Author: BRWC

  • Killer Couples On Film

    Killer Couples On Film

    From Eddie O’Keefe comes Kill the King, a love story like no other. Southern Belle Karen Bird (Emily Browning) and Jack Blueblood (Luke Grimes) meet whilst committed to the Second Chances mental facility. The two fall madly in love and embark on a mission, to kill the King of Rock and Roll; Elvis Presley (Ron Livingston) who is in Los Angeles with wife Priscilla Presley (Ashley Greene).

    To mark the release of Kill the King on Digital Download, Blu-ray™ and DVD on 14th November, we take a look at some of the most scandalous serial killing duos on screen.

    Bonnie and Clyde

    Holding bank clerks up at gunpoint. Grand theft auto. Just your average date night then?

    Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker certainly took the idea of ‘adding excitement to a relationship’ to a whole new level.  In the middle of the Great Depression, Clyde Barrow (Warren Beatty) and Bonnie Parker (Faye Dunaway) meet when Clyde tries to steal Bonnie’s mother’s car. Bonnie who is enamoured by the rebellious nature of Clyde decides to become his partner in crime – and in life. Bonnie and Clyde turn from pulling minor heists to robbing banks. After a string of violent exploits, the pair end up in a heated police chase which escalates into a full blown shoot out.

    The film is based on the real life misadventures of Bonnie and Clive who were not only immortalised on screen but also in song by Serge Gainsbourg and Brigitte Bardot.

    Mr. & Mrs. Smith

    John (Brad Pitt) and Jane Smith (Angelina Jolie) live a mundane life in the suburbs in a struggling marriage. Or so we’re led to believe. Turns out, they are both assassins working for adversarial agencies.

    When they are both assigned to kill the same target, Benjamin Danz (Adam Brody), a series of highly charged, fire-powered liaisons ensue until they eventually discover the real aim of the mission was to kill each other.

    Their chemistry on screen was undeniable so it is no surprise that it led to one of the greatest celebrity couplings of our time; Brangelina.

    Natural Born Killers

    Woody Harrelson and Juliette Lewis star as ‘Natural Born Killers’

    Mickey and Mallory Knox. The couple are bloodthirsty serial killers on the run and crazy in love. And also just plain crazy.
    After a series of murders originating from a mass diner shooting, the pair become tabloid-TV darlings, thanks to a sensationalistic press campaign led by Robert Downey Jr. The press report on the pair as they go on a 52 people killing spree. The film is largely notorious for its amount of bloodshed and its controversial look at the way the media portrays criminals. Due to its apparent inspiration for copycat murders in the U.S, the film when first released was banned in multiple countries, including Ireland. However, it is now considered a cult classic.

    Heathers

    When you think of Murderous couples in films, you may not automatically consider these two perplexing paramours.

    Veronica (Winona Ryder) is part of the most popular clique at her high school, the ‘Heathers,’ but she disapproves of the other girls’ cruel behaviour. When Veronica and her new boyfriend, J.D. (Christian Slater), confront clique leader Heather Chandler (Kim Walker) and accidentally poison her, they make it appear a suicide. Where this film differs is that, though initially attracted to this troubled and intriguing sociopath, she eventually ends things with J.D after he murders two frat boys in the woods. The story culminates with J.D trying to blow up the school. Talk about a fiery relationship.

    Badlands

    Badlands is set in 1959 and is narrated by the impressionable 15-year-old Holly Sargis (Sissy Spacek), a teenage girl living in a dead-end South Dakota town called Fort Dupree.

    Holly lives with her controlling father; their relationship has been strained since her mother died of pneumonia a few years earlier. After meeting 25-year-old garbage collector Kit Carruthers (Martin Sheen) an impressionable Sissy falls madly in love with the James Dean lookalike.

    Holly’s narration, describing her adventures with Kit in romantic clichés, is a sinister contradiction to the gradual revelations of Kit’s increasingly antisocial and violent behaviour. Holly’s father disapproves of the relationship between Kit and Holly and shoots her dog as a punishment. In retaliation, Kit comes to Holly’s house and kills her father. To cover up the crime, they burn the house and go on the run together. More murders ensue but the pair are eventually caught and the film concludes with Kit revelling in the attention from police and press.

    True Romance

    Comic book nerd and Elvis fanatic Clarence (Christian Slater) and a prostitute named Alabama (Patricia Arquette) fall in love. Following an apparition from Elvis, Clarence ends up killing Alabama’s pimp. Things get worse though as he mistakenly grabs a suitcase of cocaine on his way out thinking it is Alabama’s clothing. The two hit the road for California hoping to sell the cocaine, but the mob is soon after them. Following a lot of death and deceit, the film climaxes in a bloody gun battle between police and drug dealing mobsters with Clarence and Alabama caught in the middle.

    Kill the King

    Veteran actor Burt Reynolds lends his voice to narrate a love story like no other. Southern Belle Karen Bird (Emily Browning) and Jack Blueblood (Luke Grimes) both meet whilst committed to the Second Chances mental facility. And to follow on the theme of psychotic suitor’s obsessed with Elvis Presley, the two fall madly in love and embark on a mission to kill the King of Rock and Roll.

    Karen and Jack’s bond is immediate and passionate as they quickly fall in love. Upon Karen’s mistreatment by the resident doctor, Jack loses all control and kills not only the doctor, but also anyone else who gets in their way as they escape the facility to head across the country to fulfil their dark, deranged destinies.

    Kill the King is available on Digital Download, Blu-ray™ and DVD from 14th November, courtesy of Universal Pictures.

  • Playing Elvis On Screen

    Playing Elvis On Screen

    From Eddie O’Keefe comes Kill the King, a love story like no other. Southern Belle Karen Bird (Emily Browning) and Jack Blueblood (Luke Grimes) meet whilst committed to the Second Chances mental facility. The two fall madly in love and embark on a mission, to kill the King of Rock and Roll; Presley (Ron Livingston) who is in Los Angeles with wife Priscilla Presley (Ashley Greene).

    To mark the release of Kill the King on Digital Download, Blu-ray™ and DVD on 14th November, we look at the actors who have portrayed the iconic music legend onscreen.

    Kurt Russell (Elvis, 1979)

    Known most recently for his roles in Fast and Furious 7 and The Hateful Eight, Russell played Presley in the earlier part of his career in the TV movie Elvis, for which he was nominated for an Emmy© for Outstanding Lead Actor. However, before depicting Presley, Russell began his acting career aged 10 in an uncredited role in one of Elvis’ many feature films, It Happened at the World’s Fair (1963). Russell’s character was paid by Presley’s character to kick him in the shins, which Russell was apprehensive to do due to Presley’s star status, yet was convinced to do it by The King himself who paid him $5.

    Johnny Harra (This Is Elvis, 1981)

    Johnny Harra began impersonating The King at the age of 11 and was cast as the 42-year-old Presley in the 1981 docudrama This Is Elvis. Harra, one of four actors to portray Elvis in the movie, was featured in two scenes from the re-enactment of August 16, 1977, filmed at Graceland. He is one of the very few Elvis impersonators to have portrayed ‘The King’ himself in a film!

    Dale Midkiff (Elvis and Me, 1988)

    Midkiff played Presley in the TV Movie Elvis and Me opposite Susan Walters as Priscilla Presley and was based on Priscilla’s 1985 book of the same title. Elvis and Me was one of the few films about Elvis that focused on Priscilla’s point of view. The film included a very heated lovemaking scene for the 1980’s and it took Midkiff and Walters several takes to get it right!

    Jonathan Rhys Meyers (Elvis, 2005)

    The Elvis TV mini-series saw more than 300 actors line-up to audition to play the role of Presley, yet Rhys Meyers won the part, even though he’s British and he wasn’t one of the 300 in line. Rhys Meyers went on to win a Golden Globe for his portrayal of Presley, with his role as ‘The King’ winning him widespread critical acclaim.

    Tyler Hilton (Walk the Line, 2005)

    Hilton was mainly known for his role in One Tree Hill and in 2005 seemed a peculiar choice for an Elvis role, however, he was selected to depict the role of Elvis in Walk The Line (2005), Jonny Cash’s life story, despite never intending to audition for the role. He originally responded to a casting call for musicians, and upon arrival was asked if he could play any Elvis songs. After the casting directors heard him play he was asked to star as Presley. Hilton was apprehensive to accept as he didn’t believe he would be able to portray ‘The King’, however, the thought of the part going to anyone else got the better of him, and he ended up accepting the role and is to this day said to be proud of his attempt.

    Michael Shannon (Elvis & Nixon, 2016)

    One of the most recent portrayals of Presley was from Academy Award nominee Michael Shannon in Elvis & Nixon (2016), which focuses on the meeting between Presley and Nixon, leading to Presley being appointed an honorary DEA agent. Eric Bana was originally cast as Presley but luckily for Shannon, he dropped out due to the pressure of living up to expectations of portraying ‘The King’!

    Ron Livingston (Kill The King, 2016)

    Ron Livingstone is well known for his role in Sex & The City as Burger, something he ate a lot of to gain a few pounds for his portrayal in Kill the King! To get into character Livingstone put on a bit of weight and tried to grow his side burns. Interestingly enough, even though the pop culture royal was and still is storied enough to be featured as the central figures of any film, this is one of the few films that has The King as a supporting character.

    Kill the King is available on Digital Download, Blu-ray™ and DVD from 14th November, courtesy of Universal Pictures.

  • Now You See Me 2 Interview: Jesse Eisenberg

    Now You See Me 2 Interview: Jesse Eisenberg

    Q: What was it about the idea of doing a sequel to Now You See Me that appealed to you as an actor? 

    Jesse Eisenberg: Absolutely nothing, we were all very hesitant about signing on to doing the second movie because the first one worked for a variety of reasons, one of which was luck.

    We all loved playing our characters in the first movie, and we wondered how the humour would reconcile with the drama, which was going to have to combine with the theatrics and suspense of the film. When it worked with the first one, we felt lucky and relieved.

    When they pitched the idea of the sequel to the nine great actors who are in this movie, all of whom are busy people, we read the first script, and we didn’t think that it was good enough. They went away and wrote another one, and another one and wrote about six to a dozen scripts and finally we found one that we felt was right and could be better than the first one or at least as good. When we found the right one, we all became incredibly excited. I like ensemble casts because of my background in the theatre; you get to work with great actors, and it reminds me of why I got into acting in the first place. Getting to play a part like this with these actors is a great thrill.

    Q: A lot of summer blockbusters are based on pre-existing material, whereas the Now You See Me films are original material and not based on comic books (a rarity these days), was this part of the appeal? 

    JE: Yes, I think that the Now You See Me movies celebrate certain things that I value: like hard work, cleverness, craftiness, and it doesn’t celebrate brute strength or the deification of an individual. It focuses on characters that practised eight hours a day in a dark room to become good at what they do and not because they were given superhuman strength. It is the type of movie that me as a kid would really have appreciated because that was me practising in my room doing musical theatre, and I would have been able to relate to these characters rather than one that is imbued with a God-given ability.

    Q: What are the advantages and disadvantages of working with an ensemble cast? 

    JE: The advantages are that if you are surrounded by people who are good and hard-working, they will make you better, just by virtue of wanting to live up to the expectations that are set up by the group. I would say that the disadvantages are that you feel that you have to defend your character a little more aggressively than you would otherwise have to. If you are in every moment of the movie and the film is showing those quiet, private moments of a character thinking or being concerned about something then you don’t have to push as hard, as an actor, to make your presence felt. When surrounded by a group of iconic people you have to push that bit harder to make your presence felt. That isn’t at the expense of the movie, but it naturally happens when you are in a group of talented, charismatic people.

    Q: Was there space for collaboration and to develop the character in the way that you wanted to take it? 

    JE: 100%. In the first movie, the first characters weren’t as specifically drawn until the actor was assigned to them. I believe that Woody Harrelson’s character was initially a 70-year-old Englishman, my character was much older and incredibly different. When they cast us, they allowed us to tailor our characters with the screenwriter who did the last draft, which was Ed Solomon, who also wrote this film. They allowed us to work with the writers and tailor what we wanted to do. I wanted to play a performer that didn’t suffer the anxieties that I do. I am an actor, and when I perform on stage, it tears me apart. I really wanted to play a character that I had seen before, actors who are confident in their performances and they’re good at what they do, and they don’t panic about it. That was what I wanted to play.

    Q: Does getting to play a confident performer help you with your anxieties as a performer? 

    JE: Precisely, it reminds me that my anxieties as a performer don’t make me any better at what I do, it is just one way of thinking about it, and I could just go on stage and not worry about thinking about it all day, and that is what my character in NYSM2 does. He goes on stage, and he is great, and he is actually really excited about it all day. It reminds me that there are different avenues that can be taken and my character in this film actually takes the most comfortable route.

    Q: Now You See Me 2 has a different director, Jon Chu. How did you find working with him and what was different in his approach to directing compared with the first film’s director, Louis Leterrier? 

    JE: I have wanted to work with Jon Chu since I was twenty-years-old. About twelve years ago someone gave me a short that they had seen from a USC graduate, and it was John Chu’s graduation short. It was a musical movie, and it was astounding. I must have watched it a dozen times, and I even sent it to my mom in New Jersey so that she could watch it and she ended up sending it to her friends. Jon is very adept at making things with interesting choreography – not necessarily dance, but movement – and he uses cinematography to enhance them rather than just trying to capture how amazing they are live. He also happens to be a sensitive, smart guy with a good sense of humour, which meant he let us as actors do what we love to do. He was great on this because he enhanced the theatricality of what was visually beautiful about this movie. Similar to our characters in the movie where we are trying to use our minds coupled with technology to do tricks that have never been done before, Jon would use technology in the same way to create shots that had never been done before. He used a drone camera inside a casino to create a shot that had never been done before. He shot using drones in aqueducts in London, and again I believe that has never been done before. He was pushing the envelope on how a movie could be shot, and that paralleled what the magicians were trying to do with their tricks in the movie.

    Q: Does this approach to the movie change how you approach your performance? 

    JE: I don’t watch the movies that I have been in, and I also don’t watch the dailies or the snippets of the movie, because I find it deeply uncomfortable. However, I like being in someone else’s visual world, except I never watch it or even know how they look. I see the trailers for these movies, and they always look different to how I expected. Even with a film like this, where there’s such wonderful style and visually imagery, and they are great to watch in person doing magic shows, but you are enhancing them with a camera. There is a scene where I make the rain stop, then go up, and that scene was beautiful to shoot in person, but the way that Jon shot it allowed for the best possible version of that imagery to exist. As an actor occasionally you are spending a little longer to get the shot right, but as an actor, I am happy to do that because film is a visual medium. My acting will only be enhanced by being in a nice looking movie so I never mind that. Then I go do theatre for six months and there are no technical tricks and we do it chronologically.

    Q: In Now You See Me 2, Woody Harrelson plays two characters, his character from the first film and now also his twin brother. Did you give Woody Harrelson any advice on playing two characters given your experience on Richard Ayoade’s The Double? 

    JE: No, in fact on set they were talking about how it had never been done before, and I was there going ‘I did this a year ago in London’, which was where we were filming at the time. I felt like I never got the credit for knowing how it worked and everyone was like, ‘yesterday was so cool, they used the camera like this,’ and I was like ‘I know, I know!’ No one asked me for tips or advice.

    Q: For the sequel, you are joined by Lizzy Caplan as Lula, the latest member of the Horsemen. How did you find working with her? 

    JE: Lizzy is an unusually confident performer, and by unusual, I mean that she showed no timidity towards the fact she was walking into a group that had not only been established in a previous movie but also had actually had someone in her place – namely the single female illusionist. I think she stole the show, and the veterans had to live up to what she was doing. She was incredibly funny, innovative and interesting and really she is one of these rare performers where every single take is different, and she is endlessly clever. She takes a role that is already well written and makes it different to how it was seen on the page. I think that she found her footing a little later in her career than some women do because a lot of women are famous very young and I just look forward to seeing more of her work in the future.

    Q: You have also been in London with your play The Spoils. How do you find work acting in both plays and films as well as your writing? 

    JE: I see them as extensions of each other. My character in Now You See Me 2, Atlas, has a bit of hubris, whereas the character that I am playing in The Spoils has that in a skewed way. By getting to act in other people’s plays and films, it inspires me as a writer because you get to live in someone else’s mind and world. As an actor, you have no choice but to immerse yourself because you have to manifest the emotions of that character within a fictional world. In that way, it has exposed me to language, thoughts and dialogue that I would not have otherwise been exposed.

    Q: Lastly, would you return for a third instalment of the Now You See Me Movies? 

    JE: Yeah, I think that we would all come back if the script was right. We are a group of actors that all love working with each other. I love my character, and he has been the most comfortable character that I have played. Most of the characters I play are tortured, angry depressives, and certainly those are the parts that I am often allotted, but they can be taxing. While my character in Now You See Me is taxing, I get to enjoy myself playing a character who likes to perform and it is fun for me to do that.

    NOW YOU SEE ME 2 will be available to download from 28 October  2016 and on Blu-ray, DVD, Double Pack DVD and DVD Bonus Disc Edition from 7 November 2016. 

  • Now You See Me 2: Dave Franco Interview 

    Now You See Me 2: Dave Franco Interview 

    NOW YOU SEE ME 2 is available to download now and out on Blu-ray and DVD this Monday, 7th November, so here’s an interview with Dave Franco.

    Q: How was it reuniting with the majority of the cast for Now You See Me 2?  

    Dave Franco: It was incredible, we all genuinely love each other, and I laugh with this cast more than most people in my life. I would already love to come back and do as many installations of these movies as possible. Of course, it will depend on how well this film does at the box office to see if we will get another movie but I would be so sad if we didn’t come back.

    Q: Asides from reuniting with the cast, what was it that made you want to revisit this character? 

    DF: It was more that I was attracted to the take on the second movie. When most people think of sequels, they think of bigger and crazier, and there are elements of that in this his movie regarding the movie being more global. We short part of it in London and in Macau in China. What I loved about this movie was that it felt different while retaining its essence. What I mean by that is that in the first one the Horsemen, the magicians, were always one step ahead of the audience. In this one, without wanting to give too much away, there is a twist where someone is playing a trick on the Horsemen. This time, we have our backs against the wall and are a little more human and exposed. You get to see a different side to the magicians and not just the confident on stage persona.

    Q: The Now You See Me Movies stand out from a lot of mainstream cinema because it is based on an original concept, is that part of the appeal for you as an actor? 

    DF: Definitely, one of the main criteria for me as an actor these days when I chose a project is that the project is bringing something new to the table. Sometimes they don’t work out, but I appreciate the attempt. Most movies these days are comic book movies, and it is nice to feel like I am part of something that feels unique.

    Q: What are the advantages and disadvantages of working with an ensemble cast? 

    DF: In this case, there weren’t many disadvantages because we all get along. There weren’t any egos, and we were giving each other lines. If I had a line that didn’t feel true to my character, I would give my line to say, Ruffalo, because it would serve the line better. The general atmosphere was about looking at the bigger picture and what best served the film.

    Q: Was there a degree of flexibility as to where you wanted to take your character, Jack Wilder? 

    DF: Definitely, this is a big budget studio movie, but my hat is off to Jon Chu, who gave us a load of flexibility and bring our own personalities to these characters. I think that means that the characters are able to break out of the typical archetypes that you might expect.

    Q: You mentioned Jon Chu, how did you find working with him and how did it compare with making the first film? 

    DF:  I think Louis Leterrier, who directed the first one, and John Chu, who directed this one, both have their strengths. I loved working with both of them. What I can say about John Chu is that his films often have a lot of choreography and dancing, and he brought those elements to our movie in the big set pieces. There is a scene that takes place in a laboratory, and we are passing a card between the four of us and it felt like a choreographed dance which is his strong suit. John Chu really cared about the characters and what we learn about them in this movie in particular their backgrounds so that the audience is even more invested in the characters. In a film like this, there is often a lot of action sequences where there isn’t a lot of time for the audience to breath, but John Chu made sure that the audience got to know these characters. As an actor, it is important to me that you get to bring a rounded character to the audience.

    Q: This time around there is a new addition to the Horseman in the form of Lizzy Caplan as Lulu. What do you think that she brought to the team? 

    DF: Lizzy is technically the new kid on this film, but she did not act like it from day one. I respect her so much. She came in with such confidence, and she brought a lot of humour to the film and stole ever scene that she is in. If I were in her position, I would have withdrawn into myself and been concerned about taking risks as an actor, whereas she was the opposite of that. I give her a lot of credited for what she did.

    Q: Lizzy is also the only female Illusionist and a member of the Four Horsemen, was it a bit of a boy’s club on set? 

    DF: Sure, and she held her own, she set the tone, and we had to keep up with her.

    Q: Woody Harrelson is playing his original character from the first film and is also playing his twin brother. You have several scenes with double Harrelson, how did you find it? 

    DF: I love Woody Harrelson, so the more Woody, the better. He is one of these actors that can do no wrong in my book. He can be so believable in the most serious of dramas and at the same time can be so likeable and funny in comedies. What I enjoyed about working with him on this movie was that by being both characters he got to play his entire range. I don’t think anyone is going to be upset about double Woody Harrelson in a movie. It was a lot of fun to shoot. The guy who would stand in for Woody was extremely funny to work with.

    Q: What tricks did you have to learn on this movie to up your game from the first instalment of Now You See Me? 

    DF: My character throws a lot of cards in the first movie, and in this instalment, he throws a lot of cards, so I wanted to up the ante and learn to throw cards in new ways. I learned how to flip a card and propel it with my thumb and catch it in my mouth. It is a skill that I will never need again in my life, but it was fun to learn. I wanted to become as proficient in as many tricks as possible so that it gives me credibility as an actor playing one of the greatest magicians of all time. You believe it so much more when it is actually me doing the tricks rather than CGI.

    Q: You mentioned it before, but would you be up for returning for a third instalment? 

    DF: The script would have to be in a good place, and I wouldn’t jump on the project for the sake of it. As with this film, I think that they will work and work on the script until all of us are satisfied. I can’t speak for all of us, but if there is a script that feels good enough and clever enough then we would all come back.

    NOW YOU SEE ME 2 will be available to download from 28 October  2016 and on Blu-ray, DVD, Double Pack DVD and DVD Bonus Disc Edition from 7 November 2016. 

  • Kevin Hart: His Top 5 Films

    Kevin Hart: His Top 5 Films

    Kevin Hart is taking the comedy world by storm. With the biggest comedy tour of the year and a slew of well received feature films, Hart’s come a long way since his gig at comedy club The Laff House in Philadelphia. According to Forbes Hart has dethroned Comedy King Jerry Seinfeld as the highest paid comedian of 2016.  With his most recent film Central Intelligence, available on Digital Download October 17th, and the Blu-Ray and DVD on October 31st, we take a look back at some of his best cinematic moments.

    Central Intelligence (2016)

    Easily one of the most entertaining buddy-comedies of 2016, Central Intelligence follows the gag-worthy antics of Hart’s peaked-in-high-school accountant Calvin Joyner as he is reunited with Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson’s former high school victim turned CIA assassin, Bob Stone. The film takes a light-hearted look at the contrast between high school success and life after graduation. When Bob unexpectedly reappears in  Calvin’s life shortly preceding an upcoming High School reunion, Calvin finds himself dragged into the middle of an international incident, recruited by his high school friend because of his accounting skills. Hart brings his comedic talents to the film, and alongside Johnson’s imposing stature, delivers a fun and entertaining performance that results in a barrel of laughs.

    The Wedding Ringer (2015)

    The Wedding Ringer sees Hart bring to life a best-man-for-hire with his signature raunchy style. Doug Harris (Josh Gad), a tax attorney about to marry a woman he considers out of his league, turns to Jimmy Callahan (Kevin Hart), who runs The Best Man Inc. Doug has managed to hide from his fiancée and charismatic wedding planner that he does not have a best man or seven groomsmen to complement his fiancée’s seven bridesmaids. Hart’s character takes on the role of a militant priest from El Salvador and a series of unexpected, but hilarious consequences ensue. The film did remarkably well at the box office, grossing over $79 million.

    Get Hard (2015)

    Starring alongside Will Ferrell and by now an established comedian himself, Hart plays a car wash attendant, Darnell Lewis, who is approached by James King (Ferrell), a rich hedge fund manager who has been sentenced to ten years in prison for insider trading. Upon receiving his sentence James is given 30 days to set his affairs in order before being incarcerated. James’ flawed and elitist preconception that any black man working in a low-paid labour job has been to prison leads him to ask Darnell to help him toughen up for prison-life. In reality, Darnell is a perfectly law abiding citizen and has never been to prison but agrees to help for the money James offers.

    Ride Along (2014)

    Arguably the film that propelled Kevin Hart to fame, Ride Along sees Hart playing security guard Ben Barber as he tries to prove to his girlfriend’s cop brother that he’s good enough for her. Hart’s quick-witted comedy received impressive reviews from critics who appreciated his self-deprecating style and rapid-fire delivery. Paired with Ice Cube’s more restrained take on comedy, Hart’s comedic style is a nice juxtaposition that allowed him to prove his ability to carry a film on his own comedic merits.

    Think Like A Man (2012)

    Based on Steve Harvey’s book, Act Like A Lady, Think Like A Man, Kevin Hart plays a ‘Happily Divorced Man’ named Cedric, who in reality feels quite lonely. The film takes Harvey’s relationship rules and caricatures and turns them into real people whose lives audiences can easily be related to. The light-hearted take on modern relationships was received with positive reviews from critics and is one of Hart’s most well-reviewed films.

    Central Intelligence is available on Digital Download on October 17th and on Blu-ray and DVD on October 31st. You can pre-order from the following link: