Bong Joon Ho explains how Mark Ruffalo's character in Mickey 17 was not based on one specific dictator, but rather multiple inspirations.
Celebrities like Laurence Fishburne, Mark Ruffalo and Matthew Broderick were among those rallying Saturday to keep a 135-year-old church and theater space on the Upper West Side open.
Mark Ruffalo says Mickey 17 is "a feel good movie," sharing fun set photos from the Robert Pattinson sci-fi movie directed by Bong Joon Ho.
Director Bong Joon Ho tells IndieWire why he cast Mark Ruffalo as a flamboyant, failed politician in his new film, "Mickey 17."
Kieran Culkin was one of the night's biggest winners at the 97th Academy Awards, taking home the 'Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role'
Bong has used his darkly comedic edge to create hilariously strange authority figures in his English-language films.
Actor Mark Ruffalo — who has never been shy about slamming Donald Trump — threw shade at the president without saying his name while promoting new sci-fi dystopian comedy “Mickey 17” on Thursday’s episode of “The Tonight Show.”
Ruffalo’s villain is a projection of the world's "most stressful political leader," observes the filmmaker.Bong Joon Ho is well aware that audiences see Donald Trump in Kenneth Marshall, the egomaniacal politician played by a delightfully absurd Mark Ruffalo in his new sci-fi comedy,
Although Mark Ruffalo‘s character in Mickey 17 might elicit some deja vu, he recently noted that any similarities to real political leaders are purely coincidental. While discussing his role in writer-director Bong Joon-ho‘s upcoming sci-fi satire,
Mark Ruffalo, Matthew Broderick and Laurence Fishburne are among a list of top actors rallying to protect a landmark church on the Upper West Side.
From the Academy Award-winning writer/director of Parasite, Bong Joon Ho, comes his next groundbreaking cinematic experience, Mickey 17. Written and directed by him, Mickey 17 stars Robert Pattinson,
Bong Joon-ho is addressing chatter about Donald Trump being the inspiration behind Mark Ruffalo’s villainous character in Mickey 17. In a new interview, the Oscar-winning director discussed who really inspired the egomaniacal politician Kenneth Marshall,