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Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg talk making movies their way, and how life blew up after the Sony hacks

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Seth Rogen Evan Goldberg TBI Interview illustration


For nearly a decade, Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg have created some of the funniest and most profitable comedies released by major studios.

From their first script, 2007’s “Superbad,” which the two started at age 13, to the stoner comedies “Pineapple Express” and the monster hit “Neighbors” — which earned $270 million worldwide on an $18 million budget — the duo have figured out how to get movies green-lighted and do them with little studio interference.

One reason for their success actually had to do with the failure that was 2011’s big-budget comedy-action movie “The Green Hornet.” With Rogen playing the lead and cowriting the script with Goldberg, it was panned by critics and made just $228 million on a $120 million budget.

They licked their wounds and went back to what they knew best. They created the production company Point Grey Pictures — named after the school they attended in Vancouver — and have found great success and freedom writing and producing movies with modest budgets and stories that go beyond the “stoner comedy.”

As they prepare to release their first sequel, “Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising,” we talked to Rogen and Goldberg about what goes into making movies, North Korea and the Sony hack, and how a night out with Jonah Hill led to them making the upcoming R-rated animated comedy “Sausage Party.”

This interview has been edited for clarity and length.

Jason Guerrasio: How nerve-racking was it to make “Neighbors 2” and try to match the success of the original?

Evan Goldberg: I would like to pretend that it was easy, but it was kind of the hardest thing we've ever had to do.

Seth Rogen: With a movie with so many dildo jokes, we put a lot of thought into it.

bi_graphics_seth rogan and evan goldberg_bioGoldberg: It was really daunting because you have your laughs per minute, and then you also have the plot and the character structure, and they all need to be as good or better.

Rogen: But what made us think we could do it was really that, above everything, the characters are what people liked the most about the first movie. So it felt like we could very organically ask what happened next, basically, and kind of get into their emotional stories and get into the heads of where they would be a few years later. That really guided us through the process as much as anything.

Guerrasio: Many of the jokes are original. You don't regurgitate the ones that worked in the first one.

Goldberg: We did a few of them.

Rogen: Yeah, it's not like we didn't do an airbag-related gag. But in general we really tried to make a movie that wasn't highly referential of the first one. That the joke wasn't just like, "Well, here are the same things again."

Goldberg: I'm extremely upset when I see a comedy sequel and they are delivering the same exact thing. You want to have the feeling of the first one, but you don't want it to be literally the same thing.

Guerrasio: You sent the script to a professor of feminist studies. Why?

Rogen: Because it was written by five men. [Laughs] Pretty quickly it was evident that five guys should not be the sole creative individuals behind this, and so we wanted to get the opinions of a lot of smart girls.

Goldberg: We also had a writer's roundtable with 10 extremely talented women, and we hired two of them, Maria Blasucci and Amanda Lund [cocreators of the web series “Ghost Ghirls”], to be on set all day. It made a serious difference, and I think we can all agree that the movie just wouldn't have worked if we kept it a literal sausage party. That's our other project. [Laughs]

Guerrasio: How did they contribute?

Rogen: We were very open. We didn't pretend to understand how women act. I think that was the big part of it. It was understanding how groups of young women relate to one another and speak to one another. We just did not pretend to understand what that was like. We really looked to the actors in the movie and the writers we hired to help us understand what it would be like the first night three 18-year-olds met each other in a dorm room and hung out.

Goldberg: We made a sorority-rush video, and the first version was something we wrote. It was very funny but we slowly realized it had a lot of stuff guys would like. And from the help we got from other people, our wives, and the writers who were women, we managed to find the proper balance.

Rogen: Things like "The Fault in Our Stars" party we would have never thought of.

Goldberg: Yeah, we wrote a paintball scene at one point. Man, was that wrong.

Rogen: Sometimes what male writers do to make females seem cool or to make it seem like a feminist thing is they just write them exactly like men, and it's just wrong to pretend that a group of 18-year-old women do the exact same thing that a group of 18-year-old men do. They might do a lot of the same things, but there are also very different things that they would do. And we tried to get as much insight into that as humanly possible.

Neighbors 2 3 Chuck Zlotnick Universal_finalGuerrasio: Did test screenings help?

Goldberg: Yeah. The writing process was the core of it all, but in editing we learned so much and changed a lot of very large things.

Rogen: But a joke that people liked was the reframing of some of the ideas in the first movie through the women's perspective.

Guerrasio: Something like "bros before hos" not working this time.

Rogen: Exactly. But overall the testing process was very educational and luckily ended very well.

Guerrasio: The ending feels like you're putting the franchise to bed. Or do you want to do more "Neighbors" movies?

Goldberg: I'm aggressively pushing for a "Neighbors 3”–“Fast & Furious 9" mashup.

Rogen: Yeah. Where we move in next to Vin Diesel. Wait, I think they blew up his house in the last one.

Goldberg: That's why! He needs a new house, so he moves into the neighborhood because he wants to be in the safe suburbs, away from trouble. And he finds a group of young frat and sorority kids who made a coed frat-sorority.

Rogen: That street race! Oh, that's a really good idea actually.

Goldberg: We gotta go — we have to write this. [Laughs]

Guerrasio: You founded Point Grey Pictures with the idea of making movies on a smaller budget so that you would have less pressure from the studios. Was it the disappointment of doing bigger movies such as "Green Hornet" and "Guilt Trip" that led you to this model?

Rogen: Yeah. Something we realized over the years was that the more control we had, the less stressed out we were.

We realized over the years was that the more control we had, the less stressed out we were.

Because a lot of our stress came from a fear that other people were going to ruin the stuff we were working hard on. And we thought we'd be much happier if we ruined the stuff we were working hard on. So we made a company that really tried to make movies in a way that felt protected, and we felt were responsible and made in a sustainable model, which is something that we talk a lot about. Not out-pricing ourselves, not making movies with budgets that we don't think realistically we’d make back given their subject matter.

Goldberg: And we found that we operate well in a box. If you say there's $500,000 and you want to accomplish these three things but you can't, trying to solve that problem kind of creates a better product in a lot of ways.

Guerrasio: Does it all start with keeping yourselves restricted in the writing of stories?

Rogen: It doesn't.

Goldberg: We write like we've got a billion dollars and figure it out after.

Rogen: Exactly. I think you can make any movie for any amount of money if you approach it intelligently.

Goldberg: Like the movie "Chronicle" is gigantic in scope and costs less than every superhero movie — and had better superhero moments than the big ones.

Guerrasio: So how do you get to the budget that will get you to make the movie you want but keep the studio at bay?

Rogen: It depends on the cast.

Goldberg: It's complicated because if it stars Seth and another person of comparable fame that's a [budget] figure, or Seth and two other people who aren't at his level of fame, or Seth not in it and all new people, it changes the financial structure massively.

Rogen: But no matter what, we are making movies that are between $10 million and $40 million, basically. Anything more than that, there's just a level of involvement from the studio. We just never want to be their biggest problem. When we were making "The Green Hornet" we were the studio’s biggest problem, and so all they could do was focus on us. And as they were focusing on us, we realized a lot of other people were probably getting away with a lot of really cool stuff because they were busy focusing on us.

Goldberg: When making "This Is the End," I don't know what their biggest problem was, but it wasn't us.

Rogen: That was more the lesson that we learned — don't be their biggest problem. Be the thing that they aren't paying attention to while they are focusing on their biggest problem. And then be the thing that turns out really well and can maybe be their most profitable movie, which we've been several years for several studios. I'm sure it was the last thing they expected, but it's always a possibility, which is one of the reasons people make our movies.

Goldberg: And I also think when they come to set and see that there are 10 of us jammed in one half trailer —

Rogen: We are really putting it on the screen.

bi_graphics_seth rogan and evan goldberg_box officeGuerrasio:“Neighbors” has always been reported as being budgeted about $18 million. Is that the same number for “Neighbors 2”?

Goldberg: No. The first one was one of those situations where everyone kind of took less to get it done because we all wanted to make it. This time it's a bigger movie. We still kept it very low. But I think it was around $35 million or $40 million.

Rogen: Which is still less than most movies. Again, part of our plan is to make these reasonably.

Goldberg: For “Neighbors 2,” we came to that number with the studio and we were like, "Great, that seems reasonable," but I always think when they turn the corner they're like, "Yeah!"

Guerrasio:“We got them again!”

Goldberg: Yeah. [Laughs]

Guerrasio: How often do you get notes from the studio?

Goldberg: It depends studio by studio. And we have an extremely good relationship with Universal [which released both “Neighbors” movies], and we respect them creatively — and their financial instincts. Some places you clash heads. Universal, not one of them.

Rogen: We are always willing to hear their notes. We just don't always take them. But we are very happy to have the conversation, and we like having a good relationship with them, and we try not to be confrontational in how we work. Even if their notes aren't specifically right, often it speaks to something that might not be functioning properly in the script or the movie. I think because we know at the end of the day that we can mostly do what we want, it's not stressful to listen to everyone's opinion. Sometimes they will point something out that is totally not the right thing, but it makes you realize that there is another problem.

Goldberg: Right. "Well, if he thinks that, would the audience think that?"

Guerrasio: Paul Feig [director of “Spy” and the upcoming “Ghostbusters” movie] told me once that what he does is videotapes the audience at the test screenings, so when he talks to the studio he can point out to them that he's right about a scene or a line because he can show footage of the audience laughing.

Rogen: We do that, for sure.

Goldberg: And we cross-reference them. Sometimes we will have four test screenings and we'll point out, "See, at three of them it didn't work,” then the joke's out.

Rogen: And we seek rougher and rougher audiences for our test screenings. In the past, I feel like some of our movies have been disserved by only having really good test screenings, which can happen, and it's not always representative of a good movie. Recently we haven’t told the audience what movie they are seeing. It’s finding ways to put as many roadblocks between us and a good test screening, and really be hard on the material and make sure it is all working.

Goldberg: And in our mission to find harder audiences we encountered this funny thing where there will be one guy in the theater who's like "I did not sign up for this!"

In our mission to find harder audiences, we encountered this funny thing where there will be one guy in the theater who's like, 'I did not sign up for this!'

Rogen: For the first screening of “Neighbors 2” we didn't tell the audience what they were seeing and one of our editors was sitting next to someone, and when the audience was told "You're about to see 'Neighbors 2,'" the guy next to him was like, "I don't want to see that!" That guy probably gave us the best notes.

Guerrasio: The movie you guys did that I don't understand why it didn't do better was "The Night Before." Did that test well?

Goldberg: Tested really high. It was one of our better-testing.

Rogen: The truth is, the studio never really found the way to market it incredibly effectively. It's one of those things I hear a lot, which means it wasn't marketed right. I keep hearing "That movie was really good — I didn't think I was going to like it, but I did." That means it was not presented in a good way. And I will say, the movie doesn't have as clean-cut a concept as “Neighbors” or “Sausage Party.”

Guerrasio: I think "The Night Before" is going to be a movie people go back to and appreciate five or 10 years from now.

Rogen: I hope so.

Goldberg: Jonathan Levine, the director — the whole reason he wanted to make that movie with us was he wanted to have something that will play once a year and that over time will be remembered.

Rogen: As we were making it I felt like, for me personally, it was some of the funniest stuff I had ever done. And it was actually a little disappointing that more people didn't go see it in theaters, because I was incredibly proud of it. I feel a lot of us took big swings in that movie. Michael Shannon delivers one of the funniest performances ever.

james franco seth rogen the interviewGuerrasio: How are things with you guys at Sony since the release of “The Interview”?

Rogen: Time heals all wounds. A lot of the same people who were there before are still there. There are some new people there as well, and we've tried very hard to develop good relationships with them.

Goldberg: We were all in a similar boat and went through a lot of similar things.

Rogen: But we have more movies with them, and I think, honestly, “Sausage Party,” thus far, is going incredibly well, and we really are on the same page and they seem to be very excited about its potential. They really seem like they are going to get behind it.

Guerrasio: But during that time you guys must have been walking around the Sony lot and getting dirty looks.

Rogen: Oh yeah, lots of people. [Laughs]

Goldberg: That was just for two weeks, though.

Rogen: That ended eventually. But every once in a while people are still surprised to see us there.

Goldberg: But it's not like, "What are you doing here?" It's like, "Huh, you're still here?"

Guerrasio: This is the crazy thing about what happened with "The Interview.""Neighbors 2" focuses on women empowerment, a popular topic partly because Jennifer Lawrence spoke out about getting paid less than her male costars, which she found through the Sony hack. So if anything, you guys should be proud for pushing forward the conversation of the gender pay gap in Hollywood.

Rogen: If it wasn't for us no one would know. [Laughs]

Goldberg: That's why we made all those things happen.

Rogen: We made that movie in hopes of empowering women. It finally paid off.

Guerrasio: Today, do you guys still wonder if North Korea really did the hacking?

Rogen: Yeah.

Rogen: We debate about it a lot.

Guerrasio: Seriously?

Goldberg: Oh yeah.

Rogen: It was f---ing crazy.

Goldberg: Every now and then we look at each other and one of us will say, "Remember that?"

Rogen: And we still work with a lot of the same people. We're making a movie with Amy Pascal [the former head of Sony, who stepped down after the hack]. We're in the same places a lot. We're dealing with the same marketing people. It's impossible not to bring it up. And we still debate whether or not it was North Korea.

We still debate whether or not it was North Korea.

What do you think?

Guerrasio: I don't know. Someone must have thought it was someone nefarious because you guys had security around you at the time.

Rogen: We did.

Goldberg: I feel that was an insurance issue, who knows.

Guerrasio: Did that experience change how you guys write? Did it make you gun-shy?

Goldberg: No.

Rogen: No. I would probably maybe not make a thing about North Korea again. We played that card, and all I can say is, touché.

Guerrasio: Is it true you came up with the idea for your next movie, “Sausage Party,” while smoking weed with Jonah Hill?

Rogen: Yeah. It actually came from me and Jonah and my wife having dinner together. We started talking about what it would be like if we made a Pixar-style movie about food and how f---ed up that would be and how potentially hilarious it would be. And that was almost 10 years ago, and we've been tirelessly trying to make it ever since then.

Guerrasio: What were the roadblocks? I'd assume a lot of that time was getting an education on how to make an animated movie.

Goldberg: Oh yeah. Long, complicated education.

Rogen: But it was mostly just trying to get someone to make it. It's truly f---ing crazy and when there’s less precedent for something the harder it is to get it made. There's literally never been an R-rated computer-generated animated movie, so it made it really hard to get someone to agree to make it because we couldn't point to anything to show them that it wasn't a terrible idea. Which to us was why it was a good idea.

Goldberg: And it was a lot like “Superbad” where we would go in, pitch it, people would go, "Oh God, that's so funny." Laugh the whole pitch. And then be like, "No, we can't do that."

bi_graphics_seth rogan and evan goldberg_filmographyRogen: Yeah, it was a lot like “Superbad.” I remember one studio head — who I won't name — literally was crying with laughter, in hysterics with laughter. And I remember thinking, "Oh my God, of course they are going to do it!” I had never seen someone react like that. And then they were even like, "We just can't do it." It took [producer] Megan Ellison to come along and cofinance the movie and Amy Pascal, who at the time was the head of Sony, agreed to make it, and we took the money and ran.

Guerrasio: Because it's animated, is it more money than you usually work with?

Rogen: No. We found a way to do it for a more responsible price than most animated movies. It's just being finished now, and as it finally comes together it's unbelievably gratifying. I don't know how the world is going to react to it, but I know we made a movie that we ourselves are incredibly entertained by.

Guerrasio: What was the biggest takeaway from showing it as a work-in-progress at South by Southwest? Have you done any tweaks since then?

Rogen: We did do some tweaks. But we really listened to the laughs. There were some jokes that for sure overstayed their welcome, and there were some themes that weren't landing as well as we were hoping they would. It's a movie we haven't been able to screen a lot because of the animation process, so we kind of treated it like a test screening. We changed the ending a little bit. It was actually incredible for us.

Guerrasio: Looking back, if "Green Hornet" did amazing — which probably means, Seth, you'd still be making sequels for it to this day — would you have been able to make these movies you came up with? Was it good that "Hornet" bombed?

Rogen: You know, I have never thought of that. Ever.

Goldberg: That never occurred to me.

Rogen: You're probably right.

Goldberg: I feel like people get one movie between each franchise.

Rogen: Yeah, we wouldn't have been able to make as many movies, which I don't know if anyone would be complaining about that.

Goldberg:"The Green Hornet" was just the greatest education possible in the history of the world for us.

Rogen: I don't think it's a coincidence that after "The Green Hornet" is when we started producing, writing, and directing way more movies that, to some degree, have a larger rate of success. It taught us so much about every element of filmmaking on the biggest scale you could imagine. We took those lessons back to how we make movies on a much smaller scale. We were able to direct "This Is the End" because of what we learned on "The Green Hornet." I think we were able to produce "50/50" and all the other movies we've produced since because of what happened on "The Green Hornet."

Goldberg: The movie was like, 89 shooting days, so on day 60 you just turn to the cinematographer and are like, "How does that camera work?"

Rogen: Yeah, you just start learning about things you see. Action sequences put together on the biggest scale. You see how visual effects work. We literally, out of everyone we knew who were working in movies, had an in-depth course on giant-budget filmmaking at a very early time in our careers, relatively speaking. We use those lessons to this day. And we met Neal Moritz, so we wouldn't be doing “Preacher” if it wasn't for that movie, which is also weird to think about. [“Preacher” is an AMC TV series based on the popular comic that Rogen, Goldberg, and Moritz are executive producers on.]

Guerrasio: Is “Preacher” your way of redeeming yourselves in doing the comics you wanted to adapt back in “The Green Hornet” days?

Rogen: Yeah. That was a comic property we loved and truly —

Goldberg: We're going to do it our way.

Rogen: We're going to maximize the potential while using our strengths as people who make movies. We tried to do that with "The Green Hornet" and due to the process and due to our inexperience, it just did not go that way. But with “Preacher,” for many reasons, it's playing much more to our strengths. I think us in combination with [cocreator] Sam Catlin have done a much better job reimagining the material in a way that is better for audiences.

Guerrasio: Is the Tom Cruise gag still in the pilot episode?

Rogen: Yeah, of course.

Goldberg: Oh hell yeah.

Guerrasio: In the movies you want to make, why are the studios still important? I'm sure you could easily pull an Adam Sandler and sign a four-picture deal with Netflix, where you’d have even less interference.

Rogen: We are not against working with Netflix in any capacity, honestly, but we just think the best way to see a comedy is in a theater full of people.

Goldberg: I went to see “Deadpool” alone when it came out, and it was a revelatory experience because me and 400 people were all on the same wavelength and doing the same thing and it's just not the same at home.

Rogen: I saw “Hateful Eight” in a theater and it was just so much fun.

Goldberg: That's funny. I was on a flight yesterday and I was going to watch “Hateful Eight” and I was just looking at the little screen, and I was just like, not going to do it.

Rogen: I think it's the opposite of what people like George Lucas and Steven Spielberg say — the only movie that's worth going to see in a theater is a big-budget visual-effects movie. You can see that at home and sit 3 feet away from your giant television that most people have and get a very similar experience. What you can't replicate at home is the shared group experience of being with 300 other people as you all are laughing hysterically or looking at each other marveling that what you are seeing was even allowed to be turned into a movie.

Goldberg: Without those moments, humanity will fall apart.

Rogen: Exactly. It's the most important thing you should be doing. [Laughs]

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Kristen Stewart explains why she 'broke up' with the 'Snow White and the Huntsman' prequel

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Kristen Stewart is setting the record straight on her absence from the prequel for "Snow White and the Huntsman."

Although the first movie made $400 million internationally, Stewart didn't appear in the prequel "The Huntsman: Winter's Warrior." 

There were some reports that Stewart's personal relationship with "Huntsman" director Rupert Sanders and the accompanying tabloid coverage caused her to be fired from the prequel. But Stewart maintains that isn't true.

In fact, it was just a matter of business.

“It wasn’t a situation where I got kicked off a movie because I got in trouble,” Stewart told Variety in this week's cover story. “We had been in talks months after that about making something work, and it never came together.”

Stewart said she took part in discussions for the sequel and even "read a few scripts." 

"None of them were good," she explained. "None of them were greenlight-able. And I had a meeting with Universal about the places where the story could go. Maybe, Chris [Hemsworth] was more into it. I actually don't f---ing know."

Stewart told the magazine she was blindsided by the news of the prequel in a press release.

“I was like, 'OK, cool.' We hadn’t spoken in a long time, but I didn’t know we had broken up,” she said of the movie's producer Universal Pictures.

Later, Stewart said she passed on an offer to cameo in the prequel. Universal declined to comment to Variety.

Released on April 22, "The Huntsman: Winter's War" stars Stewart's former castmates Chris Hemsworth and Charlize Theron. Emily Blunt joined as Theron's character's sister. The movie is currently trailing behind the previous one's box office with $146 million internationally to date, according to Box Office Mojo, on a $115 million budget, and it has a 16% fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

SEE ALSO: HBO is aggressively ramping up its war on people who illegally download 'Game of Thrones'

DON'T MISS: Kristen Bell says she's suffered anxiety and depression for years: 'I fight it all the time'

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RANKED: The 10 movies that are going to dominate the box office this summer

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4x3_2016 Summer movie power rankings_x men apocalypse

The summer movie season came out of the gate strong with the huge opening weekend for "Captain America: Civil War," the 5th biggest of all time.

Now the question is: Will any title catch up to it, or will the Avengers leave everyone else in the dust?

As more titles being to screen for press, we're getting a better sense of the movies that will dominate the summer.

In our latest ranking, we've compiled critical and fan reaction, plus available box office and projections, to figure out which movies are winning over audiences.

Read all summer movie power rankings.

SEE ALSO: 41 movies you have to see this summer

10. "The Shallows" (June 29)

On paper the movie sounds like a cousin of the campy "Sharknado" franchise, but Sony may have a hit on its hands if the trailer is any indication (which, by the way, has over 4 million views). 

Starring Blake Lively as a surfer in a beautiful, secluded cove who's suddenly attacked by a great white shark 200 yards from shore, the movie then follows her battle with the beast.

When the trailer hit the web May 4, it instantly became a trending topic on social media. 

It has the buzz. We'll see when it's released if there's a payoff.

Last Ranking: New This Week



9. “Ghostbusters” (July 15)

It looks like it's going to be an uphill climb for the "Ghostbusters" reboot leading up to its release. Just as initial bad reception to its trailer was fading, ScreenCrush ran a story saying that it's now the most disliked trailer ever on YouTube.

Just as a good trailer doesn't necessarily mean a good movie, the same goes for a bad trailer. But "Ghostbusters" isn't going to catch a break.

All that noise will be muted, though, if it turns out critics love the movie when they see it.

Last Ranking: 7th



8. “X-Men: Apocalypse” (May 27)

Depending on who you read, "X-Men: Apocalypse" is either an ambitious superhero movie that sets itself apart from the Marvel heap, or it's a big disappointment.

20th Century Fox's plan to take some of the wind out of the sails of "Civil War" by lifting the review embargo on "Apocalypse" right after the Marvel hit opened might have backfired. With only a 47% on Rotten Tomatoes, "Apocalypse" looks like another superhero movie that can't live up to the supremacy of Disney's releases in the genre.

We'll see if things improve in the next few weeks.

Last Ranking: 5th 

 

 



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Jodie Foster on Hollywood pay gap: 'It's hard for me to get interested in millionaires'

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Jodie Foster says she finds it hard to join fellow celebrities in speaking out against the Hollywood wage gap between women and men.

“In terms of pay, it’s hard for me to get interested in millionaires worried about who gets paid more,” Foster said during a recent SiriusXM Town Hall.

The actress and director, whose film "Money Monster" hits theaters on Friday, believes there's a fairly straightforward economic principle that governs Hollywood stars' salaries.

“I’m just so grateful to be an actor, and I know lots of actors feel that way, that it’s hard for us to complain because we’re artists, and unfortunately we’re artists in a marketplace, and the marketplace pays what the marketplace demands, so we need to change the marketplace,” she said.

Foster feels that the problem of salary disparity should be looked at in a broader way "especially now, when the class inequality and financial inequality is larger than ever, and it really is the problem of our future."

The pay gap conversation saw a resurgence in 2014, when the Sony hacks revealed that Jennifer Lawrence and Amy Adams made less than their male costars for "American Hustle."Lawrence waited nearly a year before addressing the wage gap in Lena Dunham's newsletter, Lenny, saying that she was more angry with herself for not pushing harder for a higher salary.

SEE ALSO: Neve Campbell says she's never been paid equally to her male costars

DON'T MISS: Kristen Stewart explains why she 'broke up' with the 'Snow White and the Huntsman' prequel

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A 25-year-old Photoshopped movie posters to highlight Hollywood's diversity problem

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john cho avengers

Marvel Studios has been accused of "whitewashing" an iconic Doctor Strange character. Emma Stone was poorly received for being cast as an Asian American in "Aloha," and Scarlett Johansson was recently criticized for her role in a remake of Japanese anime film "Ghost in the Shell."

"Star Trek" actor George Takei has been especially vocal about whitewashing in big-budget films.

"Hollywood has been casting white actors in Asian roles for decades now, and we can't keep pretending there isn't something deeper at work here," he recently wrote on Facebook.

Now William Yu, a 25-year-old digital strategist, has started #StarringJohnCho, a project imagining what big movies and blockbusters would look like if Asian-American actor John Cho had a starring role.

Keep reading to learn more about the project and see some of the posters in the series:

William Yu, a Korean-American digital strategist in New York City, is the man behind the website #StarringJohnCho.



The series of posters envision Cho as the leading man in a series of big blockbusters ranging from "Spectre" to "The Martian."



Yu made the site on Thursday and told Tech Insider that he was inspired to start the project after seeing the lack of Asian-American actors in leading roles.



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The trailer for Woody Allen's new movie recreates old Hollywood glamour with an all-star cast

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As the film has its world premiere at the Cannes Film Festival on Wednesday, the trailer for Woody Allen's latest movie "Cafe Society," his first in a production deal with Amazon, is now online.

As usual, the legendary writer/director has cast the film with a who's who of Hollywood stars, including Steve Carell, Jesse Eisenberg, Kristen Stewart, and Blake Lively, to name a few.

The movie is set in 1930s Hollywood, where Brooklyn native Bobby Dorfman (Eisenberg) is thrust into high society and finds love and many interesting characters.

It should be noted that, amid press for Allen and the film, his son Ronan Farrow has called out the media for not raising the sexual assault allegations against Allen enough.

Watch the trailer below. The movie opens in the summer.

SEE ALSO: Ronan Farrow calls out the media "silence" on Woody Allen sex abuse allegations

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NOW WATCH: 4 important things you probably missed on this week's 'Game of Thrones'

There’s a ‘Star Wars’ Easter egg in a lot of Marvel movies

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Marvel and Lucasfilm's "Star Wars" franchise are both owned by Disney. So it's not a surprise that one may pop up as an Easter egg in the other universe. Disney's latest theatrical release, "Captain America: Civil War", has a big nod to "Star Wars" more than halfway through the film. 

But there's another "Star Wars" Easter egg that pops up in a lot of Marvel movies. Have you noticed it?

In almost every single "Star Wars" movie, somebody loses an arm or a hand

Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill) famously loses his hand to Darth Vader, in an iconic scene from "Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back."

Mark Hamill GIF ArmIf you've been watching the latest Phase Two Marvel movies closely, you'll notice a character has been losing an arm — or hand — in each film, too.

Phase Two refers to the second of the three phases of Marvel's Cinematic Universe. Phase Two kicked off in 2013 with "Iron Man 3" and it ended with 2015's "Ant-Man." In total, it includes six films.

President of Marvel Studios Kevin Feige, a self-proclaimed "Star Wars" fan, confirmed the gag is an homage to a galaxy far, far away during the press tour for "Avengers: Age of Ultron." But it didn't start that way.

"So I’m obsessed with 'Star Wars' - and it didn’t start out as intentional, but it became intentional," Feige told Cinemablend. "It sort of happens in every 'Star Wars' movie, but I was sort of looking at it, ‘Okay, is Phase Two our 'Empire Strikes Back'?’ Not really, but tonally things are a little different. Somebody gets their arm cut off in every Phase Two movie. Every single one."

And the "Star Wars" gag didn't just stop in Phase Two. It appeared in "Civil War," too, the first film in Marvel's Phase Three.

Keep reading to see all the severed arms as they appear in the Marvel Universe so far.

"Iron Man 3" (2013)

Aldrich Killian (Guy Pearce) loses his arm during his final battle with Iron Man (Robert Downey, Jr.).

Iron Man 3 Arm GIF

"Thor: The Dark World" (2013) 

Thor lost his hand momentarily when Loki pretended to chop it off in a grand visual illusion.

Thor Arm GIF

 "Captain America: The Winter Soldier" (2014) Winter Soldier Arm GIF

Bucky (Sebastian Stan) is seen losing his arm in a flashback where he falls off a train and is thought to be dead.

"Guardians of the Galaxy" (2014)Guardians of the Galaxy Groot Arm Chop

Groot (Vin Diesel) loses both of his arms during his first encounter with Gamora (Zoe Saldana). Don't worry, they grow back. 

"Avengers: Age of Ultron" (2015)

andy serkis avengers age of ultron

Ulysses Klaue (Andy Serkis) gets his arm chopped off by villain Ultron, setting him up for his namesake, Ulysses Klaw (get it?). We'll probably see him again in 2018's "Black Panther."

"Ant-Man" (2015)

ant man yellowjacket

Near the end of the film, Ant-Man nemesis Yellowjacket loses his right arm before the rest of him disappears into the void when his suit starts shrinking non-stop.

"Captain America: Civil War" (2016)

In the final showdown between Iron Man, Captain America, and The Winter Soldier, Iron Man lasers Bucky Barnes' robotic arm right off. The moment was briefly spoiled in an early trailer for the film.

captain america civil war bucky

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NOW WATCH: Disney just dropped another 'Avengers: Age of Ultron' trailer — and it's the best one yet

A comedian at Cannes made a rape joke to Woody Allen's face and got gasps

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Though the Cannes Film Festival is known for being the most glamorous festival in the world, it’s also known for its shocking moments, especially in the relatively polite world of cinema.

The latest was at its opening ceremony on Wednesday when Laurent Lafitte, a French comedian and the master of ceremonies of the festival, joked about Woody Allen’s rape allegations.

Lafitte addressed Allen, whose latest film “Cafe Society” kicked off the festival, and said to his face, "You've shot so many of your films here in Europe and yet in the U.S. you haven't even been convicted of rape."

A staffer at The Hollywood Reporter captured the remark in a picture he tweeted:

The comment is likely also a reference to another Cannes regular, director Roman Polanski, who lives in Europe and hasn’t been back to the US since the 1970s, when he was convicted of unlawful sex with a 13-year-old.

Earlier in the day on Wednesday, The Hollywood Reporter ran an opinion piece by Ronan Farrow, son of Allen and Mia Farrow, calling out the media for not asking Allen for years about the allegations by his sister, Dylan Farrow, that Allen sexually assaulted her when she was seven years old. 

At the press conference the same day for Woody Allen's new film that he attended, no reporters brought up the sex abuse allegations.

Lafitte’s remarks drew gasps from the audience, according to THR

SEE ALSO: The trailer for Woody Allen's new movie recreates old Hollywood glamour with an all-star cast

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NOW WATCH: 4 important things you probably missed on this week's 'Game of Thrones'


How Robert Downey Jr. was transformed into a teen in 'Captain America' using special effects

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Warning: There are spoilers ahead for "Captain America: Civil War."

Robert Downey Jr. is delighting the audiences rooting for #TeamCap in "Captain America: Civil War." He's been playing the role of Tony Stark since 2008's original "Iron Man," but took the role to a new level during a flashback sequence where he plays a version of the character 30 years younger. 

In the key scene, we see a teenage Tony Stark speaking with his parents. Interestingly, Marvel chose not to recast the part. Instead, the 51-year-old actor played teen Tony himself. Speaking to The Hollywood ReporterTrent Claus, visual effects supervisor at Lola VFX, revealed how they were able to reverse the clock on the veteran actor. 

"It is a similar process to Photoshop that uses some similar tools," Claus explained, "but unlike Photoshop which is done on a single image, we have 24 frames per second of footage."

Instead of using a digital double, Downey shot the scene normally and the effects team used digital compositing to apply the de-aging effects to the actor's face in post-production. Claus said this let them retain Downey's "performance and nuances" even after extensive effects. 

For the scene, Lola analyzed footage of Downey from his younger years. There was plenty to choose from, Downey began acting in the early '80s. But that brought its own challenges.

"... When working with the appearance of a well-known actor such as Robert Downey Jr.," Claus explains, "there is the added pressure of living up to the youthful appearance that audiences remember." 

rdj-young-less-than-zeroThe Lola VFX team was also behind the de-aging effects of the 2008 drama, "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button," winning Academy Awards for both Best Makeup and Best Visual Effects. Claus went into detail on how delicate the digital compositing process is:

"Every feature of the face and body needed to be addressed in some fashion," Claus told THR. "One thing that happens to all of us is that the skin of the face gradually lowers in certain areas, and needs to be 'lifted' back to where it was at the age in question."

Lola honed in on minute details in Downey's face to make sure the younger Tony looked natural. 

" ... Other changes are incredibly subtle, such as increase in the way light reflects off the sheen of the skin, a reduction in the appearance of tiny blood vessels under the surface of some parts of the face, or more blood flow in the cheeks giving them that familiar youthful 'glow.' "

The effects were nearly unnoticeable, which, for visual effects teams, is a huge compliment. 

Read the full Hollywood Reporter article here

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NOW WATCH: Even the camera crew had to do insane stunts while shooting 'Captain America: Civil War'

Psychiatrists studied 400 movies to find the most realistic psychopath

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As frightening as movie psychopaths like Norman Bates and Hannibal Lecter appear on the big screen, turns out they may not be as realistic compared to their real-life counterparts. In 2013, Belgian psychiatrists watched over 400 movies to decide which fictional psychopath are based in reality and which ones were pure fiction.

Produced by Darren Weaver. Original Reporting by Chris Weller.

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Seth Rogen says his biggest career failure actually led to his success

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After he played the lead in the beloved 2007 comedy "Knocked Up" and cowrote the equally popular "Superbad" with his childhood friend, Evan Goldberg, in the same year, Seth Rogen was suddenly one of Hollywood's newest young stars.

And like any comic-book-obsessed 20-something, he did the next logical thing: attach himself to a character that he could turn into a franchise.

"The Green Hornet" opened in 2011 with Rogen in the lead, visionary director Michel Gondry behind the camera, and Rogen cowriting the script with Goldberg.

Sounds like a franchise in the making.

Sadly, that didn't happen. With lousy reviews and a lifetime gross of only $228 million worldwide — on a $120 million budget — the movie killed any hopes of Rogen being the next big superhero star.

And it was the best thing to happen to him.

"I don't think it's a coincidence that after 'The Green Hornet' is when we started producing, writing, and directing way more movies that, to some degree, have a larger rate of success," Rogen told Business Insider in an interview alongside Goldberg.

"'The Green Hornet' was just the greatest education possible," Goldberg said.

After "Green Hornet" went belly-up, the two formed the production company Point Grey Pictures, named after the school they attended as kids in Vancouver, and began making comedies within the $10 million to $40 million budget range, which gave them little worry of studio interference.

Evan Goldberg Seth Rogen Mike Windle Getty finalRogen said:

We just never want to be their biggest problem. When we were making "The Green Hornet," we were the studio's biggest problem, and so all they could do was focus on us. And as they were focusing on us, we realized a lot of other people were probably getting away with a lot of really cool stuff because they were focusing on us.

Since 2011, the duo has written and produced some of the funniest and most profitable comedies put out by the major studios, including "This Is the End"— which Rogen and Goldberg also directed — "The Interview," and "Neighbors," which took in a worldwide gross of $270.6 million on a budget of only $18 million.

Rogen and Goldberg say that they're happy to take notes from the studios, but now they can also get away with not taking the notes, and that's a relief.

"Be[ing] the thing that they aren't paying attention to while they are focusing on their biggest problem," Rogen said is the biggest lesson they've learned.

He continued:

And then be the thing that turns out really well and can maybe be their most profitable movie, which we've been several years for several studios. I'm sure it was the last thing they expected, but it's always a possibility, which is one of the reasons people make our movies.

The two hope that winning streak continues for their next movie, "Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising," when it opens in theaters on May 20.

SEE ALSO: Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg talk making movies their way, and how life blew up after the Sony hacks

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NOW WATCH: Seth Rogen explains why Marvel is great at making sequels

Peter Jackson believes Sean Parker's Screening Room will pump $8.5 billion into the film industry every year

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The buzz around Sean Parker’s startup Screening Room, in which customers pay $50 to stream movies still available in theaters, has died down of late, but that doesn’t mean things aren’t going on behind closed doors.

In a piece in Deadline celebrating the “disruptive” career of filmmaker and Oscar winner Peter Jackson — one of the backers behind Screening Room along with fellow directors Steven Spielberg, J.J. Abrams, and Martin Scorsese — the director unveiled for the first time details about the streaming startup's security and what its backers hope to achieve for a movie industry that Jackson believes is “dying slowly.”

“We want to inject health into it, to give the cinemas money they can use to improve the experience, and to give the studios money to get more films made,” Jackson told Deadline.

A big problem with the movie industry currently is that while it’s hitting box office records for grosses (thanks to the expensive cost to go to the movies), fewer people are going to theaters. Jackson points out that there was a 10 percent drop in attendance from 2014 to 2015.

“Screening Room is designed to sell movie tickets to people that want to buy them but can’t,” said Jackson.

The filmmaker said what sold him on Screening Room was a non-target audience survey the company did asking those who took it if they’d pay $50 to see a film at home:

83% of that non-target audience said no. That’s what we want, for those people to continue seeing movies in cinemas. We asked the same question to our target audience; the people stuck at home, the 25-39 year olds. And 70% said yes they would spend $50. This is what persuaded me.

The article did not indicate how many people were surveyed.

The business model of Screening Room is not to shut out movie chains. According to previous reports, the company has proposed giving theater chains a slice of the revenue, as much as $20 of the fee. Distributors who participate would take 20% of the $50 rental fee, and Screening Room would take 10% of the fee. The $50 rental (you also have to pay $150 for a set-top box) also gets you two tickets to see the movie in theaters.

Jackson told Deadline that this can help the movie industry’s theatergoing problem.

4d movie theater movie goers“If we can get Screening Room into 20 million households, and they rent 12 movies a year, then the exhibitors and the studios will get over $8.5 billion dollars a year,” he told Deadline.

Jackson also went into some of the security Screening Room is developing, which will help with the industry’s constant combat against piracy:

Screening Room is only going to be sold as a membership from a Screening Room website, and there will be thorough security checks done where you’ll provide all your information, including social networks. Screening Room is being sold to an individual person, not to anonymous people who walk into Walmart and walk out with a box.

The movies will also be watermarked so Screening Room will know not only if a member pirated a movie but which member did it.

However, Screening Room still has a long climb to gain support within the industry.

Filmmakers James Cameron and Christopher Nolan have spoken out against it, as well as Warner Bros. CEO Kevin Tsujihara

A company that is familiar with what Screening Room is trying to accomplish is Prima Cinema, which offers streaming of first-run movies to the super rich for $500 per rental.

When Business Insider asked its CEO Shawn Yeager about the chances of Screening Room being accepted by Hollywood, he said it doesn’t make sense for movie studios to go with the model.

"The movie business is smart enough to realize that you never want to trade analog dollars for digital pennies, which is what would happen under that scenario," he said.

Jackson told Deadline that conversations about Screening Room are ongoing with studio heads and others within the industry.

Read the full story over at Deadline.

SEE ALSO: I tried home-streaming new movies with $150,000 setup the super-rich swear by

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NOW WATCH: Warner Bros. just released the first trailer for its R-rated animated Batman movie

Seth Rogen still has a big question about the Sony hacks from 'The Interview'

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It was supposed to be a fun comedy about the assassination of Kim Jong Un. It turned out to be a movie that sparked an international incident — at least, we think.

It was June 2014 when news broke that the North Korean government was aware of Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg’s comedy “The Interview,” in which Rogen and James Franco play journalists who are granted an interview with Kim Jong Un and have been tasked by the CIA to kill him.

North Korea’s Foreign Ministry stated that the US would face “stern” and “merciless” retaliation if the film were released. Hoping to calm the waters, the studio behind the film, Sony, pushed the release date from October to Christmas of that year for digital tweaks of the movie in the hopes of not offending North Korean officials, even altering the death scene of Kim Jong Un.

On November 24, a group known as the “Guardians of Peace” hacked the company networks of Sony Pictures, releasing internal emails, employee records, and recent Sony movies onto the internet. Then on December 16, the hackers threatened to attack any theater that showed the movie, leading Sony to pull the title from theaters. (Only a handful of independent chains showed it.) The movie was made available online instead.

North Korea has never claimed responsibility for the hack, and it’s something that Rogen and Goldberg, who cowrote and directed the film, still wonder about.

Seth Rogen, Evan Goldberg“Every now and then we look at each other and one of us will say, ‘Remember that?’” Goldberg told Business Insider in a recent interview alongside Rogen.

“And we still work with a lot of the same people,” Rogen added. “We're making a movie with Amy Pascal [the former head of Sony, who stepped down after the hack]. We're in the same places a lot. We're dealing with the same marketing people. It's impossible not to bring it up. And we still debate whether or not it was North Korea.”

When asked if they got a lot of dirty looks around the Sony lot at the time of the Sony hack, Rogen laughed.

“Oh yeah, lots of people,” he said. “That ended eventually. But every once in a while people are still surprised to see us there.”

The hack hurt the film substantially at the box office, as it only took in $11 million worldwide, though it was the top-selling film of 2014 on YouTube and Google Play.

Rogen said that “time heals all wounds” and that he and Goldberg have a good relationship with Sony now. The studio will be releasing their upcoming movie, the R-rated comedy “Sausage Party” — out in theaters August 12.

One thing the hack didn't affect, they say, is how they approach comedy writing. Well, with the exception of one topic.

“I would probably maybe not make a thing about North Korea again,” Rogen said. “We played that card, and all I can say is, touché.”

SEE ALSO: Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg talk making movies their way, and how life blew up after the Sony hacks

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NOW WATCH: This is what a bar in North Korea looks like

This Marvel actor looks shockingly like a young Luke Skywalker

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You'd be hard pressed these days to find two bigger movie franchises that Star Wars and the Marvel Cinematic Universe, both of which have been raking in massive box office receipts. Star Wars: The Force Awakens has taken in a record-breaking $936.3 million domestically and $2.06 billion worldwide, while Marvel launched the first movie in their Phase 3 lineup last weekend, Captain America: Civil War, which earned a whopping $179.1 million in its debut. While both of these franchises have much in common, aside from the fact that they're both housed at Disney, one Instagram user made quite the startling discovery.

Of course, as of now, Disney and Lucasfilm haven't confirmed any sort of Luke Skywalker spinoff movie, and, as far as we know, this iconic character won't be featured in the first spinoff, Rogue One, or the Han Solo movie. The Han Solo spinoff will provide an origin story for the rogue smuggler, long before he's introduced in the Mos Eisley Cantina in Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope. Still, with the Star Wars franchise more popular than ever, the possibilities are certainly endless.

luke skywalkerbucky barnes winter soldier

Back in November, a report surfaced that claimed Disney is planning on releasing a new Star Wars movie every year, indefinitely, until fans stop buying tickets to these adventures in a galaxy far, far away. Given the $2 billion worldwide gross for Star Wars: The Force Awakens, the franchise is stronger than it's ever been, so there doesn't seem to be anything that would stop the studio from putting out a new movie each year. Rogue One: A Star Wars Story hits theaters this December, followed by Star Wars: Episode VIII on December 15, 2017, Han Solo: A Star Wars Story on May 25, 2018, Star Wars: Episode IX in 2019 and a Boba Fett spinoff being planned for 2020. B

There doesn't seem to be any end in sight for the Marvel Cinematic Universe either, with the studio's 10-movie Phase 3 lineup already set through the year 2019, with Avengers: Infinity War - Part II arriving on May 3, 2019. The studio has also set three dates for unspecified movies on May 1, 2020, July 10, 2020 and November 6, 2020, but the studio hasn't announced what movies will fill those slots. Take a look at these uncanny photos below, and let us know what you think about Sebastian Stan being turned into a young Luke Skywalker.

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Hollywood's biggest stars are at the Cannes Film Festival — here are the glamorous photos

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george clooney amal clooney

It's Cannes time again.

That is, when Hollywood's elite travel to the French Riviera for the industry's most glamorous event of the year, the Cannes Film Festival.

This year, things kicked off with the latest movie from Woody Allen, "Cafe Society," which stars Kristen Stewart, Jesse Eisenberg, and Blake Lively, among others. The premiere also put the sex abuse allegations against Allen back in the spotlight.

The latest Jodie Foster-directed movie, "Money Monster," starring George Clooney and Julia Roberts, is also in the festival. As is the animated family movie "Trolls," with Justin Timberlake and Anna Kendrick lending their voices.

Below see the stars and more as they walk the historic Cannes red carpet. 

SEE ALSO: The 22 most exciting TV shows this summer you need to see

Here are Anna Kendrick and Justin Timberlake at Cannes for the premiere of "Trolls."



JT was also there for Woody Allen's new movie, "Cafe Society," which kicked off the festival.



Here's the filmmaker with his stars, Jesse Eisenberg and Kristen Stewart.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

This movie about an Iraq War troop based on an acclaimed book is a surefire Oscar contender

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billy lynn final

It's never too early to start up Oscar talk, and after watching the trailer for "Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk," you'll know what I mean.

Director Ang Lee's ("Life of Pi,""Brokeback Mountain") latest movie looks at the victory tour of 19-year-old soldier Billy Lynn after an intense tour in Iraq. The film shows what really happened over there through flashbacks and contrasts that with the perception of Billy and his squad back home.

It's based on the universally praised 2012 novel of the same name by Ben Fountain, which won the National Book Critics Circle Award for Fiction. For that and Ang Lee's name alone, it's sure to get a lot of attention.

Shot in 3D, the movie is certain to be visually stunning. But it also looks like it has the emotional weight to carry it to award season.

The film stars Kristen Stewart, Chris Tucker, Vin Diesel, Steve Martin, and newcomer Joe Alwyn as Billy Lynn.

Watch the trailer below. The movie opens in November.

 

SEE ALSO: Seth Rogen still has a big question about the Sony hacks from 'The Interview'

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Ben Affleck is an assassin in the powerful trailer for 'The Accountant'

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The Accountant WB final

Ben Affleck is taking off the Batman costume for his next movie, "The Accountant." 

Directed by Gavin O'Connor, who is best known for his dramatic movies that meld family and sports like "Miracle" and "Warrior," this one takes a sharp right into the thriller genre. "The Accountant" follows Christian Wolff (Affleck), an accountant who is a math savant but also a deadly hired killer for criminal organizations.

The powerful trailer puts the focus on Wolff's distance from others because of his genius, which has been turned into a tool for the underworld.

Watch the trailer below. The movie opens October 14.

SEE ALSO: Hollywood's biggest stars are at the Cannes Film Festival — here are the glamorous photos

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NOW WATCH: Warner Bros. just released the first trailer for its R-rated animated Batman movie

This new all-star comedy movie has a 0% rating on Rotten Tomatoes

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Though "Search Party" is filled with comedy stars like Alison Brie, Adam Pally, J.B. Smoove, and two guys from the hit show "Silicon Valley," T.J. Miller and Thomas Middleditch, critics haven't found much to laugh at in the movie. It currently has the dreaded 0% rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

On the shelf for a few years — never a good sign — the movie opens in theaters on Friday through Focus World and follows two friends (Miller and Pally) racing to rescue their other friend (Middleditch), who is stranded in Mexico after running out on his own wedding.

Though it was directed by Scot Armstrong, one of the screenwriters behind comedy hits "Old School" and "Road Trip," this one hasn't caught the same magic.

Let's see why:

SEE ALSO: 12 TV shows that have just been canceled

Don't expect "Road Trip 2."

Though "Search Party" sounds like a 30-something version of the hit 2000 comedy that followed the cross-country trek of four college friends — which was cowritten by the director of "Search Party"— it certainly doesn't have the same energy or bring any originality to the genre.

As The Hollywood Reporter points out, the movie is "an exercise in recycling similar material on a smaller budget."



There are a lot of stereotypes.

While Hollywood keeps saying that it needs to tell more progressive stories, it looks like "Search Party" didn't get the memo, as Variety points out:

"Search Party" traffics in more south-of-the-border stereotypes than could be squeezed on the Tijuana Trolley. Within the space of a minute, Nardo hijacks a pickup truck that plays "La Bamba" and "La Cucaracha" at top volume before springing down the highway on hydraulics. There's bits of business about corrupt cops and Mexican jails, gold machine guns and mountains of cocaine. The only flicker of clever self-awareness is two drug-runners discussing the finer points of Sandra Bullock's hairstyle in Alfonso Cuaron's "Gravity."



Talented actors still need material to work with.

"'Search Party' pays off on my morbid fascination," a writer on RogerEbert.com said, "proving that even if you invite a lot of talented people to the set, the result won't work if you don't give them a way to show why they're considered talented."

That seems to be the big takeaway about the movie. The talent was in the room, but they didn't have the right ideas or lines to work with.

"This is safe, hyper-conventional stuff,"Indiewire wrote of the movie's comedy — or lack of it. "Lazy enough to make you feel bad that Middleditch had to free willy for it." He's nude through a lot of the movie.

The A.V. Club puts it bluntly: "It's just not very funny."



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Here are all the Marvel movies coming out in the next 4 years

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With the opening of "Captain America: Civil War" over the weekend becoming the fifth-largest of all time at the box office, the adaptation of Marvel comic-book characters continues to be a profitable endeavor for Hollywood.

While most of that success comes from Marvel Studios at Disney, which holds the rights to "The Avengers"— among others — 20th Century Fox has found a huge box office with the release of its "X-Men" and standalone "Wolverine" movies, not to mention proving this year that even an outlandish character like Deadpool can make blockbuster money.

And though Sony is rebooting Spider-Man with the help of Disney's Marvel Cinematic Universe, the studio once upon a time did very well with the character, and hopes to do so again.

Looking forward, all of those studios have numerous anticipated releases coming soon that adapt Marvel properties.

Here's the rundown of all the Marvel movies coming out from now through 2019:

SEE ALSO: Disney announced all its movies coming in the next 4 years — here's what you have to look forward to

"X-Men: Apocalypse" introduces us to the franchise's most chilling villain yet.



Apocalypse (Oscar Isaac) is considered the first mutant, and is immortal.



We'll see how the X-Men handle him when the film opens on May 27.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

'Captain America: Civil War' takes down all newcomers to win the weekend box office

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In a turnout that surprised no one, "Captain America: Civil War" repeated for a second weekend as box office champ, earning an estimated $72.5 million, according to Exhibitor Relations.

That put the movie over the $300 million mark for its total domestic box office. It is nearing a $1 billion total worldwide after taking in $84.2 million overseas this weekend. (It's total worldwide box office is $940.8 million.)

And also passing the $800 million worldwide total this weekend is another Disney title, "The Jungle Book."

The film came in second place at the domestic box office with an estimated $17.7 million. ($828 million global gross to date.)

Disney is certainly having one heck of a year at the box office.

If you're keeping count, a Disney movie has now been number one at the US box office for the last five weeks.

In third place is the the biggest new release this weekend, "Money Monster," starring George Clooney and Julia Roberts, which took in $15 million. A number the film's studio Sony can be happy with. Though the movie has big-name stars like Clooney and Roberts, throwing a dramatic movie like this into the summer movie season that caters more to the over-30 crowd (who notoriously don't go to the movies on opening weekend), they have to be happy it earned this much on its first weekend.

Next weekend will be the first major challenge for "Civil War" as three very different titles will be going after moviegoers.

There's "Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising," which will certainly be a draw for the twentysomething demo that has been going to "Civil War.""The Angry Birds Movie" will attract the teen demo. And "The Nice Guys," starring Russell Crowe and Ryan Gosling, will draw the thirty and over crowd. 

We'll see if Cap can take down the competition for a third straight week. 

SEE ALSO: Michael Ian Black told us who are 4 of the best comedians right now

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: 5 important things you probably missed on this week's 'Game of Thrones'

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