Thursday, December 26, 2013

Gal Gadot Addresses Wonder Woman Criticism: 'I'll Gain Body Mass'


gal gadot wonder woman



There are no fans more exacting than comic book lovers, which Israeli model/actress Gal Gadot has learned since being cast as Wonder Woman in the upcoming "Batman vs. Superman" movie.



Her future co-star, Ben Affleck, also received the same harsh lesson when the Internet imploded after he was cast as Batman. He shrugged it off, and now Gadot is doing the same thing.



In her first interview about the role, Gadot told an Israeli entertainment show that she isn't fazed by the fans' concern that her physical appearance doesn't match Wonder Woman's -- particularly the fact that her chest is not as full.



"I represent the Wonder Woman of the new world. Breasts ... anyone can buy for 9,000 shekels and everything is fine," Gadot said on "Good Evening With Gai Pines" (via Batman-News.com).



"By the way, Wonder Woman is Amazonian, and historically accurate Amazonian women actually had only one breast. So, if I'd really go 'by the book' ... it'd be problematic."



Fans should have no fear that Gadot won't be physically prepared to play the superheroine. She's already starting "a very serious training regimen -- Kung Fu, kickboxing, swords, jujutsu, Brazilian."



She promised, "I'll gain body mass."



There, comic-book nerds, are you happy now?

Gal Gadot Is Cast as Wonder Woman in Man of Steel Sequel





from The Moviefone Blog http://news.moviefone.com/2013/12/26/gal-gadot-wonder-woman-criticism/

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'The Exorcist': 25 Things You Didn't Know About the Terrifying Horror Classic


the exorcist facts



"The Exorcist," released 40 years ago this week (on December 26, 1973), is widely regarded as the scariest movie ever made, but after four decades, two sequels, two prequels, and countless spoofs, is there anything about the tale of demon-possessed Regan MacNeil (Linda Blair) and the priests who try to save her (Max von Sydow and Jason Miller) left to jolt and shock us?



Maybe there is. "Exorcist" director William Friedkin's 2013 memoir, "The Friedkin Connection," has three chapters full of dish on the making of the film, including which characters were based on famous people, how some of the famous special effects were accomplished, how he came to slap a Jesuit priest, and whether or not the production was cursed. Here are 25 things you may not know about "The Exorcist," many of them from Friedkin's recent book.



1. The real case that inspired William Peter Blatty's novel and screenplay was the 1949 exorcism of a 14-year-old boy, named in press accounts as "Roland Doe" or "Robbie Mannheim." The incident occurred in Washington, D.C., while Blatty was a student at the city's Georgetown University. In his novel, he would change the boy to a girl, but he kept many of the reported details, including the D.C. setting, the levitating furniture, the strange words appearing on the child's body, and the guttural voice heard when the boy opened his mouth.



2. Blatty made his career as a comic novelist and screenwriter of Hollywood comedies, including "A Shot in the Dark" and "John Goldfarb, Please Come Home." But he'd long been haunted by the Roland Doe story and finally began writing the novel in 1969.



3. Published in 1971, the book earned strong reviews but was not an immediate hit. Blatty lucked into an invitation to appear on the Dick Cavett talk show after another guest's last-minute cancellation, and he got to spend 40 minutes pitching his novel to a national TV audience. After that, the book climbed to the top of the New York Times bestseller list.



4. Warner Bros. bought the film rights and offered it to several top directors, who all turned it down, including Stanley Kubrick, Arthur Penn, and Mike Nichols, who said he doubted he could find a 12-year-old girl who could carry the movie.



5. The studio's next choice was Mark Rydell, director of the then-recent Warner release "The Cowboys." Blatty, however, wanted the little-known Friedkin and threatened to announce during the author's upcoming appearance on Johnny Carson's "Tonight Show" that the studio wasn't letting him have the director he wanted. The studio may have relented anyway, but on the scheduled day of Blatty's "Tonight" visit, "The French Connection" opened and instantly turned Friedkin into a director in demand.



6. The model for Chris MacNeil, Regan's film-actress mother, was Blatty's friend and "John Goldfarb" star, Shirley MacLaine. The actress expressed interest in starring in the movie, but Friedkin demurred, since she had just starred in the similar "The Possession of Joel Delaney." Audrey Hepburn was offered the role, but she didn't want to leave her home in Rome to film in America. Anne Bancroft wanted to play Chris, but she was pregnant and unavailable. Jane Fonda declined, in a profanely-worded telegram. Finally, Ellen Burstyn, then best known for her supporting role in "The Last Picture Show," insisted to Friedkin that she was right for the part. (Among other things, she was a lapsed Catholic and the mother of a teenager.) With persistence, she won the role.



7. The model for Burke Dennings, the director of the movie Chris shoots in Georgetown, was J. Lee Thompson, who had directed "John Goldfarb" (as well as other hits, like "Cape Fear"). He would be played in "The Exorcist" by Jack MacGowran.



8. The model for Father Karras was Blatty himself, a Catholic undergoing a crisis of faith. The filmmakers signed Stacy Keach, but then they met Jason Miller, the playwright whose "That Championship Season" was about to win the Pulitzer Prize. Miller, who'd dropped out of a Catholic seminary before becoming an actor and playwright, insisted he should play the doubtful, tormented priest. He persuaded Friedkin to let him screen test with Burstyn. Friedkin was sold, and Warner Bros. was forced to buy Keach out of his contract.



9. The model for Father Lankester Merrin was Gerald Lankester Harding, an acquaintance of Blatty's who was both priest and archaeologist; he'd been involved in the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls. Friedkin thought he bore a resemblance to Max von Sydow, who read the script and accepted the role immediately.



10. To find Regan, the filmmakers auditioned more than a thousand girls before they met 12-year-old Linda Blair. Friedkin hired her once he was convinced that she was not only talented enough to handle the acting challenge, but well-adjusted enough to handle what would surely be a traumatic filmmaking experience for a young girl.



11. One small but key role was the drunken beggar who accosts Father Karras in the subway -- and whose voice is later heard coming from Regan's mouth, as a demonic taunt. Friedkin's casting director found Vinny Russell, an actual New York barfly whose only known address was the White Rose Tavern. Friedkin says Russell was drunk and wearing his own clothes when they shot the scene, and was still drunk months later when they brought him back to the sound studio to re-record his one line. And that was the extent of Vinny Russell's film career.



12. While the exteriors for the film were shot in Georgetown, most of the shoot took place in Manhattan. The interior of the MacNeil house was a set built in a warehouse. The bedroom was its own set, built on top of a giant ball to create the pitching effect, with a hidden forklift attached to the bed to create the jumping bed effect, piano wires suspended from the ceiling for Regan's levitation, and refrigeration units that cooled the room to a frigid 30 degrees below zero for scenes showing the actors' breath.



13. Makeup artist Dick Smith and his protégé, Rick Baker, spent three hours a day turning Blair into the demonically-possessed Regan. But they spent four hours a day turning 43-year-old Von Sydow into the 70-something priest.



14. To play Father Dyer, Father Karras's colleague, Friedkin cast an actual Jesuit priest, Father William O'Malley. But for an emotional scene at the end of the movie, Friedkin couldn't get the performance he wanted from the amateur actor. After 20 takes, Friedkin took Father O'Malley aside, told him he loved him, then slapped his face and pushed him to his knees. He got the take he wanted.



15. Friedkin had a similar problem with von Sydow during the scene where Father Merrin commands the demon to leave "in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit," at which point Regan's bedroom ceiling cracks open. Friedkin spent three days trying to get the line reading he wanted, going through nearly 20 fake ceilings in the process. Finally, von Sydow admitted that he had trouble with the words because he himself didn't believe in God. Friedkin asked how he'd been able to play Jesus so convincingly in "The Greatest Story Ever Told." Von Sydow replied that he'd played Jesus as a man, not a god. Friedkin suggested that he play Father Merrin as a man, and though he instantly thought that was a weak bit of direction, it worked on von Sydow, who went off by himself for an hour, returned, and delivered the line with the intensity Friedkin wanted.



16. Friedkin insisted on shooting the prologue in Iraq, where Father Merrin finds the statue of the demon Pazuzu, on location in that country. Friedkin spent more than a month there, facing such obstacles as 130-degree weather, illnesses among the crew, a thwarted government coup, a curious tribe of actual devil-worshippers, and difficulties with the key prop, the statue, which was mistakenly shipped to Australia before finding its way to Baghdad.



17. Friedkin denies that the production was cursed, but he catalogs a lot of freaky mishaps and tragedies that occurred during the production. An unexplained fire destroyed the entire MacNeil interior set except for Regan's bedroom. Jason Miller's toddler son (future "Lost Boys" star Jason Patric) was hit by a motorbike and hospitalized. Von Sydow's brother died, and he had to take time off to return to Stockholm for the funeral. Not mentioned by Friedkin: A scene where Chris is thrown against the wall gave Burstyn a permanent back injury. MacGowran and Vasiliki Maliaros (Father Karras's mother), whose characters die in the film, both died after production was complete but before the movie was released.



18. For the voice of the demon-possessed Regan, Friedkin hired veteran Oscar-winning actress Mercedes McCambridge. She had long since quit the drinking and smoking that had given her such a distinctively raspy voice, but she started up again for the sake of her performance. She would also drink raw eggs and have herself tied to a chair, so that she could feel the restraints Regan felt when she was bound to the bed. Friedkin claims that McCambridge insisted on doing the performance without credit so as not to take away from Blair's accomplishment, but when the film opened, McCambridge complained that she'd been denied credit and threatened to sue. Warner Bros. hastily spliced her name into the credit reel.



19. Music producer Jack Nitzsche made the eerie sounds over the opening credits by rubbing the rim of a wine goblet. He also placed a microphone by his girlfriend, who was sleeping face-down on a sofa, then ran across the room and jumped on her back, landing on his knees. Her shrieked reaction was used as the sound of Regan projectile-vomiting.



20. The rest of the music was harder to find. Friedkin sought out legendary movie composer Bernard Herrmann ("Psycho"), but they couldn't agree on what the score should sound like. He hired Lalo Schifrin ("Mission: Impossible") but didn't like the overly orchestral results and fired him. Friedkin finally found the minimalist sound he wanted when he stumbled across Mike Oldfield's recording "Tubular Bells." Once the piece became known as the "Exorcist" theme, "Tubular Bells" became the first million-selling record for Richard Branson's then-new Virgin Records label.



21. The movie was booked at first in just 26 theaters across the country. Friedkin visited every single one of them before the film's release to insure that its lighting and sound quality were up to his standards.



22. The film earned $66 million in 1974 in North America, making it one of the most lucrative films of all time (if adjusted for inflation). After various re-releases, it has earned $233 million to date in North America and $441 million worldwide.



23. The film was nominated for 10 Oscars, including nods for Friedkin, Burstyn, Miller, and Blair, but it won just two: Best Sound and Best Adapted Screenplay. It was the first horror film to be nominated for Best Picture.



24. In 1982, Miller directed the film version of his play, "That Championship Season," and gave a prominent role in it to Stacy Keach, the actor whose "Exorcist" role he'd taken.



25. Rick Baker, whose first movie gig was as makeup artist Dick Smith's assistant on "The Exorcist," went on to a distinguished career in monster makeup and special effects, highlighted by his work on "An American Werewolf in London," Michael Jackson's "Thriller," Eddie Murphy's "Nutty Professor" movies, and the three "Men in Black" films.





from The Moviefone Blog http://news.moviefone.com/2013/12/26/the-exorcist-facts/

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Oscar Movie Mistakes: 7 Best Picture Blunders


Oscar Movie Mistakes



Movies are prone to make mistakes -- that's just the nature of production. However, when a film has won the Oscar for Best Picture, people can't help but hold it to a higher standard. With the 2013 Oscar race heating up, we take a look at a few of the most recent Best Picture winners.



We could certainly focus on the beautiful direction, the (near) perfect production, and the astounding acting of these winners, but today we highlight the films' noticeable blunders to remind everyone that even the best filmmakers make mistakes.



From "American Beauty" to "Gladiator," here are seven best picture blunders. As usual, all photos are courtesy of MovieMistakes.com.





from The Moviefone Blog http://news.moviefone.com/2013/12/26/oscar-movie-mistakes/

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Wednesday, December 25, 2013

'Million Dollar Arm' Trailer: Jon Hamm Gets Disney-fied (VIDEO)


million dollar arm trailer



Jon Hamm's traded his "Mad Men" drinking and womanizing for a more feel-good business in the baseball comedy "Million Dollar Arm."



JB Bernstein's career as a sports agent is on the wane when he comes up with an idea from out of left field. JB (Hamm) enlists former baseball scout Ray Poitevint (Alan Arkin) to join him on a trip to India to find the fastest cricket pitcher in the land. As part of a reality show called "Million Dollar Arm," JB and Ray recruit Dinesh (Madhur Mittal, "Slumdog Millionaire") and Rinku (Suraj Sharma, "Life of Pi") to come with them back to America to compete for contracts in the major leagues. Then JB hires Tom House (Bill Paxton) to train Dinesh and Rinku for their big try-outs.



Add in some fish-out-of-water comedy (Alan Arkin being cranky in India, for example), a beautiful and charming neighbor played by Lake Bell ("In A World..."), and plenty of nay-sayers, and you've got what could be a charming Disney movie. Plus, Jon Hamm attempting yoga is worth the price of admission.



"Million Dollar Arm" was written by Thomas McCarthy, the same fellow who penned "The Station Agent," "Up," and "Win Win," which is a strange mix of heartfelt comedies with a soupçon of sportiness. Director Craig Gillespie was behind the odd miss "Mr. Woodcock," but he also directed the Ryan Gosling indie "Lars and the Real Girl" and several episodes of "United States of Tara." What we're saying is this is a real mixed bag, especially once you mix in some "wacky" race-based humor and life lessons.



"Million Dollar Arm" is actually based on a true story. JB really is a sports agent, and Dinesh Patel and Rinku Singh actually play for the Pittsburgh Pirates. However, it is unlikely that JB actually has an adorable and inspirational neighbor who looks like Lake Bell.



"Million Dollar Arm" comes out swinging on May 16, 2014.





from The Moviefone Blog http://news.moviefone.com/2013/12/25/million-dollar-arm-trailer-jon-hamm/

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Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Marcus Luttrell on 'Lone Survivor': 'It Keeps the Memory of My Teammates Alive Forever'


marcus luttrell lone survivor



In "Lone Survivor," Mark Wahlberg plays the only Navy SEAL to survive a deadly gunfight with the Taliban, but Marcus Luttrell is the man who actually lived through the battle that claimed the lives of all of his teammates.



Luttrell's book about his real-life ordeal is now a nail-bitingly tense film, directed by Peter Berg, and co-starring Taylor Kitsch, Emile Hirsch, and Ben Foster as the other members of the ill-fated four-man team assigned to take out a high-ranking Taliban member. It's incredible that Luttrell survived, and, even more so, that he says he'd do it all over again in a heartbeat.



As he got on the phone to talk about the movie, Luttrell sounded tired. When I said he must be worn out from all the interviews, he answered with characteristic humor in his friendly Texas drawl, "No, c'mon. I'm a Navy SEAL. What are you talkin' about?"



Moviefone: For most people seeing this movie, it's just a movie, no matter how affected we are by it. But it was your life. Have you seen the movie?



Marcus Luttrell: Yes, ma'am.



How tough was it to sit through?



Oh man, easy day. I went through it in real life, so everything you see on a screen is all Hollywood. I mean, it was true to form, the reenactment. I think about it every day in my head. It was like just watchin' it in my mind. The only thing that I would do is, in certain situations, I would remember that, when it happened in real life, like when one of my guys got shot, their facial expressions, as opposed to the facial expressions that the actors were making. You know, stuff like that. And I remember being in that situation and how bad it hurt. I remember, "That's where I hurt my back. That's where I got shot. That's where Danny got shot." And then I remember the fall, vaguely.



Peter said you couldn't be on set when they were filming those scenes.



He wouldn't let me. Don't let him lie to ya. He made me leave.



Do you think it was because it would have clouded his ability to tell the story?



Yeah. He was worried about me freakin' out or... I don't know what the deal was. I didn't argue with him. I was just like, "Roger that." I was ready to go home and get some rest anyways.



Did you have any say in having Mark Wahlberg play you?



No, ma'am. I like Mark. I think he's a great actor. It was a privilege to have him on set and be a part of it.



How weird is it to see someone playing you on the big screen?



Well, that's not the way I look at it. I just step back and let Mark do his thing. If he had some questions for me, I was right there for him, but in all truth, ma'am, I just let him play it out like he thought it should be played out. I think the one discussion that we did have was the fact that I was from the South and he was from the North and Yankees cannot imitate a Southern accent. I was like, "Why don't you just stick to that Boston accent of yours, pal. Hopefully we'll get through this pretty good." [Laughs]



There was a line in the movie right before the gunfight where he goes, "We're about fixin' to get into a pretty good gunfight." I about lost my cheese. I was like, "It's just 'fixin'!" I gave him a hard time about it, but he's such a good actor that it's hard to find situations to bust his chops on. Because that's the way we are. I didn't have any juice on him, so that was the only thing I could bring to the table. Other than that, he listened to everything we said, from his training all the way through the film.



He's been around since we saw him runnin' around in his underwear in "Good Vibrations." I mean, the guy knows the business. Who am I to go in and tell him how to do his job? As a Navy SEAL, I'm kind of a realist and an in-your-face kind of guy, and I understand when I'm not the resident expert and when the resident expert is in the room, I step back and open my ears and shut my mouth.



So did he and the three other main actors make convincing Navy SEALs?



Absolutely.



The film dramatizes your three teammates' deaths, but you didn't actually see your teammates die.



No ma'am. That was right over the peak. By that time we had fallen down the mountain a couple thousand feet or whatever it was, and I didn't see it. I learned about it when the Taliban had me.



Given that some of that was based on guesswork, do you think those scenes did justice to them?



I don't know if that's the right word, "justice," in their deaths. When you watch the movie and you see the guys getting shot, that's right from the autopsy reports. It's as authentic as he could possibly make it. You gotta keep it real. These guys were shot multiple times and we all kept goin.'



I haven't read the book, but what was the extent of your injuries?



I had to have my hand reconstructed. My back's been reconstructed. Multiple back surgeries. My knees are blown out, my pelvis is cracked, I had maxillofacial damage, I bit my tongue in half... you want me to keep goin''?



There's more?



I got shot-fragged by RPGs and grenades, eleven through-and-throughs in my quads and calves, shrapnel stickin' out of my legs and everywhere. All the skin off my back and the back of my legs was gone.



It's a miracle that you survived.



If the villagers hadn't found me, if the Taliban didn't kill me, then I would have died of my injuries out on the mountain.



The closing narration is your words that you do feel like you died on the mountain a little bit.



Part of me. Each time one of my brothers dies, a part of every SEAL dies. That's how close we are.



You named your son Axe after Matthew Axelson. Would you want him to be a SEAL when he grows up?

I wouldn't push it on him. If you walk into my house, there's no proof that I was ever in the military. I'm not a flashy guy, I don't show medals or anything like that. Obviously, one day, he's going to see the movie and hear the stories about his dad and his uncle and his teammates and their brothers. I always say, I don't expect him to fill my shoes, but they'll aways be there for him to walk around in if he needs it. I just want to love him and raise him to be a good man. If he decides to go down that road, then I'll accept that. I'll have that discussion with his mother. She ultimately has the go/no-go answer. Right now, we're workin' on the alphabet.



So Red Wing was your final mission?



Oh, no, ma'am. I was in the hospital for about a year doing physical therapy and surgeries putting myself back together. And then I platooned back up and went to Iraq and Ramadi in '06 and '07. Then I got my knees blown out, that's what ultimately cost me my career.



Would you do it all over again?



Sure, absolutely. I have no regrets whatsoever. Even if I go back, which I can't, and I don't think like that, because you can't go back, if you had got ahold of me right out of college and told me this is what I was going to happen to me, I would have said, "Okay, that's part of the job."



Why was it important for you to tell this story, first in the book and now in a film?



It keeps the memory of my teammates alive forever. It's forever immortalized in writing, and now in a movie. It'll be around for well after you and I are gone, I would imagine. You can't ask for anything more than that. It's not a recruiting movie or anything like that. I would like people to take from it that the bond that we have is unbreakable and that we're willing to die for each other in any circumstance at any time.



If you're going to come up against us, you better come with everything you got, because you're going to have to kill us to stop us. That's why we're able to do the things that we do, because we do not care about our own lives, we care about the guys that we're out there with. That's what I miss about being in the community; I can't be with my guys every day. It affects me. It's the one thing that does.



"Lone Survivor" opens in limited release on Christmas day, and opens nationwide January 10.



from The Moviefone Blog http://news.moviefone.com/2013/12/24/marcus-luttrell-lone-survivor/

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The 'Draft Day' Trailer Proves That Football Is Just as Intense Off the Field (VIDEO)


draft day trailer



Who knew that the NFL's draft day was so high pressure? (Perhaps that explains our lackluster fantasy football scores.)



In Ivan Reitman's "Draft Day," Kevin Costner must trade his way up to the hottest NFL draft pick for the struggling Cleveland Browns. As General Manager Sonny Weaver Jr., he's accosted on all sides by the owner (Frank Langella), the coach (Denis Leary), the players, and even his own Twitter-happy mom (Ellen Burstyn). Luckily, he's got someone on his side, and that's a quick-witted Jennifer Garner.



It looks like Garner's character is more than just a helpful colleague, though. Is it possible that love is in the cards for Sonny, along with one of those giant fancy Super Bowl rings that Leary's character keeps waving in everyone's face?



The script for "Draft Day," by Rajiv Joseph and Scott Rothman, was the number one unproduced screenplay in 2012, as determined by the insider-y Black List. The cast includes Sam Elliott, Sean Combs, Terry Crews, Chadwick Boseman, Rosanna Arquette, and Chi McBride.



It seems like just yesterday director Ivan Reitman was giving us a comedy about a pregnant Arnold Schwarzenegger. Memories! Now he's bringing this hot property to theaters April 11, 2014.



from The Moviefone Blog http://news.moviefone.com/2013/12/24/draft-day-trailer/

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Kristen Wiig on 'Secret Life of Walter Mitty,' Her Future as a Director, and Life After 'Bridesmaids'


kristen wiig secret life of walter mitty



It's been a little while since mainstream audiences have seen Kristen Wiig. After the breakout success of 2011's "Bridesmaids," Wiig has kept something of a low profile, starring in a string of lesser-seen independent features ("Friends With Kids," "Revenge for Jolly!" and "Girl Most Likely"), while putting in a wonderfully nutty supporting role in this year's "Arrested Development" revival on Netflix, and contributing a vocal performance to the smash animated hit "Despicable Me 2."



But Wiig is back, in a big way.



Wiig costars in two major studio movies -- the hotly anticipated sequel "Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues" (once again starring Will Ferrell and directed by Adam McKay) and the movie that we're here to talk about, "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty," an ambitious, gorgeously photographed remake of the 1947 Danny Kaye movie, that stars (and is directed by) Ben Stiller.



We got to sit down with Wiig to talk about "Walter Mitty," her offbeat career choices since finding big-time box office success, and who cracked her up the most during her "Saturday Night Live" days.



Moviefone: So, what drew you to "Walter Mitty"?



Kristen Wiig: I had spoken to Ben about it when he hosted "SNL," which is where we met. He brought up that he wanted to talk to me about a project. So he sent over a script, and it was written by Steve Conrad, who I think is a genius. I've been a fan of his for a long time. I loved the script. And I met with Ben shortly after and he talked about the character and what he thought the movie would be and what the feel of it was and the tone of it. We talked about other cast he was thinking of and even the music. It just sounded amazing and like the kind of movie I would want to go see.



Did you ever worry about it?



No, never.



But there are so many things going on, tonally.



Yes... I mean, you always wonder about your own performance, but as far as the movie, I felt very safe and taken care of knowing Ben was directing.



A lot of the movie rests on you without you being in a lot of it. What surprised you?



[Laughs] It's always great to watch the scenes you weren't there for and so much of this movie is Ben on his journey, going through Iceland and Greenland. You read on the page "Walter is skateboarding through these hills" but when you see it and how majestic it is. I got emotional the first time I saw it. He made a really beautiful film.



You had this great success with "Bridesmaids" and you've made some interesting, more dramatic decisions since. Is that the direction you're going to be going in?



I guess I don't really consciously think about the direction I'm going in as far as a thought-out strategy. I kind of just go by and I read something that I connect with and that could be two scripts a year, it could be five or six. You never really know. I never set out and say, "I want to do something dramatic." It just sort of happens as the material comes in and I just try to be choosy.



And you're continuing to write things?



Yes.



I wanted to talk to you about another really amazing project you were a part of this year, which is the "Arrested Development" series.



Oh yeah!



What was that like?



It wasn't even a pitch. I just knew it was coming back, and when Mitch Hurwitz reached out I didn't even know what it was but I said yes right away. It's always daunting playing a younger version of someone who is already in the cast and so funny. Jessica is so unbelievable. I wanted to do a good job. I just think it's one of the best TV shows of all time.



Working with Stiller, who has worked as both an actor and director for so long, do you have aspirations to direct?



Yeah, that's what I'd like to start focusing on later this year. Maybe something someone else has written. Maybe something I have written. I'm not sure. I'm starting to look at stuff now. But that's been an ambition for a long time.



Is there a specific genre you're looking to tackle?



No, it's just going to have to be the right material. It being my first thing, it'll probably be something smaller. I'm not going to be directing the next "Hunger Games." I don't think they're going to come to me!



Looking back on your career at "SNL," who made you crack up the most?



I hate this question! Because it's like choosing between my own children. Towards the end of my last year, it was hard to get through sketches in general because we were bonding and having so much fun. I came in with Bill [Hader] and Jason [Sudeikis] and Andy [Samberg], and we're sort of a class. We'll have that very special bond that people have with other cast members they come in with because you start at the same time and you learn at the same time. So anything those guys did, obviously. But I can't think of a specific person.



You're in "Anchorman 2" and also "Welcome to Me." Was McKay there when you were at "SNL"?



No.



So what's that bond like between you, Will Ferrell, and McKay?



I mean, it's hard to describe. Will is Will and everything he does makes me laugh. We have a very similar sense of humor. We just get along really well and find the same things funny. And McKay is one of the funniest people I have ever met. When we were shooting "Anchorman" and there was an opportunity to improvise, I'd rather him shout things out because whatever he would say would be funnier than what I could come up with.



Was it daunting, in the same way that joining "Arrested Development" was daunting, joining this cast?



Oh, of course. The original "Anchorman" is one of the funniest comedies of all time. I remember the first day of shooting they were all there in their costumes and I couldn't believe I was there, standing in my frizzy wig, thinking, Oh, god. I hope I don't f*ck this up.



"The Secret Life of Walter Mitty" opens Christmas day.



The Secret Life of Walter Mitty- Trailer No. 2





from The Moviefone Blog http://news.moviefone.com/2013/12/24/kristen-wiig-secret-life-of-walter-mitty/

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