Posts with tag ben whishaw
Posted Jun 23rd 2008 10:02PM by Kim Voynar
Filed under: Classics, Drama, Casting, Fandom, Movie Marketing, Miramax, Cinematical Indie
One of my favorite classic novels, Evelyn Waugh's Brideshead Revisited, is coming your way in a new adaptation starring what looks to be a perfectly suited cast. Matthew Goode, (Match Point, The Lookout) stars as Charles Ryder, the tale's protagonist and narrator, who befriends the wealthy Sebastian Flyte (Ben Whishaw). When Sebastian brings Charles for a visit to his family's estate, Brideshead Castle, Charles meets Sebastian's sister, Lady Julia Flyte (Hayley Atwell, Cassandra's Dream).
Emma Thompson plays Lady Marchmain, Sebastian and Julia's aristocratic mother, a Roman Catholic for whom her husband, Lord Marchmain, converted his faith from Anglican; in the book, at least, Catholicism is an influence on both the lives and conversations of the characters, especially Lady Marchmain, who uses the duel thumbscrews of guilt and manipulation to control others ... this is a character Thompson can really sink her teeth into, and I look forward to seeing her take on the role.
Continue reading Revisiting 'Brideshead Revisited'
Posted Jan 30th 2008 6:32PM by Kim Voynar
Filed under: Casting, Movie Marketing, Cinematical Indie

I loved
Tom Tykwer's
Perfurme: The Story of a Murderer, starring
Ben Whishaw as a sociopathic serial killer. Whishaw's performance in that film -- in which he had very little dialog and had to convey almost everything through facial expression and body language -- was just outstanding. In poking around IMDb a bit while writing some Sundance reviews, I found out that Whishaw (most recently seen in Todd Hayne's
I'm Not There) has three new projects lined up, and I'm excited about all of them.
First up is
The Restraint of Beasts (currently in post-prod), an adaptation of Magnus Mills's first novel. The film is being directed by Polish director
Pawel Pawlikowski, whose film
My Summer of Love back in 2004 first brought
Emily Blunt to notice.The darkly comedic story is about an unnamed supervisor (presumably Whishaw) working with two Scottish high-tensile fence builders in the countryside and "accidentally" killing people along the way by day and hitting the local pub at night. I have the book on reserve to read before the film comes out -- I like Mills's work but I've not read this one yet. If this film does well, perhaps it will be the beginning of a series of adaptations of Mills's books.
Continue reading Perfume's Ben Whishaw Branches Out from Murder
Posted Nov 24th 2007 9:32AM by Jeffrey M. Anderson
Filed under: Music & Musicals, New Releases, Theatrical Reviews, Critical Thought, New in Theaters, The Weinstein Co., Oscar Watch

Todd Haynes is one of the most intelligent filmmakers our country has to offer. The question remains, however, whether his intelligence allows for any emotion to come through in his films. I think it does, but it's not an obvious, worn-on-your-sleeve type of emotion; it's the type that takes a little self-analysis to discover. For example, his great film Safe (1995), which was voted the best film of the decade in the Village Voice poll of 1999, left me feeling queasy and unpleasant, and my initial reaction was to blame the film for it. But those were precisely the types of emotions I was supposed to be feeling after seeing a story about a sick woman. Haynes deliberately designed the film with a kind of emptiness -- and refused to answer the question as to whether or not his heroine was actually sick, and when the lead character joins the "cult" in the film's final stretch, Haynes does not invite us to go with her, so we're left in the lurch, so to speak.
Jean-Luc Godard, another intelligent filmmaker, once said that the best way to critique films was to make one. Haynes did precisely this with Far from Heaven (2002), which more or less used a Douglas Sirk framework to discuss Sirk's films as well as a more modern look at racism and homophobia. (The critics' group I am a member of, the San Francisco Film Critics Circle, gave our 2002 Best Director award to Haynes.) Now Haynes does it again with his exceptional new I'm Not There, a deconstruction of the biopic as well as a fascinating look at the cult of celebrity, and, on a deeper level, the celebrity as a godlike being with answers to all our questions. Whereas most biopics are made solely for the purpose of providing a rich centerpiece role (and, hopefully, an Oscar) for an ambitious actor, Haynes deliberately subverts this by casting seven different actors -- of all different ages, races and even sexes -- to play Bob Dylan.
Continue reading Review: I'm Not There - Jeffrey's Take
Posted Apr 4th 2007 5:02PM by Christopher Campbell
Filed under: Drama, Independent, Romance, Casting, Cinematical Indie

You probably aren't familiar with him just yet, but
Ben Whishaw is an actor worth taking note of. He was
nominated recently for the BAFTA Rising Star award (
Eva Green won it), mostly for his starring role in
Perfume: The Story of a Murderer, which was one of my favorite films of last year. He's also been racking up roles in which he plays famous people (one day he could even catch up to
Val Kilmer and
Gary Oldman). Last year he was
Keith Richards in
Stoned, this year he
can be seen as one of many
Bob Dylans in
I'm Not There and now he's
in negotiations to portray the poet
John Keats in
Jane Campion's Bright Star.
The period romance takes place in the early 19th century, focusing on Keats' romance with Fanny Brawne, who has
already been cast with Australian actress
Abbie Cornish (who is
rumored to also be in talks for the next Bond film.) The couple's romance only lasted a couple years before Keats' health deteriorated due to his suffering from tuberculosis. He died a year after they separated, at the age of 25. As much as we could do without another tragic, tear-jerking romance film, with Campion behind the camera this could be one of the better ones. And in addition to further boosting the careers of both Whishaw and Cornish, it could, as many Campion films are good for, garner some acting nominations for the pair as well.
Next up for Whishaw is a new adaptation of
Evelyn Waugh's Brideshead Revisited.
Posted Feb 12th 2007 11:02AM by Monika Bartyzel
Filed under: Comedy, Drama, Foreign Language, Independent, Casting

Casting bites for this past weekend:
- Earlier this month, Erik brought news of Lindsay Lohan backing out of her role in the upcoming Oscar Wilde adaptation, A Woman of No Importance. Now, according to a slew of sources, Lohan has been replaced with none other than Jessica Biel. A few years ago this might have seen like a strange replacement, when La Lindsay wasn't boozing it up, and Biel was more known for screams and underwear dancing. However, after a surprising stint in The Illusionist, this could very well be a blessing for Importance. At the very least, it should have much less production drama and gossip.
- I'm sorry fans of the original miniseries, but Brideshead Revisited is getting definitely getting made, and the film has found its leading men. As I previously reported, Julian Jarrold was looking to bring the Evelyn Waugh novel to the big screen. Now The Hollywood Reporter has shared the stars of the film -- Matthew Goode (Heck from Imagine Me & You) and Ben Whishaw (Stoned, Perfume: The Story of a Murderer). Goode will be Charles Ryder (previously played by Jeremy Irons), and Whishaw will be Sebastian Flyte (previously played by Anthony Andrews).
- A whole slew of names and roles have been added to the international film, Adam Resurrected. In December, we brought you news of the upcoming film, which had already signed Jeff Goldblum in the lead, and Willem Dafoe as a co-star (his role has since been released -- that of a concentration camp commandant). German actress Veronica Ferres, who has been added to the cast, says of the film: "There have been many movies about the Holocaust, but this is the first one where Americans, Israelis and Germans have worked together." And she's right -- the rest of the international cast include: Hana Laszlo, Evgenia Dudina, Joachim Król, Juliane Köhler, Ayelet Zurer and Moritz Bliebtreu from Run Lola Run.
Posted Jul 31st 2006 2:32PM by Martha Fischer
Filed under: Drama, Independent, Casting, Newsstand, Cinematical Indie

According to
Screen Daily,
Todd Haynes is finally finished casting
I'm Not There, his weird-ass Bob Dylan biopic. The movie, which is actually
going into production on this very day in the rather pedestrian location of Montreal (it was originally reported that the shoot would
take place in Romania), has gained attention because a rotating cast will be playing Dylan, and
names from Oprah Winfrey to
Michelle Williams have been bandied about as possible Bobs. Disappointingly, it turns out that only a handful of the slew of names already connected to the film will actually play Dylan (a different actor will represent each "different period or artistic phase of his life"):
Christian Bale,
Richard Gere,
Heath Ledger,
Cate Blanchett and
Ben Whishaw will be joined by young African-American actor
Marcus Carl Franklin in the role -- and that's it. While
David Cross,
Charlotte Gainsbourg,
Bruce Greenwood,
Julianne Moore and
Michelle Williams ARE in the film, they're sadly not going to get to play Dylan. Which, honestly, totally sucks. I'd give anything to see David Cross singing
Lay Lady Lay.
Posted Feb 20th 2006 3:04PM by Martha Fischer
Filed under: Drama, Thrillers, Movie Marketing

We haven't heard much about
Tom Tykwer's
Perfume: The Story of a Murderer since the cast was
announced last March. Starring
Dustin Hoffman,
Alan
Rickman, and
Ben Whishaw, the film is an adaptation of a German
novel of the same name that has been "hailed as one of the most influential works of German literature in the past
two decades." The novel tells the unendingly bizarre story of an 18th century man (Jean-Baptiste Grenouille, played
by Whishaw) who has remarkably sensitive sense of smell but lacks any discernible personal scent. His career as a
perfume artist "take a dark turn" when he becomes obsessed with bottling the scent of "a young
virgin." I don't want to spoil anything here, but what with the title and everything, I'm a little worried about
the virgin's lifespan.
Out of nowhere, a German teaser for the film has emerged, and it's creepy as hell.
Something about the way she pauses before screaming makes it much, much scarier than the normal shrieking any woman
would do when she finds she's being sniffed by a random guy she didn't even know was there. Yikes.
The movie
opens in Germany in September and in other European territories in the late fall and early winter. There is currently no
US distributor.
[via
AICN]