Pine had taken to wearing a rotation of linen ensembles, and when they met up one morning, Gotler jokingly referred to him as a “regular Barry Linen,” a play on ...
I think generally speaking for the next 20 or for my career in general, it’s what makes my job is so neat is I want to have the buffet of experience. I mean, I would say really, the foundation of the production company is A) to help my friends, people that I love get a shot. That greatly appeals to a part of my brain that I like to be able to go back to if I’m not doing my day job. It’s like, let’s make the movie for the people that love this group of people, that love this story, that love Star Trek. Let’s make it for them and then, if people want to come to the party, great. Just like I Am the Night, I did that because it was Patty and I wanted to play this weird detective, and I wanted to shoot on film in Los Angeles, and I love that time period and all that. So that was the genesis of that, and then, because I’d been thinking about it for so f*cking long, it just seemed like a thing that I would be directing. If I can push to have a theatrical release, I’m going to push to have a theatrical release. They scare the sh*t out of me, and I don’t want to make them, and I don’t want to bring that energy home with me. The other stuff that he had that he brought me was just really interesting, and it just so happened all of this to align with the lockdown. That didn’t work out, so we had to pivot and find a space that wanted it and that turned out to be a podcast. You know, there was something about it that I felt was something recognizable with certain genre elements to it but really, on a deeper more fundamental level, was a really interesting character study that was particularly 21st century, particularly American 21st century and what it means to be a patriot, what it means to be an honorable person, an honorable man, what it means to be a warrior. All the Old Knives is the type of film I love, type of story that I love reading, love watching.
Chris Pine had nothing but great things to say about 'humble hard worker' Harry Styles' move into acting.
MORE : Fans need ‘hosing down’ as Harry Styles gets down to his red pants in As It Was music video MORE : Amanda Holden fangirls as Harry Styles reveals he dedicates hit song Golden to her in rehearsals Chris Pine has sung Harry Styles praises in his acting career, specifically his work ethic while honing his craft.
Star Trek actor Chris Pine has praised singer Harry Styles for his “hungry to learn” attitude to acting, branding him a “humble hard-worker.”
“A lot of great stories have been told and I am here for it, I am just waiting for the call so to speak,” he said. “He shows up to set earliest than everybody else, hungry to learn, and he and Florence, I saw the film actually, just knock it out of the park.” “To be that young and to be that famous and have your head screwed on right, he’s a humble hard-worker.
Chris Pine says that Star Trek movies should be made for people that love Star Trek and not try to chase billion-dollar Marvel-size audiences.
While it's certainly not a franchise in the red in terms of profitability, it simply isn't on the same level as the superhero genre and that's okay. Pine also reiterated that he's met with Shakman, the studio, and others and that he likes everyone involved with Star Trek 4, particularly his castmates that he gets to work with on the series. The actor remains committed to the role, citing the impact it had on his career, saying, "It cemented the career that I have now. However, Pine thinks that Star Trek should operate in a smaller zone, with the movies being made "for the people that love this group of people, that love this story, that love Star Trek." He also emphasizes the budget, saying that they should focus on making it for a budget so that when it doesn't make a billion, it's still a win. By contrast, Spider-Man: No Way Home made $1.8 billion alone globally, but even a smaller-scale profit Marvel film like Eternals still made more than Star Trek Beyond, which presents a difficult monetary scenario for the studio in relation to cost. Pine mentions that the franchise has always been after the international market and hitting that billion-dollar mark because that's what Marvel was doing.
Chris Pine and Ben Foster love working together, as they show in the new movie "The Contractor." The two tell Looper about why they connect so well.
"It goes for any job, you'd rather do it with people you respect and know have your back and go ask some questions together." With he and I, it's what's best for the scene, what's going to work, what's going to make it pop, and whether that's him or me taking the lead, it doesn't really matter so long as it works for the film. "It just so happens that with Ben, I get the beauty of both worlds — someone I like to spend time with who's also one of the finest actors out there."
With director Tarik Saleh's (The Nile Hilton Incident) The Contractor now playing in theaters and available on Digital and On Demand, I recently got to ...
In addition, Pine talks about how grateful he was to have the opening thirty minutes show his character’s story without action. The film also stars Kiefer Sutherland, Gillian Jacobs, Eddie Marsan, JD Pardo, and Florian Munteanu. Pine also talks about how grateful he was to have the opening thirty minutes show his character’s story without action.
Chris Pine recently talked about Star Trek 4, sharing his excitement for the film and wanting to make a movie for fans not the box office.
But for Pine, making the Star Trek films is less about trying to compete against Marvel and more of making a good movie for the fans—and anyone who wants to join in. It’s like, let’s make the movie for the people that love this group of people, that love this story, that love . Let’s make it for them and then, if people want to come to the party, great. He went on to talk about the expectations for the Star Trek films and how much pressure the franchise had to cross the billion dollar benchmarks that Marvel films cross. It was also quite the surprise for the cast, who weren’t quite locked in when the project was announced. . Again, I love the messaging of it. The announcement was a delightful surprise for fans considering plans for Star Trek 4 collapsed back in 2018.
They co-star in Olivia Wilde's thriller Don't Worry Darling.
“I’ve asked a bunch of people, I asked John Krasinski, Channing Tatum, Michael B Jordan, David O’Russell, Ben Stiller, I have talked to everybody I possibly can to give me good advice on what to do here. “He shows up to set earliest than everybody else, hungry to learn, and he and Florence, I saw the film actually, just knock it out of the park.” Star Trek actor Chris Pine has praised singer Harry Styles for his “hungry to learn” attitude to acting, branding him a “humble hard-worker.”
What happens to our fine young actors as they reach middle age? They get to play more characters who spend whole movies looking anxious and ...
His James, graying around the temples, undone with worry over his family, carries extra layers of gravity that we didn’t see in Steve Trevor in the Wonder Woman films, or Captain Kirk in the J. J. Abrams Star Trek franchise. His old friend and former superior, Mike (Ben Foster, reuniting with his co-star from 2016’s superb Hell or High Water), has a much nicer house than Jack does, as well as the means to take good care of a son with special needs. But The Contractor follows a long, proud tradition of films that are critical of the military without being anti-soldier. Before long, he’s headed to Berlin, where he’s met by new colleagues including a tough cookie named Katia (played by the marvelous German actor Nina Hoss, in a way-too-small role). And for a brief stretch late in the film, the fine English actor Eddie Marsan shows up as the keeper of a safe house, a cozy repository of books, record albums, and rough wooden furniture, which in future centuries might be viewed as archaeological evidence of a man living on his own in forced solitude, building the best life for himself that he can. It’s an honorable discharge, but the higher-ups have stripped him of his pension and insurance benefits. That’s the realm Chris Pine has entered with The Contractor, directed by Tarik Saleh and written by J. P. Davis. Pine plays Army Ranger James Harper, a medical sergeant dismissed from duty when the painkillers he’s forced to take for an old injury show up in a drug test.
The pair star in Olivia Wilde's psychological thriller Don't Worry Darling together. Little Women star Florence Pugh plays Alice while former One Direction ...
Star Trek actor Chris Pine has praised singer Harry Styles for his “hungry to learn” attitude to acting, branding him a “humble hard-worker.” Star Trek actor Chris Pine has praised singer Harry Styles for his “hungry to learn” attitude to acting, branding him a “humble hard-worker.” “To be that young and to be that famous and have your head screwed on right, he’s a humble hard-worker.
Singer Harry Styles' “hungry to learn” attitude praised by Star Trek actor Chris pine, cy calling him “humble hard-worker.”
It's been six years now since Star Trek Beyond, the most recent movie in the legendary sci-fi franchise, hit cinemas. But it's not for lack of trying on ...
I love Star Trek. Again, I love the messaging of it. love Star Trek. Let’s make it for them and then, if people want to come to the party, great. I love the character. Conceptually, I love it. The Wonder Woman actor revealed that he’s met with director Matt Shakman, “who I really like”, and is just all-round excited to dive back into that world. But it’s not for lack of trying on Paramount’s part as the studio has been attempting to get Star Trek 4 off the ground ever since.
In an interview with Deadline, the 41-year-old actor discussed some of the new projects he has in the works, as well as what he hoped the new iteration of Star ...
It’s like, let’s make the movie for the people that love this group of people, that love this story, that love Star Trek. Let’s make it for them and then, if people want to come to the party, great. “I love Star Trek. Again, I love the messaging of it. “So to make a billion, it’s like you haven’t even — a billion is the gross. “But we operate in a system now which I don’t know how much longer we have of you have to spend 500 million dollars on a film to reach … even you have to pay all sorts of people back,” he continued. “I met a producer on it that I really like. “It was always this billion-dollar mark because Marvel was making a billion.