Movies' Winners And Losers In 2014



via BuzzFeed

From Marvel Studios’ highs to Sony Pictures’ lows, from Scarlett Johannsson kicking butt to Adam Sandler bombing out, here are the highlights and lowlights in the movies this year.



Alice Mongkongllite for BuzzFeed


To say this has been a bad year for Hollywood is a bit like saying the outgoing Congress had some small disagreements. So let's reach into the thesaurus for some better bad words: It's been awful. Horrific. Abysmal. And that is setting aside (for the moment) the December denouement that was the Sony Pictures/The Interview debacle, the Bryan Singer scandal, the renewal of the Woody Allen scandal, the continued decline of original studio movies, and the unabated commercial primacy of Michael Bay.


Based on figures from Box Office Mojo, Hollywood has not seen ticket sales this low since 1989. That measurement may fluctuate a bit as final numbers for the year trickle in. But rather than some one-time aberration, 2014 represents the latest low mark in a downwardly mobile trajectory that the movie business has not yet figured out how to reverse — if indeed it can. It's how Disney can have four of the year's top 10 grossing movies domestically (Guardians of the Galaxy, Captain America: The Winter Soldier, Maleficent, and Big Hero 6), more than any other studio, and still be down roughly 4.5% from 2013. It's how Warner Bros. and Universal can have a healthy slate of hits and still be down double digits year-over-year.



Adam B. Vary for BuzzFeed / Via boxofficemojo.com


Amid all this gloom, there are still plenty of studios, filmmakers, and actors who had cause to celebrate this year, while others are likely itching to put 2014 far behind them. Six months ago — back when box office was down a mere 1.5% from 2013, instead of a much more worrisome 5.3% — I assessed the winners and losers in movies through the first half of the year. Some things since have changed for the better, some for the worse. So as we ring in 2015, let's look back on the biggest winners and losers in movies overall from the year just past.




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Richard Gilmore's Best 19 Quotes From "Gilmore Girls"



via BuzzFeed

“It takes a remarkable person to inspire all of this.” In memory of Edward Herrmann, who died on Dec. 31, and played Richard Gilmore in all seven seasons of Gilmore Girls.


When Richard (Edward Herrmann) had little tolerance for Lorelai's (Lauren Graham) jokes.


When Richard (Edward Herrmann) had little tolerance for Lorelai's (Lauren Graham) jokes.


Warner Bros. Television / Via lukesdiner.tumblr.com


When he wasn't afraid to ask the tough questions.


When he wasn't afraid to ask the tough questions.


Warner Bros. Television / Via wifflegif.com



Warner Bros. Television / gilmored.tumblr.com




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49 Movies And TV Shows We Loved, Hated, And Couldn't Stop Writing About In 2014



via BuzzFeed

From The Good Wife and Mad Men to Guardians of the Galaxy and Gone Girl, there were television shows and films that the staff of BuzzFeed Entertainment couldn’t stop talking about this year. Let’s get critical!



Netflix; Walt Disney Pictures; Paramount Pictures; Twentieth Century Fox; FX; Universal Pictures; Warner Bros. Pictures; BBC; CBS Video; Lionsgate; HBO; Walt Disney Pictures / Jace Lacob for BuzzFeed


The Good Wife


The Good Wife


“The Good Wife” Is The Best Show On Television Right Now by Jace Lacob


The CBS legal drama, now in its sixth season, continually shakes up its narrative foundations and proves itself fearless in the process. Spoilers ahead, if you’re not up to date on the show.


Was That “Good Wife” Twist Cheap Or Profound? by Jace Lacob and Louis Peitzman


No one saw that coming, not even BuzzFeed Entertainment Editorial Director Jace Lacob and Senior Editor Louis Peitzman, who discuss the shocking reveal on the legal drama. MAJOR SPOILERS AHEAD, if you haven’t watched.


CBS


Mad Men


Mad Men


The Midseason Finale Of “Mad Men” Is One Giant Leap Forward by Jace Lacob


Don’t be fooled: Matthew Weiner’s period drama has always been about the future. Warning: Contains spoilers for “Waterloo.”


AMC


The Interview


The Interview


“The Interview” Is The Most Dangerous Dumb Comedy In The World by Alison Willmore


Here’s guessing Seth Rogen, Evan Goldberg, and James Franco never thought their North Korea assassination comedy would come to this.


Sony Pictures




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"A Most Violent Year" Pulls A Reverse "Godfather"



via BuzzFeed

Oscar Isaac and Jessica Chastain star in a story about a New York businessman trying to stay clean in a dirty industry. Principles are great and all, but you kind of wish he’d give in.



Oscar Isaac and Jessica Chastain in A Most Violent Year


A24


Abel Morales (Oscar Isaac), the cool-tempered, highly driven, impeccably dressed protagonist of A Most Violent Year, is trying to be the poster boy for the American dream, but the American dream keeps turning nightmarish on him.


A Columbian immigrant, though his roots are left undiscussed — "Speak English," he urges an employee who entreats him in Spanish, "speak English" — Abel's now a business owner and family man in New York City. He has a stylish Brooklyn-born wife named Anna (an immensely enjoyable Jessica Chastain), two beautiful daughters, and a lavish new house. He's about to make a real estate deal for some waterfront property that could take his company, Standard Oil, to another level.


Also, he's being investigated by the DA (David Oyelowo), and his trucks keep getting hijacked on the road and turning up elsewhere emptied of their loads. It's 1981 — as the title promises, one of the most violent recorded periods in New York history — and Abel is being pressured to answer in kind while under the scrutiny of a legal system that doesn't seem to care that his competitors are all dirtier than he is. He willfully refuses to accept that going by the book isn't the same thing as playing by the (unwritten) rules.



A24


There's plenty that's Godfather-like to A Most Violent Year, most of it emanating from Isaac, who with his camel coat, brushed back hair, and intense gaze often feels like he's channeling Al Pacino's brooding Michael Corleone. While Michael sought to make the family crime business legitimate, Abel doesn't want to consider being anything but in the first place. He's a player in an industry that is, on the outside, breathtakingly mundane — home heating oil, delivered around the five boroughs and sold door-to-door by the earnest young men and women that Abel coaches himself (the secret is prolonged eye contact).


But it's also, despite its seeming humbleness, a sizable and quietly cutthroat business with a long-established way of doing things that Abel's been bypassing. He's been ignoring the territories his rivals have divvied up for themselves and expanding his customer base by way of charm and good old-fashioned work ethic, and that's why his drivers are getting attacked, his oil is being stolen, and men with guns are skulking around his home. With 30 days to close a property deal that will clean him out if it falls through, Abel suddenly finds himself in desperate straits, scrabbling to stick to his principles when everyone else in his life, including his wife, is ready to brawl in the street.




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Edward Herrmann Has Died



via BuzzFeed

The prolific actor, who starred on all seven seasons of Gilmore Girls, was 71.



Getty Images Andrew H. Walker


Edward Herrmann — star of The Lost Boys, Gilmore Girls, and My Cousin Vinny — has died, his manager told BuzzFeed News.


Herrmann had been diagnosed with brain cancer. He was 71.



"Foxcatcher" Wrestler Mark Schultz Appears To Go On Tirade About The Film And Director Bennett Miller



via BuzzFeed

“Leaving the audience with a feeling that somehow there could have been a sexual relationship between duPont and I is a sickening and insulting lie.”




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32 Characters We Loved In Film And TV In 2014



via BuzzFeed

From actors and pop stars to robots and sentient trees, these are the film and TV characters we can’t stop thinking about. Presented in no particular order. WARNING: Spoilers throughout.


1. Valerie Cherish (Lisa Kudrow), The Comeback


1. Valerie Cherish (Lisa Kudrow), The Comeback


When The Comeback debuted in 2005, Valerie Cherish was ahead of her time. The series was a rich satire of reality television and the way the entertainment industry undermines women, subject matters that the mainstream public wasn't quite ready to face. Flash forward to 2014, the year The Comeback made its triumphant return. The show was darker than ever — with Valerie representing an even more damning indictment of how prestige dramas treat female characters, and how Hollywood treats women of a certain age — but viewers were now ready to dive into the show's scathing tone. (It's worth noting that the show isn't quite a ratings hit. Critical perception of The Comeback, however, is far more positive than it was nearly 10 years ago.) More the point, Lisa Kudrow's powerful, multi-layered portrayal of Val gives us a character who is savvier and more emotionally rich than her first impression would have you believe. Without revealing too much about the pitch-perfect Season 2 finale, The Comeback also gifted us with one of the best realized character arcs in television history. In the end, Val's journey, always grounded in a painful reality, brought equal parts humor and pathos. —Louis Peitzman


HBO


2. Noni Jean (Gugu Mbatha-Raw), Beyond the Lights


2. Noni Jean (Gugu Mbatha-Raw), Beyond the Lights


Gugu Mbatha-Raw has had quite the year — first Belle, and then Gina Prince-Bythewood’s music industry melodrama, in which she plays depressive R&B princess Noni Jean. Noni is always in the spotlight but in other ways has been going totally unseen, with no one getting a glimpse of the actual woman beneath the fantasy girl facade. Mbatha-Raw makes it clear when Noni’s turning the charm on and when she’s being real, and there is an immense, understandable gap between the professional smile and the deep loneliness underneath. It’s not always easy to make the sad celebrity sympathetic, but Noni, groomed from childhood to be the success her mother wasn’t, is wonderfully compelling as someone only now realizing how lost she is. Plus, her triumphant removal of her violet hair extensions is one of the year’s most gratifying scenes of self-affirmation. —Alison Willmore


Relativity Media


3. Lou Bloom (Jake Gyllenhaal), Nightcrawler


3. Lou Bloom (Jake Gyllenhaal), Nightcrawler


There is nothing likable about Lou Bloom, the deeply corrupt, arguably sociopathic (a designation that his portrayer Jake Gyllenhaal rejects) protagonist of Nightcrawler. He lies, cheats, and steals — and that's just in the first scene. But no matter how appalling Lou's behavior is, there's an undeniable draw to him. His intensity and utter lack of morals — reflected by Gyllenhaal's gaunt face and fake smile — make him a character unlike any other. We should be repulsed by Lou, who beats the police to crime scenes and deliberately withholds evidence, and coerces his boss Nina (Rene Russo) into sleeping with him, and yet he's magnetic. But that's the power of Nightcrawler, which appeals to the darkest elements of our psyche. Just as television news clamors for more salacious stories, filled with grotesque images of sex and violence, we tune in as hungry consumers. It's easy to look at the film and its main character as a Network-esque criticism of the TV news industry — and it is — but it's just as strong an indictment of human nature. We are all more Lou Bloom than we want to believe. —L.P.


Open Road Films


4. Terence Fletcher (J. K. Simmons), Whiplash


4. Terence Fletcher (J. K. Simmons), Whiplash


Whiplash may not be a horror film, but Terence Fletcher is scarier than any horror film villain. As portrayed by J. K. Simmons, he is a terrifying force of nature, a relentless bully who pushes drummer Andrew Neiman (Miles Teller) to his limit — and then keeps pushing. What's scariest about Fletcher is that, despite his shocking cruelty and casual slurs, he might actually be right: Most of the students he teaches have been celebrated for relatively minor accomplishments, and it's only through Fletcher's abuse that they're able to unlock their full potential. Well, maybe. Whiplash refuses to pass final judgment on Fletcher — is he a misunderstood genius mentor, or is he a sadist who routinely goes too far? The most fascinating thing about the character is that he alternates between being an asshole and being an asshole with a point. It's up to the audience to decide whether the results Fletcher gets ever justify his means. Either way, it's impossible to take your eyes off him. —L.P.


Sony Pictures Classics




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The Worst Movie Quotes Of 2014



via BuzzFeed

“I’m a fat ballerina who takes scalps and slits throats!”


Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles


Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles


Drain every ounce of sense while you're at it.


Paramount


3 Days To Kill


3 Days To Kill


I'll just have chips, thanks.


Relativity Media


Blended


Blended


Not the best euphemism, since 'frigging' is also a sexual swear word, and not the kind of one you want in a sentence with 'Mom'.


Warner Bros.



Terror flaps.


Lionsgate




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127 New Movies And TV Shows To Be Really Excited About In 2015



via BuzzFeed

From Better Call Saul to Westworld, and Fifty Shades of Grey to Star Wars: The Force Awakens, there are a lot of new film and television offerings to look forward to in the next year. In chronological order!



Alice Mongkongllite/BuzzFeed


Marvel’s Agent Carter, Jan. 6 (8 p.m. on ABC)


Marvel’s Agent Carter, Jan. 6 (8 p.m. on ABC)


Hayley Atwell, who played Peggy Carter in the two Captain America films, along with the short Marvel One-Shot: Agent Carter, takes Peggy's game to TV this time. Agent Carter will air for seven episodes during the hiatus for Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. Her Peggy is shrewd and calm — and is also subject to the limitations that trapped women in 1946, when the show is set. Yet while she's largely dismissed at work, she's valued by Howard Stark (Dominic Cooper, also reprising his Captain America role), who enlists her to fight against…something. Yes, these Marvel stories pretty much always lose me with their Big Bads. But that's OK: The fun is in Peggy's undercover work, her confidence, and in this show's slick production design.


ABC


Empire, Jan. 7 (9 p.m. on Fox)


Empire, Jan. 7 (9 p.m. on Fox)


I can’t tell whether Empire is an answer to my soapy needs, or a big old mess — or maybe both, which…yay! In the Lee Daniels-directed pilot, Terrence Howard plays the head of a music company — an EMPIRE, in fact — who wants his three sons to compete over who will succeed him (because he is secretly ill): Yes, someone makes a King Lear joke. It’s a good premise, and Timbaland does the music. But what sends it over the top is that his ex-wife, Cookie, is played by Taraji P. Henson, and in the pilot she gets out of prison after many years. After a few years as a staid cop on Person of Interest, it’s as if Henson wanted especially to burn it down as Cookie. She is amazing. And her clothes are amazing (see above). In Cookie we trust.


Fox


Babylon, Jan. 8 (10 p.m. on Sundance)


Babylon, Jan. 8 (10 p.m. on Sundance)


I'm not going to lie: Somehow I had misheard or misread what Danny Boyle's Babylon was about, and went into it thinking it was science fiction. As the first episode went on — in which Brit Marling plays the new head of PR for Scotland Yard, and James Nesbitt is the head of the police — I was very confused. But I was also thinking I pretty much liked it! Eventually, I looked at the screener's box, and saw it described as a workplace satire. Ha! This one's for Anglophiles, Marling obsessives, and Boyle completists (I am 1½ of those things).


Sundance




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Christine Cavanaugh, Voice Of Chuckie From "Rugrats" And Babe The Pig, Dies At 51



via BuzzFeed

Cavanaugh also voiced characters like Oblina in Aaahh!!! Real Monsters and Dexter from Dexter’s Laboratory.


Cavanaugh's cause of death was not released.



Mark J. Terrill / AP Photo


Besides voiceover work, Cavanaugh also had live-action guest roles on Salute Your Shorts, Cheers, The X-Files, and ER, as well as appearances in the films Jerry Maguire and Soulmates.




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Ranking Every Episode Of "The Twilight Zone"



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One hundred and fifty-six episodes, countless twists. Here’s how they stack up, from worst to best.



Chris Ritter / BuzzFeed


"The Jungle" (Season 3, Episode 12)


"The Jungle" (Season 3, Episode 12)


Writer(s): Charles Beaumont

Director: William F. Claxton


If we could set aside the episode's blatant discomfort with African people and cultures — it follows a couple who have returned from a work trip to Africa (just "Africa") with bewitched talismans — we'd have a truly spooky story of a man trying to outrun some demons. But we probably shouldn't set all of that aside!


CBS / Via pinterest.com


"The Chaser" (Season 1, Episode 31)


"The Chaser" (Season 1, Episode 31)


Writer(s): Robert Presnell Jr., based on the short story by John Collier

Director: Douglas Heyes


Roger Shackleforth cannot deal with the fact that the woman of his affection isn't interested, so he gives her a love potion, becomes fed up with her devotion, and then buys poison to kill her. It could've MAAAAAYBE worked as a criticism of all the abusive would-be Romeos out there, except Roger ends up not using the poison because he finds out Leila is pregnant? And his punishment is that they stay together? So? No thanks?


CBS / Via twilightzonevortex.blogspot.com


"From Agnes — With Love" (Season 5, Episode 20)


"From Agnes — With Love" (Season 5, Episode 20)


Writer(s): Bernard C. Schoenfeld

Director: Richard Donner


This episode — about a computer named Agnes that falls in love with her technician (a real Nice Guy, if I've ever seen one) and then sabotages his relationship — manages to be both technophobic and misogynistic. It evens closes on a comparison between women and "dangerous," "jealous" machines! You're better than this, Twilight Zone.


CBS / Via veehd.com




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122 Of The Most Important TV Deaths Of 2014



via BuzzFeed

Even without the Red Wedding, this was one of the bloodiest years for TV in recent memory. Warning: MAJOR SPOILERS for just about every television series. (Seriously.)


Pierce Hawthorne (Chevy Chase), Community


Pierce Hawthorne (Chevy Chase), Community


Chevy Chase's drama-filled time spent on the beloved NBC comedy ended with his decision to leave the show before what was to be its final season. (Of course, that was before it was resurrected by Yahoo! for a sixth season sans movie.) That also meant an early end for his character, Pierce Hawthorne. It was jarring watching the lighthearted show deal with something as serious as Pierce's death, but Community did so with its signature quirky comedy mixed with some schmaltz, i.e., his Greendale eulogy, which read: "Pierce Hawthorne, 14-year Greendale student, entrepreneur and expert heart attack faker passed away. For real this time. Pierce had been recently banned from campus, but not from our hearts. He's survived by many ex-wives and all of us here at Greendale who called him a friend. If you're listening, Pierce, you were a hell of a D&D player. It's time to level up." (Side note: It was later revealed that Pierce died of "dehydration from filling up all those cylinders" of his sperm that he left his fellow Greendale students.) RIP Piercinald Anastasia Hawthorne, but no thank you for that parting gift.


NBC


Madame LaLaurie (Kathy Bates), American Horror Story: Coven


Madame LaLaurie (Kathy Bates), American Horror Story: Coven


When American Horror Story fans first met Madame Delphine LaLaurie on the anthology series' third season, the 19th-century Louisiana socialite was happily torturing her slaves in the most unimaginable ways possible (like, making them minotaurs, for example). But eventually, she got her due: She was buried alive, unburied and made a slave, and eventually decapitated. And when she arrived in hell, she watched as her rival burned her daughter in the same chambers she tortured her own slaves in decades earlier. Karma really is a bitch, just like LaLaurie.


FX


Marie Laveau (Angela Bassett), American Horror Story: Coven


Marie Laveau (Angela Bassett), American Horror Story: Coven


Madame LaLaurie's rival was famed voodoo priestess and owner of the Cornrow City salon Marie Laveau. Her cackle, skin, and magic were flawless, but that wasn't enough to save her. Before she met her own end, LaLaurie managed to attack Laveau, knocking her unconscious. Then, she dissected her body, spreading various parts all around New Orleans. And if that weren't bad enough, Laveau met LaLaurie again in the afterlife, where she was forced to spend eternity torturing LaLaurie's innocent daughters, which wasn't as fulfilling for Laveau as she would've imagined in theory.


FX


Fiona Goode (Jessica Lange), American Horror Story: Coven


Fiona Goode (Jessica Lange), American Horror Story: Coven


Even the Supreme wasn't safe on Coven. Fiona yearned for eternal life and became particularly desperate for it when she was diagnosed with terminal cancer (which wasn't a surprise considering the woman smoked like a glamorous chimney clad in black designer cocktail frocks). But even after coming up with a master plan — implanting a vision of her fake murder in the brain of the serial killer she was having a love affair with (Danny Huston) — Fiona still met her end the natural way, letting her daughter Cordelia (Sarah Paulson) reign Supreme. In her own personal hell, she was bound to spend eternity in a shack with Huston's Axeman that smelled like fish and cat piss. Oh, and it was made of knotty pine. THE HORROR!


FX




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"The Comeback" Completes Its Perfect Comeback



via BuzzFeed

Lisa Kudrow discussed the finale, the second season as a whole, and addressed important questions (i.e., is Valerie Cherish Jewish?) with BuzzFeed News.



Lisa Kudrow as Valerie Cherish, with Dan Bucatinsky as her publicist, in The Comeback's second season finale.


Colleen Hayes / HBO


The 2005 season of HBO's The Comeback combined comedic farce with a deep character study of Valerie Cherish (Lisa Kudrow), a faded fortysomething actress hellbent on propelling herself back to fame, even if it came at a profound personal cost. The Comeback's tone was hilarious, painful, true, and uncomfortable; it was a specific evisceration of Hollywood, and a general examination of how women are treated, slighted, and discarded.


But The Comeback — created by Kudrow and Michael Patrick King — flew too close to the sun and did not achieve broad success, lasting only that one 13-episode season.


That is, until this past spring, when HBO announced that it would revive The Comeback, which had since achieved cult status. The members of that cult felt both joy and terror: Could Kudrow and King achieve something so alchemically delicate again? Maybe it would be better just to leave that one perfect season alone. Even Kudrow had those thoughts. "They loved it so much," she told BuzzFeed News in the fall, referring to The Comeback's ardent fans. "I hope it's as good."


With the finale now having aired, it's safe to say that, yes, the eight-episode comeback season was as good. We saw Valerie go through it: Her once-stable home life with her husband, Mark (Damian Young), and her tethering friendship with her hair stylist, Mickey (Robert Michael Morris), were both thrown into crisis.


Her career thrived after she made the morally compromised choice to play a fictional version of herself, in her nemesis Paulie G.'s distorted, self-serving HBO dramedy, Seeing Red. But that decision had consequences: on her marriage, on Mickey's failing health, and on her friendships, as we saw in the finale when Juna (Malin Akerman) wondered how Valerie could have ever taken part in such a thing. Not only did Valerie take part, she ended up winning an Emmy for her portrayal of Mallory Church, Paulie G.'s gnarled vision of her.


Yet, in the finale's biggest twist of all, Valerie left the ceremony before receiving the award. After learning from Mark that Mickey had collapsed, she found she simply couldn't stay away from him. And in a stylistic rupture, her Emmy departure also marked the first time The Comeback broke from its reality/documentary visuals. Without the accompaniment and pressure of being surrounded by cameras, Valerie's world seemed rich and hopeful. Having been raw as fuck all season — as well as screamingly funny — The Comeback finale brought us back from the brink: Valerie's care for Mickey and reconciliation with Mark provided a lovely, warm ending.


Over breakfast recently, Kudrow discussed (sometimes in Valerie's voice) the nuances of the finale, as well as the season as a whole. And on the pressing question of whether we will get to see The Comeback for a third season — according to HBO, the show drew an average of 1.4 million viewers across its channels and on demand — Kudrow said she has not "heard it officially," but that she and King have gotten the impression that the door is open for more. Soon, she hopes she and King will begin to "talk about what more would look like."


(Yes, please.)



Kudrow as Valerie.


HBO


Let's begin at the end. Valerie wins an Emmy and she chooses not to be there to receive it. How did you and Michael decide that was the place you wanted her to end up?


Lisa Kudrow: She's choosing Mickey. She's choosing a person. That, we knew we wanted. Because that, to us, was the biggest surprise — to everyone, probably, including her. There's a human being in there, who, for the first time, is showing some priorities that we can finally be on board with.


It's very emotional. I cried watching it.


LK: Yeah. Me too.


It doesn't seem like Valerie has even a second of regret once she makes the decision to leave and go to the hospital.


LK: I guess it has to do with something I experienced that I was telling Michael about. My son broke his arm, and he needed surgery, and we were in France. And my husband had to be the one at the hospital. And I was outside of my body until the next morning when I could go to the hospital. And once I was just in the room and saw him, I was the happiest. That was, like, the best day of my life. I don't know how to put it.


And it's Mickey. He does mean something to her. She can't not be with him. She didn't intend to leave when she stepped out. But she can't go back in there. She has to be with him. That's all she knows. It's sort of a primal instinct.


In terms of the reconciliation with Mark, it appeared to me that he was just waiting for one sign that she was still the person he has loved.


LK: But this wasn't a test from Mark. Yes, I think he is blown away. I don't think he was looking for a sign, but I think this did surprise him as much as it's surprising to maybe all of us, which I think we see. He's like, I sent you the text, I didn't expect you to come down here. Yeah, why would he? She hasn't given him any indication that she would be that person.


In terms of the way it's shot, her leaving the Emmys is the only time we've seen her not being filmed by a fictional camera. It's actually beautiful — and is so jarring. Are we seeing the real her?


LK: She's not a completely different person, obviously. But what I like about it, just personally, is your real life is a prettier movie than a produced reality — how someone else is going to edit your life. We don't go too deep, Michael and I. But we know it's an impulse, and we know it's right. He directed it, and he said, "You come out, and it's going to be beautiful." I'm like, "Great, yes, it should be beautiful."




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