
movies
‘Pressure’ Review: Brendan Fraser and Andrew Scott In D-Day drama
If you have seen Oscar-winning accounts of the June 6, 1944, seaborne invasion in Normandy, known as D-Day, in classic films like Steven Spielberg’s Saving Private Ryan and 1962’s all-star epic The Longest Day, you probably believe you know all you need to know about that fateful day that changed world history. Think again.
Just when it seems there is no angle of WWII unexplored, along comes Pressure, the story of how conflict over forecasting what the weather would be on those beaches in France in order to pull off this complex and risky Allied invasion against the Nazis. That’s right, the weather! How director Anthony Maras is able to make this moment in the war such a cinematic, edge-of-your-seat thriller about predicting the weather conditions is a bit of a miracle itself, but he has done it. It is not really a story widely known to general audiences, and here it carries remarkable power and a message for world leaders that resonates to this day, making Pressure a crackerjack film detailing a historical event in the lead-up to it, even more than its actual execution, but also a stirring and pertinent lesson that is as relevant today as much as ever.
Based on David Haig’s hit 2012 play of the same name, Haig and Maras have collaborated on scripting this film, which, like the stage version, largely takes place on one very big set. This is where the generals, notably Dwight “Ike” Eisenhower (Brendan Fraser), gather to make crucial decisions, live-or-die determinations that can affect millions of lives. With him is trusted aide and very opinionated meteorologist Irving Krick (Chris Messina), who has given him key weather forecasts on several campaigns and is doing so again for perhaps the biggest ever attempted, a seaborne invasion onto the beaches of Normandy in France planned for June 5, 1944. But wait, didn’t D-Day happen on June 6?
This is where the battle first plays out, over 72 hours before the actual event, with the arrival of noted meteorologist Dr. James Stagg (Andrew Scott), a no-nonsense, not-so-friendly man who remains confident of his abilities to correctly call the weather forecast when it counts the most. Instant conflict is created, especially with Krick, when he says the latter’s prediction of perfect conditions for June 5 is heavily disputed by Stagg’s calculations that it would be disastrous to launch on that day. Who do you trust?
That is the conundrum for Eisenhower and others, notably the ever-opinionated General Bernard “Monty” Montgomery (Damian Lewis), who has a way of being lovably obnoxious and is not at a loss for words or ideas. With his longtime relationship with Krick, Eisenhower is skeptical of Stagg’s forecast but is a man who will hear even what he doesn’t necessarily want to hear. He is a leader (and future president) who only wants to get it right, and that means listening to anyone in the room who can help in that regard, even someone who on the surface is seemingly as unlikable as Stagg.
This is what Pressure is all about, and even if we are aware of the outcome and the fact D-Day took place on June 6, not June 5, the suspense level is high and this becomes a story that really pops. Much of that is thanks to this terrific cast, starting with Scott, who invests Stagg with understatement and a duty to serve his country and to deliver the facts, no matter how unpopular his analysis may be or how conflicted it gets with Krick and other doubters. Stagg, in the middle of all this, also is dealing with the most personal of circumstances with his wife (Tamsin Topolski), who is pregnant but who also might be in harm’s way. As Scott so brilliantly plays him, this is a man suffering in silence, caught up in heartbreaking circumstances, but also has a job to do and knows the consequences of failing.
Although at first Fraser might not have come to mind as the perfect Eisenhower, you can rest assured that he is. This actor nails exactly what made Ike the kind of leader you want in this situation, a man with a decision that is everything. The film’s title, Pressure, doesn’t begin to explain the stakes here. Lewis as the ever-colorful Montgomery and Messina playing the surefooted Krick both really liven up the debate. A very fine Kerry Condon contributes much-needed warmth and a female presence as Lt. Kay Summersby, a trusted aide to Ike when he needs it most.
Daniel Taylor’s impressive production design and Volker Bertelmann’s precise score add immensely along with the top-notch camera work of Jamie D. Ramsay, who manages the not-so-simple task of matching actual colorized documentary footage of the invasion into the film’s own template. As editor in addition to director, Maras makes it all look seamless and authentic.
Producers for the Studio Canal and Working Title production are Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Cass Marks and Lucas Webb. Focus Features is releasing just in time for the 82nd anniversary of D-Day, and I can’t think of a better reminder of the greatness and courage of those who made the crucial decisions toward its legendary triumph. If only we had this kind of true leadership in a world that desperately still needs it.
Title: Pressure
Distributor: Focus Features
Director: Anthony Maras
Screenwriters: Anthony Maras and David Haig
Cast: Andrew Scott, Brendan Fraser, Kerry Condon, Chris Messina, Damian Lewis, Tamsin Tupolski, Jojo Macrei, Alexandra Hanson, Con O’Neill
Rating: PG-13
Running time: 1 hr 40 mins
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movies
Student Journalist Speaks Out On CBS News’ Direction At News Emmys
The upheaval at CBS News — and 60 Minutes in particular — was on display at the News & Documentary Emmys on Wednesday evening, with the winner of a journalism scholarship calling out the network’s recent direction as something that “stains” its legacy.
Santiago Campos accepted the Mike Wallace Memorial Scholarship at the ceremony in New York, telling the audience, “While I want to thank CBS News for funding this generous gift towards my education, I want to also acknowledge how the recent direction of the outlet stains the legacy of Mike Wallance, the namesake of this scholarship.”
There were cheers heard in the audience.
He added, “As corporate elites take hold over the very pipes through which our information flows, journalism that serves people becomes increasingly harder to come by, yet ever more crucial, and what the people want is the truth. So if at any time you hesitate to utter the word ‘genocide’ or remain silent in the face of lies, remember to ask yourself, ‘Who is this for?’ I hope you choose us.”
The scholarship was presented by 60 Minutes correspondent Scott Pelley, who pointed out that Sharyn Alfonsi, one of the nominees, was in the audience, a nominee.
“There have been many great 60 Minutes correspondents over the years. I see Sharyn Alfonsi in the audience,” Pelley said.
Earlier on Wednesday, Alfonsi issued a blistering statement after CBS News under editor in chief Bari Weiss declined to renew her contract.
“The wall between editorial independence and corporate interest at CBS is being methodically torn down,” Alfonsi said. She had clashed with Weiss after the CBS News boss held back a 60 Minutes segment on CECOT prison in El Salvador last December. It ran a month later.
At the corporate level, Paramount is seeking approval from the Trump administration for its acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery. When Skydance purchased Paramount last year, it committed to hiring an ombudsman to take complaints about CBS News, but hired a former head of a conservative think tank.
After Campos’ remarks, Pelley praised him. “God, we need young people liek you right behind us. Thank you, God bless you. I know that Mike Wallace is looking down at you with pride at this very moment.”
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movies
Steven Spielberg On “Where I Draw The Line” With AI
As the discourse around artificial intelligence (AI) in Hollywood continues to buzz, Steven Spielberg recently shared his two cents.
The 3x Oscar winner noted that he’s “withholding judgment on AI” until he has a better understanding of how it’s being used, but he’s “not willing to substitute” an AI tool for a creative role usually filled by humans.
“Where I don’t love AI is where it takes a position, or there’s an empty chair at a writer’s table,” he explained on the IMO podcast. “There’s six writers, and there’s an empty chair, and there’s a computer in front of the empty chair, and it is the seventh writer. I’m not willing to substitute, because I don’t really believe in sentience. I don’t believe there is any substitute for the soul. I don’t think that is an algorithm that is inventible.”
While he sees AI as a useful tool for the medical field or in education, Spielberg doesn’t think it should be used as more than a tool in creative fields. “I don’t want AI involved in that way. If AI wants to help me find locations, that’s great. Saves us all a lot of leg work,” he said.
“But don’t tell me that I don’t have the right antagonist in this movie, don’t tell me how to write my dialogue for this character, don’t tell me where the camera has to go,” added Spielberg. “And also, don’t tell me what the sets should look like, unless AI is simply a tool in the large tool chest of the production designer.”
Spielberg said, “Use AI as a tool, but do not use AI as the final word on anything creative. That’s where I draw the line.”
The use of AI in Hollywood continues to be a hot-button topic. Meanwhile, SAG-AFTRA has endorsed the Trump administration’s AI policy framework, which calls for Congress to enact legislation that includes parental controls, intellectual property rights protection, First Amendment protections, expanding AI workforce development, allowing data centers to generate their own power, and removing legal barriers that limit AI innovation.
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movies
‘The Testaments’ EP Warren Littlefield on Making Of, ‘Fargo’ Season 6, More
The Season 1 finale of Hulu’s The Testaments dropped last night, and it was already clear that the Margaret Atwood-born, Bruce Miller-adapted Handmaid’s Tale sequel was a success after the streamer gave it a Season 2 renewal on May 20. Of course, its 45 million hours watched didn’t hurt.
On today’s Crew Call we talk with The Testaments’ EP Warren Littlefield about how the production worked with Atwood to bring the sequel series to fruition (“Margaret in another life probably would have wanted to be part of a writers’ room”). While Atwood’s publishers pursued her for several years for a follow-up to her 1985 novel, she only began putting it together post the award-winning success of the 2017 TV series.
The Testaments follows the story of June’s (Elisabeth Moss) daughter, Hannah, who is known in Gilead as Agnes (Chase Infiniti). She’s being raised in upper crust Gilead society, tutored in a private girls’ school led by Aunt Lydia (Ann Dowd) for a potential prosperous husband, specifically one in the upper ranks of the military. But there’s a frosh girl in the Gilead faith, Daisy (Lucy Halliday), from the independent city of Toronto. She is known as a “Pearl Girl.” Aunt Lydia orders Agnes to mentor her. Unbeknownst to all, Daisy is a spy sent to infiltrate Gilead.
While Atwood’s Testaments novel continues 15 years after Handmaid’s Tale, the series leaps forward roughly three-to-five years. Littlefield tells us that there’s not a third novel planned in the series from Atwood.
Littlefield tells us that two more seasons are being planned for Testaments (a total of three altogether). When it comes to the future of the young women in Testaments, he teases, “If season one is an awakening, with knowledge and power comes responsibility. We look at our young women and say, ‘What are you going to do?’” Part of Season 2 per Littlefield has already been written with production eyed for late summer or early fall.

Halliday and Infiniti
When it came to casting of Chase Infiniti well before she broke out in Paul Thomas Anderson’s multi-Oscar winning One Battle After Another, Handmaid’s Tale actor O-T Fagbenle advised Littlefield “run, don’t walk” when it came to choosing the Indianapolis-born actress.
“Against hundreds of young women, she auditioned and it jumped out,” Littlefield says about Infiniti’s grit. “Everyone who saw that tape said, ‘That’s it, that’s Agnes.’ And so then it was just her desire. Chase could have sat out having done that movie and just said, ‘I’m only making feature films’…She fought for the role and boy, did she earn it.”
Meanwhile Lucy Halliday, a Scottish actress stood out with not only an interesting interpretation of Daisy, but, “She was an Atwood scholar. She just fascinated us.”
In putting together a murderer’s row of young actresses that also includes Rowan Blanchard, Isolde Ardies, Mattea Conforti and others, the amazing luck about assembling the Testaments cast was that there were no chemistry tests per Littlefield.
We also chat with the former President of NBC Entertainment about the current state of linear, as well as truisms in the TV business which he still believes in to this day (“Respect the audience…they’re very smart. Keep them guessing….Great content still breaks through.”).
And then there’s the sixth season of Fargo which Deadline hears is set in Texas.
“I don’t think I’m authorized to confirm or deny your rumor. Noah Hawley and I are committed to keeping this franchise going. We’re deeply connected for well over a decade to making this content. We might be in an old age home together, and we’re still going to leave the old age home and make Fargo if someone says they want it.
“We like to scare ourselves in our ambitions every year,” he adds.
Littlefield also tells us about the documentary he’s currently shooting about young gamers who are recruited to fly drones in the Ukraine war, a project that he’s in talks with Hulu and ABC News on.
“It’s a thematic of lost and found young men in America, young men in Europe and young men in the UK who responded to an ad on a sub-Reddit page for the Ukraine army. They feel left out. They feel forgotten in the world that we live in right now and yet they have a unique skill and that’s gaming.”
Our conversation with the producer whose Littlefield Company counts 163 Emmy nominations and 24 Emmy wins, is below:
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