becomes closer to Atlas and learns from her. By the trailer’s end, the two have become a fearsome duo.

Joining Lopez, Liu, and Cohan are recent Oscar nominee Sterling K. Brown, along with Abraham Popoola, Lana Parrilla, and Mark Strong.

Check out the trailer below. Atlas lands on Netflix on May 24.

 

For more on big titles on Netflix, check these out:

First Trailer for Netflix’s Animated “Thelma the Unicorn” Boasts Singing Phenom Brittany Howard in First Acting Role

Penelope and Colin Conspire in First “Bridgerton” Season 3 Trailer

“3 Body Problem” Cinematographer Martin Ahlgren on Creating the Series’ Most Shocking Set Piece

“Stranger Things” Star Maya Hawke Teases Mind-Boggling Final Season

Featured image: Atlas. Jennifer Lopez as Atlas Shepherd on the set of Atlas. Cr. Ana Carballosa/Netflix ©2024.

“The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare” DP Ed Wild Captures the Chaos of Guy Ritchie’s Crackling Action-Comedy

Following last year’s contemplative war thriller The Covenant, director Guy Ritchie is back with a propulsive military actioner with his go-to cinematographer in recent years, Ed Wild (London Has Fallen and Ritchie’s Netflix adaptation of his own film, The Gentlemen). On his fifth collaboration with Ritchie in two years, Wild is very comfortable with the director’s fluid shooting style. “We’ve got a real rhythm for how to do things quickly. Guy likes to work in a very quick, immediate, responsive way, so the cast is in the moment.”

Adapted from Damien Lewis’ 2014 historical novel—which was based on recently declassified files from the British War Department— The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare is a semi-fictionalized account of Operation Postmaster, a daring mission that helped neutralize Nazi Germany’s U-boat dominance in the Atlantic during WWII. Although the book—and indeed the historical events—were deadly serious, Ritchie wanted to apply a breezy, boisterous sensibility to the dire business of war. “From the outset, Guy did not want this to be a gritty, hard war film,” recalls Wild of the visual language needed to balance the brutality of warfare with some devil-may-care, quippy humor.

 

“Tonally, he was very clear—everything from costume, script, to set design—that we needed it to be visually enticing so that people knew it was okay to have some fun,” Wild says. “It’s sort of that SAS [British Special Air Service] thing that no matter the extremes, you still have that sense of humanity and fun. That sort of gallows humor is quite an English thing. So, the visual language had to allow for that humor to breathe.” To give the film a 1950s Technicolor aesthetic and glamorous sheen, he used Sony Venice 2 for its neutral density and low light capabilities, coupled with Tokina Vista lenses, “which were gentle on the skin. We wanted everyone to feel glamorous rather than gritty. A lot of it was old-fashioned three-point lighting, but with a softer wraparound light to give it that glamorous feel.”

Henry Golding and Hero Fiennes Tiffin “The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare.” Courtesy Dan Smith/Lionsgate

Teetering on the precipice of defeat, UK Prime Minister Winston Churchill (Rory Kinnear) formed the first clandestine combat unit tasked with deploying unconventional and “ungentlemanly” guerilla warfare tactics. Their first mission is to cut off vital supplies to the German U-boats by sinking the Italian cargo ship Duchessa d’Aosta in the port of Fernando Po in West Africa. Disguised as merchant seamen on the Brixham trawler Maid of Honor, the ragtag coterie of unruly operators is led by the effective but often insubordinate Major Gus March-Phillipps (Henry Cavill).

With the resort city of Antalya, Turkey, standing in for West Africa, Ritchie wanted to capture all of the seafaring adventures in-camera rather than turning to VFX. “We decided to do all the boat stuff for real; we didn’t want any blue screen. The interior of the boat was a set build [by production designer Martyn John], but all the top side exteriors on the boat, including all the night work, were all shot for real,” Wild shares of the ten-week shoot. For the opening sequence, they “took the flotilla six miles out into the ocean every day. There’s one camera on a crane that could shoot dialogue across the bow, and I’d operate another camera on the Maid of Honor—there was no room for anyone else. A lot of it was handheld. Our key grip, Rob Fisher, hung spring balances off a big rig, which allowed us to move the camera around fluidly.”

Alan Ritchson in “The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare.” Courtesy Dan Smith/Lionsgate

Before shooting a single frame, marine coordinator Jonjo Stickland had to get all the boats from various countries to Turkey. After finding the Maid of Honor in Holland, it had to be transported on another boat to Antalya. Securing all the period-appropriate vessels—including the German ships and the Duchessa—and getting the paperwork in time was a massive effort. “Logistically, it was a real juggle, but Jonjo had an excellent team – he supplied all the boats and the boat drivers. They really understood what we were trying to get, so we could get done really fast,” says Wild. As a national champion and Commonwealth bronze medalist in rowing, he is in a better position to fully grasp the challenges of operating on the water. “They had to line up all the boats while Pete [Wignall] operated the Steadicam, George Amos was on the B camera, and I was on the handheld. Rob built rigs that hung over the side of the boat so I could have a platform to shoot the close-ups,” he adds.

Henry Cavill in “The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare.” Courtesy Dan Smith/Lionsgate

Ritchie’s fast-moving and free-flowing style capitalizes on the momentum and spontaneity of the day but also demands a lot of the crew and his actors. “There is a story structure, and there are scenes, but the focus of those scenes may change,” Wild explains. “As he starts to feel the story develop, he becomes interested in strands that are going certain ways. The dialogue is hard on the actors because what’s in the script is very rarely what’s said in the film. They’ll do a block in the morning and often change the dialogue quite significantly.”

One such example turned out to be Wild’s favorite bit in the film—when undercover agent Marjorie Stewart (Eiza González) is tasked with seducing the main Nazi baddie at a costume party to distract everyone on shore while Gus’ crew attempts to sink the Duchessa. Although the script had her singing a sultry version of “Mack the Knife” in English, Ritchie figured out on the day that it would need to be done in German instead—and with a specific accent on a few keywords in the lyrics—to deliver a crucial turning point in the story. “That’s Guy. It’s brilliant for the plot and rhythm of the story, but everything can change very quickly.”

Eiza Gonzalez in “The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare.” Courtesy Dan Smith/Lionsgate

Wild credits his background in documentary filmmaking for being able to adapt to whatever the day may bring. “You figure out quickly where to put the camera with relationship to the light to get the best shot, and not to fight the scene. As a DoP, you don’t try to impose a vision with a shot that you’ve always wanted. You have to respond to how the scenes evolve. The great thing about Guy is he’s pragmatic about everything, so he doesn’t over-obsess about a shot. If you haven’t got what he needs because something’s changed, he can bend it and change it into something else.”

And here’s part two of our conversation, where Wild reveals what happened when they had one shot to capture the climactic explosive ending during a night shoot with severe weather in the last week of production.

The “Deadpool & Wolverine” Trailer Hints At a Different Logan & the Most Powerful Villain Since Thanos

The reveal of the first Deadpool & Wolverine trailer yesterday unleashed a new kind of mayhem on Marvel. The Merc with the Mouth (Ryan Reynold)’s entrance into the MCU—alongside Wolverine (Hugh Jackman), the beloved, be-clawed mutant mauler, no less—was the raunchiest, most foul-mouthed and deliriously unhinged trailer to ever fall under the MCU banner, and that’s by a wide margin. Of the main clues and Easter Eggs dropped in the trailer’s two minutes and change (including revealing some X-Men and a sadly deceased Giant Man), the F-bombs and the grungy vibe of it all might have been the first thing you noticed.

But there were two things going on in the trailer in particular worth paying close attention to, so to that end, we’ve taken a closer look.

The Return of Wolverine Might Be A Different Wolverine Altogether

Hugh Jackman as Wolverine/Logan in 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios’ DEADPOOL & WOLVERINE. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios / © and ™ 2024 MARVEL.

As it’s been noted many, many times before, Jackman’s Wolverine definitely died in James Mangold’s excellent 2017 film Logan, which made the news of Jackman’s return extra surprising and, to some, a little concerning. Is nothing sacred anymore, not even death? (In the superhero world, the short and obvious answer is no.) The simplest solution would have been to set Deadpool & Wolverine before the events in Logan, which take place in 2029. This would have kept Deadpool & Wolverine on the same timeline and in the same universe as Logan and given the film a bittersweet quality, considering we all know Logan’s fate is heroic but grim.

Or, considering all the timeline meddling that the X-Men franchise has done—so much so they devoted a (very good) movie, Days of Future Past, to try and sort it all out—to say nothing of the multiverse traversing going on in the MCU, Deadpool & Wolverine could have plucked any number of Wolverine iterations from the vast web of realities already explored or mentioned in a previous film. But it looks like director Shawn Levy and screenwriters Paul Wernick, Rhett Reese, and Reynolds might have gone a different route.

The opening sequence in the Deadpool & Wolverine trailer suggests that this might actually be an altogether different Logan. As Logan drinks alone at a bar and is once again badgered by the bartender (a callback of sorts to Jackman’s first appearance as the mutant in 2000’s X-Men), Deadpool appears and tries to lure him out of the bar with a call to action. We eventually hear Logan say he’s “let down his entire world,” which is paired with a flashback of an apocalyptic scene.  This doesn’t appear to be connected to any previous X-Men film, and the fact that Deadpool & Wolverine includes the Time Variance Authority, with Matthew Macfayden’s TVA employee Mr. Paradox also saying, “This Wolverine let down his entire world,” this version of Wolverine might be one we’ve never seen before.

And not for nothing, we get Wolverine back in his classic blue and gold suit—the first time Jackman has worn this in a live-action film—but one we know from the classic 1990s animated series and the comics. Which brings us to the villain…

Hugh Jackman as Wolverine/Logan in 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios’ DEADPOOL & WOLVERINE. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios / © and ™ 2024 MARVEL.

Enter Cassandra Nova

Emma Corrin as Cassandra Nova in 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios’ DEADPOOL & WOLVERINE. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios / © and ™ 2024 MARVEL.

One theory for what happened to this Wolverine’s world is that Emma Corrin’s Cassandra Nova, finally glimpsed in the trailer, is the destroyer herself. Created by Grant Morrison and Frank Quitely in the comics, Nova is Charles Xavier’s evil twin sister, and we get a glimpse of her skill set when she easily forces Wolverine to heel with her telekinetic powers and seems almost bored by how easy it is. This is because Cassandra Nova’s powers are immense, and she could make a claim for having the most fearsome skills since Thanos.

In the comics, Cassandra’s backstory is beyond gothic and haunted by her dark connection to Charles—Wolverine’s former mentor, no less. While the two were gestating in the womb, Charles recognized her evil presence, and before Cassandra could kill him, he killed her. But Cassandra’s mind lived on, and years later, she formed a new body and swore revenge on her twin brother. Cassandra boasts vast mutant powers, many of them shared by her twin brother and many, according to the comics, he didn’t possess. A brief glimpse at the list of things Cassandra can do includes mind control, insane healing abilities, psionic blasts, telepathy, and astral projection.

There are a lot of things Cassandra Nova has done in the comics that the Deadpool & Wolverine team might have used to connect her to the action. What’s worth noting is that the trailer seems to place her in the Void, the space at the end of time introduced in Loki, where baddies are sent into exile.

The most salient Cassandra Nova comics storyline that might connect her directly to this Wolverine is when she helped facilitate the genocide of 16 million mutants on Genosha. This horror could be what Logan is talking about at the top of the trailer when he beats himself up for not being able to save his world. Now, it seems, he’ll have a shot at revenge, and there are few things that any one of the Wolverines we’ve met over the years love more.

Check out the other new images below. Deadpool & Wolverine slashes its way into theaters on July 26.

Ryan Reynolds as Deadpool/Wade Wilson in 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios’ DEADPOOL & WOLVERINE. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios / © and ™ 2024 MARVEL.
(L-R): Hugh Jackman as Wolverine/Logan and Ryan Reynolds as Deadpool/Wade Wilson in 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios’ DEADPOOL & WOLVERINE. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios / © and ™ 2024 MARVEL.
(L-R): Leslie Uggams as Blind Al and Ryan Reynolds as Deadpool/Wade Wilson in 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios’ DEADPOOL & WOLVERINE. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios / © and ™ 2024 MARVEL.
Ryan Reynolds as Deadpool/Wade Wilson in 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios’ DEADPOOL & WOLVERINE. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios / © and ™ 2024 MARVEL.
(L-R): Hugh Jackman as Wolverine/Logan and Ryan Reynolds as Deadpool/Wade Wilson in 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios’ DEADPOOL & WOLVERINE. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios / © and ™ 2024 MARVEL.

For more on Deadpool & Wolverine, check out these stories:

“Deadpool & Wolverine” Official Trailer Unleashes Mutant Mayhem on Marvel

“Deadpool & Wolverine” Director Shawn Levy Teases Raunchy, Riotous Super Team-Up

Kevin Feige Unleashes 9 Minutes of “Deadpool & Wolverine” at CinemaCon

First “Deadpool & Wolverine” Images Tease the Start of a Beautiful Relationship

Featured image: (L-R): Hugh Jackman as Wolverine/Logan and Ryan Reynolds as Deadpool/Wade Wilson in 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios’ DEADPOOL & WOLVERINE. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios/Marvel Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios / © and ™ 2024 MARVEL.

“Deadpool & Wolverine” Official Trailer Unleashes Mutant Mayhem on Marvel

The official Deadpool & Wolverine trailer has arrived, and it opens by riffing on a classic moment in Logan (Hugh Jackman) lore. When we first met Logan in 2000’s X-Men movie, he was cage fighting in a bar, a feral, ferocious mutant with nothing and nobody to lose. When he wanted to have a few (dozen) drinks afterward, he was told that “his kind” (mutants” weren’t allowed to drink there. Now, 24 years later, we find Logan once again in a bar, once again being told his kind isn’t welcome; what’s different this time around is, for starters, the language—an F-bomb makes it clear that Deadpool & Wolverine, as promised, another R-rated installment in the franchise. The second difference is this time, Logan actually does have a friend in the world, sort of, and his name is Wade Wilson (Ryan Reynolds), who says, “Hi Peanut, I’m going to need you to come with me right now.” And just like that, Deadpool & Wolverine remixes a legendary moment in Logan’s life for laughs. Perfection.

It turns out, Wade Wilson has popped up in Wolverine’s world because he needs the surly mutant’s help in saving his own. The trailer is absolutely chock-a-block with adult languages, adult situations, and childish humor—precisely how we want and love our Deadpool films—only now it boasts Jackman’s beloved, be-clawed mutant in the long-awaited frenemy pairing with Reynolds’ Merc with the Mouth.

The trailer also reveals, for the first time, Emma Corrin’s villain, Cassandra Nova, who can be seen matching Wolverine’s fury with abundant powers she seems almost bored to use on him. She’ll be a potent enemy.

Joining Jackman, Reynolds, and Corrin is Matthew MacFayden as the Time Variance Authority’s Mr. Paradox, and returning stars like Leslie Uggams as Blind Al, Karan Soni as Dopinder, Rob Delaney as Peter, and Morena Baccarin as Vanessa. The trailer is a blast and indicates why Marvel Studios felt pretty great about having only Deadpool & Wolverine on their 2024 slate—this movie is going to be huge.

Check out the trailer below. Deadpool & Wolverine slashes its way into theaters on July 26.

For more on Deadpool & Wolverine, check out these stories:

“Deadpool & Wolverine” Director Shawn Levy Teases Raunchy, Riotous Super Team-Up

Kevin Feige Unleashes 9 Minutes of “Deadpool & Wolverine” at CinemaCon

First “Deadpool & Wolverine” Images Tease the Start of a Beautiful Relationship

“Deadpool & Wolverine” Makes History as Most Watched Trailer Ever

Featured image: Ryan Reynolds as Deadpool/Wade Wilson in Marvel Studios’ DEADPOOL & WOLVERINE. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios / © and ™ 2024 MARVEL.