The last cork has been popped and the final flute of Kirkland Signatures sparkling wine drained down to the last drop. Old Man 2023 has gathered his sash about his withered frame and slunk into the night, clearing the way for cherubic New Year 2024–giggly, chubby and brimming with promise.
Or something. In reality, years don’t flip on and off like a light switch. They smear into each other like paint, until everything is the same weird shade of brownish-purple. But still: we all strive to make each new chapter in the Gregorian filing system a fresh start–a chance to break bad habits and begin good ones.
The traditional way of kickstarting these self-improvement reboots is through the maddeningly self-deceptive ritual of setting New Year’s Resolutions–80% of which are inevitably abandoned by February 1, according to most studies. But hey! A sustainable 20% is still pretty good. And for cineastes,...
Or something. In reality, years don’t flip on and off like a light switch. They smear into each other like paint, until everything is the same weird shade of brownish-purple. But still: we all strive to make each new chapter in the Gregorian filing system a fresh start–a chance to break bad habits and begin good ones.
The traditional way of kickstarting these self-improvement reboots is through the maddeningly self-deceptive ritual of setting New Year’s Resolutions–80% of which are inevitably abandoned by February 1, according to most studies. But hey! A sustainable 20% is still pretty good. And for cineastes,...
- 1/3/2024
- by Matt Warren
- Film Independent News & More
Dumb Money is a biographical comedy-drama film directed by Craig Gillespie from a screenplay by Lauren Schuker Blum and Rebecca Angelo. Based on a novel by Ben Mezrich titled The Antisocial Network, the film chronicles the GameStop short squeeze, which happened in January 2021. Dumb Money stars Paul Dano, Pete Davidson, Shailene Woodley, Seth Rogen, Nick Offerman, Anthony Ramos, America Ferrera, Vincent D’Onofrio, and Sebastian Stan. So, if you loved the comedy-drama film here are some similar movies you could check out next.
The Big Short (Netflix & Rent on Prime Video) Credit – Paramount Pictures
Synopsis: When four outsiders saw what the big banks, media and government refused to, the global collapse of the economy, they had an idea: The Big Short. Their bold investment leads them into the dark underbelly of modern banking where they must question everyone and everything. Based on the true story and best-selling book by Michael Lewis,...
The Big Short (Netflix & Rent on Prime Video) Credit – Paramount Pictures
Synopsis: When four outsiders saw what the big banks, media and government refused to, the global collapse of the economy, they had an idea: The Big Short. Their bold investment leads them into the dark underbelly of modern banking where they must question everyone and everything. Based on the true story and best-selling book by Michael Lewis,...
- 9/23/2023
- by Kulwant Singh
- Cinema Blind
It all started with shows such as “Blaze & the Monster Machines” and “Doc McStuffins.” Over the past decade, many preschool children’s animated shows have shifted toward showing a more diverse cast and including storytelling that features Stem themes — problem-solving that’s focused on subjects including basic understanding of math, engineering and the sciences.
“I do think that there are far more Stem animated shows, especially for preschoolers,” says Amy Friedman, head of kids and family programming for Warner Bros. “If you’re doing preschool programming, you’ve got to have an educational foundation because you’re always teaching. The question is what are you teaching? Everything teaches something. You just may do it intentionally or unintentionally.”
In May, Cartoon Network began airing “Sesame Street Mecha Builders,” which focuses on a reimagined cast of Elmo, Cookie Monster and Abby Cadabby, who play robot heroes-in- training.
Together, they use their Stem superpowers to solve problems.
“I do think that there are far more Stem animated shows, especially for preschoolers,” says Amy Friedman, head of kids and family programming for Warner Bros. “If you’re doing preschool programming, you’ve got to have an educational foundation because you’re always teaching. The question is what are you teaching? Everything teaches something. You just may do it intentionally or unintentionally.”
In May, Cartoon Network began airing “Sesame Street Mecha Builders,” which focuses on a reimagined cast of Elmo, Cookie Monster and Abby Cadabby, who play robot heroes-in- training.
Together, they use their Stem superpowers to solve problems.
- 6/16/2022
- by Karen Idelson
- Variety Film + TV
Alex Cox attacks the Reagan years with a political tale sung in the key of the Italo Spaghetti Western: expect plenty of slow motion shots of stylish pistolero mercenaries fighting for the historical ‘filibuster’ William Walker. Look him up, he’s the patron saint of every neocon and would-be soldier of fortune. Everybody on this show goes the whole 9 yards in commitment, with Ed Harris in the lead — they filmed in Nicaragua. It may be director Cox’s finest film, packed with vivid images and surreal anachronisms — and a terrific music score by Joe Strummer.
Walker
Blu-ray
The Criterion Collection 423
1987 / Color / 1:85 widescreen / 94 min. / available through The Criterion Collection / Street Date April 12, 2022 / 39.95
Starring: Ed Harris, Richard Masur, Rene Auberjonois, Xander Berkeley, Peter Boyle, Marlee Matlin, Alfonso Arau, Pedro Armendáriz Jr., Gerrit Graham, William O’Leary, Blanca Guerra, Miguel Sandoval.
Cinematography: David Bridges
Production Designer: Bruno Rubeo
Art Directors: Cecilia Montiel, Jorge Sainz
Film Editors: Alex Cox,...
Walker
Blu-ray
The Criterion Collection 423
1987 / Color / 1:85 widescreen / 94 min. / available through The Criterion Collection / Street Date April 12, 2022 / 39.95
Starring: Ed Harris, Richard Masur, Rene Auberjonois, Xander Berkeley, Peter Boyle, Marlee Matlin, Alfonso Arau, Pedro Armendáriz Jr., Gerrit Graham, William O’Leary, Blanca Guerra, Miguel Sandoval.
Cinematography: David Bridges
Production Designer: Bruno Rubeo
Art Directors: Cecilia Montiel, Jorge Sainz
Film Editors: Alex Cox,...
- 4/16/2022
- by Glenn Erickson
- Trailers from Hell
Review by Stephen Tronicek
Steven Soderbergh’s The Laundromat makes a damning case for why the filmmaker is starting to become outdated. Slick, cool, and progressive in 1989, Soderbergh broke onto the scene with sex, lies and a videotape. That film is a fantastic work, one that stood out with a risque but honest view of sexuality. Nowadays, it’s still effective but the veneer of that honesty has worn slightly thin. Maybe part of Soderbergh is stuck in 1989.
Now, of course we can’t just blame him. The Laundromat, written by Scott Z. Burns (responsible for a few good Soderbergh movies and this year’s The Report) is ill conceived from the get go. Following a mystery that never gets solved, Meryl Streep does her best to give life to Ellen Martin, a woman whose husband died on a cruise boat. The aftermath lead her to an offshore scheme that...
Steven Soderbergh’s The Laundromat makes a damning case for why the filmmaker is starting to become outdated. Slick, cool, and progressive in 1989, Soderbergh broke onto the scene with sex, lies and a videotape. That film is a fantastic work, one that stood out with a risque but honest view of sexuality. Nowadays, it’s still effective but the veneer of that honesty has worn slightly thin. Maybe part of Soderbergh is stuck in 1989.
Now, of course we can’t just blame him. The Laundromat, written by Scott Z. Burns (responsible for a few good Soderbergh movies and this year’s The Report) is ill conceived from the get go. Following a mystery that never gets solved, Meryl Streep does her best to give life to Ellen Martin, a woman whose husband died on a cruise boat. The aftermath lead her to an offshore scheme that...
- 10/20/2019
- by Movie Geeks
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
The pairing of Scott Z Burns and Steven Soderbergh is usually a very promising one. Unfortunately, for their fourth collaboration, the writer and the director are way off of the mark. The Laundromat attempts to combine some of the methods of their previous team ups, but this would be satirical comedy/expose falls incredibly flat. Initially pegged as a potential Academy Award vehicle for Netflix, this should instead just have a final resting place buried among the streaming service’s movie options, where it actually is hitting today. Burns’ own impending outing The Report is tremendous, while Soderbergh even had another Netflix effort earlier this year in High Flying Bird that was spectacular. This one just doesn’t measure up. The film is a look at the lead up to and leaking of the 2016 Panama Papers publication, which revealed a huge money laundering scheme by a Panama City law firm...
- 10/18/2019
- by Joey Magidson
- Hollywoodnews.com
Hollywood loves a good true-crime story almost as much as scammers love to scam, so that's why The Laundromat inevitably exists. The Steven Soderbergh-helmed film brings Netflix viewers a fictionalized account of the 2016 Panama Papers scandal, during which a massive data breach exposed how the rich set up offshore accounts to avoid taxes and launder money.
The company helping these elites was the law firm Mossack Fonseca, founded by Jürgen Mossack (Gary Oldman) and Ramón Fonseca (Antonio Banderas). Meryl Streep comes in as Ellen Martin, an unassuming middle-class woman whose husband dies in a ferry accident. Following his death, the ferry owners realize that their insurance policy is a sham tracing back to Mossack Fonseca's shady money laundering businesses. The movie's star-powered cast and poppy colors certainly heighten the Panama Paper scandal, but the true story of corruption is downright shocking on its own.
First, Let's Talk About Shell...
The company helping these elites was the law firm Mossack Fonseca, founded by Jürgen Mossack (Gary Oldman) and Ramón Fonseca (Antonio Banderas). Meryl Streep comes in as Ellen Martin, an unassuming middle-class woman whose husband dies in a ferry accident. Following his death, the ferry owners realize that their insurance policy is a sham tracing back to Mossack Fonseca's shady money laundering businesses. The movie's star-powered cast and poppy colors certainly heighten the Panama Paper scandal, but the true story of corruption is downright shocking on its own.
First, Let's Talk About Shell...
- 10/15/2019
- by Stacey Nguyen
- Popsugar.com
Remember when Steven Soderbergh retired from moviemaking? There was a brief moment when the 56-year-old writer-director declared he was done trying to jam his square-peg projects into a one-size-fits-all landscape. The guy who helped kickstart the Sundance Revolution, who reinvented himself via a meta-masterpiece (we’re talking about Schizopolis and yes, we’re willing to die on this hill) and reinvigorated George Clooney’s career, who’s made movies starring Julia Roberts and a KFC employee from West Virginia (respectively), and made us take Channing Tatum seriously — he was happy to go paint.
- 9/26/2019
- by David Fear
- Rollingstone.com
We present our interviews from the Tiff premiere of Steven Soderbergh’s The Laundromat based on the book Secrecy World: Inside the Panama Papers by Jake Bernstein. The money laundering drama stars Meryl Streep, Gary Oldman, Sharon Stone, Melissa Rauch, Antonio Banderas, Alex Pettyfer, James Cromwell, David Schwimmer, Robert Patrick, Matthias Schoenaerts, Will Forte, Jeffrey Wright, Nonso Anozie, Nikki Amuka-Bird and Jessica Allain.
The film premiered at the 2019 Toronto Film Festival, and these are the interviews from the red carpet.
Synopsis:
A widow investigates an insurance fraud, chasing leads to a pair of Panama City law partners exploiting the world’s financial system.
When her idyllic vacation takes an unthinkable turn, Ellen Martin (Meryl Streep) begins investigating a fake insurance policy, only to find herself down a rabbit hole of questionable dealings that can be linked to a Panama City law firm and its vested interest in helping the world...
The film premiered at the 2019 Toronto Film Festival, and these are the interviews from the red carpet.
Synopsis:
A widow investigates an insurance fraud, chasing leads to a pair of Panama City law partners exploiting the world’s financial system.
When her idyllic vacation takes an unthinkable turn, Ellen Martin (Meryl Streep) begins investigating a fake insurance policy, only to find herself down a rabbit hole of questionable dealings that can be linked to a Panama City law firm and its vested interest in helping the world...
- 9/13/2019
- by Jon Lyus
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
While the beginning of fall usually means back-to-school and the end of outdoor barbecues, Hollywood has its own way of changing seasons. The Toronto International Film Festival, which starts on Sept. 5, marks the official launch of the Oscars race.
Unlike neighboring film festivals at Telluride and Venice, which both take place on the weekend before, Toronto is easier to reach and packed with far more screenings: more than 200 movies. Here are 14 that will likely be the talk of Canada.
“Hustlers”
(Stx Entertainment, Sept. 13)
Director: Lorene Scafaria
Cast: Constance Wu, Jennifer Lopez, Julia Stiles, Keke Palmer, Lili Reinhart, Cardi B, Lizzo
Ever since I saw “Hustlers” at an early screening, I can’t stop raving about it. Every Oscars season, there’s a movie that sneaks up on the pundits. And I have a feeling that this dramatic comedy written and directed by Lorene Scafaria will be a box office hit and critical darling.
Unlike neighboring film festivals at Telluride and Venice, which both take place on the weekend before, Toronto is easier to reach and packed with far more screenings: more than 200 movies. Here are 14 that will likely be the talk of Canada.
“Hustlers”
(Stx Entertainment, Sept. 13)
Director: Lorene Scafaria
Cast: Constance Wu, Jennifer Lopez, Julia Stiles, Keke Palmer, Lili Reinhart, Cardi B, Lizzo
Ever since I saw “Hustlers” at an early screening, I can’t stop raving about it. Every Oscars season, there’s a movie that sneaks up on the pundits. And I have a feeling that this dramatic comedy written and directed by Lorene Scafaria will be a box office hit and critical darling.
- 9/5/2019
- by Kate Aurthur and Ramin Setoodeh
- Variety Film + TV
The world is full of scammers trying to take your money, and in Netflix's The Laundromat, Meryl Streep is determined to make them pay - literally. Based on "some real sh*t," the dark comedy chronicles the group of journalists behind the 2016 Panama Papers incident, who uncovered the illicit money networks at the heart of some seriously shady financial activities worldwide. The Panama Papers were the documents that exposed companies setting up offshore shell companies that allowed them to avoid paying billions of dollars in taxes and screw over all the people not making millions of dollars in income.
The Laundromat tackles the story through the perspective of Streep's Ellen Martin, a middle-class woman who is investigating an insurance fraud case after the death of her husband. When she starts asking questions, she discovers that it's all much bigger than she thought possible. Directed by Ocean's Eleven's Steven Soderbergh...
The Laundromat tackles the story through the perspective of Streep's Ellen Martin, a middle-class woman who is investigating an insurance fraud case after the death of her husband. When she starts asking questions, she discovers that it's all much bigger than she thought possible. Directed by Ocean's Eleven's Steven Soderbergh...
- 9/4/2019
- by Mekishana Pierre
- Popsugar.com
The Venice Film Festival officially kicked off in Italy on Aug. 28, and stars wasted no time promoting their latest projects. Lily-Rose Depp and Timothée Chalamet looked like royalty at the premiere of The King, while Meryl Streep and Gary Oldman shared a few laughs at the screening of their upcoming film, The Laundromat. Based on the 2016 Panama Papers incident, the comedy-drama - which also stars David Schwimmer, Antonio Banderas, and Sharon Stone, and hits Netflix on Oct. 18 - sees Meryl as a woman named Ellen Martin who embarks on a mission to take down powerful swindlers. Ahead, see the most glamorous moments from the festival and get the details on what everyone's wearing - so far!
- 9/3/2019
- by Monica Sisavat
- Popsugar.com
Steven Soderbergh’s “The Laundromat” is a fluky contradiction that works. I’m tempted to call it a brain-teaser — not because it’s some sort of clockwork mystery caper that toys with your expectations, but because it’s a true-life journalistic drama about the new world order of offshore financial corruption, and it’s a movie you’ve got to put on your thinking cap to watch. But then, Soderbergh knows how to make using your head fun.
Made for Netflix, “The Laundromat” flashes by in a brisk and buoyant 90 minutes, but it’s about something that can seem, at times, ludicrously complicated: the scandal of the Panama Papers, which revealed, with a detail that hadn’t been reported in the mainstream media, the staggering network of shell companies, many located on tropical islands, in which the global financial elite conceal their assets to avoid paying taxes, or just to stash the funds,...
Made for Netflix, “The Laundromat” flashes by in a brisk and buoyant 90 minutes, but it’s about something that can seem, at times, ludicrously complicated: the scandal of the Panama Papers, which revealed, with a detail that hadn’t been reported in the mainstream media, the staggering network of shell companies, many located on tropical islands, in which the global financial elite conceal their assets to avoid paying taxes, or just to stash the funds,...
- 9/1/2019
- by Owen Gleiberman
- Variety Film + TV
Steven Soderbergh excels at exploring the complex systems governing modern society with a delicious ironic tone. With “The Laundromat,” that tendency reaches a grandiloquent extreme. The director’s funny, searing look at the Panama Papers scandal unleashes a cavalcade of goofy fourth-wall-breaking explanations about shell companies, corporate tax laws, and offshore accounts. It has a gun-toting Meryl Streep shooting up a fraudulent insurance company, primitive cavemen to explore the origins of supply and demand, and a cameo by Will Forte as “Doomed Gringo #1.” There’s no telling where this movie will go in its quest to shake up a dense subject.
Needless to say, “The Laundromat” stuffs a lot of information into 95 minutes. The slapdash narrative doesn’t always click, and some of the devices are so on-the-nose one can practically hear Soderbergh and screenwriter Scott Z. Burns cackling at their cleverness. At the same time, , so that even the...
Needless to say, “The Laundromat” stuffs a lot of information into 95 minutes. The slapdash narrative doesn’t always click, and some of the devices are so on-the-nose one can practically hear Soderbergh and screenwriter Scott Z. Burns cackling at their cleverness. At the same time, , so that even the...
- 9/1/2019
- by Eric Kohn
- Indiewire
Benicio Del Toro in Traffic, Julia Roberts in Erin Brockovich, Michael Douglas in Behind the Candelabra–Steven Soderbergh has directed a great many stars to career peaks and the statuettes that follow. While Meryl Streep is probably the last person in need of help with such things, her first collaboration with the shape-shifting pioneer of American independent cinema can’t help but stand out amongst her illustrious career. A new entry into the financial satire sub-genre of Soderbergh’s filmmaking, his new movie The Laundromat is an air-tight, tumultuous info-graph about our rotten to the core financial systems and, in particular, the 2016 Mossack and Fonseca leak, when millions of the Panamanian law firm’s files were anonymously leaked to the press.
A quick overview would be sufficient to suggest that this is Soderbergh’s answer to The Big Short. Filmmakers have recently woken up to the idea that solemnity is...
A quick overview would be sufficient to suggest that this is Soderbergh’s answer to The Big Short. Filmmakers have recently woken up to the idea that solemnity is...
- 9/1/2019
- by Rory O'Connor
- The Film Stage
In Steven Soderbergh’s latest film, The Laundromat, Meryl Streep plays a retiree, Ellen Martin, on holiday with her husband (James Cromwell) to celebrate their 40th anniversary. An unexpected tragedy hits and Martin is widowed. But her troubles are just beginning as she seeks to get settlement money, runs against disastrous cases of insurance fraud, shell companies and offshore bank accounts that threaten to ruin her last days of happiness.
That’s just the tip of the iceberg, but all roads lead back to a shady law firm in Panama run by Jurgen Mossack (Gary Oldman) and Ramon Fonseca (Antonio ...
That’s just the tip of the iceberg, but all roads lead back to a shady law firm in Panama run by Jurgen Mossack (Gary Oldman) and Ramon Fonseca (Antonio ...
In Steven Soderbergh’s latest film, The Laundromat, Meryl Streep plays a retiree, Ellen Martin, on holiday with her husband (James Cromwell) to celebrate their 40th anniversary. An unexpected tragedy hits and Martin is widowed. But her troubles are just beginning as she seeks to get settlement money, runs against disastrous cases of insurance fraud, shell companies and offshore bank accounts that threaten to ruin her last days of happiness.
That’s just the tip of the iceberg, but all roads lead back to a shady law firm in Panama run by Jurgen Mossack (Gary Oldman) and Ramon Fonseca (Antonio ...
That’s just the tip of the iceberg, but all roads lead back to a shady law firm in Panama run by Jurgen Mossack (Gary Oldman) and Ramon Fonseca (Antonio ...
Prepare yourselves for a new Meryl Streep.
The three-time Oscar winner, 70, stars in the first trailer for Netflix’s The Laundromat as a widow who uncovers insurance fraud committed by law partners Jürgen Mossack (Gary Oldman) and Ramón Fonseca (Antonio Banderas).
The two lawyers ran a law firm that was at the center of the 2016 Panama Papers scandal when documents leaked showing how wealthy people were hiding money through offshore shell corporations.
Directed by Steven Soderbergh, the film is a wild foray into the world of money and the lengths millionaires will go to in order to stay rich.
“First...
The three-time Oscar winner, 70, stars in the first trailer for Netflix’s The Laundromat as a widow who uncovers insurance fraud committed by law partners Jürgen Mossack (Gary Oldman) and Ramón Fonseca (Antonio Banderas).
The two lawyers ran a law firm that was at the center of the 2016 Panama Papers scandal when documents leaked showing how wealthy people were hiding money through offshore shell corporations.
Directed by Steven Soderbergh, the film is a wild foray into the world of money and the lengths millionaires will go to in order to stay rich.
“First...
- 8/28/2019
- by Alexia Fernandez
- PEOPLE.com
Meryl Streep plays a widow who helps expose worldwide fraud in the dizzying first trailer for The Laundromat, director Steven Soderbergh’s upcoming Netflix film about the Panama Papers scandal.
The clip opens with a pair of shady law firm partners, Jürgen Mossack (Gary Oldman) and Ramón Mora (Antonio Banderas), breaking the fourth wall as they stare into the camera and outline the broad strokes of the true story. “First, you must ask yourself, ‘Are you wealthy?'” Mossack says. “Simple truth of the world is that [with] most games, for someone to win,...
The clip opens with a pair of shady law firm partners, Jürgen Mossack (Gary Oldman) and Ramón Mora (Antonio Banderas), breaking the fourth wall as they stare into the camera and outline the broad strokes of the true story. “First, you must ask yourself, ‘Are you wealthy?'” Mossack says. “Simple truth of the world is that [with] most games, for someone to win,...
- 8/28/2019
- by Ryan Reed
- Rollingstone.com
Check out the first trailer for director Steven Soderbergh’s The Laundromat, starring Meryl Streep, Gary Oldman and Antonio Banderas.
The film will have a platform release starting September 27 in Los Angeles, New York and the UK, additional engagements in U.S. and international cities will rollout October 4 and October 11. The Laundromat will be released globally on Netflix on October 18 with an expanded theatrical release in the U.S. and international markets.
When her idyllic vacation takes an unthinkable turn, Ellen Martin (Academy Award winner Meryl Streep) begins investigating a fake insurance policy, only to find herself down a rabbit hole of questionable dealings that can be linked to a Panama City law firm and its vested interest in helping the world’s wealthiest citizens amass even larger fortunes. The charming – and very well-dressed – founding partners Jürgen Mossack (Academy Award winner Gary Oldman) and Ramón Fonseca (Golden Globe nominee Antonio...
The film will have a platform release starting September 27 in Los Angeles, New York and the UK, additional engagements in U.S. and international cities will rollout October 4 and October 11. The Laundromat will be released globally on Netflix on October 18 with an expanded theatrical release in the U.S. and international markets.
When her idyllic vacation takes an unthinkable turn, Ellen Martin (Academy Award winner Meryl Streep) begins investigating a fake insurance policy, only to find herself down a rabbit hole of questionable dealings that can be linked to a Panama City law firm and its vested interest in helping the world’s wealthiest citizens amass even larger fortunes. The charming – and very well-dressed – founding partners Jürgen Mossack (Academy Award winner Gary Oldman) and Ramón Fonseca (Golden Globe nominee Antonio...
- 8/28/2019
- by Michelle Hannett
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Netflix has launched the first trailer for Steven Soderbergh’s ‘The Laundromat’ featuring Meryl Streep, Gary Oldman and Antonio Banderas.
Directed by Soderbergh, the film has a stellar cast of Meryl Streep, Gary Oldman, Antonio Banderas, Jeffrey Wright, Melissa Rauch, Jeff Michalski, Jane Morris, Robert Patrick, David Schwimmer, Cristela Alonzo, Larry Clarke, Will Forte, Chris Parnell, Nonso Anozie, Larry Wilmore, Jessica Allain, Nikki Amuka-Bird, Matthias Schoenaerts, Rosalind Chao, Kunjue Li, Ming Lo, with James Cromwell and Sharon Stone.
Also in trailers – ‘The Mandalorian’ full trailer and further character details revealed
The film launches in select UK cinemas on 27th September and on Netflix 18th October
The Laundromat Synopsis
When her idyllic vacation takes an unthinkable turn, Ellen Martin (Academy Award winner Meryl Streep) begins investigating a fake insurance policy, only to find herself down a rabbit hole of questionable dealings that can be linked to a Panama City law firm...
Directed by Soderbergh, the film has a stellar cast of Meryl Streep, Gary Oldman, Antonio Banderas, Jeffrey Wright, Melissa Rauch, Jeff Michalski, Jane Morris, Robert Patrick, David Schwimmer, Cristela Alonzo, Larry Clarke, Will Forte, Chris Parnell, Nonso Anozie, Larry Wilmore, Jessica Allain, Nikki Amuka-Bird, Matthias Schoenaerts, Rosalind Chao, Kunjue Li, Ming Lo, with James Cromwell and Sharon Stone.
Also in trailers – ‘The Mandalorian’ full trailer and further character details revealed
The film launches in select UK cinemas on 27th September and on Netflix 18th October
The Laundromat Synopsis
When her idyllic vacation takes an unthinkable turn, Ellen Martin (Academy Award winner Meryl Streep) begins investigating a fake insurance policy, only to find herself down a rabbit hole of questionable dealings that can be linked to a Panama City law firm...
- 8/28/2019
- by Zehra Phelan
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
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