Bill Murray Hyde Park on Hudson Interview
>> YOUR LINK HERE: ___ http://youtube.com/watch?v=djxG9OtfzNo
Bill Murray chats about the challenge of playing Franklin D. Roosevelt in Hyde Park on Hudson. Watch interview with Hyde Park on Hudson director • Roger Michell Hyde Park on Hudson Int... • http://bit.ly/movie-interviews-tv - Watch more movie interviews! • http://FlicksAndTheCity.com - Visit Flicks and the City! • / flicksandthecity - Like Flicks and the City on Facebook! • / flickscity - Follow Flicks and the City on Twitter! • Interviewer: Jan Gilbert • / jan_gilbert - Follow Jan on Twitter! • http://JanGilbert.co.uk - Visit JanGilbert.co.uk! • Featured on http://flicksandthecity.com/bill-murr... • Hyde Park on Hudson stars Bill Murray, Laura Linney and Samuel West and directed by Roger Michell. Hyde Park on Hudson trailer preview clip spoiler soundtrack and teaser • Hyde Park on Hudson - Trailer [HD] • Bill Murray has also starred in Caddyshack, Zombieland, Stripes, Groundhog Day, Lost in Translation, Ghostbusters, Ghostbusters 2 ( Ghostbuster 3 to come), Moonrise Kingdom, Life Aquatic, Rushmore, Garfield, and performed Star Wars on SNL, and appeared on David Letterman and Jay Leno. • Roger Michell's (Notting Hill) whimsical, clever and ever so slightly risqué Hyde Park on Hudson is sheer movie-going delight. In a perfect narrative double-take on the term 'special relationship', the story of the secret love affair between Franklin D Roosevelt (Bill Murray) and his distant cousin Margaret Stuckley (Laura Linney) centres on the weekend in 1939 when King George (Samuel West) and Queen Elizabeth (Olivia Colman) pay a royal visit to upstate New York with the objective of securing the United States' allegiance in the impending war. Based on Stuckley's diaries and letters, discovered after her death, Richard Nelson's finely modulated script balances charm, comedy and political acuity. Bill Murray's impish performance as FDR oscillates between playful and serious, proving a delicious contrast to Laura Linney's gentle naivety and Olivia Williams' energetic swagger as the forthright Eleanor Roosevelt. Intriguingly, given its essentially female perspective, the heart of the film is to be found in an extraordinary scene between the two leaders - the roguish, paternal American President, and the nervous young British King - an encounter that will ultimately define the future alliance. Excellent cinematography and production design from Lol Crawley (Ballast; Here) and Simon Bowles respectively complete this dreamy, impeccable film. • Thanks to London Film Festival http://www.bfi.org.uk/lff
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