Tag Archives: Steven Soderbergh

Lucy Liu, Family Chased by Ghost

As a Halloween deal with, Neon launched a trailer for Steven Soderbergh’s upcoming horror movie Presence.

The film, set to hit theaters on Jan. 24, 2025, is a couple of household who strikes into a brand new home after which notices an unnerving presence within the dwelling. To make it much more unsettling, the movie is shot from the viewpoint of the ghost, and the digicam strikes all through the home as if the viewer is following the household.

The solid’s ensemble consists of Lucy Liu, Chris Sullivan, Eddy Maday, Callina Liang and Julia Fox. It’s produced by Julie M. Anderson and Ken Meyers and David Koepp is the screenwriter, who additionally labored with Soderbergh on Kimi.

PRESENCE - Official Trailer - In Theaters January

In his overview, The Hollywood Reporter’s David Rooney, praised the movie’s casting, saying it “couldn’t be higher” and that Liu is “terrific” within the position of Rebekah “permitting her to indicate some laborious edges however by no means making her such a monster that the wedding is questionable or stopping us from feeling for her when she suffers a crushing blow.”

Rooney continued to applaud the horror movie for taking dangers, “That is an enormously satisfying look ahead to haunted home film followers, favoring sustained nervousness over large scares and sensible results over digital trickery,” he wrote. “The diploma to which Soderbergh harnesses the mesmerizing energy of visible storytelling can’t be overstated.”

Neon acquired the worldwide rights to Presence quickly after it premiered on the Sundance Movie Pageant earlier this yr.

Steven Soderbergh on Jaws Book, Genre Films and Streaming-Era Success

Steven Soderbergh has opened up a few big guide on Jaws, the basic Steven Spielberg thriller he first noticed in 1975, that he has been engaged on for almost 15 years.

“I’ve been engaged on this factor [the book] that’s ostensibly about directing and makes use of as its backbone an evaluation of the making of Jaws day-to-day,” Soderbergh revealed throughout an off-the-cuff dialog on the Toronto Movie Pageant on Thursday.

Don’t count on his how-to Jaws tome to be bought at airports, nevertheless.

“This guide will not be for common consumption. That is for people who find themselves thinking about movies, both as moviegoers or [who] need to do that job. As a result of in the event you’re going to do that job, it’s essential perceive the job. That is the job,” Soderbergh stated of his long-gestating ardour mission.

Do count on greater than a scene-by-scene evaluation of Jaws: “I’m going to stroll you thru the expertise of constructing it as a leaping off level to speak about downside fixing and course of.”

The snag is that the guide isn’t executed and should by no means be accomplished, the Oscar-winning director warned. Writing about Jaws will get Soderbergh again to the primary film that had him considering he may grow to be a Hollywood director.

He recalled seeing Jaws at a cinema in St. Petersburg, Florida, at 12 years of age and rising again into the actual world with two questions: “What does directed by imply? And who’s Steven Spielberg?”

Fortunately, Soderbergh picked up The Jaws Log, a guide by Carl Gottlieb concerning the motion thriller that he pored over for classes on problem-solve on a movie set. “I carried this guide round with me, it was just like the Bible. I wore out many copies,” he recounted.

And when Soderbergh bought to highschool and round filmmaking gear, he started making brief movies. The director was talking at TIFF as his newest movie, the spooky ghost story Presence, starring Lucy Liu, Chris Sullivan and newcomer Callina Liang, is about to obtain a global premiere.

He recalled his success with Intercourse, Lies and Videotape in 1989 altering indie cinema as a result of Soderbergh, together with fellow administrators like Spike Lee and Jim Jarmusch, had the movie trade instantly seeing greenback indicators from embracing signature auteur movies after an early excessive level throughout the Nineteen Seventies.

“It simply felt like folks had been able to see one thing made by a person once more after having taken a breather. They needed to see a signature. They needed to really feel like an actual individual was speaking to them,” Soderbergh argued.

The place are these signature auteur movies in the present day? “This overlay of business filmmaking and a signature directorial presence these days, to be sincere, that’s most obvious in horror movies,” Soderbergh stated. He first screened Presence at Sundance earlier this 12 months, some 35 years after the debut of Intercourse, Lies and Videotape in Park Metropolis.

Soderbergh then went on to direct an eclectic assortment of flicks like Visitors, Erin Brockovich, Contagion, Magic Mike and Behind the Candelabra. Presence follows a household who strikes into a brand new dwelling solely to acknowledge an unsettling presence in the home. The haunted home chiller is pushed to the place the household seems getting ready to falling aside.

Soderbergh instructed the TIFF viewers that horror movies are an ideal supply car for administrators and even argued each movie he has executed since Che, his epic two-part biopic of the Argentinian physician who turned world revolutionary, had been a style movie.

“I simply really feel all people wins in the event you’re respectful of the pillars of what that style is. You may load this factor up with something you’re thinking about,” Soderbergh defined. The story of Presence was filmed solely in a single setting and from the visible point-of-view of the ghost, with the digital camera shifting all through the home because the apparition.

That has Soderbergh’s subjective digital camera reaching into each nook of the household’s outdated two-story home in a leafy suburb, passing rapidly over some areas and getting in shut for longer appears to be like at others. “It’s a easy film concept. You’re in a point-of-view and also you’re in a home and you realize you’re in a point-of view, however you don’t know who’s,” he insisted.

Soderbergh stated Presence is a few household, to make certain, however the style factor “is the Malicious program to indicate a household in a dire circumstance made extra intense as a result of they don’t know they’re in hassle.” Presence is about for a launch by Neon.

Soderbergh additionally addressed the way forward for film stars in a streaming period, the place TV collection’ might not want A-listers to hold them, however theatrical releases do. “For motion pictures to work, they want film stars. It’s nice if the story is large enough to drag folks in by itself, however that’s onerous, and more and more tougher to do,” he argued.

A altering enterprise mannequin for Hollywood has made it harder to measure the value of film stars. “It’s gotten harder to quantify what’s bringing folks to a selected movie, and what makes a selected movie successful,” Soderbergh noticed.

Which makes it all of the extra important that administrators do good work from nice scripts. “On the finish of the day, the one resolve is sweet shit. You bought to make good shit. You’ve bought to give attention to that,” Soderbergh stated.

Kate Winslet to Star in ‘The Spot’ Series on Hulu

Kate Winslet is about to star in The Spot, a drama from screenwriter Ed Solomon and A24 ordered straight to collection by Hulu.

The present, additionally from twentieth Tv, facilities on a profitable surgeon and her schoolteacher husband beginning to suspect she could also be accountable for a kid’s hit-and-run dying. Their quest for reality solely spirals into an internet of mounting suspicion and darkish secrets and techniques, testing their resolve and their relationship as they confront the potential for hidden guilt and betrayal.

Solomon created, wrote and can showrun The Spot, whereas additionally government producing together with Winslet and her Juggle Productions banner and A24. Winslet, finest often called a film actor since breaking out in Peter Jackson’s Heavenly Creatures in 1994, has earned two Emmys for Mildred Pierce and Mare of Easttown.

She additionally starred alongside Leonardo DiCaprio in Titanic and has different film credit like Everlasting Sunshine of the Spotless Thoughts, Revolutionary Highway, Little Kids, Steve Jobs and an Oscar-winning efficiency in The Reader.

Solomon’s credit embrace Males in Black, the Now You See Me film franchise and the Mosaic TV collection. He additionally wrote the script for the movie No Sudden Transfer for director Soderbergh and producer Casey Silver, which debuted at Tribeca and starred Don Cheadle, Benicio Del Toro, Ray Liotta, Brendan Fraser, Kieran Kulkin and Matt Damon.

Solomon’s most up-to-date launch, Full Circle, is a six-hour restricted collection additionally directed by Soderbergh and starring Claire Danes, Zazie Beetz, Dennis Quaid and Timothy Olyphant.

Winslet is represented by CAA and United Brokers within the U.Ok. Solomon is repped by CAA.  

Karlovy Vary Curators  Hollywood’s “Kafkaesque” Cinema

In the case of celebrated Czech author Franz Kafka, filmmakers the world over have lengthy been impressed to both adapt his work outright or make films which are decidedly “Kafkaesque,” full of the form of angst, alienation and absurdity the made the novelist probably the most distinguished and distinctive figures in twentieth century literature.

Now, a century after his demise, Prague-born Kafka would be the topic of a movie retrospective on the Karlovy Differ Worldwide Movie Pageant, which can embrace titles from Orson Welles, Martin Scorsese, Federico Fellini and Steven Soderbergh. “It’s wonderful the best way this author [Kafka] has been capable of affect not solely literature, however cinema for thus a few years,” Lorenzo Esposito, co-curator of the retrospective together with Karlovy Differ creative director Karel Och, tells The Hollywood Reporter.

The retrospective will embrace such classics as Orson Welles’s The Trial (1962), which forged Anthony Perkins because the bewildered workplace bureaucrat Josef Ok.Martin; Scorsese’s Kafkaesque New York dramedy After Hours (1985); Fellini’s Intervista (Interview); Soderbergh’s Kafka (1991) and its 2021 re-edit Mr. Kneff — each starring Jeremy Irons as a set-upon insurance coverage man and author — alongside lesser-known diversifications like Jan Němec’s Metamorphosis, a German TV film.

For Esposito, what set Kafka aside was a singular understanding of the human situation and the way difficult — and absurd — dwelling within the trendy world could be. “In the long run, what is actually disturbing about Kafka, and what brings him so near all of us, shouldn’t be solely that he clearly understood the political and financial construction of the world we reside in, however he understood additionally our powerlessness to alter it,” he argues.

Karel Och talked concerning the Kafka retrospective from his workplace in Prague inside footsteps of the place the nice Czech author lived and labored: “I’m sitting right here 200 meters from the place Kafka was born and 400 meters from the place he wrote his most well-known books. So the competition is a lot related to the place Kafka was dwelling, strolling round, writing, spending time together with his household, together with his pals. So, if we don’t do it, who else?” Och explains.

The KVIFF retrospective, entitled The Want to Be a Pink Indian: Kafka and Cinema, is split into movie diversifications and flicks influenced by Kafka’s literary works. The road between adapting a Kafka work by making a film out of it, and taking parts from a narrative to craft your personal film, is thinner than the Karlovy Differ audiences may count on.

Esposito factors to one of many KVIFF sidebar picks, Fellini’s Intervista, which has typically been interpreted as an adaptation of Kafka’s Amerika novel, revealed in 1927. Not so, he provides, because the Italian auteur had in reality been at Rome’s Cinecitta Studios making ready to adapt Kafka’s literary work, solely to show the movie right into a surreal mixture of documentary, autobiography and a movie inside a movie after changing into the topic of a movie the place a Japanese TV crew interviewed Fellini about his life and flicks whereas on set.

One other retrospective title, L’Udienza (The Viewers), a 1971 movie by director Marco Ferreri, had originated as an adaptation of Kafka’s 1926 novel The Fort, a few man battling towards soul-crushing forms. That’s till the Italian director realized he must pay to adapt the basic novel. “He [Ferreri] believed there weren’t any rights holders,” Esposito recounts, which led to the plot of the film being modified to grow to be the story of a younger man with the loopy concept to go to Rome to satisfy the Pope.

In one other occasion of “based mostly on” changing into “impressed by,” Esposito recalled David Lynch as soon as turning Kafka’s touchstone novella The Metamorphosis the story of a person who wakes as much as discover himself became an enormous cockroach – right into a screenplay, solely to determine to not make the movie “as a result of he stated the ebook was too good to make a movie.”

However Lynch’s respect for Kafka’s literary work prolonged to the enduring TV sequence Twin Peaks, together with an episodic scene set within the workplace of FBI director Gordon Cole, performed by sequence co-creator Lynch, the place a portrait of Kafka is clearly seen framed and positioned on the wall.

The Karlovy Differ retrospective is timed for the a centesimal anniversary of Kafka’s demise in June 1924. Soderbergh will probably be in Karlovy Differ to introduce his two variations of Kafka, says Och: “Two completely different edits of the identical materials shot in Prague within the early Nineties.”

It’s solely owing to his good friend Max Brod, who defied Kafka’s deathbed request to burn his literary works, that the world has identified nice writing like The Trial, The Fort and the quick story The Metamorphosis, as supply materials for films. Ochs argues Kafka’s literary works and the films they impressed between 1954 and 2017 converse volumes about our personal turbulent occasions.

“If you concentrate on the fashion of Franz Kafka’s writing, and the best way he depicts the connection between folks and the best way he perceived actuality round him and thru his writing, it’s timeless,” he says. “But it surely feels very correct in comparison with our occasions due to the confusion and the truth that occasions appear to be a bit extra aggressive than they was. Kafka was very delicate, and in case you are delicate these days, your sensitivity will get attacked from so many locations and parts. So it’s form of violent, and the truth that he handled it by way of his phrases is fascinating and really, very trendy.”

Provides Esposito: “[Kafka] merely speaks about one thing that impacts us on a regular basis, about happiness and unhappiness and we will all perceive this, particularly these days, throughout these very violent and tragic days we live by way of, with wars and lots of demise.”