Tribute to Charlize Theron: Tully
They had a nice tribute clip to Charlize Theron and dialog with a host before the movie. That was the highlight. Oh, she also spoke afterwards with the director Jason Reitman. The film was about suburban post baby depression/angst. Not my thing. It was just a little bit better than I expected as it had some humor.
Program description:
Description
Charlize Theron has a ferocity and focus unique to contemporary screen actors. She can utterly transform herself and transfix an audience across a variety of genres, and the subtlety in her protean performances is a tonic for these times. But her talent in that regard dates back: By 2003, Theron was already a master of her art, something never more apparent than in her role that year as serial killer Aileen Wuornos in Patty Jenkins' Monster (2003). Since then, Theron has continued to build an impressive body of work, receiving a second Academy Award nomination for her portrayal of a miner who sues her company for sexual harassment in North Country (2005), reviving George Miller's Mad Max franchise with her ferocious turn as the warrior Imperator Furiosa in Mad Max: Fury Road (2015), and mixing slaughter and spycraft in the Cold War era thrillerAtomic Blonde (2017). Join us for this special conversation with Charlize Theron, followed by a screening of Tully.
Marlo (Charlize Theron) has lost her youth to motherhood and is completely burnt out. When her brother (Mark Duplass) suggests a night nanny-someone to help with her newborn-she reluctantly agrees, welcoming a stranger named Tully into her home. Grounded by Theron's extraordinary performance, which delivers the smart and hilarious dialogue written and directed with great care by frequent collaborators Diablo Cody and Jason Reitman, Tully details all aspects of motherhood however unglamorous they may be.
Trailer:
She did this movie right after Atomic Blonde and was in her best physical shape and had to gain 50lbs for the role. She says she was walking in the Golden Globes in front of Jason Reitman and stopped, turned around and said - I'm not moving unless you agree to do a movie together. A few years later they did.
Jason Reitman was the director of the famous Juno film. He works with the writer Diablo Cody who says she only writes a first draft of each movie. They were both there and talked about their collaborations together since the first movie in this trilogy Juno, then Young Adult.
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