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‘Deep Cover' Review: Bryce Dallas Howard and Orlando Bloom Play Improv Actors Working an Undercover Police Sting in a Winningly Silly Comedy

‘Deep Cover' Review: Bryce Dallas Howard and Orlando Bloom Play Improv Actors Working an Undercover Police Sting in a Winningly Silly Comedy

Yahoo20 hours ago

The premise of Deep Cover is almost funny enough to carry the entire film: A trio of improv actors is recruited by the London police to go undercover on a low-level sting operation, on the theory that they can think on their feet. Fortunately, this comedy is more than its plot thanks to the hilariously straight-faced performances of Bryce Dallas Howard, Orlando Bloom and Nick Mohammed as the hapless actors who wind up embedded with dangerous London gangsters. The film approaches its action tropes with an effective sense of absurdity, but it's the stars' kinetic commitment to the bit that makes this relentlessly silly film work.
Howard brings energy and conviction to her role as Kat, an American in London whose visa has almost run out, along with her luck as an actor. Now she teaches improv classes to play the bills, and faces the pitying looks of her old friends.
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Bloom is not exactly known for comedy (Pirates of the Caribbean aside) but is wonderfully cast here as one of Kat's students, Marlon, an ultra-Method actor who constructs elaborate, dramatic backstories for his characters even when auditioning for a television commercial. His biggest role so far is in cheesy Medieval costume as 'Pizza Knight' for a commercial, and his agent finally drops him after saying, 'You're from the Cotswolds, you're not Al Pacino.'
Mohammed is known for comedy, notably as Nathan on Ted Lasso, and is a natural for the role of Hugh, a buttoned-up, socially inept IT guy so desperate for friends and connection he impulsively signs up for Kat's class, even though he has the shakiest grasp of what improv is.
The scenes introducing those three are among the funniest, with the actors leaning into the earnest aspects of their characters even while reveling in their goofiness. Sean Bean soon turns up as Billings, a cop who recruits Kat and asks her to bring two colleagues along for the sting. He offers them £200 each simply for walking into a store and buying some illegal cigarettes. With her best students unavailable, she has to resort to Marlon and Hugh.
The consequences ratchet up during that sting when their often misguided improv impulses take off. They just can't help themselves. Marlon takes on the guise of a thug named Roach and of course overplays the role. The clueless Hugh blurts out 'Yes, and' at inappropriate moments, as if it's a line of dialogue instead of the most basic improv rule. Kat is shrewder, and leaps in to try to save things, only to make them more complicated.
Before long they are meeting with a mob boss, Fly, played by Paddy Considine, who makes the character as tough as they come until it turns out he might not be so perceptive. Kat convinces him she is Bonnie, the brains of the operation, and that they are drug dealers. Marlon is the muscle, who dubs Hugh 'The Squire,' the guy who tastes and authenticates the cocaine. With all that great mob access, Billings refuses to let them out of the gig, and when things go further awry they have to meet with the angry big boss (Ian McShane).
Behind the scenes of the film there is a bit of a Jurassic World reunion. Trevorrow, who directed and co-wrote that mega-hit starring Howard, wrote a version of the Deep Cover screenplay along with his Jurassic writing partner Derek Connolly more than a decade ago. Eventually Ben Ashenden and Alexander Owen were brought in to rewrite and transplant the story to London, and they also have substantial supporting roles as detectives on the trail of the improv trio. Those sleuths aren't so smart themselves, mistakenly thinking that Kat and her gang are the masterminds behind London's drug trafficking. In the detectives' defense, the three do accidentally knock off a notorious assassin.
The director, Tom Kingsley, is known for the droll British television comedy Stath Lets Flats, but the tone of Deep Cover is more reminiscent of Simon Pegg and Nick Frost comedies like Hot Fuzz, with ridiculous plots and characters and consistently sharp but loose-limbed performances. Kingsley directs with confidence, even though the film sags a bit when the ever-escalating action starts to overtake the character comedy.
The action is effective enough, full of chases. In the most ludicrous, the detectives drive through narrow streets chasing Kat, Marlon and Hugh, who are trying to outrun them on rental bikes. Those scenes aren't especially inventive, but because the film is referencing stock action tropes, they don't need to be.
Deep Cover played at the SXSW London and Tribeca festivals shortly before dropping on Amazon Prime. Still, it arrives with relatively little hype considering its starry cast, which makes it a pleasant surprise, easy-to-watch breezy fun.
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What to Stream: HAIM, 'The Gilded Age,' Benson Boone, astronaut Sally Ride and digital dinosaurs
What to Stream: HAIM, 'The Gilded Age,' Benson Boone, astronaut Sally Ride and digital dinosaurs

San Francisco Chronicle​

time6 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

What to Stream: HAIM, 'The Gilded Age,' Benson Boone, astronaut Sally Ride and digital dinosaurs

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Amid immigration raids and a military parade, a reenactment at Bunker Hill aims to recall the values a young nation fought for
Amid immigration raids and a military parade, a reenactment at Bunker Hill aims to recall the values a young nation fought for

Boston Globe

time12 minutes ago

  • Boston Globe

Amid immigration raids and a military parade, a reenactment at Bunker Hill aims to recall the values a young nation fought for

On Monday, amid a tumultuous season in American democracy, a group of historically minded musicians, artists, and members of the public are staging an elaborate recreation, with parades, toasts, and music to match. Their goal is to celebrate the bicentennial anniversary of the cornerstone, and perhaps in the process recall what all those people came to celebrate that day. Advertisement 'The laying of the cornerstone reminds us of the long work of remembering this battle,' said historian Nat Sheidley, who leads the nonprofit Advertisement Lee Eiseman, a longtime Charlestown resident, has been the driving force behind the event. A musical impresario who also edits the Boston Musical Intelligencer online journal, Eiseman said he was asked to join the Monument Association in 2023 to arrange the commemoration because he had also organized a similar event in 1993. That was for the 150th anniversary of the 221-foot obelisk's 1843 dedication. Numerous regional newspapers covered the cornerstone laying in detail, and that documentation allowed Eiseman to piece together the music and poetry that the crowd would have heard there. 'It was an all-day affair that lasted through dinner,' he said. When Eiseman read the speeches delivered at the event, he found passages 'talking about how the cornerstone is plumb and level, the way our behavior should be: moral and upright,' he said. 'The sentiments are lofty, and I'm happy to be involved in celebrating those ideals.' The 200th anniversary features several free events Monday, beginning with a 9:30 a.m. procession from the Charlestown Navy Yard to the Bunker Hill Monument. That will be followed by a reenactment of the ceremony, with actors portraying orator and famed lawmaker Daniel Webster and the Marquis de Lafayette, the French hero of the Revolutionary War who laid the cornerstone. The professional Dee Opera Orchestra and Chorus, led by conductor Stephanie Beatrice, will perform some of the music known to have been heard at the original event. There's one intentional and significant change: Webster's morning speech at the original event lasted 45 minutes, but at the reenactment, it'll be abridged to five. 'Imagine addressing 60,000 people and being heard without any amplification,' Eiseman said. 'You really needed to have a trumpet for a voice.' Advertisement Later that day at 6 p.m., Old South Meeting House will host an event Eiseman is calling a 'civic exercise and grand monumental celebration,' featuring ceremonial toasts paired with apropos period music, which was collected by Eiseman and arranged by several other musicians. A few of those selections will be familiar to modern ears, Beatrice said – 'Yankee Doodle' was played, for one, as well as 'The Anacreontic Song,' which modern Americans know as 'The Star-Spangled Banner.' Beatrice said he grew up in Massachusetts and 'being able to supply historic tunes to this reenactment is really special for me.' Across the morning and evening events, Beatrice and the ensemble will be responsible for around 25 pieces. 'Each one is paired with a toast or an ode tied to a historical figure, and this all shows the relationship between the ideology of their words and the music that would have rallied the forces,' she said. 'It's going to be fun.' Sheidley often finds it a challenge to make the history of the founding era feel approachable, because it's 'saturated in mythology, and it's divisive,' he said. 'We currently are having a national argument about how we should remember our founding history … people can be on opposite sides of a political divide on that question, and we want them to be in dialogue with each other." Art and music can help guide that dialogue Sheidley wants to foster, because when people take part in a common experience, he said, it's easier for them to see themselves 'as part of writing that story.' Advertisement At heart, whenever Americans talk about the nation's founding era, they're never 'just having a conversation about history,' said Sheidley. It's also 'a conversation about where we are now and who we want to be.' A.Z. Madonna can be reached at

LeBron James's massive Beverly Hills mansion is well underway — after demolishing the original property
LeBron James's massive Beverly Hills mansion is well underway — after demolishing the original property

New York Post

time13 minutes ago

  • New York Post

LeBron James's massive Beverly Hills mansion is well underway — after demolishing the original property

LeBron James's custom hilltop mansion is really beginning to take shape. The Los Angeles Lakers star may be enjoying the off-season, but his work is far from over. The 40-year-old MVP is in the midst of building a megamansion in Beverly Hills, reported. The massive project on 2.5 prime acres is five years in the making. Impressive progress photos revealed a multilevel main house surrounded by scaffolding, neighboring a smaller abode with a finished facade. 5 LeBron James, 40, pictured alongside his wife, Savannah James. Getty Images 5 Aerial photos from 2024 show slow and steady progress on the property — which has only become more robust in recent days. nobyline@backgrid / BACKGRID James purchased the $39 million property in 2020 from television host Lee Phillip Bell and her husband, soap opera legend William J. Bell. The Bells created the shows 'The Young and the Restless,' and 'The Bold and the Beautiful,' that defined American daytime television for decades. The four-bedroom abode's star-studded history stretched back even further — it was previously leased by American business magnate and aviation figure Howard Hughes to his ex-girlfriend, the actress Katharine Hepburn, at the height of her career. James ultimately paid $36.75 million for the Mediterranean-inspired home in September of 2020. He subsequently razed the 13,000-square-foot structure — theatrical screening room, tennis court, swimming pool and all — in 2023 after getting permits approved. 5 The Lakers star purchased his in-progress property in 2020. AP 5 The hilltop patch of dirt is progressing into a sprawling luxury compound in this 2024 shot. nobyline@backgrid / BACKGRID The hilltop pile of dirt, accessed by one of the longest driveways in Los Angeles, has slowly transformed into a sprawling, multilevel compound over the past two years. Aerial photos of the project, exclusively reported by revealed a tiered megamansion accompanied by several outbuildings, including a large guesthouse. The structures appear to house more than enough space to house James, his wife Savannah, and his three children — including his son and Lakers teammate Bronny James. 5 James's new megamansion has been under construction since 2023. NBAE via Getty Images The property is expected to become James's primary residence, reported, where he will enjoy an infinity pool, a home theater, a wine cellar and an indoor basketball court. James let go of another Los Angeles property one year after purchasing his new Beverly Hills address. The grand colonial-style mansion sold in 2021 for $19.6 million, more than $1 million less than he paid for it in 2015.

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