Tag Archives: Comer

Hugh Jackman, Jodie Comer Starring in ‘The Death of Robin Hood’ – Variety

  1. Hugh Jackman, Jodie Comer Starring in ‘The Death of Robin Hood’ Variety
  2. Hugh Jackman & Jodie Comer To Star In Robin Hood Reimagining ‘The Death Of Robin Hood’ For ‘A Quiet Place: Day One’ Director Michael Sarnoski — Cannes Market Hot Project Deadline
  3. Wolverine Star Hugh Jackman Will Play a Battle-Worn Robin Hood Grappling With His Life of Crime in New Movie IGN
  4. Hugh Jackman and Jodie Comer Cast in ROBIN HOOD Reimagining BroadwayWorld
  5. Hugh Jackman & Jodie Comer to Headline The Death of Robin Hood Movie Yahoo Entertainment

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‘The Bikeriders’ Trailer: Austin Butler, Tom Hardy and Jodie Comer Get Caught Up in a Motorcycle Gang War – Variety

  1. ‘The Bikeriders’ Trailer: Austin Butler, Tom Hardy and Jodie Comer Get Caught Up in a Motorcycle Gang War Variety
  2. ‘The Bikeriders’ Trailer Teases ‘Sons Of Anarchy’ Vibe With Tom Hardy And Austin Butler Outkick
  3. ‘The Bikeriders’ Trailer: Austin Butler Revs His Engine in Jeff Nichols’ Motorcycle Gang Drama IndieWire
  4. Telluride Review: Jeff Nichols’ The Bikeriders is a Muddled Chronicle of the Midwest’s Most Clean-Cut Biker Gang The Film Stage
  5. Austin Butler and Tom Hardy kick ass in new ‘The Bikeriders’ trailer Entertainment Weekly News
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Comer Releases Third Bank Memo Detailing Payments to the Bidens from Russia, Kazakhstan, and Ukraine – United States House Committee on Oversight and Accountability – House Committee on Oversight and Reform |

  1. Comer Releases Third Bank Memo Detailing Payments to the Bidens from Russia, Kazakhstan, and Ukraine – United States House Committee on Oversight and Accountability House Committee on Oversight and Reform |
  2. House GOP release bank records on Hunter Biden payments from Russian, Kazakh oligarchs, total clears $20M Fox News
  3. Biden Family Received Millions from Foreign Oligarchs Who Had Dinners with Then-VP Joe Biden National Review
  4. Hunter Biden-linked foreign haul at $20M with Russia, Ukraine, Kazakh bank transfers, Comer says New York Post
  5. More Biden Family Bank Records Reveal Suspicious Wires, James Comer Says Newsweek

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Comer jokes special counsel ‘plagiarized’ notes on Biden but put in Trump’s name – The Hill

  1. Comer jokes special counsel ‘plagiarized’ notes on Biden but put in Trump’s name The Hill
  2. Hunter Biden sold ‘illusion of access’ to his father, former business partner tells Congress 6abc Philadelphia
  3. Hunter Biden told Archer that Chinese chairman loved him for his ‘last name,’ posse of ‘godlike Aryan men’ Fox News
  4. Hunter’s ex-business partner, Devon Archer, could blow the lid off Joe Biden’s phony claims of innocence Fox News
  5. Hunter Biden’s partner testifies: Congress must not skip one crucial question Fox News
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New York air quality forces Jodie Comer to end Broadway performance after 10 minutes – The Independent

  1. New York air quality forces Jodie Comer to end Broadway performance after 10 minutes The Independent
  2. Jodie Comer Leaves ‘Prima Facie’ Broadway Performance After 10 Minutes, Says She ‘Can’t Breathe’ Due to NYC Air Crisis Variety
  3. Northeast Haze: Yankees, Phillies Postpone Games And Actress Abruptly Exits Broadway Play Due To Dense Wildfire Smoke Forbes
  4. Jodie Comer Leaves Broadway Show Because of Air Quality Concerns The New York Times
  5. Jodie Comer stops stage performance because of New York air: ‘I can’t breathe’ The Guardian
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Jodie Comer Leaves ‘Prima Facie’ Broadway Performance After 10 Minutes, Says She ‘Can’t Breathe’ Due to NYC Air Crisis – Variety

  1. Jodie Comer Leaves ‘Prima Facie’ Broadway Performance After 10 Minutes, Says She ‘Can’t Breathe’ Due to NYC Air Crisis Variety
  2. Jodie Comer Halts ‘Prima Facie’ Broadway Matinee Due To Bad NYC Air; Understudy Set To Fill In Deadline
  3. Jodie Comer stops stage performance because of New York air: ‘I can’t breathe’ The Guardian
  4. Jodie Comer Leaves PRIMA FACIE Performance Due to Bad Air Quality in NYC Broadway World
  5. Tony Awards: Meet the nominees, Jodie Comer CBS New York
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Jim Cornette Praises WWE Up and Comer For ‘Looking Like A Star’

Jim Cornette gave his thoughts on various topics, including Madcap Moss, during his Jim Cornette Experience.

Cornette spoke highly of Moss’ look, in-ring prowess, and overall athleticism while he finds his way in WWE. 

“But next up was for the NXT North American Title, which was just won by Solo Sikoa on apparently the last NXT program he’s going to be on, because now he’s on the main roster. And he defended against old Mosh Pit Jones. Who now except they’re still calling him Madcap Moss, but he looks like a f*cking star now, because they’ve taken that goofy outfit off of him.

And he’s jacked, and he looks good, and his athleticism, you can tell he’s [got potential], why they stuck him next to Baron Corbin and that ridiculous gimmick, you know, they have however long it’s been since they started it, that’s how far behind they have put this guy in his wrestling career. Because nobody was ever going to give a sh*t about it, take it seriously, pay attention to him as a result of it, whatever. So, both these guys can go because Solo is good they look great. And it’s still the same six guys on this show.

I remember Mid South Wrestling used to have more variety on the programme. We had 18 guys in the territory, they’ve got 200 under contract, and we’re seeing the same six. Hopefully they’ll change Madcap in the near future. They can go, they looked great, Sammy interfered enough until finally, Moss chased him away and then turned around and ran into a super kick 123. So, apparently, they’re not wanting to push Moss, but at least they made him or let him get rid of his suspenders.”

Quotes via Inside The Ropes



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‘Killing Eve’ series finale review: Sandra Oh and Jodie Comer come to the less-than-killer end of a long, strange trip (SPOILERS)

It’s hard to call the “Killing Eve” finale a disappointment, because given the downward trajectory that the show has been on since its buzzworthy first season, expectations have been systemically lowered. “Anticlimactic,” however, fits the bill, especially given the anticipated showdown and ultimate fates of key characters in this less-than-killer finish.

Season 4 started on a particularly clunky note, with the detour involving the trained assassin Villanelle (Jodie Comer) and her time-killing brush with religion. While things improved a bit after that, the show never quite recovered.

There were some major deaths in the buildup to the finish, including Helene (Camille Cottin) and Konstantin (Kim Bodnia) — the latter in typically pointless and tragic fashion — but the idea that the two leads would be reunited and square off with the shadowy organization known as The Twelve still loomed.

Eve (Sandra Oh) did find Villanelle and they embarked on their revenge mission, which, emblematic of the show’s dark and whimsical tone, unfolded at a wedding aboard a ship.

Still, Villanelle’s bloody encounter (after greeting her victims with “Hello, losers”) played out as part of a murkily-shot musical number, offering little sense of what exactly was being done to whom.

The central aspect of the episode thus became the tender romantic exchange between Eve and Villanelle after years of coy flirtation, pregnant pauses and uncomfortable stares. As executive producer Sally Woodward Gentle told the Hollywood Reporter, despite the espionage themes, “ultimately, it’s a love story, and it’s a story about discovering who you really are.”

Then, at the moment of triumph, an anonymous shot rang out, sending Eve and a wounded Villanelle into the water, where more random shots finished off the latter. (In hindsight, it’s a shame she endured healing from getting hit with an arrow in the back in an earlier episode just to be dispatched like that.)

As for Eve, she burst to the surface, but it was hard not to think, “Well now what?” We’ll never know (or at least, hopefully never), because the big block letters “THE END” rolled across the screen, just in case anyone was confused.

“Killing Eve” started off fabulously well under the creative stewardship of “Fleabag’s” Phoebe Waller-Bridge, earning Emmy nominations for both leads and a win for Comer in 2019, drawing viewers into its weird mix of grisly violence and offbeat humor. Yet in hindsight, this was a limited series that didn’t appear to realize it — a show destined to run one season, maybe two, but which couldn’t sustain its delicate juggling act for four.

By the end, as Eve noted, the title character bore little resemblance to the reserved, office-bound MI6 worker that she was when the series began, alluding to her various exploits and marveling, “Unbelievably, I survived,” adding, “For what?”

Despite the strength of the cast, that last part was a question that seasons three and four didn’t satisfactorily answer. Like Eve, in fact, as the finale underscored, “Killing Eve” might have survived but came to bear scant resemblance to the defining qualities that distinguished the show when it began, too.

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Jodie Comer Exits ‘Kitbag’ Citing Scheduling Issues – Deadline

While Jodie Comer had looked to reunite with her The Last Duel director Ridley Scott this month on the set of his Napoleon Bonaparte biopic Kitbag, the actress has now made her exit from the project, citing Covid-related scheduling issues, Deadline has confirmed.

We hear that the the film’s other lead, Joaquin Phoenix, is remaining with the Apple project in the role of Bonaparte, and that the streamer is already in “advanced negotiations” with another actor who will take over Comer’s part as the French emperor and military leader’s wife, Empress Joséphine.

The film scripted by Scott’s All the Money in the World collaborator David Scarpa is billed as an epic drama examining Bonaparte’s origins and his swift, ruthless climb to emperor, viewed through the prism of his addictive and often volatile relationship with his one true love. Scott is producing the film with Kevin Walsh for Scott Free and said in a November interview with BBC’s Today that production is kicking off on January 15. Apple Studios committed to financing and producing the project last January, as Deadline first reported.

In The Last Duel, Comer played Marguerite de Carrouges, who accuses her husband Sir Jean de Carrouges’ (Matt Damon) friend, knight Jacques Le Gris (Adam Driver), of rape, prompting a deadly dual between the two. The Emmy winner will next be seen in the fourth season of AMC’s Killing Eve, which premieres on February 27, and in a West End production of Suzie Miller’s play Prima Facie, which opens at London’s Harold Pinter Theatre on April 15.



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The Last Duel review: Ridley Scott does Rashomon

Matt Damon and Adam Driver in The Last Duel
Photo: 20th Century Studios

The muted blue tint of the imagery should be a dead giveaway. If not, look to the specks of dirt on the lens or listen for the grunts and clang of swordplay. All betray that Ridley Scott, director of Gladiator, Kingdom Of Heaven, and Robin Hood, has returned to the crumbling castles and muddy battlefields of a distantly bygone Europe. Yet The Last Duel, his latest lavish act of time travel, is archaic only in garb and speech (the latter mildly bungled through a collection of wavering accents). The setting may be the 14th century, but this is very much a historical drama of modern concerns. Damningly, it suggests that yesterday’s injustices remain very much today’s.

Working from Eric Jager’s novel of the same name, Scott tackles a matter of enduring international fascination: the last judicial duel sanctioned in France, circa 1386. That year, Norman knight Jean de Carrouges challenged his one-time friend, the squire Jacques Le Gris, to trial by combat. Carrouges’ wife, Marguerite, had accused Le Gris of rape the previous January. Le Gris flatly denied the allegations. The battle to the death between the men drew an enormous audience of Parisian aristocrats and commoners, and it continues to be recounted and reenacted centuries later. Part of what’s kept the incident alive in the public imagination is the question of guilt, still a subject of historical debate. Who was telling the truth, and who was lying?

For a while, The Last Duel seems to entertain such uncertainty. It also takes care to lay out how the conflict between the men extended beyond the accusations. Introduced fighting side by side, Carrouges (Matt Damon) and Le Gris (Adam Driver) are fast friends whose bond is tested and ultimately broken by a series of disputes involving contested property, an expected captaincy, and the favor of the count Pierre d’Alençon (Ben Affleck), cousin of the king. Is social standing the subtext of their falling-out? Carrouges is revealed to be a litigious hothead whose habit of suing fellow noblemen damages his leadership prospects. Meanwhile, the cocksure, womanizing Le Gris proves more adept and strategic in his public manner.

Damon and Affleck, whose script for Good Will Hunting won them an Oscar nearly 25 years ago, co-wrote The Last Duel with indie filmmaker Nicole Holofcener (Enough Said). The three novelly divided writing duties by character, and their story into three competing, overlapping narratives: “The truth according to” Carrouges, Le Gris, and, finally, Marguerite. This is, of course, a variation on that most beloved, influential ode to subjectivity, Rashomon, in which the great Akira Kurosawa spun a samurai story of contradictory accounts. The Last Duel doesn’t so much shift the basic facts of its plot as subtly alter their context and meaning. Each of the three chapters depicts events only discussed in the others, and repeated scenes play much differently depending on whose perspective is dominant.

Jodie Comer in The Last Duel
Photo: 20th Century Studios

Performance is key to this approach, and the film offers its principal cast the chance to essentially trifurcate their characters—to play them based on how they see themselves and how others see them. That range is most obvious with Damon, who projects a kind of aggrieved nobility in the first chapter (told, naturally, from Carrouges’ point of view), only to become embarrassingly impotent and finally coldly distant as the lens of perspective changes. Driver’s charisma fluctuates throughout to reveal the way predatory behavior gets delusionally twisted into something more romantic through self-image, while Comer plays a mere object of attraction until the moment that she passes out of the male gaze and into the spotlight of the narrative. (Only Affleck creates a consistent persona—a haughty and perpetually amused rake that counts among the actor’s funniest performances in years.)

It takes a while to realize that The Last Duel is not using its, well, dueling perspectives to reinforce the neutrality of the historical record. Instead, it’s offering something like a critique of the way the history books have pushed a skeptical he-said, she-said framework on this story. Jager’s research cast doubt on the doubt historians have sown regarding the guilt or innocence of certain parties. The movie, in turn, refuses to revel in ambiguity, instead offering an eventual, clear-cut presentation of events—most notably, and disturbingly, through two dramatizations of a horrible encounter, different not in what happens but in how as remembered by the characters. Rashomon was about the essential unknowability of the truth. The Last Duel is about how treating the truth as always unknowable can be a trick to skirt accountability.

Ben Affleck in The Last Duel
Photo: 20th Century Studios

There are limitations to the film’s structure. Damon, Affleck, and Holofcener save Marguerite’s perspective for last, in part so it can function like a damning rejoinder to the chapters before it—the woman’s side of the story, finally presented after two hours of the men’s blinkered sides. Yet that choice leaves Comer a little dramatically adrift: While Damon and Driver are gifted complicated (if ultimately unsympathetic) characters, she’s strategically denied much dimension until the home stretch—and by then, the film is focused almost entirely on her bravery as a victim stuck in a system stacked against her. The movie struggles as much as Carrouges and Le Gris do to really see Marguerite, at least outside the context of her ordeal.

Still, there’s a power to this film’s blunt era-crossing outrage. The Last Duel resists reducing the immortal, historical events it restages to some vision of the primitive past, to be easily scoffed at like the barbaric practices of Gladiator’s colosseum. Watching Marguerite pushed through a gauntlet of skeptical questioning, her resistance waved off as the “customary protest” of a lady (the “no” means “yes” of the 1300s), it’s impossible not to think of Christine Blasey Ford and countless other women faced with the threat of immolation, literal or otherwise, for coming forward.

Scott, of course, eventually delivers the eponymous duel, and it’s as tense as it is grimly violent, with stakes far greater than which of these flawed men will emerge with his head and ego intact. But by that point, the possibility of a rousing climax, let alone a happy ending, has long since passed, like the people swallowed by history and its distorting ambiguities.

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