Deadline’s deep dive into ‘Bones And All’, ‘She Said’ and more new releases – ‘Take Two’.

Deadline’s deep dive into ‘Bones And All’, ‘She Said’ and more new releases – ‘Take Two’.

Editor’s note: Deadline presents the 40th episode of its video series Second try, in which Pete Hammond and Todd McCarthy explore the artistry of movies that hit theaters every weekend. Each of them has spent decades reviewing and writing about the craft, and has built up a remarkably broad knowledge of cinema past and present. When we asked them, we were hoping for a concise, mature and thoughtful conversation similar to what we saw from Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel.

This week we look at what’s new Legs and all, she said and Polish Oscar submission E.O.

Timothée Chalamet, Taylor Russell and Mark Rylance play award-winning director Luca Guadagnino bones and all an unlikely love story set in the world of cannibalism. But what is it Really round? Guadagnino won the Best Director award at the Venice Film Festival for this first feature shot in America – specifically the American Midwest – with a story that takes unpredictable directions, but does it really work? It will be widely used during the Thanksgiving holiday and beyond. How big is the appetite for it?

Also find out what we are talking about she said, the kind of critically acclaimed and serious drama that Harvey Weinstein used to direct at Miramax and The Weinstein Company. That won’t be the case here with this universal release, as Weinstein’s criminal role takes center stage, an authentic story about it New York Times Journalists Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey, who broke the case against Weinstein by finally getting the word out from the many women who were victims of his various attacks. Many of them are equal in the film with Carey Mulligan and Zoe Kazan as these brave journalists and even with Ashley Judd as herself. Directed by Maria Schrader and written by Rebecca Lenkiewicz, it is a film about women in front and behind the screen who, against all odds, is a tell an extraordinary story. How well are they doing it, and whether the public even wants to see it, even though Weinstein is on trial again – this time in Los Angeles after he was sentenced to 23 years in prison in New York. Find out what we say about him and why it’s a must-read.

Finally, we dive deep into one of the best international films of the year, the official Oscar-winning Poland, the moving, wry and compelling film from veteran director Jerzy Skolimowski. E.O. The film focuses on a donkey and his wild journey, but is really about humanity and the people he meets along the way. The film won an award at Cannes, where it premiered in May, and is now in cinemas.

Click on the video above to watch our conversation.

Hammond has been a columnist for Deadline’s Awards for the past decade, covering the Oscar and Emmy seasons year-round. He is also Deadline’s chief film critic, having previously reviewed films for MovieLine, box office Magazine, BackstageHollywood.com and maximumhow Film Guide by Leonard Maltin, for which he was an editor. In addition to writing, Hammond also hosts the KCET Cinema Series and the network’s weekly series Must see movies.

McCarthy is a veteran film critic, columnist and reporter who has also written several award-winning books and documentaries. He served two terms on staff diversity and The Hollywood Reporter and internationally acclaimed film festivals for both publications. his video Visions of Light: The Art of Cinematography won the best documentary award from the New York Film Critics and the National Society of Film Critics Associations, and he won an Emmy for writing the documentary Preston Sturges: The Rise and Fall of an American Dreamer. He also directed the documentaries Filmmaker: Pierre Rissient and Forever Hollywood.

pmc-u-font-size-14″>Writer pmc-u-font-size-14″>Writer: Peter Hammond, Todd McCarthy

Source: Deadline

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