Tag Archives: Hanks

Austin Butler on Tom Hanks’ ‘Masters of the Air’ Pitch and “Deeply” Loving ‘Dune: Part Two’ – Hollywood Reporter

  1. Austin Butler on Tom Hanks’ ‘Masters of the Air’ Pitch and “Deeply” Loving ‘Dune: Part Two’ Hollywood Reporter
  2. Austin Butler Hired a Dialect Coach to Help Him Get Rid of His Elvis Accent Harper’s BAZAAR
  3. Austin Butler Broke a Rib While Shooting ‘Masters of the Air,’ but He ‘Had to Keep Fighting’: ‘It Was an Honor to Play These Men’ Variety
  4. Austin Butler Says He Hired a Dialect Coach to Help Get Rid of Elvis Accent for ‘Masters of the Air’ Hollywood Reporter
  5. Austin Butler Says He Needed A Dialect Coach To Get Rid Of His Viral ‘Elvis’ Voice HuffPost

Read original article here

Billionaire Francois Pinault Now Majority Stakeholder In Hollywood Agency Of Tom Hanks, Steven Spielberg – Forbes

  1. Billionaire Francois Pinault Now Majority Stakeholder In Hollywood Agency Of Tom Hanks, Steven Spielberg Forbes
  2. TPG’s Majority Stake In CAA Acquired By Francois-Henri Pinault’s Artémis; Bryan Lourd To Be Named CEO Deadline
  3. CAA Sells Majority Stake to Francois-Henri Pinault’s Artemis Variety
  4. CAA Sells Majority Stake to Investment Firm Led by Luxury Mogul François-Henri Pinault Hollywood Reporter
  5. Family of Billionaire French Luxury Tycoon Pinault Buys Stake in CAA The Wall Street Journal
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Tom Hanks Was So Concerned for Austin Butler’s Mental Health After ‘Elvis’ That He Offered Him a Next Role Immediately to Prevent ‘Emotional Whiplash’ – Variety

  1. Tom Hanks Was So Concerned for Austin Butler’s Mental Health After ‘Elvis’ That He Offered Him a Next Role Immediately to Prevent ‘Emotional Whiplash’ Variety
  2. Austin Butler says Tom Hanks gave him career instruction to help him post-Elvis The Independent
  3. Austin Butler Says Tom Hanks Was Concerned for His ‘Mental Health’ After ‘Elvis’ Role PEOPLE
  4. Tom Hanks was concerned for Austin Butler’s mental health following ‘Elvis’ NME
  5. “I had never experienced pain like that before”: Austin Butler’s Life Became a Living Nightmare After the Most Saddening Loss Nearly 10 Years Ago FandomWire
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Tom Hanks’ niece had a meltdown and yelled about deserving ‘more camera time’ after getting eliminated on celebrity relative show ‘Claim to Fame’ – Yahoo Entertainment

  1. Tom Hanks’ niece had a meltdown and yelled about deserving ‘more camera time’ after getting eliminated on celebrity relative show ‘Claim to Fame’ Yahoo Entertainment
  2. Tom Hanks’ Niece Got Kicked Off A Reality Show, And Her Exit Was Absolutely Bonkers HuffPost
  3. Tom Hanks’ Niece Went Viral For Bizarre Rant BuzzFeed
  4. Tom Hanks’ Niece Melts Down in ‘Claim to Fame’ Premiere: ‘I Should Have More Camera Time!’ Yahoo Entertainment
  5. Tom Hanks’ Niece Suffers Meltdown After ‘Claim To Fame’ Elimination: “I Should Have More Camera Time” Deadline
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Tom Hanks Says Robert Zemeckis Shot ‘Forrest Gump’ Scenes Like ‘I Love Lucy’ to Combat His Exhaustion – IndieWire

  1. Tom Hanks Says Robert Zemeckis Shot ‘Forrest Gump’ Scenes Like ‘I Love Lucy’ to Combat His Exhaustion IndieWire
  2. We all have movies we hate, even me: Tom Hanks’ humble confession | Onmanorama Onmanorama
  3. “That was an incredibly important movie for me”: Tom Hanks is Heartbroken for Fans Ignoring His $183M Comic-Book Adapted Movie by James Bond Director FandomWire
  4. Tom Hanks Reveals Why Sleepless In Seattle Made Him ‘Cranky,’ And How He Changed His Attitude CinemaBlend
  5. Tom Hanks On How That Thing You Do Became A Fan-Favorite BuzzFeed
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Tom Hanks would boycott any books rewritten to reflect “modern sensitivities” – NME

  1. Tom Hanks would boycott any books rewritten to reflect “modern sensitivities” NME
  2. Tom Hanks Takes A Stance Against Cancel Culture: “Let Me Decide What I Am Offended By” — World of Reel Jordan Ruimy
  3. Tom Hanks Confesses He Felt Insecure About Forrest Gump MovieWeb
  4. Tom Hanks’ ‘The Making of Another Major Motion Picture Masterpiece’: Listen to an Excerpt Featuring Holland Taylor (Exclusive) Hollywood Reporter
  5. Tom Hanks, actor and first-time novelist, shows his Chicago cred at Auditorium Theatre Chicago Sun-Times
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Tom Hanks Knows Exactly What He’s Doing – Rolling Stone

In A Man Called Otto, Tom Hanks stars as a grunty older man named Otto, who’s sort of a dick. He’s a little bit of a busybody. He lives on a quiet street in suburban Pittsburgh where everybody seems to know each other and where you need a parking permit in your window to park your car, otherwise somebody (Otto) will notice. The older residents, Otto among them, have a bit of history. This does not prevent Otto from believing that everybody in his midst is something of an idiot. He is right; everyone else is wrong. The whippersnappers with their phones and their social media. The young store employees whose insistence on helping this older man find what he needs makes Otto feel that his intelligence is being insulted. The people who put garbage in a recycling bin — which Otto, a stickler for rules whose daily routine consists of making his rounds and correcting his neighbors’ mistakes, makes a point of dutifully retrieving and discarding in the proper place. Nothing seems to make him happy. A retirement party only reminds him that he felt shitty about the job to begin with. And he has no one — his personality makes this unsurprising, but still. Watching, you immediately jump from wondering where his family is to thinking that a lack of family may explain why he is the way that he is.

A Man Called Otto is kind of funny as a Tom Hanks experiment. It clarifies something about his persona. This is the man who played Mister Rogers, who once worked to rescue Matt Damon from WWII with his dignity intact amid stunning violence. He’s Mr. Reliable. Apollo 13, Captain Phillips and Sully all coast on his sturdy moral backbone, a correctness that is undimmed by a short temper or the occasional stern look. Hanks is one of those actors who uses his sternness discerningly enough that you feel you must have earned it. When he’s gotten weird, it’s felt like a joke: weirdness doesn’t come naturally to him. So he occasionally plays around with the unnatural. Grotesqueness, like the kind we saw earlier this year in Elvis, where Hanks played the King’s sleazy, bloated, carnivalesque manager, is a characteristic that, in Hanks’s hands, only works (or tries) because we know the actor is the radical opposite. We know it’s false, but he’s a movie star, one of the finest, and one of the last. When a movie star of this caliber hits a false note, we’re almost criminally willing to pretend it was on purpose. The compelling thing about Hank’s slithering, greasy turn in Elvis, which Hanks clearly relishes, is that it’d be hard to prove us wrong.

As Otto, Hanks is playing an older asshole of the About Schmidt variety — a classic codger. Or to keep it in the Hanksiverse, a man close to Jimmy Dugan, Mr. “There’s no crying in baseball”: a jerk that ultimately isn’t so bad, the kind of man you never totally hate, even when he’s being hateful, because you have him pegged as a sentimental convert from the beginning. Otto’s particularly cuddly, in his way, kind of like a grumpy cat whose face you can’t help but smooch despite it hissing at you — because somehow you convince yourself that the cat doesn’t mean it, even as your scratches are bleeding. This is how Otto’s treated by his new, younger neighbors, Marisol (Mariana Treviño) and Tommy (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo) and their young kids. They know they’re getting on his nerves. They know they’re asking for too many favors — becoming too much a part of the life of a man who’s giving off signs of wanting not to be bothered. What they don’t know is that Otto has given up on his life — was in fact committed to killing himself when they moved in across the street. What we know is that a little excess love is exactly what the movie formula gods ordered.

A Man Called Otto is based on the 2012 novel A Man Called Ove by Fredrik Backman, which has already been adapted into a Swedish film of the same name. The movie is just OK. Marc Forster basically knows what he has: a great star, a good script, a relatable story. Done. Flashbacks tell us more about who he is (there was a wife, after all!) and why he is the way that he is. Minor incidents involving Otto and his neighbors and the conspiracy to whittle this grump down into the big softie that he really is reach their climax in a surprising act of solidarity, the kind of move that we shouldn’t have doubted Otto was capable of, because ultimately, he’s not an asshole because he takes pleasure in it: It all stems from a bone-deep sense of right and wrong. He’s a dick, but he’s not unfair.

Trending

The interesting thing is to think about what the movie is and what it isn’t. Otto’s got a gruffness that in another actor’s hands — say, Clint Eastwood — would easily have lent itself to becoming a surly boomer hard-ass, a Gran Torino antihero on the same path from asshole to reluctant hero as the Otto we’ve been given, but with an uncomfortable bite. A Man Called Otto often feels just on the verge of giving us a man who’s genuinely offensive — less of a plain jerk and more of a problematic granddad you’d struggle to endorse. But he swerves like a virtuoso. 

Maybe that’s what can make an ultimately middling movie like this feel sort of fun: A likable cast of oddballs and friendly faces encircles an expert Hanks as he does a familiar but intricate two-step, a dastardly dance in all the almost-wrong but, ultimately, morally right directions. It is all under his control. His antihero is all hero from the start. If anything, the movie almost overcompensates. The personalities in Hanks’s midst are plainly diverse, checking various boxes (Latinx, Black, trans, disabled, a full range of ages) without — mercifully — feeling too cynically engineered. Because Otto, as written, doesn’t reject that world — because he does not deadname the young trans man at his door, or spew racist filth at new minorities moving into his neighborhood — we’re to understand that however bad he seems like he is, if he’s not complaining about these things, he can’t be that bad. But the Hanks of it all already speaks for that. He’s not at risk of coming off as a bad man. His appeal is in convincing us that he’s flawed and forgivable enough, simply as a man.



Read original article here

Tom Hanks says he’s only made four ‘pretty good’ movies

Though he starred in at least 85 films throughout his glittering career, Tom Hanks thinks only four of those movies are “pretty good.”

The two-time Oscar winner, 66, is considered one of Hollywood’s greatest actors but insists only a handful of films he’s made in the last 30 years are actually good.

The actor made the revelation to People while promoting his debut novel “The Making of Another Major Motion Picture Masterpiece,” set for release in May 2023.

“No one knows how a movie is made – though everyone thinks they do,” he told the outlet.

“I’ve made a ton of movies, and four of them are pretty good, I think, and I’m still amazed at how films come together. From a flicker of an idea to the flickering image onscreen, the whole process is a miracle.”

Hanks did not divulge which of the four films he was referring to.

Tom Hanks starred as “Forrest Gump” in the movie with the same namesake in 1994.
Sunset Boulevard
Tom Hanks sits next to actor Denzel Washington during filming of the 1993 film “Philadelphia.”
©TriStar Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection

The actor first emerged on the scene in the 1980s, when he landed roles in “Splash!,” “The ‘Burbs,” and “Big” – for which he received an Oscar nomination.

But his life changed forever after he won his first Academy Award in 1994 for “Philadelphia.” He took home another Oscar the following year for his role in “Forrest Gump.”

Tom Hanks starred alongside Robert Loggia in the 1988 film “Big.”
Everett Collection

He was nominated an additional three times in later years.

The actor’s other notable credits include two “Toy Story” films, “You’ve Got Mail,” “Catch Me If You Can,” “The Green Mile,” “Saving Private Ryan,” “Cast Away,” and “Road To Perdition.”

Most recently, Hanks appeared in Baz Lurhmann’s “Elvis” alongside Austin Butler.

Read original article here

Lightyear: Tom Hanks questions decision to replace Tim Allen as Buzz Lightyear

Tom Hanks has questioned why Tim Allen wasn’t asked to voice Buzz in Lightyear.

When the film was announced, many assumed Allen would be voicing the character. However, it was revealed that Chris Evans would be doing so.

Evans defended his casting, clarifying that the film was based not on the toy, but the real-life astronaut that inspired the toy within the Pixar universe. Meanwhile, director Angus MacLane described the decision as “intentional”.

When Woody voice star Hanks, who is in Baz Luhrmann’s Elvis, was asked if it was “strange to be in theatres opposite a Buzz Lightyear film”, he told CinemaBlend: “How about that? I actually wanted to go head-to-head with Tim Allen and then they didn’t let Tim Allen do it. I don’t understand that.”

When it was commented that it was Evans in the role, he said: “Yeah, yeah, I know.”

He continued: “Here’s the thing: I want to go back in the theatre with a bunch of strangers and leave with something in common. That’s what I want to do and, going to see a movie with [Allen] – I’m looking forward to that.”

Tom Hanks doesn’t ‘understand’ why Tim Allen wasn’t cast in ‘Lightyear’

(Getty Images)

Hanks and Allen have remained friends since first voicing the characters in the first Toy Story film, which was released in 1995. They returned for three sequels in 1999, 2010 and 2019.

Allen recently shared his candid view on the new film. Meanwhile, a disturbing theory about Woody in Toy Story 3 might change how you watch the film.

Lightyear is in cinemas now. Find The Independent’s review here.



Read original article here

Tom Hanks says he wouldn’t accept role as gay man in Philadelphia in modern times

Tom Hanks says he wouldn’t accept role as gay man in Philadelphia in modern times … actor won Oscar playing HIV-positive character for performance in 1993 film

  • Actor, 65, said: ‘Let’s address, “Could a straight man do what I did in Philadelphia now?” No, and rightly so’ 
  • Hanks won an Oscar for his performance of a gay man living with the HIV virus in the 1993 film 
  • He said his presence in the film was ‘one of the reasons people weren’t afraid of that movie’ 
  • He said people wouldn’t ‘accept the inauthenticity of a straight guy playing a gay guy’ 
  • Hanks currently plays the role of Colonel Tom Parker in the new film Elvis 

Tom Hanks opened up on straight performers playing LGBTQ characters, saying he would not accept a role in such circumstances in current times after winning an Oscar for his performance of a gay man living with the HIV virus in the 1993 movie Philadelphia.

The Academy Award winner, 65, speaking with The New York Times Magazine Monday, said, ‘Let’s address, “Could a straight man do what I did in Philadelphia now?” No, and rightly so.’

Hanks in the film portrayed the role of lawyer Andrew Beckett, a gay man who is fired from his law firm after his bosses discover details about his personal life.

The latest: Tom Hanks, 65, opened up on straight performers playing LGBTQ characters, saying he would not accept a role in such circumstances in current times after winning an Oscar for his performance of a gay man living with the HIV virus in the 1993 movie Philadelphia. He was snapped in Memphis earlier this month

He said that ‘the whole point of Philadelphia was don’t be afraid,’ and that ‘one of the reasons people weren’t afraid of that movie is that [he] was playing a gay man.

‘We’re beyond that now, and I don’t think people would accept the inauthenticity of a straight guy playing a gay guy.’

Hanks added, ‘It’s not a crime, it’s not boohoo that someone would say we are going to demand more of a movie in the modern realm of authenticity. Do I sound like I’m preaching? I don’t mean to.’

Hanks, who won back-to-back Oscars in 1994 and 1995 for Best Actor in a Leading Role for his performances in Philadelphia and Forrest Gump, said both films were ‘timely movies, at the time, that you might not be able to make now,’ as they ‘would be mocked and picked apart on social media.’

Hanks won an Oscar for his portrayal in the film of lawyer Andrew Beckett, a gay man who is fired from his law firm after his bosses discover details about his personal life

Hanks appeared alongside Denzel Washington in the 1993 Jonathan Demme film 

In accepting the Oscar for Philadelphia, Hanks opened up about the tragic death toll caused by HIV/AIDS.

‘I know that my work in this case is magnified by the fact that the streets of heaven are too crowded with angels,’ Hanks said. ‘We know their names. They number a thousand for each one of the red ribbons that we wear here tonight. They finally rest in the warm embrace of the gracious creator of us all.

‘A healing embrace that cools their fevers, clears their skin and allows their eyes to see the simple, self-evident, common-sense truth that is made manifest by the benevolent creator of us all and was written down on paper by wise men, tolerant men, in the city of Philadelphia 200 years ago.’

Hanks said that ‘the whole point of Philadelphia was don’t be afraid,’ and that ‘one of the reasons people weren’t afraid of that movie is that [he] was playing a gay man’

Hanks, who plays the role of Colonel Tom Parker in the new film Elvis, has been on the promotional trail for the film 

Hanks, who plays the role of Colonel Tom Parker in the new film Elvis, also spoke with the publication about why he hasn’t posted any tweets to his Twitter page in more than two years.

‘I stopped posting because, No. 1, I thought it was an empty exercise,’ he said. ‘I have enough attention on me. But also I’d post something goofy like, “Here’s a pair of shoes I saw in the middle of the street,” and the third comment would be, “F*** you, Hanks.” I don’t know if I want to give that guy the forum.

‘If the third comment is “F*** you, you Obama-loving communist,” it’s like, I don’t need to do that.’

Read original article here