Sunday, 16 September 2012
Billy Connolly: 'Quartet' premiere in Toronto
On Sunday September 9, “Quartet” had its première at The Elgin at the Toronto International Film Festival. “Quartet” is the directorial début of Dustin Hoffman, and stars Maggie Smith, Michael Gambon and Billy Connolly.
Gracing the red carpet première were Director Dustin Hoffman, Maggie Smith, Billy Connolly, Aaron Paul, Pauline Collins, Tom Courtenay, Lisa Gottsegen, Eline Powell, Jake Hoffman and Max Hoffman.
In “Quartet,” Cecily, Reggie and Wilfred are in a home for retired opera singers. Every year, on October 10, there is a concert to celebrate Verdi's birthday and they take part. Jean, who used to be married to Reggie, arrives at the home and disrupts their equilibrium. She still acts like a diva, but she refuses to sing. Still, the show must go on... and it does.
This is the début of the film and it is slated to be released in the U.S. on Friday, January 4, 2013.
Read more at Examiner.com (includes video clip and red carpet photo gallery)
Billy Connolly talks aging in 'Quartet'
In the Dustin Hoffman-directed Quartet - about a retirement home for Brit musicians and opera singers - one of the characters repeatedly quotes the supposed Bette Davis line, "Growing old is not for sissies."
Billy Connolly, who plays a member of the title operatic quartet -- and who turns 70 in November, takes issue with the line.
Old age, the bawdy Scottish comedian/actor says, "is lovely as long as you don't pay any attention to it. Don't let a number control your life. People make decisions based on what number you've become, which I think is quite baffling. It's like acting your street number. Because you've become 57 or 58 you should wear beige or wear wide trousers with a saggy ass.
"And I find it a lot when I go home to Glasgow and I meet people I went to school with. Some of them are in great shape, but some of them have voluntarily become old men. They've gone for the old-guy haircut and the old-guy sports jacket and that terrifying little half a raincoat that they wear.
"And of course, they call ME Peter Pan," Connolly adds with a smirk, dressed in black jeans, shirt and jacket. (He still cuts a solid enough figure to be cast an axe-wielding dwarf Dane Ironfoot in Peter Jackson's three-picture adaptation of the Lord of the Rings prequel The Hobbit.)
His character in Quartet, a charmer named Wilf, cheerfully says whatever sarcastic thing pops into his head - attributed in the script to a stroke. Given that it is Billy Connolly in a nutshell, we ask him if he had this stroke when he was 12, which elicits a hearty laugh.
"Wilf was perfect to play, I understood him, which is a great benefit. I could relax within him." But it was his "other half," quartet member and lifelong best friend Reggie (Tom Courtenay) that completed the chemistry.
"Tom's character is my pal, and his stiffness, and his fear of the future and his fear of Maggie (Smith, who plays Reggie's diva ex-wife), just encouraged me in my silliness."
I mention the irony of Hoffman directing a movie about British opera singers, given the ancient tale of Lord Laurence Olivier telling him "Dear boy, why don't you try acting?" while filming The Marathon Man.
"I've always hated that story," Connolly says, "because in my opinion Dustin could act Olivier off the map. And he's a great director because he's a great listener. If there's a line that's redundant, you could say 'Dustin, I think I've said this before,' and he'd say, 'Yeah, throw it away.'
"He liked economy. He said this lovely thing to me, 'Americans make movies, and the British make talkies. You say too much. It's a visual medium.' "
And with that, how about a "method" question. How did Connolly put himself in the mindset of being in a retirement home? "I thought about school," he says. "There's school and jail. Old folks homes are all pretty much the damn same. I'm against them. There's a mindset of getting rid of the old because they're old."
Meanwhile, he was surprised to find out his highly regarded fellow "retirees" were all longtime fans of his comedy, particularly Dame Maggie Smith.
"Maggie Smith is very funny. She does a brilliant Glasgow accent. She'd say little Glasgow sayings to me in Glaswegian, and it blew me sideways laughing."
Source: Toronto Sun
From Maclean's:
TIFF 2012 video: Most fun ever on a red carpet, pretty sure
Jessica Allen with Billy Connolly, Dustin Hoffman, and an up-and-coming actress named Maggie Smith
Source: Macleans.ca
Tuesday, 28 September 2010
James McAvoy talks more about 'X-men'; discusses Xavier and Magneto
You can also check out more portrait photos of James from the Toronto International Film Festival over at James McAvoy Fan.
Thursday, 23 September 2010
James McAvoy talks 'X-Men' with MTV
Tuesday, 21 September 2010
'Beginners' lands distribution deal + Ewan McGregor commemorates the Battle of Britain
Ewan McGregor and his brother Colin visited (via Best of Ewan) RAF Cranwell in April to film part of BBC1 documentary The Real Battle of Britain which aired on Sunday, September 19. Ewan talked about making the documentary with his brother:
“The Battle of Britain was a dramatic turning point in the history of the Second World War and a defining moment in world history. It was a privilege for Colin and I to make this documentary; not only to mark the 70th anniversary itself, but to be able to pay tribute to the courage and sacrifice of those who fought during the battle”.
Ewan's brother Colin also attended a thanksgiving service at Westminster Abbey for the 70th anniversary of the Battle of Britain. Colin who is in the RAF read a prayer at the ceremony:
“Let us pray for those members of the Royal Air Force, who through their vigilance and determination make it possible for planes to fly and defend these shores.
“For all mechanics and ground crew, for radar operators and engineers, members of the logistics corps, that inspired by the example of their forbears, they might continue to fulfil this vital service with skill and pride.”
A clip from the documentary is below.
Thursday, 16 September 2010
'The Conspirator' lands distribution deal + new TIFF portraits with James McAvoy

Roadside Attractions and Lionsgate have acquired The Conspirator for a Spring 2011 North American release. An official release date hasn't been confirmed yet.
A batch of TIFF portrait photos with James McAvoy have been released. The really cute photo of James and Conspirator co-star Justin Long comes courtesy of Life (via ONTD) and was taken by Jeff Vespa.






Wednesday, 15 September 2010
TIFF: Kevin McKidd interviews
Bunraku cast and crew interviews. Kevin's interview starts at 1:13.
Interview with Ron Perlman.
Another interview with Kevin and Ron.
Tuesday, 14 September 2010
Kevin McKidd attends the 'Bunraku' TIFF premiere







Monday, 13 September 2010
New clips from 'Beginners' + Ewan McGregor's TIFF message
Beginners made its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival, but Ewan couldn't make it to the screening. His Beginners co-star Christopher Plummer read a message from him instead, which you can watch below.
James McAvoy at the Toronto International Film Festival

James McAvoy was at yesterday's gala presentation of The Conspirator at the 35th Toronto International Film Festival. You can watch a portion of the film's press conference at the film festival's official site. A portrait photo that was taken yesterday is posted above.





Some new film stills from The Conspirator are below.


Wednesday, 8 September 2010
Ewan McGregor talks 'Beginners'

The LA Times has a fascinating write-up about indie drama Beginners, which debuts at the Toronto International Film Festival this week. The profile focuses more on writer-director Mike Mills and the semi-autobiographical nature of the film, but there are a few quotes from Ewan McGregor as well:
McGregor described Mills as "the director I've been looking for for a long time," no minor statement from an actor who has worked with, among others, Roman Polanski, Woody Allen, George Lucas and Michael Bay. McGregor likened his working relationship with Mills to the one he had early in his career with Danny Boyle, when they made three films together.
"I tried to get a flavor of him, but he never really wanted me to play him," said McGregor from London of the challenge of taking on Mills' role in the filmmaker's own story. "And I did in the end do a kind of version of Mike, there's some physical things I suppose that come from him, but there's something more. What I tried to capture, which I hope I did, is his spirit. He's quite a sensitive, interesting man." [Mark Olsen]
Friday, 3 September 2010
James McAvoy to star in 'At the Mountains of Madness'? + TIFF appearance speculation

Guillermo del Toro's 3D adaptation of H.P. Lovecraft's At the Mountains of Madness, is set to shoot in May of 2011. Universal reportedly wants James McAvoy in the lead role, while del Toro wants Tom Cruise instead. Both actors would presumably be free at the time, though at this point both actors aren't even officially attached to the project. A synopsis of Lovecraft's novella is below:
The story is written in first-person perspective by the geologist William Dyer, a professor from Miskatonic University. He writes to disclose hitherto unknown and closely kept secrets in the hope that he can deter a planned and much publicized scientific expedition to Antarctica. On a previous expedition there, a party of scholars from Miskatonic University, led by Dyer, discovered fantastic and horrific ruins and a dangerous secret beyond a range of mountains taller than the Himalayas. [Wikipedia via Collider]The Conspirator will make its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival later this month, but there hasn't been official confirmation on whether or not James McAvoy would make an appearance in Toronto. According to an Exclusive Artists Management press release, James will be at the festival:
Exclusive Artists Management will be providing celebrity hair and makeup artists to participate at this year's Toronto International Film Festival for the seventh consecutive year.
...Some of the confirmed actors that our teams will be getting camera ready include Helen MIrren, Carey Mulligan, Evan Rachel Wood, James McAvoy, Rachel Weisz, Frieda Pinto, Minnie Driver, Vera Farmiga, Kristen Scott Thomas, Bryce Dallas Howard, Winona Ryder, Michael Sheen, Thomas Hayden Church, Chris Cooper, Josh Lucas, Amy Ryan, Sam Rockwell, Zach Galifianakis, Amber Tamblyn, Dominic Cooper, Kate Mara, Jim Broadbent and Melissa Leo
Wednesday, 25 August 2010
TIFF schedule: 'Beginners', 'Bunraku', and 'The Conspirator'
Beginners, with Ewan McGregor:
Saturday September 11
9:00 PM
VISA SCREENING ROOM (ELGIN)
Sunday September 12
3:00 PM
RYERSON
Sunday September 19
9:30 PM
SCOTIABANK THEATRE 1
Bunraku, featuring Kevin McKidd:
Saturday September 11
11:59 PM
RYERSON
Tuesday September 14
10:15 PM
SCOTIABANK THEATRE 2
Friday September 17
5:00 PM
SCOTIABANK THEATRE 2
The Conspirator starring James McAvoy:
Saturday September 11
6:30 PM
ROY THOMSON HALL
Sunday September 12
12:00 PM
RYERSON
Sunday September 19
2:45 PM
VARSITY 8
Friday, 20 August 2010
More photos of Ewan McGregor in 'Beginners'


Five years after Thumbsucker, director Mike Mills returns to the Festival with
another winning indie dramedy that balances humour, sorrow and romance with
aplomb.
Beginners deftly juggles two chronologies to tell the heartwarming
story of two major points in the life of Oliver (Ewan McGregor), a talented
illustrator.
One timeline follows the slow-burning deterioration of
Oliver’s father (Christopher Plummer), who is dying of cancer. But his impending
death is not the only news that has caught Oliver off guard; his divorced
father, at the age of seventy-five, has also come out of the closet. Just like
that, he gets a new wardrobe, a new boyfriend and an entirely new outlook on
life.
Following his father’s death, a bereaved Oliver becomes somewhat
of a shut-in. As Beginners takes us through his personal journey, the film
flashes forward, intercutting a budding relationship between Oliver and a young
French actress (Inglourious Basterd’s Mélanie Laurent) whom he meets at a
costume party that he attends under duress. The twin narratives gradually reveal
subtle associations about how Oliver reacts to both these unpredictable
relationships, and how his father and girlfriend motivate him to surpass his
self-prescribed limitations.
McGregor and Laurent have natural onscreen
chemistry, and Plummer is outstanding in his rich portrayal of a dying man who
is finally able to live honestly, breaking out of his shell so near the end of
his life. The ensemble cast lends the film a warm, understated aura that never
feels the least bit contrived.
Mills is at the top of his game in
crafting dynamic mood pieces that steer clear of the usual trappings found in
American independent cinema. The outcome is a thoroughly enjoyable character
study about people opening up and discovering themselves despite age,
preconceptions and illness. [Jane Schoettle]
Friday, 13 August 2010
'Bunraku' to screen at Toronto

Wednesday, 11 August 2010
First photo of Ewan McGregor in 'Beginners'

Tuesday, 27 July 2010
Toronto 2010 line-up revealed; includes 'Beginners' and 'The Conspirator'

Thursday, 11 February 2010
'Triage' to screen at the ICA

Triage, if you'll remember, stars Scottish actor Jamie Sives and is about "The wife of a photojournalist" setting "out to discover why he came home from a recent assignment without his colleague." Thanks to TRIAGEmovie for pointing out the UK screening of Triage:
Following its first stop in Toronto as part of TIFF Cinematheque in February, the 14th Human Rights Watch International Film Festival, featuring 28 films from 20 countries, will continue on its tour making London the next stop, where Danis Tanovic’s TRIAGE will enjoy its UK premiere screening.
The Human Rights Watch International Film Festival in London runs March 17-26, with TRIAGE screening 8:30 PM March 20th 2010 at the Institute of Contemporary Arts.
To book your tickets for the London screening, CLICK HERE.
As a reminder, the Human Rights Watch International Film Festival in Toronto runs February 24 – March 6, 2010. To book your tickets for the Toronto screening of TRIAGE, 7:00 PM February 25th, CLICK HERE.
You can also join the Toronto Human Rights Watch International Film Festival on Facebook. [TRIAGE Movie Fan Supporters]
Friday, 18 September 2009
Clip from The Disappearance of Alice Creed
There are also more reviews for The Disappearance of Alice Creed coming in from TIFF:
The Disappearance…will appeal largely to aficionados of grungy thrillers full of double-crosses and battles of wit. Cult status would appear to be firmly in this film’s grasp.
The Disappearance is more of a verbal battle than a physical one, preferring barbed dialogue to clichéd gunplay. This, of course, requires relatable performances, and all three leads do strong work. Compston nails Danny’s slippery desperation, making it impossible to ever know when he’s telling the truth.
Source
Wednesday, 16 September 2009
First look: Martin Compston in The Disappearance of Alice Creed

First, you can head on over to Movieline for two new clips from the film. The Disappearance of Alice Creed has already been bought for some international distribution at TIFF, but has not yet secured domestic rights.
Movieline also gives us Martin Compston's and co-star Eddie Marsan's first official interview for the film:
You can go here for the rest of the interview.
One of those pleasant gems you hope to stumble upon at any film festival, The Disappearance of Alice Creed is a wonderfully entertaining little thriller from British screenwriter and first-time director, J Blakeson. Set almost entirely in an enclosed apartment, Blakeson’s story takes a simple premise — “So you’ve kidnapped a beautiful heiress. Now what?” — and wrings out of it a darkly humorous and utterly unpredictable tale of greed gone wrong, with shades of Rope, Shallow Grave and Deathtrap. The titular heiress is played by Quantum of Solace star Gemma Arterton, who squeezed in this film between her two upcoming blockbusters, Prince of Persia and Clash of the Titans. Rounding out the triangle are the two kidnappers, the elder and more volatile man played by Eddie Marsan — star of Mike Leigh’s Vera Drake and Happy-Go-Lucky and Will Smith’s super-nemesis in Hancock — and the younger played by Martin Compston, a Scottish actor discovered by Ken Loach (who gave him the lead in Sweet Sixteen). Both are superb in their roles. Movieline spoke to Marsan and Compston this morning at TIFF, for what it turns out was their first official interview in support of the film.There’s a fair bit of nudity required of everyone in Alice Creed. How did you feel about that?
COMPSTON: You never feel really comfortable being naked among strangers, but it was nothing compared with everything Gemma went through, so you just think, well, get on with it. The one scene that sort of freaked me out had a [full frontal shot], but it was quick and you couldn’t really see it. But one of our producers said, just wait until the DVD comes out and people press pause!
The film had also been an official selection at the London Film Festival, but I hadn't posted the official screening dates:
Saturday, October 24 | 21:00 | Vue Screen 6
Tuesday, October 27 | 14:00 | NFT1
Tuesday, October 27 | 19:00 | STUDIO
Source
Source
Source
Air dates for David Tennant's appearance on The Sarah Jane Adventures

David Tennant's episode of The Sarah Jane Adventures, entitled The Wedding of Sarah Jane Smith will be aired on Thursday, October 29 and Friday, October 30 on BBC 1. The Waters of Mars, his upcoming Doctor Who Special is scheduled to air on BBC 1 sometime in November.
You can also check out a review (beware of the spoilers) of his new film Glorious 39 which premiered at TIFF on Monday. Tonight is the film's second screening and official press call.
Source
Source
Source