On the JoBlo Movies YouTube channel, we will be posting one full movie every other day throughout the week, giving viewers the chance to watch them entirely free of charge. The Free Movie of the Day we have for you today is the drama Explicit Ills, starring Rosario Dawson. You can watch it over on the YouTube channel linked above, or you can just watch it in the embed at the top of this article.
Written and directed by Mark Webber, Explicit Ills is a drama of four interconnecting stories revolving around love, drugs and poverty in Philadelphia.
Dawson is joined in the cast by Paul Dano, Naomie Harris, Lou Taylor Pucci, Frankie Shaw, Tariq Trotter, Francisco Burgos, Martin Ceoeda Jr., Destini Edwards, Ross K. Kim-McManus, Tim Dowlin, Rebecca Comerford, Nicole Mitchell, Rukiya Thomas, Sam Meyerson, Duncan Lam, Brian Anthony Wilson, Jermaine Crawford, Ravinder Singh Reyett, Anna Martemucci Lukas, Rocco Rosanio,...
Written and directed by Mark Webber, Explicit Ills is a drama of four interconnecting stories revolving around love, drugs and poverty in Philadelphia.
Dawson is joined in the cast by Paul Dano, Naomie Harris, Lou Taylor Pucci, Frankie Shaw, Tariq Trotter, Francisco Burgos, Martin Ceoeda Jr., Destini Edwards, Ross K. Kim-McManus, Tim Dowlin, Rebecca Comerford, Nicole Mitchell, Rukiya Thomas, Sam Meyerson, Duncan Lam, Brian Anthony Wilson, Jermaine Crawford, Ravinder Singh Reyett, Anna Martemucci Lukas, Rocco Rosanio,...
- 4/21/2023
- by Cody Hamman
- JoBlo.com
Exclusive: Netflix’s action-thriller Trigger Warning rounds out its cast with Anthony Michael Hall, Mark Webber (The Place of No Words), Alejandro De Hoyos (The Man from Toronto), Tone Bell (The Flash), Jake Weary (It Follows), and Gabriel Basso (Hillbilly Elegy).
The newly added actors join previously announced lead Jessica Alba in her first feature project since 2019’s Killers Anonymous.
Trigger Warning, directed by Mouly Surya, tells the story of Parker (Alba), an active-duty Special Forces officer described as a female John Wick. Parker takes ownership of her grandfather’s bar shortly after he dies, and soon finds herself at odds with the violent gang that killed him.
Filming is set to begin in New Mexico this fall.
Executive producers include Esther Hornstein for Thunder Road Pictures; Jeanette Volturno and Jason Clark for Catchlight Studios; and Alba. Trigger Warning is written by Josh Olson and...
The newly added actors join previously announced lead Jessica Alba in her first feature project since 2019’s Killers Anonymous.
Trigger Warning, directed by Mouly Surya, tells the story of Parker (Alba), an active-duty Special Forces officer described as a female John Wick. Parker takes ownership of her grandfather’s bar shortly after he dies, and soon finds herself at odds with the violent gang that killed him.
Filming is set to begin in New Mexico this fall.
Executive producers include Esther Hornstein for Thunder Road Pictures; Jeanette Volturno and Jason Clark for Catchlight Studios; and Alba. Trigger Warning is written by Josh Olson and...
- 9/2/2021
- by Rosy Cordero
- Deadline Film + TV
To celebrate the release of The Place of No Words, the new film from writer/director/actor Mark Webber, we down with the filmmaker and his co-star and wife Teresa Palmer to find out about this deeply personal film.
Told in two distinct parts – one in present day, the other in a mystical, magical “other” world – The Place of No Words tells the story of a young son (Webber and Palmer’s real-life son Bodhi) as he comes to terms with the terminal illness of his father (Webber). As he tries to make sense of the situation in his young mind, it wanders to a fantasy realm where he and his father can be together forever, exploring and laughing together, fighting off creatures, and enjoying its wonderous surroundings.
Webber, who had four films previously, tells us how the story came about through his own real-life experiences with his father and...
Told in two distinct parts – one in present day, the other in a mystical, magical “other” world – The Place of No Words tells the story of a young son (Webber and Palmer’s real-life son Bodhi) as he comes to terms with the terminal illness of his father (Webber). As he tries to make sense of the situation in his young mind, it wanders to a fantasy realm where he and his father can be together forever, exploring and laughing together, fighting off creatures, and enjoying its wonderous surroundings.
Webber, who had four films previously, tells us how the story came about through his own real-life experiences with his father and...
- 7/5/2021
- by Scott Davis
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
Sam Worthington and Phoebe Tonkin are starring in Matt Nable’s directorial debut, Transfusion. The thriller, which also features Nable, is about a former Special Forces operative thrust into the criminal underworld to keep his only son from being taken from him. Production began in Sydney earlier this week and Altitude has added it to its slate with international sales launching at the Cannes Market.
Transfusion is produced by John Schwarz and Michael Schwarz through Deeper Water Films, with executive producers Cailah Scobie from Stan, Paul Wiegard from Madman Entertainment and Will Clarke, Andy Mayson and Mike Runagall of Altitude Media.
The Stan Original Film will premiere on Stan in Australia in 2022 after a theatrical release through Madman Entertainment in Australia and New Zealand.
Nable is also a writer and actor who recently appeared in Oz hit The Dry. Other acting credits include Mel Gibson’s Hacksaw Ridge and FX series Mr Inbetween.
Transfusion is produced by John Schwarz and Michael Schwarz through Deeper Water Films, with executive producers Cailah Scobie from Stan, Paul Wiegard from Madman Entertainment and Will Clarke, Andy Mayson and Mike Runagall of Altitude Media.
The Stan Original Film will premiere on Stan in Australia in 2022 after a theatrical release through Madman Entertainment in Australia and New Zealand.
Nable is also a writer and actor who recently appeared in Oz hit The Dry. Other acting credits include Mel Gibson’s Hacksaw Ridge and FX series Mr Inbetween.
- 6/17/2021
- by Nancy Tartaglione
- Deadline Film + TV
The Playlist Podcast is back! Beginning with this Halloween episode, our very own Managing Editor, Charles Barfield, leads the way with new co-hosts, Mike DeAngelo and Brian Farvour, to bring back that lovin’ feeling to your earholes.
Listen: Mark Webber On Directing ‘The Place Of No Words,’ Jim Jarmusch’s Stewardship & More [Podcast]
In this episode, the guys discuss the current state of the film business – will theaters survive?
Continue reading Celebrating Halloween With ‘The Craft: Legacy,’ ‘Spell,’ & ‘Kindred’ [The Playlist Podcast] at The Playlist.
Listen: Mark Webber On Directing ‘The Place Of No Words,’ Jim Jarmusch’s Stewardship & More [Podcast]
In this episode, the guys discuss the current state of the film business – will theaters survive?
Continue reading Celebrating Halloween With ‘The Craft: Legacy,’ ‘Spell,’ & ‘Kindred’ [The Playlist Podcast] at The Playlist.
- 10/29/2020
- by Mike DeAngelo
- The Playlist
Words of a Feather: Webber Finds Catharsis Through Fantasy in Mournful Drama
The exploration of death and grief through the eyes of a child lends itself either to heavy handed schmaltz or metaphorical fantasy, wherein filmmakers attempt catharsis through the universality of melodrama or the journey of acceptance through heightened escapism. Actor turned director Mark Webber manages his own idiosyncratic, often elegiac attempt at the latter with his fifth directorial effort The Place of No Words. Singularly formatted, though inescapably familiar, the impending death of a father through the magical fantasy of his three-year-old son, Webber has concocted a visual feast tethered inextricably to an overshadowing inevitability.…...
The exploration of death and grief through the eyes of a child lends itself either to heavy handed schmaltz or metaphorical fantasy, wherein filmmakers attempt catharsis through the universality of melodrama or the journey of acceptance through heightened escapism. Actor turned director Mark Webber manages his own idiosyncratic, often elegiac attempt at the latter with his fifth directorial effort The Place of No Words. Singularly formatted, though inescapably familiar, the impending death of a father through the magical fantasy of his three-year-old son, Webber has concocted a visual feast tethered inextricably to an overshadowing inevitability.…...
- 10/27/2020
- by Nicholas Bell
- IONCINEMA.com
You may clock Mark Webber as the talent, the creep, or the kid from cult favorites like “Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World,” “Green Room” or “Broken Flowers.”
What you might not know is that the well-traveled character actor has embarked on an ambitiously self-interrogative directing career as well, culminating in his latest film: “The Place of No Words.” In the five quintessentially independent films to his name, Mark Webber has cast Mark Webber as a widower, an ex-con, and a dying man—all named Mark Webber.
Continue reading Mark Webber On Directing ‘The Place Of No Words,’ Jim Jarmusch’s Stewardship & More [Podcast] at The Playlist.
What you might not know is that the well-traveled character actor has embarked on an ambitiously self-interrogative directing career as well, culminating in his latest film: “The Place of No Words.” In the five quintessentially independent films to his name, Mark Webber has cast Mark Webber as a widower, an ex-con, and a dying man—all named Mark Webber.
Continue reading Mark Webber On Directing ‘The Place Of No Words,’ Jim Jarmusch’s Stewardship & More [Podcast] at The Playlist.
- 10/21/2020
- by Chance Solem-Pfeifer
- The Playlist
Mark Webber likes to go his own way, animated by a peaceful yet intense desire to make cinema out of the emotional landscape of real life. In addition to a solid acting career, which has seen him cross paths with Gus Van Sant, Jim Jarmusch (Broken Flowers), Woody Allen (Hollywood Ending) and Edgar Wright (Scott Pilgrim vs. the World), he is now five movies deep into his own filmography as director, with his latest (The Place of No Words) being presented at the American Film Festival in Wroclaw, where he also received the Indie Star Award at the 10th edition of the Festival.…...
- 10/19/2020
- by Tommaso Tocci
- IONCINEMA.com
What do you tell a child when they ask where you go when you die? Some people might have a perfect answer to this question, but others are bound to fumble about a bit and try their best to come up with an explanation that kids will understand and fully accept. In The Place of No Words though it does feel as though the child that’s not fully understanding the concept is given a great way to cope and to come to a better understanding through a process that not enough of us are given when we’re younger and many
What We Learned from The Place of No Words Trailer...
What We Learned from The Place of No Words Trailer...
- 9/20/2020
- by Tom
- TVovermind.com
"Am I dreaming?" "I see the whole world in your eyes." Gravitas has released an official trailer for an indie feature titled The Place of No Words, made by actor / filmmaker Mark Webber, which first premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival last year. This deeply personal film stars real-life couple Mark Webber and Teresa Palmer, and their son Bodhi Palmer. The film explores the unanswerable question "where do we go when we die?" posed by three-year-old Bohdi and takes them on an imaginative adventure that explores how we cope with dying, and the love, laughter, and pain we can find within it. The original title of this was Freeka Reeka Sheeka Deeka and the Big Battle in the Forest, which is kind of awesome, but it makes sense for them to choose something different. Also starring Eric Christian Olsen, Nicole Elizabeth Berger, Anna Schafer, Phoebe Tonkin, and Sarah Wright. I've...
- 9/17/2020
- by Alex Billington
- firstshowing.net
‘The Place Of No Words’ Trailer: Mark Webber Takes His Family On A Fantasy Voyage To Cope With Death
It’s been a minute since we’ve heard from writer/director/actor Mark Webber, but his new directorial effort “The Place Of No Words” is almost here. Premiering in 2019 at the Tribeca Film Festival, Webber wrote the story an exploration of how we cope with death, and how we explain it to young children.
Continue reading ‘The Place Of No Words’ Trailer: Mark Webber Takes His Family On A Fantasy Voyage To Cope With Death at The Playlist.
Continue reading ‘The Place Of No Words’ Trailer: Mark Webber Takes His Family On A Fantasy Voyage To Cope With Death at The Playlist.
- 9/17/2020
- by Edward Davis
- The Playlist
Exclusive: Gravitas Ventures has acquired North American rights to The Place of No Words, the fantasy-reality drama written and directed by Mark Webber and starring Webber, his real-life wife Teresa Palmer and their son Bodhi Palmer.
The pic, which originally premiered at the 2019 Tribeca Film Festival, will now be released in theaters and on demand on October 23.
Continuing Webber’s aesthetic of using elements from his real life to enhance his storytelling, he again has cast his own family members. The pic begins as Bodhi, age 3, asks “Where do we go when we die?” It launches his real family on an adventure that moves between the real world and a fantasy realm filled with mythical creatures to explore how we cope with dying, and the love, laughter and pain we can find within it.
Nicole Elizabeth Berger plays the fairy Esmeralda.
The pic, which originally premiered at the 2019 Tribeca Film Festival, will now be released in theaters and on demand on October 23.
Continuing Webber’s aesthetic of using elements from his real life to enhance his storytelling, he again has cast his own family members. The pic begins as Bodhi, age 3, asks “Where do we go when we die?” It launches his real family on an adventure that moves between the real world and a fantasy realm filled with mythical creatures to explore how we cope with dying, and the love, laughter and pain we can find within it.
Nicole Elizabeth Berger plays the fairy Esmeralda.
- 9/15/2020
- by Patrick Hipes
- Deadline Film + TV
Mark Webber‘s The Place of No Words poses a large, unanswerable question: “Where do we go when we die?” The indie drama follows a three-year-old who poses such a question through a fantasy-tinged tryptic, while also dealing real-world troubles. It looks visually inventive and narratively interesting, and could definitely be a smaller film worth looking out for. […]
The post ‘The Place of No Words’ Trailer: Where Do We Go When We Die? appeared first on /Film.
The post ‘The Place of No Words’ Trailer: Where Do We Go When We Die? appeared first on /Film.
- 5/4/2019
- by Chris Evangelista
- Slash Film
Death will come for all of us at some point, but communicating the ideas of impermanence to children is a whole other scary, frightening bag. “Where do we go when we die?” That’s the concern of actor/director/writer Mark Webber’s personal and moving, “The Place of No Words,” an imaginative, funny, and sad examination of conceptualizing death to a child, that can really only come from a tortured parent’s perspective.
Continue reading ‘The Place Of No Words’: Mark Webber Crafts A Heartfelt Fantasy About Death, Life & Children [Tribeca Review] at The Playlist.
Continue reading ‘The Place Of No Words’: Mark Webber Crafts A Heartfelt Fantasy About Death, Life & Children [Tribeca Review] at The Playlist.
- 5/3/2019
- by Ally Johnson
- The Playlist
""Where do we go when we die?" That's the question at the heart of this. One film from this year's Tribeca Film Festival that we're keeping a close eye on is actor / director Mark Webber's latest feature, The Place of No Words. This deeply personal film stars real-life couple Mark Webber and Teresa Palmer, and their son Bodhi Palmer. The film examines that unanswerable question posed by three-year-old Bohdi and takes them on an imaginative adventure that explores how we cope with dying, and the love, laughter, and pain we can find within it. The original title of this was Freeka Reeka Sheeka Deeka and the Big Battle in the Forest, which is kind of awesome, but it makes sense for them to choose something different now. Also starring Eric Christian Olsen, Nicole Elizabeth Berger, Anna Schafer, Phoebe Tonkin, and Sarah Wright. This looks fantastic! I'm a big, big...
- 5/3/2019
- by Alex Billington
- firstshowing.net
“The Place of No Words” hasn’t screened for anyone outside of the folks that attended the Tribeca Film Festival, but that shouldn’t stop you from putting this movie near the top of your must-see list. I have no real insider information about the quality of the film, but if filmmaker Mark Webber has created a film that lives up to its first trailer, then we’re all in for a beautiful, emotional journey.
Continue reading ‘The Place Of No Words’ Trailer: Mark Webber’s Tribeca Standout Is A Deeply Personal Story Of Loss at The Playlist.
Continue reading ‘The Place Of No Words’ Trailer: Mark Webber’s Tribeca Standout Is A Deeply Personal Story Of Loss at The Playlist.
- 5/2/2019
- by Charles Barfield
- The Playlist
You can almost envision a conventional rendering of Mark Webber’s enchanting “The Place of No Words,” the writer-director’s fifth and most ambitiously scoped feature. In that scenario, the magical journey through which a three-year-old grapples with his father’s terminal illness — something he is too young to make sense of in real-world terms — would be adorned with vivid colors and on-the-nose emotions aimed at tear ducts. Conceived through a personal lens, “The Place of No Words” thankfully takes the completely opposite approach. While occasionally wearisome in its fragmented structure (and limited in its commercial appeal), Webber’s film navigates the vast notion of grief gently and with seriousness.
With its modest intentions, “The Place of No Words” loosely brings to mind David Lowery’s similarly experimental “A Ghost Story,” in a good way — which is to say, those who are patient with its deliberate shapelessness will be eventually...
With its modest intentions, “The Place of No Words” loosely brings to mind David Lowery’s similarly experimental “A Ghost Story,” in a good way — which is to say, those who are patient with its deliberate shapelessness will be eventually...
- 4/27/2019
- by Tomris Laffly
- Variety Film + TV
“Where do we go when we die?” When 3-year-old Bodhi Palmer asks his real-life father and mother (Mark Webber and Teresa Palmer) that question, it seems to denote the start of a profound journey of existential discovery. But in The Place of No Words, that journey takes some unexpected detours that don’t always pan out. […]
The post ‘The Place of No Words’ Review: A Spontaneous, At Times Surreal, Journey That Doesn’t Go Anywhere [Tribeca] appeared first on /Film.
The post ‘The Place of No Words’ Review: A Spontaneous, At Times Surreal, Journey That Doesn’t Go Anywhere [Tribeca] appeared first on /Film.
- 4/27/2019
- by Hoai-Tran Bui
- Slash Film
Secrets and Lies alum Michael Ealy and Mark Webber (Green Room) are set as leads opposite Cobie Smulders in Stumptown, ABC’s drama pilot from writer Jason Richman, Ruben Fleischer and ABC Studios.
Written by Richman, Stumptown is inspired by the graphic novels published by Oni Press. It follows Dex Parios (Smulders), a strong, assertive and unapologetically sharp-witted Army veteran working as a Pi in Portland, Or. With a complicated personal history and only herself to rely on, she solves other people’s messes with a blind eye toward her own.
Ealy will play Miles Hoffman, a detective with the Portland Police Department who is looking for escaped convict Samuel Kane — who’s probably going to pay a visit to Grey McConnell (Webber) any day now.
Webber’s Grey McConnell is Dex’s best friend and has an unrequited crush on her. He’s been renovating an old-fashioned brew pub...
Written by Richman, Stumptown is inspired by the graphic novels published by Oni Press. It follows Dex Parios (Smulders), a strong, assertive and unapologetically sharp-witted Army veteran working as a Pi in Portland, Or. With a complicated personal history and only herself to rely on, she solves other people’s messes with a blind eye toward her own.
Ealy will play Miles Hoffman, a detective with the Portland Police Department who is looking for escaped convict Samuel Kane — who’s probably going to pay a visit to Grey McConnell (Webber) any day now.
Webber’s Grey McConnell is Dex’s best friend and has an unrequited crush on her. He’s been renovating an old-fashioned brew pub...
- 3/11/2019
- by Denise Petski
- Deadline Film + TV
It has already been announced that Roger Ross Williams's will be opening NYC's Tribeca Film Festival 2019 edition with his latest doc The Apollo about the eponymous Harlem theater. Today comes the rest of the slate of films unspooling at the festival and there are some good ones. Look the full list below where you'll find notable titles like Christoph Waltz's directorial debut Georgetown, the latest from Mark Webber The Place of No Words, Joe Begos's Bliss, and the long-awaited feature directorial debut of one Ant Timpson titled Come to Daddy (pic'ed). I'm sure we'll be seeing plenty more about those closer to the festival's start date of April 24. The feature program includes 103 films from...
[Read the whole post on screenanarchy.com...]...
[Read the whole post on screenanarchy.com...]...
- 3/5/2019
- Screen Anarchy
The 18th edition of Tribeca Film Festival will get underway next month, featuring 103 films from 124 filmmakers, with 50% women-directed films in the three competition sections. Highlights include world premieres directed by Abel Ferrara, Werner Herzog, Christoph Waltz, as well as films by Sebastian Schipper, Mary Harron, Peter Strickland, and Andrew Ahn.
Check out the lineup below for the festival taking place April 24 – May 5.
U.S. Narrative Competition
Tribeca’s U.S. Narrative Competition showcases extraordinary work from breakout independent voices and distinguished filmmaking talent. These ten world premieres will vie for the Founders Award for Best Narrative Feature, Best Screenplay, Best Cinematography, Best Actor, and Best Actress. Last year, the award for Best Narrative Feature went to Kent Jones’ Diane while Jeffrey Wright was awarded Best Actor for his role in O.G. Other previous films from this section include Reed Morano’s Meadowland (2015), Ingrid Jungermann’s Women Who Kill (2016), and...
Check out the lineup below for the festival taking place April 24 – May 5.
U.S. Narrative Competition
Tribeca’s U.S. Narrative Competition showcases extraordinary work from breakout independent voices and distinguished filmmaking talent. These ten world premieres will vie for the Founders Award for Best Narrative Feature, Best Screenplay, Best Cinematography, Best Actor, and Best Actress. Last year, the award for Best Narrative Feature went to Kent Jones’ Diane while Jeffrey Wright was awarded Best Actor for his role in O.G. Other previous films from this section include Reed Morano’s Meadowland (2015), Ingrid Jungermann’s Women Who Kill (2016), and...
- 3/5/2019
- by Leonard Pearce
- The Film Stage
The Tribeca Film Festival has set its full feature slate for 2019, selecting 103 titles including world premieres of films by Jared Leto, Christoph Waltz, and Margot Robbie.
The 18th edition of the festival, which runs from April 24 to May 5, will include documentaries from Antoine Fuqua, Werner Herzog, and Abel Ferrara, and music-focused docs highlighting the lead singer of band Inxs (“Mystify: Michael Hutchence”), Rolling Stones bassist Bill Wyman (“The Quiet One”), and musician Linda Ronstadt (“Linda Ronstadt: The Sound of My Voice”) with Sheryl Crow performing after the premiere.
Leto’s “A Day in the Life of America” is a crowd-sourced documentary featuring footage from all 50 states on July 4, 2017. Waltz is making his directorial debut with the crime drama “Georgetown,” starring himself, Annette Bening, and Vanessa Redgrave. Robbie stars in and produces “Dreamland,” a Depression-era drama set in the Oklahoma dustbowl.
Other notable titles include “Mad Men” producer Semi Chellas making...
The 18th edition of the festival, which runs from April 24 to May 5, will include documentaries from Antoine Fuqua, Werner Herzog, and Abel Ferrara, and music-focused docs highlighting the lead singer of band Inxs (“Mystify: Michael Hutchence”), Rolling Stones bassist Bill Wyman (“The Quiet One”), and musician Linda Ronstadt (“Linda Ronstadt: The Sound of My Voice”) with Sheryl Crow performing after the premiere.
Leto’s “A Day in the Life of America” is a crowd-sourced documentary featuring footage from all 50 states on July 4, 2017. Waltz is making his directorial debut with the crime drama “Georgetown,” starring himself, Annette Bening, and Vanessa Redgrave. Robbie stars in and produces “Dreamland,” a Depression-era drama set in the Oklahoma dustbowl.
Other notable titles include “Mad Men” producer Semi Chellas making...
- 3/5/2019
- by Dave McNary
- Variety Film + TV
Peter Strickland’s In Fabric among inaugural Tribeca Critics’ Week sidebar.
New work from Werner Herzog, the directorial debut of Christoph Waltz and a documentary about the late Inxs front man Michael Hutchence are among the line-up at the 18th Tribeca Film Festival presented by At&T, which includes the inaugural Tribeca Critics Week.
Unveiling the programme on Tuesday (5), festival brass noted that female directors account for half of the three competition strands. The feature programme includes 103 films from 124 filmmakers, of whom 42 are first-timers, and 19 return to Tribeca.
Some 40% of the feature films have one or more women directors, 29% are directed by people of color,...
New work from Werner Herzog, the directorial debut of Christoph Waltz and a documentary about the late Inxs front man Michael Hutchence are among the line-up at the 18th Tribeca Film Festival presented by At&T, which includes the inaugural Tribeca Critics Week.
Unveiling the programme on Tuesday (5), festival brass noted that female directors account for half of the three competition strands. The feature programme includes 103 films from 124 filmmakers, of whom 42 are first-timers, and 19 return to Tribeca.
Some 40% of the feature films have one or more women directors, 29% are directed by people of color,...
- 3/5/2019
- by Jeremy Kay
- ScreenDaily
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