Bruce Willis Archives - Entertainment For Us Entertainment For Us Sun, 12 May 2019 13:04:51 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 Bruce Willis To Star in “The Long Night” https://entertainmentforus.com/bruce-willis-to-star-in-the-long-night/ Sun, 12 May 2019 11:54:15 +0000 https://entertainmentforus.com/?p=4736 Bruce Willis has joined Matt Eskandari’s The Night is Long.  The action thriller will be the actor’s and producers Randall Emmett and George Furla sixteenth collaboration.  In The Long Night, “two ruthless criminals break into a disgraced doctor’s home to be given medical attention after one of them is shot during a robbery gone wrong. […]

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Bruce Willis has joined Matt Eskandari’s The Night is Long. 

The action thriller will be the actor’s and producers Randall Emmett and George Furla sixteenth collaboration. 

In The Long Night, “two ruthless criminals break into a disgraced doctor’s home to be given medical attention after one of them is shot during a robbery gone wrong. Knowing that he lacks the expertise to patch up the injured trespasser, the doctor must protect his family at all costs.”

Details of Willis’ character have yet to be confirmed. 

The feature was penned by screenwriter Doug Wolfe. Tim Sullivan, Alex Eckert, and Ted Fox will serve as executive producers. The Long Night will be selling at Cannes via Highland Film Group.

The veteran actor is known for multiple projects including the acclaimed Die Hard franchise, Pulp Fiction, Armageddon, The Sixth Sense, and many more

It is known which character Willis is set to play. 

Filming is scheduled to begin June 3 in Columbus, Georgia.

The post Bruce Willis To Star in “The Long Night” appeared first on Entertainment For Us.

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“Glass”: A Disappointing Hybrid Of Two Great Films https://entertainmentforus.com/glass-review-a-disappointing-hybrid-of-two-great-films/ Sun, 27 Jan 2019 16:18:29 +0000 https://entertainmentforus.com/?p=3625 If you enjoyed M Night Shyamalan’s film Unbreakable in the year 2000 and were then captivated by the shocking twist of 2016’s Split, then Glass, the final film of the trilogy, may just disappoint.   M Night Shyamalan shocked his audience in Split by revealing that Kevin Wendell Crumb (James McAvoy) exists in the same […]

The post “Glass”: A Disappointing Hybrid Of Two Great Films appeared first on Entertainment For Us.

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If you enjoyed M Night Shyamalan’s film Unbreakable in the year 2000 and were then captivated by the shocking twist of 2016’s Split, then Glass, the final film of the trilogy, may just disappoint.  

M Night Shyamalan shocked his audience in Split by revealing that Kevin Wendell Crumb (James McAvoy) exists in the same universe as Unbreakable’s David Dunn (Bruce Willis).  We were then left anticipating how the superhero and alter ego from Unbreakable would be combined with the multiple personalities and psychotic behavior from Kevin (Split).

Unfortunately, the answer is that bringing the characters together in Glass simply did not work.  In spite of incredible performances from McAvoy, the audience was left with a disjointed film that appeared rushed and unfinished.  

Willis, Jackson and McAvoy – all proven successful actors – appeared to film their parts separately, leaving us with the sense that they were never actually in the same room.  

Despite the clever philosophical dialogue and the examination of humanity’s capabilities, the audience was left with the sense that they were missing something. The characters did not appear to gel enough for us to suspend our disbelief, and we were left a little dazed and deflated.

The film was named after Samuel L Jackson’s character Elijah Price in Unbreakable. Elijah, aka Mr Glass, suffered from a brittle bone disease, making his bones susceptible to fragmentation and splintering.  Since his arrest in Unbreakable, Mr Glass has spent his life drugged in a psychiatric hospital for the criminally insane.  

We are introduced to David Dunn (Willis) as the superhero vigilante that has spent his life fighting crime and is currently attempting to seek out Kevin (McAvoy) after a series of girls were kidnapped and killed.

Their paths meet, ending in disastrous consequences, and they both end up getting arrested and taken to the same psychiatric unit as Mr Glass.  It is here that the audience was waiting for the “fun” to begin. Unfortunately, with each character locked in separate rooms, we continue to wait for the interaction that we so desperately crave.

Dr Staple (Sarah Paulson) is well cast and does an excellent job of experimenting with each character’s mental states – with varying levels of success.  The dialogue’s philosophical stance grows, and we ponder on the machination of the institution and how this fits into our established concepts of good verses evil. And yet, we still wait for the characters to interact so that a plausible plot can develop.

Sadly, other than a few fight scenes, there is no meaningful interaction between the three main characters.  Bringing the two great films together thus left us with a forced crossover that is disappointingly weaker than either of its counterparts.

2/5

The post “Glass”: A Disappointing Hybrid Of Two Great Films appeared first on Entertainment For Us.

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ersion="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> Bruce Willis Archives - Entertainment For Us Entertainment For Us Sun, 12 May 2019 13:04:51 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 Bruce Willis To Star in “The Long Night” https://entertainmentforus.com/bruce-willis-to-star-in-the-long-night/ Sun, 12 May 2019 11:54:15 +0000 https://entertainmentforus.com/?p=4736 Bruce Willis has joined Matt Eskandari’s The Night is Long.  The action thriller will be the actor’s and producers Randall Emmett and George Furla sixteenth collaboration.  In The Long Night, “two ruthless criminals break into a disgraced doctor’s home to be given medical attention after one of them is shot during a robbery gone wrong. […]

The post Bruce Willis To Star in “The Long Night” appeared first on Entertainment For Us.

]]>
Bruce Willis has joined Matt Eskandari’s The Night is Long. 

The action thriller will be the actor’s and producers Randall Emmett and George Furla sixteenth collaboration. 

In The Long Night, “two ruthless criminals break into a disgraced doctor’s home to be given medical attention after one of them is shot during a robbery gone wrong. Knowing that he lacks the expertise to patch up the injured trespasser, the doctor must protect his family at all costs.”

Details of Willis’ character have yet to be confirmed. 

The feature was penned by screenwriter Doug Wolfe. Tim Sullivan, Alex Eckert, and Ted Fox will serve as executive producers. The Long Night will be selling at Cannes via Highland Film Group.

The veteran actor is known for multiple projects including the acclaimed Die Hard franchise, Pulp Fiction, Armageddon, The Sixth Sense, and many more

It is known which character Willis is set to play. 

Filming is scheduled to begin June 3 in Columbus, Georgia.

The post Bruce Willis To Star in “The Long Night” appeared first on Entertainment For Us.

]]>
“Glass”: A Disappointing Hybrid Of Two Great Films https://entertainmentforus.com/glass-review-a-disappointing-hybrid-of-two-great-films/ Sun, 27 Jan 2019 16:18:29 +0000 https://entertainmentforus.com/?p=3625 If you enjoyed M Night Shyamalan’s film Unbreakable in the year 2000 and were then captivated by the shocking twist of 2016’s Split, then Glass, the final film of the trilogy, may just disappoint.   M Night Shyamalan shocked his audience in Split by revealing that Kevin Wendell Crumb (James McAvoy) exists in the same […]

The post “Glass”: A Disappointing Hybrid Of Two Great Films appeared first on Entertainment For Us.

]]>
If you enjoyed M Night Shyamalan’s film Unbreakable in the year 2000 and were then captivated by the shocking twist of 2016’s Split, then Glass, the final film of the trilogy, may just disappoint.  

M Night Shyamalan shocked his audience in Split by revealing that Kevin Wendell Crumb (James McAvoy) exists in the same universe as Unbreakable’s David Dunn (Bruce Willis).  We were then left anticipating how the superhero and alter ego from Unbreakable would be combined with the multiple personalities and psychotic behavior from Kevin (Split).

Unfortunately, the answer is that bringing the characters together in Glass simply did not work.  In spite of incredible performances from McAvoy, the audience was left with a disjointed film that appeared rushed and unfinished.  

Willis, Jackson and McAvoy – all proven successful actors – appeared to film their parts separately, leaving us with the sense that they were never actually in the same room.  

Despite the clever philosophical dialogue and the examination of humanity’s capabilities, the audience was left with the sense that they were missing something. The characters did not appear to gel enough for us to suspend our disbelief, and we were left a little dazed and deflated.

The film was named after Samuel L Jackson’s character Elijah Price in Unbreakable. Elijah, aka Mr Glass, suffered from a brittle bone disease, making his bones susceptible to fragmentation and splintering.  Since his arrest in Unbreakable, Mr Glass has spent his life drugged in a psychiatric hospital for the criminally insane.  

We are introduced to David Dunn (Willis) as the superhero vigilante that has spent his life fighting crime and is currently attempting to seek out Kevin (McAvoy) after a series of girls were kidnapped and killed.

Their paths meet, ending in disastrous consequences, and they both end up getting arrested and taken to the same psychiatric unit as Mr Glass.  It is here that the audience was waiting for the “fun” to begin. Unfortunately, with each character locked in separate rooms, we continue to wait for the interaction that we so desperately crave.

Dr Staple (Sarah Paulson) is well cast and does an excellent job of experimenting with each character’s mental states – with varying levels of success.  The dialogue’s philosophical stance grows, and we ponder on the machination of the institution and how this fits into our established concepts of good verses evil. And yet, we still wait for the characters to interact so that a plausible plot can develop.

Sadly, other than a few fight scenes, there is no meaningful interaction between the three main characters.  Bringing the two great films together thus left us with a forced crossover that is disappointingly weaker than either of its counterparts.

2/5

The post “Glass”: A Disappointing Hybrid Of Two Great Films appeared first on Entertainment For Us.

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