Netflix Lands Adam McKay Movie Starring Robert Pattinson, Amy Adams

Adam McKay is returning to Netflix with his latest feature film. Titled Average Height, Average Build, the project is being described as part serial killer-thriller, part comedy, that follows a killer who uses political lobbyists to change laws in order to make it easier for him to kill. Like all of McKay’s recent work, the project […]

Adam McKay Reunites With Netflix for Robert Pattinson, Amy Adams Comedy ‘Average Height, Average Build’

Adam McKay is partnering with Netflix again for his follow-up to “Don’t Look Up.” The streamer has acquired the director’s next feature comedy, titled “Average Height, Average Build.” The film will star Robert Pattinson as a serial killer that looks to leverage American politicians to make murder easier, as well as Amy Adams as the […]

Michael J. Fox Says His Battle with Parkinson’s Is Getting Harder: ‘I’m Not Going to Be 80’

Michael J. Fox is getting brutally honest about his struggles with Parkinson’s disease.

In a new interview with CBS Sunday Morning to promote his upcoming Apple TV+ documentary “Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie,” the actor revealed that the degenerative disease has begun to take a larger toll on him after 30 years of living with it.

“I’m not gonna lie, it’s getting harder,” Fox said. “It’s getting tougher. Every day gets tougher. But that’s the way it is.”

Fox explained that his recent struggles have prompted him to think more about his own mortality. He said that he has begun to accept that the disease could cause a fatal accident at any time.

“Falling and aspirating food and getting pneumonia — all these subtle ways that get you,” he said. “You don’t die from Parkinson’s, you die with Parkinson’s. So I’ve been thinking of the mortality of it. I’m not going to be 80.”

Despite the adversity he faces, the documentary features multiple examples of Fox showing off the sense of humor that made him a star. Fox said that his ability to keep laughing has helped him maintain a relatively positive outlook on life.

“I recognize how hard this is for people,” he said of the disease. “I recognize how hard it is for me. But I have a certain set of skills that allow me to deal with this stuff. And I realize with gratitude, optimism is sustainable. If you can find something to be grateful for, you can find something to look forward to.”

“Still” serves as the most definitive document of Fox’s career and Parkinson’s diagnosis to date. The film, which was directed by “An Inconvenient Truth” helmer Davis Guggenheim, became a Sundance hit for its ability to blend honesty and nostalgia.

“At its most basic level, ‘Still’ tracks the arc of Fox’s career from small-for-his-age kid in Canada who drops out of high school to the biggest star in Hollywood, and how that shifts when he learns he has Parkinson’s before the age of 30,” Esther Zuckerman wrote in her IndieWire review of the film. “Fox’s voice dominates the doc, and he is the only talking head to appear. Occasionally, Guggenheim will interject to pose a question to Fox about his mental or physical state, but for the most part this is Fox’s story in Fox’s words.”

“Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie” begins streaming on Apple TV+ on Friday, May 12. 

A Less Outrageous and Costume-y Met Gala? Why This Year’s Event May Be Different

Anyone who knew Karl Lagerfeld is surely smiling while thinking about how the popular and revered late designer might react to the Costume Institute exhibition Karl Lagerfeld: A Line of Beauty, which opens May 5 at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art. After all, how does one produce a museum show around a man who […]

The ‘Fatal Attraction’ TV Show Isn’t on Anyone’s Side

“Fatal Attraction” is a story about hubris. Dan Gallagher (Joshua Jackson), a high-powered LA County prosecutor, lives a life of means. He’s inherited the de facto family business, he has a loving wife and daughter, and he can escape precarious legal situations with a well-placed phone call or two. Then, a woman enters his life who he can’t ignore: Alex Forrest (Lizzy Caplan), a member of the Victim Services team who ends up in the same courthouse hallways Dan patrols on a daily basis.

You don’t need to have seen a single movie from the 1980s to know that “Fatal Attraction” is also the story of an affair, one that plays out roughly the way it does in the film on which the Paramount+ series is based. Innocent-enough interactions quickly add up to Dan and Alex in bed together. Dan tries to end things and pretend their romantic few days never happened. Alex stages increasingly larger and more dangerous attempts to get his attention. There are obligatory nods in the eight-episode remake to its two-hour predecessor: a handwritten note, a first conversation at a bar, a few days of breezy city adventures with a dog in tow, some creative uses of home improvement products. There are also a handful of head-fakes with pieces of the movie’s original iconography — both locations and objects — presumably meant to keep any viewer on their toes.

Still more, there are bigger, conscious decisions to veer away from the film designed to make “Fatal Attraction” something that can stand on its own, even if they don’t end up being all that consequential. The move from Manhattan to Los Angeles is largely incidental, aside from a sunlit beach day getaway. Alex working in the same DA’s office makes this more explicitly an affair between co-workers, and that largely ends up more as a convenience to bring in more of Dan’s colleagues to the aftermath.

Yet, some changes do lay the groundwork for something of more substance, a show that can grapple with this central premise in a way that a film from 1987 might not have had room for. This new “Fatal Attraction” frames their brief relationship as an active one rather than a passive, incidental misstep that ballooned out of control. The opening episode, written by showrunner and “Dirty John” creator Alexandra Cunningham, posits Dan as a man who is familiar with being presented with poor choices and choosing them freely. In starting from the end and working back to it from the beginning, the opening of the series sees Dan facing real consequences. Rather than retreating to the tidy twinkle of an ironic family portrait, this “Fatal Attraction” not only sees Alex’s murder as a wrongful death, but one that Dan is responsible for.

“Fatal Attraction”

Monty Brinton/Paramount+

Opening up the series on a parole hearing, Dan spends the rest of the season trying to clear his name. 2008 and 2023 blur together from scene to scene, with the length and styling of Jackson’s hair sometimes the only clue separating meetings 15 years apart. The show finds some tenuous, mildly interesting thematic connections between past and present, and those jumps aren’t incoherent. They do mess with the overall momentum of the show, though, sanding off the edges for a deliberate, meandering murder mystery instead of a propulsive thriller.

The structure places Dan and Alex as two ripples flowing out from the center of the story. Roughly, the first half situates Dan’s life, putting his decision to have an affair with Alex in the context of a life filled with those other ill-advised choices. (Jackson is really shrewd at gradually turning the dial from charming family man to law-driven cynic.) Though the season flips the perspective early on, it’s not really until the later chapters that we really get to see the other side of the equation.

This new “Fatal Attraction” is not intent on making Alex the secret hero of this story. She’s not even really the hero of her own story, shown as a product of a lifetime of manipulations and misunderstandings, driven to the point where she had no choice but to deflect all of them onto her weekend fling with a married man. “Fatal Attraction” gives her all the shortcut signifiers of anxiety and depression — dropped-out sound, ringing ears, time-lapse dazes — but does little else to afford her a lifeline.

For someone who so recently proved in “Fleishman is in Trouble” that she’s capable of adding so much to a character grappling with the decisions and disappointments of her own past, Caplan rarely gets a similar opportunity here. Instead, any of “Fatal Attraction’s” attempts to put Alex’s choices into perspective are limp and fleeting, especially compared to the full tapestry of the Gallagher family. That Caplan holds her own without anything comparable is a testament to what she’s able to add that remains unspoken. The fact that she remains largely incidental to the story outside of her provocations and her death ends up being a roundabout indictment of both the source material (presumably intentional) and the show itself (presumably not).

Dan’s wife, Beth (Amanda Peet), and daughter, Ellen (Alyssa Jirrels), create an opportunity to examine the collateral family trauma he drags both of them into. While Dan is searching for a new trial, Ellen is busy being confronted with Jung-heavy echoes of her father’s choices in those of the people around her at college. In both past and present, Peet does an admirable job of crafting a specific version of Beth, free of the “scorned wife” mold. Neither Gallagher shows many signs of being haunted by the events of 15 years prior. It’s something that saps some urgency from the show overall, but does give the 2023 sections a weird, unexpected sense of peace.

Toby Huss in “Fatal Attraction”

Michael Moriartis/Paramount+

The one undeniable, wise addition to the show is Dan’s fixer friend Mike, played to perfection by the inimitable Toby Huss. It’s through him that “Fatal Attraction” picks up a giant dose of personality (he’s one of the few who could really make Goldfish-related dialogue sing), tinged with a trace of acceptable sleaze that the show largely (and, to various extents, wisely) excises from this update. Part father figure, part confidant, part much-needed kick in the ass, Mike is the requisite counterbalance for Dan. He also embodies something that Alex’s half lacks, another sign that — for all the destructive things she does over the course of this story — the deck is stacked against her in any version.

If part of the appeal of a TV series version of “Fatal Attraction” is looking at what you find when there’s no distinct beginning and no definitive end to what happened between Dan and Alex, what’s left here still ends up a collection of fragmented ideas that work in pieces but not together. The longer it goes on, the new developments and revelations don’t so much reframe what came before as much as they nearly make it irrelevant. “Fatal Attraction” suffers from the same paradox that plagues so many of these projects that come out of the “reimagined as a limited series” pipeline: It’s somehow both thin and overstuffed at the same time.

That comes, in part, from the time shift, put in the culturally neutral dead zone of the late 2000s, where drab remnants of the ’90s still kick around among the court’s wealthiest wardrobes and the idea of a phone camera is still in its relative infancy. During and after Dan and Alex’s affair, the intensity of passion and violence has to almost be taken at face value. The look of this “Fatal Attraction” is handsome to a point, but the visual engine is in service of something built to be much more palatable and much less abrasive than its spiritual predecessor. Save for one visual curveball of a hallucination midway through the season’s back half, the palette and style is roughly what a by-the-book dramatization of Dan and Alex’s story would have been had they been the subject of a hit true crime podcast themselves.

What “Fatal Attraction” does have is a grounding of that hubris. As Dan continues his attempted post-parole redemption tour, he’s met with a constant stream of people telling him to his face how much they despise him. Even to a few of those people who don’t meet him with contempt after a decade and a half, he’s a curio — a relic of an odd story they tell their buddies at happy hour, probably not far away from where Dan and Alex had their first flirty moment. Dan Gallagher is not the wronged, complicated hero. But no one else is, either. “Fatal Attraction” paints a picture where nearly everyone is at fault, and making that idea work is its own risky gamble.

Grade: C+

The first three episodes of “Fatal Attraction” premiere April 30 on Paramount+. New episodes will be available every Sunday through May 28.

Hollywood Flashback: In 1987, ‘Fatal Attraction’ Would Not Be Ignored

Fatal Attraction — which wheezes back to life as a series starring Joshua Jackson and Lizzy Caplan, premiering April 30 on Paramount+ — began as the 1979 short Diversion, about a one-night stand gone haywire, which writer-director James Dearden fleshed out into a feature screenplay. With contributions from Nicholas Meyer (writer-director of Star Trek II: […]

Inside the $25,000 Members-Only Club That Gives Access to VIP Suites at L.A.’s Biggest Arenas

The most expensive private suite at Crypto.com Arena might have never gotten built if it weren’t for the pandemic. The Hideaway Luxury Suite — an exclusive venue from Stadium Status, a private members club for sports and live entertainment that affords high-profile artists and musicians access to Hideaway and other premium suites around Los Angeles […]

That Old Jack Black Magic: As the Villain of ‘The Super Mario Bros. Movie,’ the Actor Gives His Peachiest Performance in Years

I have a little ritual when it comes to animated films. I try to go into them not knowing who the cast members are. That’s not always possible, of course. For the most part, though, I do my best to ignore the publicity and let the voices I hear surprise me — because if you […]

Box Office: ‘Super Mario Bros.’ Triumphs Again in Fourth Weekend, ‘Are You There God’ Debuts to Dispiriting $6.8 Million

It’s another weekend of box office domination for “The Super Mario Bros. Movie,” which collected a towering $40 million in its fourth frame. Those ticket sales, down just 33% from the weekend prior, were easily enough to rule over the weekend’s newcomers, including literary adaptation “Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret,” Finnish war drama “Sisu” […]

‘Super Mario Bros. Movie’ Officially Smashes $1 Billion Globally

“The Super Mario Bros. Movie” is officially the first film of the year to cross the coveted $1 billion milestone at the global box office. As of Sunday, after 26 days of release, the animated video game adaptation, from Universal, Illumination and Nintendo, has grossed $490 million in North America and $532 million internationallly. It’s […]