Tag Archives: Haley Lu Richardson

“Five Feet Apart” Trailers, Featurettes, Interviews & Posters

Directed by Justin Baldoni, Five Feet Apart follows Stella Grant, played by Haley Lu Richardson. She is like every other seventeen-year-old, but she ill.  She spends a great deal of time living in a hospital because she is a cystic fibrosis patient.

She has best friends, and she seems pretty happy except when her illness brings her way down.  She lives her life, which is full of limitations and self-control if she wants to stay alive.

The point of the story is that all the things that keep her alive and relatively happy are put to the test when she meets an impossibly charming fellow, who is also a CF patient. His name is Will Newman, played by Cole Sprouse. They instantly become attracted to each other, though restrictions dictate maintaining a safe distance between them. The relationship intensifies, and so does the temptation to throw the limitations out the window and embrace that attraction they share.

Added to the story is Will rebels against the medical treatment, and Stella steps up and helps him understand he needs to live. He needs to live a fulfilling life.  

The movie is a tearjerker and reminds me of the book and movie Fault in Our Stars.  The ending might be just as sad but uplifting as John Green’s story. 

I am having a hard time wrapping my wits around this movie. The trailers are not grabbing me in the least because I feel the movie will end sadly like John Green’s book, which I have mentioned before.

A new poster is released, and a trailer along with it. I am still not convinced this movie will do well. I am sure it ends on a downer like The Fault in Our Stars. The post shows the two main characters five feet apart, and the title is Five Feet Apart, but the nurse in the trailers says six feet apart. The first poster shows them close as can be. I am not quite sure what that means, but it is a discrepancy.

The studio blocked some clips that told more of the story and the relationship that builds without giving away the ending. The ending is crucial and will make it a great movie or not. The point is movies about terminal illness end sadly.

The following two features explain why the director wanted to make this movie. He relates to terminal illness by meeting a young woman who had this disease. This is a tough movie to make and even tougher to watch.

The interviews tell you about the story, and this is a spoiler alert. The producer praises Richardson for being bubbly with “sparks” in her eyes. Watching her interview, she is smart and knows her character.

Not only is the director nice eye candy, but he is also a great guy. He knows this story and is passionate about the situation people with this disease go through in general.

The character Will is hard for me to like or appreciate because he is always whining. The interview with Sprouse, who see a totally different person. In the interview, he talks about how Will is feeling sorry for himself. I am impressed.

“Operation Finale” Trailers, Movie Clips, Featurettes, and Posters

Directed by Chris Weitz, Operation Finale is a thrilling true story that follows the 1960 covert mission of legendary Mossad agent Peter Malkin, played by Oscar Isaac, as he infiltrates Argentina and captures Adolf Eichmann, played by Ben Kingsley, the Nazi officer who masterminded the transportation logistics that brought millions of innocent Jews to their deaths in concentration camps.

Mossad is the national intelligence agency of Israel.

Weitz directing credits include About a Boy, Twilight Saga: New Moon, and The Golden Compass. His writing credits are impressive, which includes Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, The Mountain Between Us, and Nutty Professor II: The Klumps.

The atrocities of the Nazi regime is forever in our minds.  We will never forget how crazy and mad a group of evil men and women can become if they are allowed to dramatize freely without being stopped.

The latest poster image communicates so much better. We must be vigilant and never let such atrocities happen again.

The rest of the cast include Lior Raz, Melanie Laurent, Nick Kroll, Joe Alwyn, Haley Lu Richardson, Michael Aronov, Ohad Knoller, Greg Hill, Torben Liebrecht, Mike Hernandez, Greta Scacchi, and Pêpê Rapazote.

The feature below offers details of how Weitz works with the actors. The actors speak about working with him and how he directs.

“The Extraction” movie clip is intense.

The movie clip tells us how they plan to get Eichmann out of Argentina.

The featurette tells more about the difficulties of capturing one of the evilest men during the Nazi regime. Kingsley tells us why he wanted to play this man.

The movie clip is directed and edited to keep the fast pace of the story moving – also known as suspense and thrilling.

The movie trailer is intense and Ben Kingsley is fantastic, as usual.