
Bill Pullman is the alcoholic chess champion enlisted to help the Americans tackle the Cuban Missile Crisis
https://www.screendaily.com/reviews/the-coldest-game-tallinn-review/5145229.article

Bill Pullman is the alcoholic chess champion enlisted to help the Americans tackle the Cuban Missile Crisis
https://www.screendaily.com/reviews/the-coldest-game-tallinn-review/5145229.article
– New York – New York – 11/12/19 – New York Premiere of Focus Features’ film “Dark Waters” -Pictured: Cast -Photo […]
Dupont will no longer be a Teflon corporation after audiences see Todd Haynes’s memorable scary “Dark Waters,” opening November 22nd. Mark Ruffalo stars as the corporate lawyer from Cincinnati who took down the company and won a $670 million settlement for rural West Virginians who were poisoned by the company when they put something called C-8 in Teflon.
Yeah, the Teflon in our pans. It turns out everyone in the world is infected in some way now, it’s far worse than just the local farmer. Now they’ve removed C8 from Teflon, but the damage has been done.
Feeling nervous? “Dark Waters” is a call to arms directed by Todd Haynes, who usually deals with more intimate films. But activist Ruffalo discovered the story of how Rob Billot working for Cincinnati law firm Taft– who usually worked for the bad guys– saw what was happening and decided to do something about it. He learned how babies were being born deformed, people worked with Teflon were dying of cancer, farm animals were losing their minds and expiring at alarming rates.
“Dark Waters” premiered Tuesday night at Lincoln Center’s Walter Reade Theater with a swell, old fashioned dinner at Lincoln Restaurant. Focus Features has a winner in this descendant of “Silkwood” and “Erin Brokovich” with all-star cast that includes Ruffalo, Anne Hathaway, Tim Robbins, Bill Pullman, Bill Camp, and Mare Winningham.
Everyone showed up except for Hathaway (on bed rest waiting for baby number 2). More on her in a minute. It was Ruffalo, an environmental activist, who pulled this project together. Remember Haynes is better known for his character pieces. But he also made a movie years ago with Julianne Moore called “Safe,” in which no one was safe from chemicals. In a way, he’s return to an old interest and done a smashing job. This might be his most commercial movie.
Ruffalo plays lawyer Billot, who’d just made partner at a white shoe law firm Taft when his Parkersburg, West Virginia grandmother sends two local farmers to him. All their cows are dead or going mad, everyone is sick. A massive amount of data has already been compiled and hidden by Dupont, which knows what’s happening and won’t do anything about it. Selling frying pans is more important.
Out of the frying pan and into the fire went Billot, who had a young family and dwindling financial resources. The case against Dupont went on for years, but luckily Billot had the help of his firm and two older lawyers (Tim Robbins and Bill Pullman, in roles that used to be played by Josef Sommer and Donald Moffat) who support the cause.
“Dark Waters” plays like a procedural in the mode of “Silkwood” or “Erin Brockovich.” Haynes and co. keep it simple and honest, with tremendously subtle work from a supporting cast that includes Bill Camp and Mare Winningham. Oscar winner Anne Hathaway starts slow as Mrs. Billot but comes through with (as usual) with stark authenticity.
In a season of gangsters, Hollywood cowboys, papal friendship, and alienated villains, we need “Dark Waters,” a David vs. Goliath tale that affects all of us in real life and once again exposes corporate greed. Billot deserves a medal for what he’s done. Haynes, Ruffalo et al should get their recognition for bringing the story to the screen.
What happens when you lose control? #TheSinner returns to @USA_Network with a new story in 2020. pic.twitter.com/qfDr5Np0Ij
— The Sinner (@TheSinnerUSA) October 17, 2019
“It’s been a surprise,” Bill Pullman admits when reflecting on what his role on “The Sinner” means to him. Pullman has a long list of film and stage credits to his name, but has to date largely avoided much TV work. His perception about the small screen really changed now that he is starring on the USA Network anthology crime thriller, which started as a limited series but was eventually renewed for a second and third season by the network. “I couldn’t believe that I would be this intrigued,” he says. Watch our exclusive video interview with Pullman above.
“The Sinner” is a psychological thriller that explores why a particular violent crime has been committed. In other words, it’s a “why-dunnit” rather than a traditional “who-dunnit,” which sets the show apart from others in the genre by focusing on the characters’ motivations, backgrounds, desires and demons, rather than primarily focusing on clues and evidence in the pursuit of an unknown killer. Pullman plays tortured soul Detective Harry Ambrose, who investigates violent crimes from his uniquely empathetic point of view. Harry has a dark past and emotional baggage that weighs on him heavily, as he identifies and uncovers the psychology behind a killer’s actions.
Last season, the show delved into the troubled past of a young mother (played by executive producer Jessica Biel) who suddenly snaps and brutally murders a man without provocation. This season the show focuses on a 13 year-old boy (Elisha Henig) who confesses to brutally poisoning a man and woman that he is traveling with.
“I had lived with the wrong conception that a TV series would probably choke me in some way, like it doesn’t have the kind of spontaneity that a film would,” Pullman explains. “[Now] I’m really appreciative to have a good man like [show creator] Derek Simonds, who has been very collaborative. There’s been some great chances to incorporate some personal things into the character,” he says.
Pullman received a Critics’ Choice nomination as well as an individual SAG nomination earlier this year for his work on the show. Surprisingly, these are the first major nominations that the veteran actor has received, which he acknowledges as a streak he was almost weirdly proud of.
“You know, I always think of myself as having a little Teflon for awards. I always managed to avoid them so successfully and then ‘wait a minute this seems not to be going according to plan!’,” he jokes. “It’s always great for me because I don’t usually keep up with this stuff or what’s going on until awards season and then I would look at what these other actors that were nominated; what are these things that they’re doing? So it really allows me to watch some things that I wouldn’t have watched but I really enjoyed watching a lot,” he says, adding that he “appreciated that aspect of the nomination” the most.
PLUS: Bill Pullman remembers “lion of the stage” Alan Rickman and Jeff Goldblum’s unique styles
Source: Bill Pullman Wishes His ‘Brilliant’ ‘Mr. Wrong’ Costar Ellen DeGeneres Would Star in More Movies
Source: Bill Pullman Thinks His Son, Top Gun: Maverick’s Lewis Pullman, Is ‘a Better Actor’ Than He Is
PLUS: How Pullman’s storyline on ‘The Sinner’ eerily mirrored his real-life experiences
Source: Bill Pullman Reflects on Growing up with Mother in Psychiatric Care: ‘You Don’t Speak of These Things’
“The Coldest Game”
Director: Lukasz Kosmicki
Producer: Watchout Studio, K5 Intl.
Logline: Bill Pullman stars in this spy thriller, set against the backdrop of the Cuban missile crisis, as an American chess master whisked off to Warsaw to square off against a Russian champion.
Sales: Hyde Park Entertainment
Source: Polish Projects in the Pipeline