Showing posts with label Liam Neeson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Liam Neeson. Show all posts

Thursday, July 11, 2024

Diane Kruger / ‘There’s a lot of despair and loneliness in Los Angeles’



Diane Kruger in a Giambattista Valli dress.

Diane Kruger in a Giambattista Valli dress.
INTERVIEW

Diane Kruger

‘There’s a lot of despair and loneliness in Los Angeles’

The German actress talks to EL PAÍS about her latest movie ‘Marlowe,’ moving from a small town to Paris and how her relationship with her mother has changed


RAQUEL PELÁEZ

27 October 2022


When Diane Kruger appears on the screen from her Parisian home, the voice of her four-year-old daughter Nova can be heard in the background. The actress has dedicated to Nova her first book of short stories, A Name from the Sky. At the end of the conversation, the child appears to sit on Kruger’s lap and explain in a timid voice that, during the Barcelona shoot of her mother’s last film, Marlowe, she learned how to count to 10 in Spanish.

Saturday, July 6, 2024

Liam Neeson / The senior avenger

Liam Neeson
Liam Neeson in a scene from 'In the Land of Saints and Sinners.'

Liam Neeson, the senior avenger


Liam Neeson, el vengador de la tercera edad


Since the death of his wife in 2009, the Irish actor has focused on action thrillers based on the premise “you don’t know who you’re messing with”, such as his latest release: ‘In the Land of Saints and Sinners’

Gregorio Belinchón
Madrid, 3 July 2024

In 2007, Liam Neeson received a curious proposal, an action script co-written by Luc Besson that Jeff Bridges had rejected. After a first reading, it sounded like a “straight to DVD” movie. But the project involved learning karate and moving to Paris for four months, and Neeson fancied both. The fact that Taken became a worldwide success and that, after the death of his wife in 2009, Neeson stopped taking dramatic parts to focus on high-action roles are two twists of fate that no one could have foreseen.

Liam Neeson joined by lifelong friends in new crime thriller 'In the Land of Saints and Sinners'

 

Liam Neeson

Liam Neeson joined by lifelong friends in new crime thriller 'In the Land of Saints and Sinners'

GEORGE PENNACCHIO
24 March 2024

HOLLYWOOD -- Liam Neeson is heading back to the box office in a tough new role. He leads the cast of a crime thriller that takes us to Ireland. It's called "In the Land of Saints and Sinners."

Neeson plays an ex-assassin who decides to use his gun again when some IRA terrorists come to his coastal Irish town.

"It was a good script. It had a, you know, a few levels to it. It wasn't just pure sort of violence or anything," said Neeson.

Neeson joked that his character's bluntness and dark humor may just be rooted in the Irish heritage.

"I would like to think it is, you know? However, I'm sure the Scots and the Welsh would disagree with me," laughed Neeson. "But I'd like to think it's Irish."

For Neeson, part of the fun of making this movie was working with old friends.

"I know! Ciaran (Hinds) is the brother I never had. We've known each other for 50 years. Colm Meaney, I've known for 40 years. So that was lovely," said Neeson. "Generally speaking, I think they're in for a good, a good evening's entertainment. It's not a movie that's three, three and a half hours long. God knows these directors! It's, you know, a hundred minutes. Perfect length, you know, to sit with your bag of popcorn and have a good time."

"In The Land of Saints & Sinners" is rated R for violence and language. It'll be in theaters on March 29.


ABC 7



DE OTROS MUNDOS
Liam Neeson / Lista de bajas
Liam Neeson / El viudo que homenajea a su esposa en cada película desde hace 13 años
Liam Neeson / “Encontrar una razón para salir de la cama cada mañana es un regalo”
Liam Neeson, el vengador de la tercera edad

DRAGON

Jaume Collet-Serra, top of the US box office once more

The 50 best films of 2018 in the UK / No 8 / Widows
Michelle Rodriguez Says Liam Neeson Can’t Be Racist Because of the Way He Kissed Viola Davis in ‘Widows

The Hard Luck and Beautiful Life of Liam Neeson
Liam Neeson / On iconic roles, Irish pride, and the influence of Ian Paisley
Liam Neeson / ‘Finding a reason to get out of bed every morning is a gift’

Liam Neeson joined by lifelong friends in new crime thriller 'In the Land of Saints and Sinners'

Liam Neeson / The senior avenger






Liam Neeson / ‘Finding a reason to get out of bed every morning is a gift’




Liam Neeson, in an image provided by the San Sebastián Film Festival, where 'Marlowe' was screened.Photo: JORGE FUEMBUENA



Liam Neeson: ‘Finding a reason to get out of bed every morning is a gift’

The Irish actor — who stars in the recently-released film ‘Marlowe’ — will turn 71 this summer, but he’s already lived the lives of many men. He’s been a talented stage actor, a sex symbol, a brooding hero, a box office success, a survivor of tragedy… and he’s still going strong



Juan Sanguino
San Sebastian, 14 May 2023

On many occasions, Liam Neeson, 70, has been compared to trees.

Standing at over 6 ft 3 with a solid build, the Irish actor has been referred to as an “oak tree” by journalists, while a theater critic once described him as a “sequoia of sex.” And, in 2017, he even played a yew tree in the film A Monster Calls.

Liam Neeson / On iconic roles, Irish pride, and the influence of Ian Paisley



Liam Neeson: on iconic roles, Irish pride, and the influence of Ian Paisley...

Ahead of receiving an industry award at the IFTAs, Liam Neeson on the journey that saw him play Michael Collins, a Jedi and God

Patrick Freyne

Saturday 9 April 2016


Liam Neeson – aka Michael Collins, a Jedi, Oskar Schindler, God (in the sitcom Rev), an otherworldly lion deity, a Batman villain, the avenging fury of the Taken films, Hannibal from The A-Team – is unafraid of playing icons.

The Hard Luck and Beautiful Life of Liam Neeson

 

Liam Neeson


The Hard Luck and Beautiful Life of Liam Neeson

Actor, ass-kicker, widower, philosophizer, big man, funny man, capable drinker of pinot noir: may we introduce to you, the man you've known for all these years

Tom Chiarella

15 February 2011

Originally published in the March issue

Liam Neeson and I last spoke a week before I wrote this sentence. At that time, I asked him what he remembered about the interview I'd done with him at a restaurant in New York almost three weeks before that. He said, "I remember you told me that story about your accident, and that was pretty hard for you. I remember that you made me draw that picture of my house, and I remember that we talked about Natasha. I started to worry: Why would I tell him that? Why did I speak about the hospital? And then I thought, No, he's a man. This is not some newspaper story. So I wasn't sorry. Except about your accident. That was bloody awful."

Tuesday, June 29, 2021

Michelle Rodriguez Says Liam Neeson Can’t Be Racist Because of the Way He Kissed Viola Davis in ‘Widows’

Michelle Rodriguez




Michelle Rodriguez Says Liam Neeson Can’t Be Racist Because of the Way He Kissed Viola Davis in ‘Widows’


DAVE MCNARY
FEBRUARY 7, 2019 10:08AM PT

Michelle Rodriguez attested that her “Widows” co-star Liam Neeson is not a racist because of how he kissed Viola Davis during the movie.

The actress came to Neeson’s defense Wednesday night at the amfAR gala in the wake of Neeson’s racially charged comments that he wanted to kill a “black bastard” to avenge a friend who had been raped. The actor later apologized and contended that his comments were taken out of context.

“It’s all f—in’ bulls—. Liam Neeson is not a racist,” Rodriguez told Vanity Fair at the New York event. “Dude, have you watched ‘Widows’? His tongue was so far down Viola Davis’s throat. You can’t call him a racist ever. Racists don’t make out with the race that they hate, especially in the way he does with his tongue — so deep down her throat. I don’t care how good of an actor you are. It’s all bulls—. Ignore it. He’s not a racist. He’s a loving man. It’s all lies.”

Davis and Rodriguez co-star in “Widows,” a thriller that sees the women attempt a heist in order to pay back a crime boss after their criminal husbands are killed. Neeson played the husband of Davis’ character.

Lionsgate scrubbed Tuesday night’s red carpet for the New York City premiere of Neeson’s upcoming film “Cold Pursuit” in the wake of the controversy. The film opens on Friday with Neeson portraying a Colorado snow-plower seeking revenge when his son is murdered.



Thursday, January 3, 2019

The 50 best films of 2018 in the UK / No 8 / Widows


The 50 best films of 2018 in the UK: No 8 – Widows

Steve McQueen’s heist drama is starry, sleek and majestically composed, with an emotional depth that sets it apart

Catherine Shoard
Wednesday 12 December 2018


S
teve McQueen’s previous film, 12 Years a Slave, won the best picture Oscar (plus supporting actress and adapted screenplay), the best picture Bafta (plus best actor), the Golden Globe for best drama and innumerable other prizes, including, perhaps most significantly, best director at the inaugural (and final) Guardian film awards.

It performed surprisingly well at the box office, too, taking $56m in the US despite scenes of a wildly upsetting nature, and changing the ambition, scope and effect of cinema for ever. (McQueen was, amazingly the first black director whose film won the top gong.) It also – not a little thing, this – affected many generations’ perception of the reality of slavery and its legacy for modern-day race relations.
Last week, McQueen’s follow-up failed to bag even a single Golden Globe nomination. It has also underperformed at the box office, so far taking less worldwide than Slave made in the States alone.
Why? On paper at least, Widows is an eminently commercial prospect: a whopping glossy thriller, with big stars (Viola Davis, Michelle Rodriguez, Liam Neeson, Colin Farrell), dazzling explosions, babes in vests firing off rounds of ammo and some flashy villainous business from Get Out’s Daniel Kaluuya.
It has a top – and topical – plot about a bunch of inexperienced women planning a big-bucks heist in Chicago to get heavies off their back, the genius of their plan being that their gender renders them all but invisible.
But for something so apparently mainstream it is also leftfield. I’m not sure what I was expecting Britain’s most talented director to do next, but it probably wasn’t to update a Lynda La Plante ITV big-hair mini-series from the mid 80s. It’s less audacious and ambitious than McQueen’s predecessor; essentially, it’s a genre piece, albeit one with the sort of sleekness and style you’d associate with a winner of the Turner prize.
What makes it great is its sombreness. This is a film that, despite some lighter touches, is steeped in fatalism and even grief. It’s reluctant to offer the kind of catharsis most action flicks indulge in – or even that audiences were permitted in the final scenes of Slave. It is majestically composed and spare; as much a meditation on the mourning process as a sisters-are-doin’-it-for-themselves slamdunk.
This is also, perhaps, what means it has proved resistible for audiences eager for either a sugar-rush brain-twister or a meaty piece of arthouse. It’s a pity: Widows is wonderful. Yes, it’s not McQueen’s best. But few films ever could be.




Thursday, March 6, 2014

Jaume Collet-Serra, top of the US box office once more

 

Julianne Moore and Liam Neeson in Jaume Collet-Serra's 'Non-Stop'.
Julianne Moore and Liam Neeson in Jaume Collet-Serra's 'Non-Stop'.

Jaume Collet-Serra, top of the US box office once more

Spanish director’s ‘Non-Stop’ repeats success of 2011’s ‘Unknown’ Both thrillers star actor Liam Neeson


Gregorio Belinchón

Madrid, 6 March 2014


Spanish director Jaume Collet-Serra has reached the number-one spot in the US box office for the second time in his career, once again with actor Liam Neeson, with new thriller Non-Stop.

The film, which is released in Spain on March 21, took in $28.8 million (20 million euros), according to data from Rentrak Spain. It had a screen average of over $9,300, beating out the movie that experts had expected to dominate the box office in Oscar week, Son of God, a cut-down version for movie theaters of a miniseries about the Bible broadcast on the History Channel. That took $25.6 million, despite having been released on more screens (3,260) than Collet-Serra’s movie (3,090).

The 50-million-dollar production is set on an international flight where a mysterious passenger threatens to kill a person every 20 minutes if they do not receive $150 million. Neeson, who starred in Collet-Serra’s previous number-one movie Unknown in 2011, stars as a federal air marshal responsible for security on the plane. Appearing alongside him are Julianne Moore and, in only her second film, Mexican-Kenyan star Lupita Nyong’o, who won the award for Best Supporting Actress at Sunday’s Oscars for her performance in 12 Years a Slave.

EL PAÍS



DE OTROS MUNDOS
Liam Neeson / Lista de bajas
Liam Neeson / El viudo que homenajea a su esposa en cada película desde hace 13 años
Liam Neeson / “Encontrar una razón para salir de la cama cada mañana es un regalo”
Liam Neeson, el vengador de la tercera edad

DRAGON

Jaume Collet-Serra, top of the US box office once more

The 50 best films of 2018 in the UK / No 8 / Widows
Michelle Rodriguez Says Liam Neeson Can’t Be Racist Because of the Way He Kissed Viola Davis in ‘Widows

The Hard Luck and Beautiful Life of Liam Neeson
Liam Neeson / On iconic roles, Irish pride, and the influence of Ian Paisley
Liam Neeson / ‘Finding a reason to get out of bed every morning is a gift’

Liam Neeson joined by lifelong friends in new crime thriller 'In the Land of Saints and Sinners'

Liam Neeson / The senior avenger