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Morning Watch: Making of The Mitchells vs The Machines, How Realistic Are Bank Heists in Movies & More – /Film

ustin Theroux takes a look back at his career, from Romy and Michele’s High School Reunionto The Leftovers and more. First up, Netflix takes a look behind the unique animation of The Mitchells vs. The Machines. Specifically, production designer Lindsey Olivares guides us through the creation of the “Katie-vision” frame of the story, which includes some of the filmmaking flourishes that add personality to the movies that our main character creates on her computer. Next, Insider had former bank robber Cain Vincent Dyer take a look at bank heist scenes from movies to rank them for their realism. After serving in the US Marine Corps., Dyer turned to bank robbery after his family was threatened by a Mexican drug cartel, which sounds like a movie in itself. After robbing over 100 banks across two years, he’s a great source to review bank heists in movies like

Janeane Garofalo Appears on Younger, Talks Bad Lesbian Sex to Maggie

Nineties icon Janeane Garofalo ( Reality Bites, Romy and Michele’s High School Reunion) recurs on Younger as Cass,  dean of the Arts College of New York, who hires Debi Mazar’s Maggie to teach a class. A once-aspiring artist with a hot young wife, Cass is about to realize that she and Maggie have more in common than their love of art. Younger stars Sutton Foster as Liza Miller, a 40-year-old divorcee who is forced to lie about her age to land a job in the publishing industry she left 15 years earlier to raise her daughter. Mazar ( Goodfellas, Entourage, L.A. Law)  plays her lesbian best friend, Maggie, a cool Brooklynite who for a time is the only person who knows Liza’s true story.

Justin Theroux Interview on Jennifer Aniston Breakup, The Mosquito Coast, and Life in New York

Mark Seliger Justin Theroux is ensconced in his Greenwich Village duplex. It’s the middle of February, “the shortest and the cruelest” of months, he says. We’re talking over Zoom. He’s wearing a black T-shirt over his non–dad bod, a black beanie, and, despite the waning daylight, tinted aviators. A russet beard covers his unfrivolous jaw. Behind him, there’s a glass case displaying wax molds of syphilitic mouths. He takes frequent drags from a Juul to supplement a steady supply of Nicorette; he quit vaping when the pandemic began and only recently resumed. “I reserve it for the evening hours,” he says, as if voicing an infomercial. It’s 3:30 p.m., close enough. He holds up a piece of gum. “Whereas the minute I open my eyes, I put this in.”

Ask the Mary Sues: Favorite Critical Flops We Sincerely Love

It s good, we swear! By Chelsea SteinerApr 10th, 2021, 11:35 am Picture this: you’re at a party (remember those?) having a deep conversation about pop culture (remember conversations?) when the topic lands on a critically and/or commercially reviled piece of pop culture. You laugh nervously as people continue to gleefully trash that mess of a film/series/game, while secretly holding your truth close to your heart. That truth? That you love this thing that everyone is making fun of. And not an ironic, “so bad it’s good” love, but a genuine, sincere fondness for this thing most folks consider to be garbage.

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