Sentences with phrase «other cast talking»

Pictures revealed a brand new IT behind the scenes Featurette video today, with Andy Muschietti, actor Bill Skarsgård and other cast talking about the...

Not exact matches

EASTWOOD: So I go in and it turns out he's in charge of production there so they cast... The next day after that the very next day I went, I was testing at a studio, standing and they gave me a page of dialogue, an absolute page, no other actor there and I had to run in and start talking to the camera.
According to USA Today, the network is talking to other regulars from the original series to join the new cast.
Other biomedical lobbyists say they try to cast a big net when talking with legislators about the importance of more research funding, but that NIH is a logical place to start.
As he pulls out drawers and talks about the casts, Meldrum shows ones with the hallmarks of hoax and others that intrigue him because of anatomy, hair striations, musculature and an apparent midtarsal break — a pair of joints in the middle of the ape foot that have less mobility in the human foot because of the arch.
As usual, cast and crew (producer David Heyman, and actors Rupert Grint, Bonnie Wright, and the Phelps twins, among many others) pop up to talk about the movie, which is occasionally paused, but usually continues playing either in a small window or full - sized.
When researching the work of a great filmmaker, it's important to talk not only with the director but also with the cast, crew, and other associates in production.
Other cast members include Daniel Stern as a freaked out suburb dad, Jeremy Piven as his frustrated, underachieving brother and Leland Orser as the guy who doesn't talk much.
Smartly cast by Francine Maisler and Des Hamilton to include such expert actors as Topher Grace, John Magaro, Anthony Michael Hall and Emory Cohen, this group enables Michôd to deftly skewer the ritualistic way these men talk to each other as well as the traditional norms of male camaraderie the military specializes in.
The other novelty for fans of the raunchy television cartoon, «South Park», comes from the lead casting of that show's creators, Trey Parker and Matt Stone, who have a lack of charisma that shows that they are better off hiding behind cute characters talking filthy for laughs.
Scarlett Johansson, director Rupert Sanders and other cast and crew take you behind - the - scenes to talk stunts, special effects and intricate fight sequences.
New Lebanon, New York's Theater Barn is casting all roles March 3, 4, and 6 for productions including «The Wedding Singer,» «Don't Talk to the Actors,» «The Cocktail Hours,» and others, which will run from mid-June to the end of September.
Psychiatrist Margaret Ford (Lindsay Crouse, either horrifically miscast or brilliantly cast, depending on who you talk to) largely through intellectual ennui, is led into a con game (other players include Joe Mantegna, JT Walsh and Ricky Jay) in which it's never entirely clear who's conning who and whether the payoff can ever be worth the various sacrifices.
However, she'll meet a unique and memorable cast of characters on her quest such as a talking bug, various other gods and more.
By the same token, the cast speaks in his stylized yet authentically provincial patois («I like the way you talk,» the two heroes of his Sling Blade confided in each other, echoing our sentiments exactly), and in a movie with a less laconic pace than Thornton the director seems willing to accept.
He talks about how this film is a fairytale and how he loves the little girl he cast and how honest she is in her complete inability to be anything other than herself (and, damnably, how much he let her ad lib her dialogue and thus alter his film).
The production consists of a single location with just two cast members who do little more than talk (nay, fight) with each other for 90 minutes.
Harvey is an executive producer and he plays himself in talk show interviews sprinkled throughout, but Think Like a Man belongs to others as well, including Friends with Benefits writers Keith Merryman and David A. Newman, Barbershop director Tim Story, and a large, talented ensemble cast composed primarily of African - American actors.
The way the other characters (played by a stacked supporting cast including Anna Kendrick, J.K. Simmons and Jon Bernthal) talk about him is enough to wonder exactly what he is capable of.
0:00 — Intro 3:45 — Review: The Dark Knight Rises 36:00 — Headlines: Jessica Biel to Play Viper in The Wolverine, Dwayne Johnson Confirms Lobo Casting Rumours, Anthony Mackie in Talks For Captain America: The Winter Soldier, Gary Ross to Direct Peter Pan Prequel, Hellboy 3 Might Happen, The Dark Knight Shooting, Fred Willard Masturbation Scandal, The Master Trailer, The Man of Steel Teaser Trailer 59:30 — Other Stuff We Watched: Harold and Maude, Wanderlust, The Devil's Double, Brave 3D, Hardware, Lord of War, Silent House, Operation Condor (Armour of God II), Shallow Grave, Cast Away, Death Becomes Her, 127 Hours 1:21:20 — Junk Mail: Dark Knight Shooting, Movies That are Enjoyable Because of the Plot, Kathy Griffin Talks During Magic Mike Screening, Actors Playing Multiple Roles Within a Movie / TV Series, What's Funnier: Die Hard or Lethal Weapon?
But if nobody would really talk to each other like that in real life, there's a sincerity to be found in the unglamorous low - budget family life (they decorate granddad's cupboard with «the poor man's IKEA» — a skip) and the young cast, led by an excellent Helen Monks, yell things like «I'm part of the digital generation!»
I hear talks are underway with other original cast members to return.
Isaac is officially in talks for the movie and the producers are reportedly keen to get him 100 % on board before moving on to cast other key characters.
While it includes a few talking head interviews with some cast members, it also incorporates a number of interesting B - roll segments of Ritchie and the other cast and crew enjoying themselves on - set, whether it be on the job or engaging in a game of chess.
Arkin is the standout in the superb cast, and the screenplay by Sprecher and co-writer Karen Sprecher doesn't flinch from discussing science, philosophy, and other things that grownups actually talk about.
Director: Craig Johnson Cast: Bill Hader, Kristen Wiig, Luke Wilson, Ty Burrell Plot: Two twins (Hader, Wiig) reconnect after ten years of not talking to each other, old grudges and secrets floating to the surface.
I was reading while the other cast was eating because I couldn't really talk or anything as a slit hadn't been cut into the mouth of my makeup.
«If we decide to go the other way and cater to China in particular and have him be in Tibet... if you think it's a good idea to cast a Chinese actress as a Tibetan character, you are out of your damn fool mind and have no idea what the fuck you're talking about.»
Other than the announcement that the ending would change, the other changes from this stage to celluloid transition was casting; French Bob (played by Inglourious Basterds» Denis Menochet on the theatre stage) became Mexican Bob (Demian Bichir), James Remar «s part was re-cast with a bonafide movie star (who we won't discuss until after posting our spoiler warning), and Amber Tamblyn «s Daisy was recast with Jennifer Jason Leigh (whom, I will say I spotted in the audience of the live - read talking to Harvey Weinstein and I astutely wrote that she should be in a Tarantino film; hey readers, sometimes armchair casting actually happeOther than the announcement that the ending would change, the other changes from this stage to celluloid transition was casting; French Bob (played by Inglourious Basterds» Denis Menochet on the theatre stage) became Mexican Bob (Demian Bichir), James Remar «s part was re-cast with a bonafide movie star (who we won't discuss until after posting our spoiler warning), and Amber Tamblyn «s Daisy was recast with Jennifer Jason Leigh (whom, I will say I spotted in the audience of the live - read talking to Harvey Weinstein and I astutely wrote that she should be in a Tarantino film; hey readers, sometimes armchair casting actually happeother changes from this stage to celluloid transition was casting; French Bob (played by Inglourious Basterds» Denis Menochet on the theatre stage) became Mexican Bob (Demian Bichir), James Remar «s part was re-cast with a bonafide movie star (who we won't discuss until after posting our spoiler warning), and Amber Tamblyn «s Daisy was recast with Jennifer Jason Leigh (whom, I will say I spotted in the audience of the live - read talking to Harvey Weinstein and I astutely wrote that she should be in a Tarantino film; hey readers, sometimes armchair casting actually happens!).
Exclusive to the Blu - ray are a horrendously slow and unfunny alternate opening sequence and closing sequence, a 12 - minute behind the scenes featurette that essentially has the cast talk about how funny and great each other is and a short bit that gives a little more screen time to Beth's eccentric suitors.
Knowing nothing of Sorrentino or his other work, which dates back to the late -»90s and until now has been entirely in his native tongue and country, it's tough to know where this is coming from, what is shaping his views of America, the Holocaust, and Talking Heads, and how he attracted such a distinguished American cast (Penn apparently wanted to work with the director after seeing Sorrentino's political biopic Il Divo at Cannes 2008).
He talks about the project's roots and why it needed to be set in New York, character subjects, various personal influences, themes and story, cast and performances, script specifics and actor improvisation, and a few other tidbits.
Canadian buyers instead receive approximately 25 minutes of «cast and crew soundbites,» which are mainly clips from promotional interviews, featuring Depp, Eckhart, Robinson and others talking up the project.
Since we were all in the entertainment industry and had access to the casts of a lot of these games, we just thought it'd be funny to watch them talk trash to each other while playing these games.
«Beyond the Eight: A Behind - the - Scenes Look» (4:58) is a brisk, general featurette which mixes trailer clips with talking heads, as the cast speaks highly of Tarantino and of each other.
The other bonus features are all quite similar: a mix of in - character narration by some of the newsies, combined with behind - the - scenes footage, talking heads interviews with cast, crew, and historians, and in some cases vintage photos and one vintage newsreel that was quite cool, actually.
After paying and going through the entrance, guests are welcomed by animated Jump characters projected on the walls of the «Center Core» area, a round room where the casts of various Jump series talk with each other.
Anyway... I really want you guys to play ZombiU, I hope someone on the cast gives it a try, I'm always keen for more actual discussion of it and NOBODY is talking about it in other podcasts (besides Connectivity: cool;).
This episode is absolutely jam - packed with tangents and distractions, but we also talk about the many big reveals from San Diego Comic - Con, Shane recounts his experience at PAX Australia, we talk about our favourite fighting games and discuss far more movie - related stuff than in any other cast thus far.
The topic of Mike's lecture was human - caused climate change, and at the end of the talk, one member of the audience — a local who had decided to attend the seminar — made a comment during the Q+A casting doubt on the greenhouse effect, suggesting that CO2, because it was heavier than other air molecules, would simply sink to the ground (a myth that is encountered surprisingly often).
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