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03-21-2024 Daily Edition March 20, 2024

Daily Edition

Tony Kushner Backs Jonathan Glazer’s “Unimpeachable, Irrefutable” Oscars Speech: “Who Doesn’t Agree With That?”

Tony Kushner has come out in support of Jonathan Glazer‘s Oscars acceptance speech, describing the British director’s comments at the ceremony as an “unimpeachable irrefutable statement.” Speaking on the Haaretz Podcast which was released Wednesday, Kushner, a four-time Academy Award nominated screenwriter, was asked about his feelings on a number of topics related to the […]

Tony Kushner has come out in support of Jonathan Glazer‘s Oscars acceptance speech, describing the British director’s comments at the ceremony as an “unimpeachable irrefutable statement.”

Speaking on the Haaretz Podcast which was released Wednesday, Kushner, a four-time Academy Award nominated screenwriter, was asked about his feelings on a number of topics related to the Israel-Gaza conflict and brought up Glazer’s speech, which has been attacked by some Jewish figures in Hollywood and was the subject of a recent open letter signed by 1,000 people.

During the podcast, Kushner, who is promoting a production of his Tony-award winning play Angels in America that is playing in Tel Aviv, brought up the blowback to Glazer’s Oscars speech, which he described as “really sort of unimpeachable, irrefutable statement.” The playwright was then asked if he agreed with Glazer’s comments, to which Kushner said, “Of course, I mean, who doesn’t?”

Kushner said, “What [Glazer’s] saying is so, is so simple. He’s saying Jewishness, Jewish identity, Jewish history, the history of the Holocaust, the history of Jewish suffering must not be used as an excuse for a project of dehumanizing or slaughtering other people.

“This is a misappropriation of what it means to be a Jew, what the Holocaust meant, and he rejects that. Who doesn’t agree with that?” he continued.

“What kind of person thinks that what’s going on now in Gaza is acceptable?” Kushner added. “And if you find yourself saying out loud and in public, ‘Oh it’s fine with me what they’re doing,’ because you feel that it’s the only choice for you, because you’re a Jew, is to defend everything that Israel does, you know, shame on you.”

Earlier in the podcast, Kushner, who has been a longtime critic of Israel’s, and particularly Benjamin Netanyahu’s, policies and treatment of Palestinians, addressed accusations that calling for a ceasefire was antisemitism. “The people that I know who are passionately involved in calls for a ceasefire, these are not people who are antisemites, their interest is not in destroying Israel and certainly their interest is not in pogroms against Jews elsewhere.

“What they’re really interested in, and the passion and the rage that you’re seeing, is because thousands of lives are at stake, tens of thousands, millions of lives are at stake. Because before our eyes, what really looks a lot like ethnic cleansing, to me, is going on,” Kushner said. “I mean, I tend to believe the people on the extreme right in Netanyahu’s cabinet who say, ‘Yeah, it’s ours now,’ how is that not ethnic cleansing?”

Kushner said he wanted “Israelis to be able to live in peace and security,” but added the “treatment of the Palestinians, as many Israelis have been saying for decades, the occupation of the West Bank and the imprisonment of people in Gaza, and the checkpoints, and the wall, and all this stuff actually doesn’t make Israel safe.”

‘The Sims’ Movie in the Works With Margot Robbie’s LuckyChap, Vertigo and ‘Loki’ Director Kate Herron

The Sims, one of the biggest names in the computer game world, is heading to the big screen. Kate Herron, best known for directing season one of the genre-bending Marvel series Loki, is attached to tackle an adaptation of the game in a hot package that has hit the studios and streamers this week. Herron […]

The Sims, one of the biggest names in the computer game world, is heading to the big screen.

Kate Herron, best known for directing season one of the genre-bending Marvel series Loki, is attached to tackle an adaptation of the game in a hot package that has hit the studios and streamers this week. Herron will also co-write the screenplay with Briony Redman.

LuckyChap, the production company run by Margot Robbie, Tom Ackerley, Josey McNamara and Sophia Kerr and which is still basking in the glow of producing Barbie, will produce the feature along with Roy Lee and Miri Yoon of Vertigo Entertainment. Electronic Arts, which published the game, will also be involved in a creative and producing capacity.

Sims is a life simulation computer game where players play as an avatar that has changeable personality traits, skills and relationships, and goes through the mundane tasks of daily life like making dinner and decorating a home. The game is built on characters having goals and aspirations. They may also, depending on the game, build out one’s family.

After the first game was released in 2000, the suburban setting of the franchise was expanded, via sequel and expansion packs, to include an almost never-ending array of settings and tones such as vacations, show business, dating, high school life, even magic and vampires. The array of characters is also in near-endless supply, though members of the Goth and Landgraab families are among the more prominent.

On some level, Sims shares similar traits as Barbie. The game has no real narrative and features characters going about their lives, albeit controlled by gameplayers. Barbie, as a toy, has no narrative, being a doll with an endless array of careers, controlled by players.

Lee, who will be in theaters this weekend with horror Late Night With the Devil, has developed similarly difficult to adapt IP with the Lego movies. Those animated features have inspired spinoffs and pulled in hundreds of millions at the box office.

For her part, Herron has shown an affinity for genre-defiant material, making Loki, with its multiple timelines and worlds, into Marvel’s most watched show on Disney+.

At the moment, LuckyChap is the hottest production company in Hollywood after the billion-dollar success of Barbie and the meme-able R-rated Emerald Fennell title Saltburn. Coming up, the company has comedy My Old Ass, which sold out of the Sundance Film Festival to MGM Amazon.

M. Emmet Walsh, Actor in ‘Blood Simple’ and ‘Blade Runner,’ Dies at 88

M. Emmet Walsh, the wily character actor who became an audience favorite for his deliciously despicable performances in such films as 'Blood Simple,' 'Blade Runner,' 'Brubaker' and 'The Jerk,' has died. He was xx.

M. Emmet Walsh, the wily character actor who became an audience favorite for his deliciously despicable performances in such films as Blood SimpleBlade RunnerBrubaker and The Jerk, has died. He was 88.

Walsh died Tuesday in St. Albans, Vermont, his longtime manager, Sandy Joseph, told The Hollywood Reporter. The cause was cardiac arrest.

With his distinctive lumbering form and droll delivery, Walsh was an ideal supporting player. A master of off-kilter comic delivery and dogged edginess, he excelled at roles that dwelled in the darker corners of humanity. No matter whom he played, he made a colorful impact.

“A consummate old pro of the second-banana business, Walsh has left his mark on 109 movies and counting, with the grin of that big bastard who stands between you and something else — and knows it,” Nicolas Rapold wrote in a 2011 profile of the actor for L.A. Weekly.

In the same piece, Walsh — who wound up with more than 230 credits listed on IMDb — summed up his philosophy toward acting: “I don’t want you to see an M. Emmet Walsh. I want you to see a garbage collector or a president of Princeton or whatever. … I do everyman. And also I play hard.”

With his imposing stature, Walsh often was cast as someone in authority. He played an army recruitment sergeant in Alice’s Restaurant (1969), a prison guard in Little Big Man (1970), a doctor in Airport ’77 (1977), Dustin Hoffman‘s belligerent parole office caught with his pants down in Straight Time (1978), a corrupt lumber merchant in Brubaker (1980), the police chief in Critters (1986), a governor in The Milagro Beanfield War (1988) and a sheriff in Bitter Harvest (1993).

Walsh also is fondly remembered for his winning performances as the humble sportswriter Dickie Dunn in Slap Shot (1977), as the relentlessly demented sniper determined to put a bullet in Steve Martin in The Jerk (1979) and as Michael Keaton‘s sponsor in Clean and Sober (1988).

Perhaps no character better embodied Walsh’s talents than Loren Visser, the unscrupulous private detective in Blood Simple (1984), the Coen brothers’ feature debut. Visser, hired to catch a cheating spouse and her lover in the act, ends up double-crossing and killing his client, emptying his safe and framing the wife for the murder.

In a story with no redeeming participants, Visser is by far the most reprehensible, and in a 2000 revival review of the film, Roger Ebert referred to Walsh as “that poet of sleaze.”

“Every time, you [have to] try to figure something individual that works for the character,” Walsh told The Guardian in 2017. “If you’re playing a villain, you don’t play villain. … Visser doesn’t think of himself as particularly bad or evil. He’s on the edge of what’s legal, but he’s having a lot of fun with all that. He’s a simple fella trying to make an extra buck and going a little further than he’d normally go in his business enterprises.”

Walsh was honored with a Spirit Award for best male lead for Blood Simple. The Coens then brought the actor back for another splashy role, as a yakking machine shop worker in Raising Arizona (1987).

If not Visser, then Walsh will best be remembered for his portrayal of Bryant in Ridley Scott‘s Blade Runner (1982). As was typical of a Walsh character, Bryant is a hard-nosed police captain who forces Rick Deckard (Harrison Ford) out of retirement to resume his post as a specialist who hunts down bioengineered replicants that have gotten loose. “I need you Deck. This is a bad one, the worse yet,” he says through clenched teeth. “I need the old blade runner. I need your magic.”

In a 2017 interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Walsh said he was asked about Blade Runner more than any other movie he had ever made. “We shot down in [Los Angeles’] Union Station,” he recalled. “They set it all up in a little office over in a corner, and we had to be out by five in the morning because commuters were coming in for the train. I don’t know if I really understood what in the hell it was all about.”

After seeing the finished film for the first time, Walsh realized he wasn’t the only one with that opinion. “We all sat there and it ended. And nothing,” he said, laughing hysterically. “We didn’t know what to say or to think or do! We didn’t know what in the hell we had done! The only one who seemed to get it was Ridley.”

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Michael Emmet Walsh was born on March 22, 1935, in Ogdensburg, New York. His father was a customs agent.

Raised in Swanton, Vermont, Walsh attended Tilton School in New Hampshire before enrolling at Clarkson University in Potsdam, New York, where he roomed with future Knots Landing star William Devane. (In 1998, Clarkson honored Walsh with its esteemed Golden Knight Award.)

Walsh graduated with a bachelor’s degree in marketing in 1958 and moved to New York City. Three years later, he joined the American Academy of Dramatic Arts and began plying his craft in summer stock and regional theater throughout the Northeast.

Walsh appeared on an episode of The Doctors in 1968 and made his Broadway debut a year later in the drama Does a Tiger Wear a Necktie? in a cast that included Al Pacino and Hal Holbrook. In 1973, he replaced Charles Durning in the role of George Sikowski in the original production of Jason Miller’s That Championship Season.

After making his film debut as an uncredited extra in Midnight Cowboy (1969), Walsh popped up in such notable features as Serpico (1973), The Gambler (1975), Bound for Glory (1976), Ordinary People (1980), Reds (1981), Cannery Row (1982) and Silkwood (1983).

Blood Simple marked a turning point.

Walsh was shooting a film in Texas when he got word of an indie project that two brothers in Austin were trying to pull together. He was intrigued by the private eye character, envisioning the role as a Sydney Greenstreet type with a Panama suit and hat. After watching a promo trailer they had shot to entice investors, he signed on.

With Joel Coen and Ethan Coen making heavy use of storyboarding and light on giving direction to their actors, Walsh wasn’t sure what to make of the fledgling filmmakers. He didn’t expect Blood Simple to have a big impact on his career.

“I didn’t hear from them for months after that. They didn’t have enough money to fly me in to New York for the opening of the film,” Walsh said. “I saw it three or four days later when it opened in L.A., and I was, like, ‘Wow!’ Suddenly my price went up five times. I was the guy everybody wanted.”

Walsh had a flair for comedy, as seen in Cold Turkey (1971), They Might Be Giants (1971), Get to Know Your Rabbit (1972), What’s Up, Doc? (1972), At Long Last Love (1975), The Prisoner of Second Avenue (1975), The Fish That Saved Pittsburgh (1979), Fletch (1985), Back to School (1986), Wildcats (1986), Camp Nowhere (1994), My Best Friend’s Wedding (1997) and Christmas With the Kranks (2004). And he showed up in a curmudgeonly role in Knives Out (2019).

He also kept busy as a voiceover actor (Ken Burns‘ 1990 documentary series The Civil War, 1999’s The Iron Giant) and as a guest star on TV (All in the FamilyIronsideBonanzaThe Bob Newhart ShowThe Rockford FilesLittle House on the PrairieHome ImprovementThe X-FilesNYPD BlueFrasierEmpire and The Righteous Gemstones).

Walsh never married. As he put it in a 2015 interview, “If you marry another actor, there’s always competition. And if you marry a ‘civilian,’ they don’t understand what you’re doing and why you have to travel to, say, Nova Scotia, for several months. Besides, I never met a woman who was stupid enough to think I was a great catch!”

Survivors include two nephews.

‘Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire’ Review: Paul Rudd and Carrie Coon in a Sometimes Strained, Mostly Breezy Installment of the Paranormal Comedy

Dan Aykroyd, Ernie Hudson, Finn Wolfhard and Mckenna Grace also star in the venerable franchise's latest gathering of demon fighters old and new.

The Ghostbusters universe seems to be getting awfully crowded. The latest film in the franchise, celebrating its 40th anniversary (gulp), features a plethora of ghostbusters old and new, including the surviving members of the original cast, the characters introduced in 2021’s Ghostbusters: Afterlife, and a variety of eccentric new figures who are bound to figure in future installments. The only ones left out, it would seem, are the female ghostbusters from 2016’s unfairly maligned reboot, who should at least have merited a respectful cameo.

Nonetheless, Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire tries hard, very hard, to satisfy the series’ fans with plenty of nostalgic throwbacks and mainly succeeds. It’s not nearly as good as the classic 1984 original, but then again, neither was 1989’s Ghostbusters II, and that one was directed by Ivan Reitman and written by Dan Aykroyd and Harold Ramis, all of whom were responsible for the original. So the fact that this installment manages to be as much fun as it is represents a minor triumph.

The screenplay by Jason Reitman and director Gil Kenan doesn’t have to do as much heavy lifting as the last film, given that the characters are well established and, as demonstrated by a raucous opening sequence, happily settled into their new roles as ghostbusters. They’ve also settled into their new home, the beloved Tribeca firehouse that was the headquarters of the original gang, giving the film the benefit of taking place in New York City rather than Oklahoma. Nothing wrong with Oklahoma, mind you, but let’s face it, New York City has a hell of a lot more ghosts. Some of which, such as the beloved Slimer, are still living in the firehouse. Not to mention those adorable Mini-Pufts, who are continuing to wreak havoc. 

But just as Gary (Paul Rudd), Callie (Callie Coon), and kids Trevor (Finn Wolfhard) and Phoebe (Mckenna Grace) are getting into their groove, they’re stymied by the original film’s nemesis, Walter Peck, who’s now the NYC mayor. He’s once again played by the great William Atherton, whose film acting career stretches back a mere 52 years, and it’s a pleasure to see him onscreen. Almost as much fun is the cameo by veteran character actor John Rothman, reprising his role as the beleaguered library administrator from the first film.

When a malicious god named Garraka is released from an orb and wreaks havoc on the city by summoning a legion of escaped ghosts and using his powers to unleash a new Ice Age, ghostbusters new and old spring into action. Well, “spring” might not be the best word to describe Aykroyd’s Ray, now the host of a YouTube show, and Bill Murray’s Peter, who’s doing … something. Both are definitely showing their age, with only Ernie Hudson’s Winston, now the wealthy founder of a paranormal research lab, looking barely different from how he did forty years ago. Also joining in the action is Annie Potts’ ever-delightful Janine, who finally gets the chance to suit up. (Murray actually isn’t in the film all that much, giving the impression that he showed up only when he felt like it. Nonetheless, he predictably adds a welcome comic charge whenever he appears.)

Repeating their appearances from Afterlife are Celeste O’Connor’s Lucky and Logan Kim’s Podcast, although they’re not really given much to do. The more amusing newcomers include Kumail Nanjiani as Nadeem, who sets the events in motion by unwittingly selling the orb containing the vengeful god; Patton Oswalt as a library researcher who gleefully provides helpful information; and James Acaster as Lars, a droll scientist in Winston’s lab.

Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire doesn’t mess with the well-honed formula, carefully balancing its laughs and scares in the breezy manner that makes for pleasurable, if lightweight, viewing. But the film does deliver some nice emotional moments with a subplot involving Phoebe’s burgeoning friendship with Melody (Emily Alyn Lind, of the Max series Gossip Girl), the ghost of a teenage girl killed in a tenement fire. Their first encounter, when they play nighttime chess in a deserted Washington Square Park (probably the most unbelievable plot element in a film featuring hundreds of ghosts rampaging through the city), proves sweetly touching. And it further demonstrates that Grace, whose character is adorably outfitted with the same glasses as her grandfather Egon (Ramis), could be the franchise’s MVP as it continues.

There are times when you feel the film is trying too hard, especially in its efforts to balance the screen time among all the characters. But it mostly handles the balancing act well and definitely gives the impression that castmembers old and new are prepared to continue carrying the torch — or, in this case, the proton packs.