never wanted to produce…” she said, laughing. So what happened to change her mind about producing? “I happened!” Duplass interjected.“I met Mark and he never let me go, he locked me in his pool house…” Eslyn said, continuing the banter. “No, I made a lot of time for people’s visions but not a lot of time for myself.”Drucker, an Emmy-nominated producer of the docuseries “This is Me” and a former consultant on the series “Transparent” (which starred Jay Duplass), offered background on the debates that take place within the movie’s narrowed scope. “Over the past few years, especially at the end of the Trump era, there’s been such a reckoning with patriarchy and toxic masculinity.
This seemed like the perfect microcosm of a story to unpack some of that.”First-time collaborators Brown and Duplass might come off as argumentative by the movie’s set standards, but their description of working together is anything but. “It’s hard to have any relationship on camera that doesn’t exist to an extent off camera,” said Brown, who can currently be seen in theaters and on Peacock in the religious-fueled satire “Honk For Jesus.
Save Your Soul.” “That was the joy of getting to know M.D., we knocked out…what was it, 9-10 pages [in one day]? It was fast and furious but because he’s a very knowable individual, we got a chance to have a good rapport.”Duplass was equally effusive. “When you’re stuck in a dome, you want to be with Sterling because even though he’s a little smarter than you, in better shape than you, a little funnier, he makes you feel that you are so much better than him at that.
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