Our original thread has been deemed "Read Only" by IMDB due to its huge size. Let's start the new thread with some expe
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Steve7216 — 9 years ago(December 22, 2016 05:13 PM)
David Rooney from the Hollywood Reporter recently wrote about the top ten New York theater plays during 2016.
Director Ivo van Hove's radical reinterpretations of classic texts are the opposite of theatrical comfort food, designed to leave audiences wrung out and unsettled. He followed the thunderous opera of his A View From the Bridge the previous year with another potent Arthur Miller drama, delivering a chilling indictment of the dangers of mob-mentality rule on an impressionable populace. The 17th century Salem witch trials, originally read as an allegory for 1950s McCarthyism, proved imminently relatable, perhaps even prescient, in this timely horror story about institutional arrogance and defiled civil liberties, in which the boundaries separating politics, religion and the judiciary are trashed.
The first-rate cast included Ben Whishaw, Sophie Okonedo, Saoirse Ronan, Ciaran Hinds and Bill Camp, all at the top of their game.
http://tinyurl.com/z27j6vk -
Poetswan — 9 years ago(January 02, 2017 03:45 PM)
Saoirse on New years eve with her friends:
https://twitter.com/saoirsenews/status/816047638600503296
How do they find those pictures! Looks like she is back to the weight she had before Brooklyn. -
canvro — 9 years ago(January 04, 2017 06:10 PM)
And now with her nice friend Scarlett Curtis, I find fascinating that she's always the one paying visits to her friends.
https://www.instagram.com/p/BO2RSevFNE_/ -
purple_lemon — 9 years ago(January 04, 2017 06:24 PM)
I find it fascinating that she's always the one paying visits to her friends.
I guess as an only child Saoirse has been used to going out and finding company for herself.
The Players of The Game are the scum of the earth. -
Steve7216 — 9 years ago(January 14, 2017 11:56 AM)
I was thinking the same thing the other day PMG.
Nice find BTW. Great compliment. I very much enjoyed the film and felt her performance had a certain dignity and gr2000ace. It was lovely.no pun intended. I hope she doesn't get left out of the best actress race because of you know who. -
Steve7216 — 9 years ago(January 19, 2017 06:36 PM)
Ronan plays Florence, a wife who is afraid of sexual intimacy because of her past sexual experiences;
The above is from an article about Saoirse seemingly not containing any new info. However, I read the novel and don't recall Florence having had any previous sexual experiences. There was a recollection by the character of her boat trips with her dad, but I never read too much into that. Apparently the author sort of leaves it up to the reader for interpretation. Looking back on the material, one wonders what might have happened in her life causing the character to exhibit such extreme revulsion to the notion of sex.
I'm I missing something here? Is there a chance the screenplay contains a revelation of so16d0rts?
http://tinyurl.com/j77rfln -
jjabbey — 9 years ago(January 20, 2017 03:55 AM)
there was the possibly abuse, yeah. is that site reputable? i think the writer probably has not read OCB and did some lazy summarizing.
anyway, wow. i could leave the internet for three more months and come back to still NO Saoirse news! when do you think we'll get some announcement? i think having all her films released in the fall (festivals or such) is a terrible idea. i really hope one of it goes to Cannes, since Sundance was a no go. (i'd like to think this is why Greta says she's swamped in editing work for LB)
if most of her films premiere in TIFF, then we'd most likely wait til next spring or whenever for actual release. all 4 have no distribution. they might as well have dumped the seagull. i think loving vincent may have already secured one with all the online buzz for it at least -
Steve7216 — 9 years ago(January 20, 2017 07:34 AM)
Hello jj.
there was the possibly abuse, yeah. is that site reputable? i think the writer probably has not read OCB and did some lazy summarizing.
I'm not familiar with the site whatsoever, but I thought there might be something new due to her phrasing.
There will be news very soon as all her projects are in the can if not all edited yet. We're just waiting for distribution news for the most part.
The timing is probably just coincidence. Some years ago, Jessica Chastain had four or five films dropped in the sa5b4me year. Don't ask me why such a great actress wasn't able to really break into films at an earlier age, but that particular year was her true breakthrough.
Assuming there are eventually all different distributors for her projects, my guess is there isn't such a thing as coordination between the involved companies. In any event, The Seagull should be the first to have a date set unless Loving Vincent comes before it. I'm not aware of why they couldn't get it released last year. It seems like a Sony Classics type of release. I watched the Kate Beckinsale film last year where she played the central character based upon the Jane Austin novella. The Seagull will be that type of release.very limited.
I've checked the director's twitter a bunch during the last year, and he either is discussing theater stuff or politics. Just my gut, but I think the film strikes me as a spring release. More importantly, Lady Bird and especially On Chesil Beach should be ready for the fall/winter season. -
jlent — 9 years ago(January 20, 2017 08:22 AM)
I'm sure the screenplay is available SOMEWHERE. I haven't been able to find it, though.
After reading the book I was convinced dad had abused her but nothing was spelled out. It's possible McEwan wrote the screenplay making it clearer since a film only has so much time to say what it wants to.
It might be something like Atonement. In the movie Briony finally remembers she saw Marshall with Lola. In the book she never saw him. -
Steve7216 — 9 years ago(January 20, 2017 09:04 AM)
Hey jlent.you've been quiet lately. I guess it's hard to manufacture news.
It's possible McEwan wrote the screenplay making it clearer since a film only has so much time to say what it wants to.
^This was my first thought when I read the article. It makes sense because otherwise the audience is questioning why this intelligent young woman has such a drastically tragic reaction to the man who she clearly loves.
Well.did you see La La Land yet? -
jlent — 9 years ago(January 20, 2017 09:26 AM)
Been frustrated with how quiet the board has been but Saoirse has been keeping a low profile since the fall, first filming Lady Bird, then OCB, now who knows why.
Yes, saw La La Land. Saw it twice. The first time it took a while to get into but the ending made me realize I needed to see it again.
By the second viewing I was totally in love with it.
Saoirse may have the most beautiful eyes in the business, Emma Stone certainly has the biggest. -
Steve7216 — 9 years ago(January 20, 2017 09:48 AM)
Yes, she's like Amanda Seyfried in being essentially an anime creature on screen.
In addition, I felt she was totally open with us emotionally, and this was one of many reasons why the film worked. It's not a complex narrative whatsoever, but there are terrific films like Brooklyn where the execution of the story and of course the crafts contribute to the satisfying whole.
It felt
very honest
to me. It has a magnified appeal IMO partly because of what we've been through this past year or two. We need outstanding level escapist cinema. I wonder if Poetswan has seen it yet. It just opened in Brazil yesterday. -
jlent — 9 years ago(January 20, 2017 10:03 AM)
I hear Natalie Portman is excellent in "Jackie" but I have to think Stone is the favorite heading into Oscar season.
To be honest, if La La Land had been made last year I still would have been pulling for Saoirse but I would have understood completely if Stone had won. She's quite extraordinary and I hadn't been that impressed with her recently.
Over on the LLL board someone asked if you could recast the leads who would you choose. Somebody wrote Brie Larson.
Gag me!
Manchester by the Sea is probably still my favorite of the year but LLL has everything Oscar is looking for. (And there is nothing from Saoirse to even test my loyalty.)