Jeanne Tripplehorn

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A Week In Movies: Ben Is Batman, One Direction Deafens London, Disney Humanises Bears


Ben Affleck One Direction Simon Cowell Jamie Campbell Bower Jeanne Tripplehorn Leland Orser James Gandolfini Julia Louis-Dreyfus Disney

Ben Batman Affleck

This week's biggest story is that Ben Affleck will play Bruce Wayne (aka Batman) in the upcoming Man of Steel sequel, opposite Henry Cavill's Clark Kent (aka Superman). There's no word on the plot or the title of the new film, which is scheduled for release in the summer of 2015. Word has it that the two superheroes will be at odds with each other, setting up some big battles between them. Read all about the epic prospect here.

On Tuesday night, London hosted the world premiere of the new One Direction movie This Is Us, and the screams of pre-pubescent girls could be heard miles away from Leicester Square as the boy band, their manager Simon Cowell and a range of starry guests turned up to walk the red carpet. The film opens next week and you can look at photos from the event here.

Continue reading: A Week In Movies: Ben Is Batman, One Direction Deafens London, Disney Humanises Bears

Love After Death: Leland Orser Steps Behind The Camera For 'Morning' [Trailer]


Leland Orser Jeanne Tripplehorn Laura Linney

Leland Orser makes his directorial debut – and stars – in Morning, a film that focuses on the inner torment of two parents after their child dies. This is five days in the life of Alice (Jeanne Tripplehorn) and Mark (Orser) as they attempt to deal with death and forge love once more.

Leland OrserOrser directs for the first time in Morning

Mark’s grief leads him to separation – he cannot stand to be around his wife any more. The opening scene in the trailer sees him sitting in an empty pool -presumably because of the accidental drowning death of their child - on his own. An elderly woman (his mother?) attempts to console him, or at least shelter him from the rain.

Continue reading: Love After Death: Leland Orser Steps Behind The Camera For 'Morning' [Trailer]

Morning Trailer


Alice and Mark are a married couple who are desperately struggling to come to terms with the catastrophic death of their child. While their friends tiptoe around them trying to offer their own advice and support, the couple find themselves unable to support each other as Mark cannot bear to be around his wife anymore. Meanwhile, Alice ends up at the office of grief counsellor Dr. Goodman who believes that fate has led them together for a reason and convinces her to look at her own life differently. They both go through feelings of devastation, intense rage and ultimately soul-destroying heartbreak that threatens not only the future of their relationship, but also their own lives. Will this once idyllic couple successfully find each other again? And, with that, find the strength to overcome the biggest tragedy of their lives?

Continue: Morning Trailer

Chloë Sevigny and Jeanne Tripplehorn - Los Angeles premiere of A24's 'The Bling Ring' at Directors Guild Of America - Arrivals - Los Angeles, California, United States - Wednesday 5th June 2013

Chloë Sevigny and Jeanne Tripplehorn

Kirsten Vangsness, A.J. Cook, Jeanne Tripplehorn, Joe Mantegna, Matthew Gray Gubler and Beverly Hilton Hotel - Kirsten Vangsness, Matthew Gray Gubler, Joe Mantegna, Jeanne Tripplehorn, A. J. Cook Sunday 29th July 2012 CBS Showtime's CW Summer 2012 Press Tour at the Beverly Hilton Hotel - Arrivals

Kirsten Vangsness, A.j. Cook, Jeanne Tripplehorn, Joe Mantegna, Matthew Gray Gubler and Beverly Hilton Hotel

Jeanne Tripplehorn Tuesday 1st June 2010 2010 Crystal + Lucy Awards: A New Era held at the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza - inside Century City, California

Jeanne Tripplehorn

Jeanne Tripplehorn Monday 26th April 2010 San Francisco Film Festival - Premiere of 'Morning' held at Sundance Kabuki Theatre San Francisco, California

Jeanne Tripplehorn

Brother's Keeper (2002) Review


Bad
Does anything inspire as much horror as the title card, "USA Network Presents"?

Brother's Keeper -- not the 1992 documentary about a hillbilly who murders his brother -- is a ridiculously stupid story about a detective who tries to protect her brother despite the fact that he's a serial killer. Standard thriller ensues.

Continue reading: Brother's Keeper (2002) Review

Swept Away (2002) Review


OK
After beginning his career with two frenetic crime films (Lock, Stock & Two Smoking Barrels; Snatch), filmmaker Guy Ritchie has changed his tone in order to make a vanity project. But it's not his vanity at stake, it's that of his wife, super-hyphenate Madonna, in this fairly faithful remake of the lusty, free-wheelin' 1974 Italian film Swept Away. That original, directed by Lina Wertmuller, starred Giancarlo Giannini and Mariangela Melato. This update, a film that Ritchie proves does not need to exist, stars Adriano Giannini (in his father's original role), Madonna, and Madonna's sinewy body.

Sure, hubby puts those super-tight abs and intimidating biceps front-and-center. But he's also forced to put Madonna's acting ability up there as well, and the awful truth is that Madonna is an average actress at best. Being as naturally theatrical as she is (and that's a compliment), she excels at stagy roles, as in Evita, but when it comes to the everyday, she comes across as rather limp.

Continue reading: Swept Away (2002) Review

Mickey Blue Eyes Review


Excellent
Hugh Grant hit paydirt once this summer, in Notting Hill. Can he do it again if you take away Julia Roberts? And throw in an unlikely comedy about murderous gangsters, an auction house, and a botched wedding?

Yes he can! Mickey Blue Eyes, against all odds, is nothing short of fall-down funny - on par with Notting Hill, South Park, and Austin Powers 2 as one of the best comedies of the summer.

Continue reading: Mickey Blue Eyes Review

Time Code Review


Good
Sorry, Mr. Lynch, your place at the head of the avant-garde experimental filmmaker table has been given away. Messrs. Jarmusch, Toback, Korine, and Cronenberg, you'll all be eating outside. Mike Figgis will be taking over for all of you, and don't come back.

Figgis, who earned a Best Director Oscar nomination for Leaving Las Vegas in 1996, appears to have gone a little funny in the head last year with his inexplicable and nearly dialogue-free The Loss of Sexual Innocence. Now he's fully gone off the deep end with what may be the most ambitious experiment ever: Time Code.

Continue reading: Time Code Review

Mickey Blue Eyes Review


Zero

"Mickey Blue Eyes" is one of those movies that wouldn't last 20 minutes if the main character wasn't a certifiable moron.

A comedy of the uncomfortable, it's predicated on Hugh Grant, playing an tentative, English, auction house proprietor in New York, allowing himself to become embroiled in the mob when he unknowingly proposes to a mafia princess (Jeanne Tripplehorn).

She declines, crying her eyes out and explaining her background and the family she's tried to put behind her. Romantically, he says it doesn't matter. She exacts one promise from him: That he won't agree to do any favors for her family and won't accept any, either. "That's how they get you," she says. "Then you'll be one of them."

Continue reading: Mickey Blue Eyes Review

Jeanne Tripplehorn

Jeanne Tripplehorn Quick Links

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Jeanne Tripplehorn Movies

Morning Trailer

Morning Trailer

Alice and Mark are a married couple who are desperately struggling to come to terms...

Swept Away (2002) Movie Review

Swept Away (2002) Movie Review

After beginning his career with two frenetic crime films (Lock, Stock & Two Smoking Barrels;...

Mickey Blue Eyes Movie Review

Mickey Blue Eyes Movie Review

Hugh Grant hit paydirt once this summer, in Notting Hill. Can he do it...

Time Code Movie Review

Time Code Movie Review

Sorry, Mr. Lynch, your place at the head of the avant-garde experimental filmmaker table has...

Mickey Blue Eyes Movie Review

Mickey Blue Eyes Movie Review

"Mickey Blue Eyes" is one of those movies that wouldn't last 20 minutes if the...

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