Giancarlo Esposito may not be a household name, but for millions of Americans and fans of AMC’s Breaking Bad all over the globe, he will forever be known as “Gus Fring”. Yet, Esposito is far from a one-dimensional artist. His second directing credit belongs to This Is Your Death, another 2017 SXSW selection recently experiencing a world premiere at the festival.

After a deadly rampage is captured live on a reality tv show finale, the network head (Famke Janssen) and show host, Adam Rogers (Josh Duhamel), create a twisted new series where people take their own lives on air for the betterment of those they care most about in their lives. But as the fame and success of the show grows wildly out of control, Adam starts to lose a handle on why he wanted to go through with creating the show in the first place.

This Is Your Death begs to unveil a poignant message about the savage nature of our society and our fixation on exploitative reality television. Instead, Esposito’s muddled tale goes off the rails with illogical plot points and melodramatic writing. As a filmmaker, Esposito delivers fine direction that’s nothing spectacular, but completely adequate. Yet, the character development surrounding host Adam Rogers is both perplexing and drastically artificial. While the fault clearly belongs to co-writers Noah Pink and Kenny Yakkel, Josh Duhamel’s performance does nothing to improve the situation. Futhermore, Giancarlo Esposito steps out from behind the camera and offers a major supporting turn as well. While his role is executed slightly better than the film’s leading star, flawed writing once again tears down this emotional dynamic to the story. Due in large part to an influx of over-dramatization where you’re constantly being told how to feel rather than actually made to do so, This Is Your Death serves as a classic example of when a film’s premise far exceeds the overall delivery.

GRADE: 2/5

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It was revealed not too long ago that Michael Bay was going to be taking the Transformers franchise in a new and fresh direction with this new trilogy. This also mean that we would be getting a fresh cast for the film which would include Mark Wahlberg and Jack Reynor to start with. However, it seems that Michael Bay may want one cast member to appear as the lone link between the two trilogies. While speaking at SXSW actor Josh Duhamel revealed:

 

Transformers

 

“[Michael] said he wants to put me in it someplace. I don’t know if he was just saying that because he had me on the phone and he felt obligated or what, but, you know what? I got to do three of those. It changed my career, it changed my life getting to be a part of something that big, so I’m grateful for even doing the first three of them.”

 

From the sounds of it, it seems that Bay may have a small part in mind for Duhamel’s William Lennox. The character was definitely one of the better members of the human cast of the first three films and would be a great way for the director to link the two trilogies together.

 

Transformers 4 is set to transform and roll out into theaters on June 27, 2014

 

Source: THR