Santa Cruz Sentinel

Summer movie preview: Breakout stars to watch

- By Lindsey Bahr

Some are newcomers. Some are former child stars reintroduc­ing themselves in adult roles. And one is a comedian making a leap to big screen. These are just a few of the actors poised to make a splash this summer at the movies:

Austin Butler in `Elvis'

How familiar you are with Austin Butler will likely have a lot to do with your age. For a certain demographi­c, Butler, who starred in Disney Channel, Nickelodeo­n, CW and ABC Family shows between 2007 and 2012, is one of the most recognizab­le faces on the planet.

But Butler is about to hit a different level this summer when audiences get a glimpse of the 30-yearold as Elvis Presley in the new Baz Luhrmann production hitting theaters June 24. To say his preparatio­n was intense is an understate­ment: He spent five months just workshoppi­ng with Luhrmann before he was even officially offered the role (which, incidental­ly, was the day before the premiere of “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood,” where he steals several scenes as a Manson follower).

“I threw my eggs in one basket,” Butler said. “I told my agents not to even send me another audition. I said I can't focus on anything else. It would have really been a bummer if I didn't get it after investing that much.”

The film is framed around Presley's complex relationsh­ip with his manager, Colonel Tom Parker, who is played by Tom Hanks. When Butler arrived in Australia for the shoot, waiting for him in his room was a typewriter with a note from Colonel Tom Parker (both were from Hanks). And throughout production, they sent letters to one another, in character.

“From the moment I first met him, he broke down barriers of that that thing that can happen when you meet your hero,” Butler said. “He gave me a huge hug, we talked for a bit and then he started talking about his fears, how nervous he was. He said, `I can only imagine how nervous you are!' I said, `I'm terrified.' And then we got to be colleagues.”

And yes, Butler kept the typewriter.

Keke Palmer in `Nope'

Keke Palmer started acting when she was 9 years old and several years later had her first big breakthrou­gh starring in “Akeelah and the Bee.” She's released music albums, hosted talk shows and worked pretty much non-stop since. So while she's not a newcomer by any stretch, Palmer is also poised for a second big moment this summer as an adult actor.

The 28-year-old was hand-picked by Jordan Peele to star alongside Daniel Kaluuya in his secretive new thriller “Nope” (July 22) and voices a main role in Disney's “Lightyear” (June 17) which she said is particular­ly surreal and fun since she grew up with the “Toy Story” movies.

Palmer can't reveal, well, anything about “Nope” but she teased that her character is “a combinatio­n of a couple of different archetypes” and “a very honest character who is transition­ing in front of us and coming of age.” As an aspiring writer-director herself, she relished getting the chance to learn from Peele on set and is excited for people to see the film. The spotlight of a Jordan Peele production is a new sensation for her.

“The space in my career that I'm in, which I'm totally comfortabl­e with, is I'm the kind of entertaine­r where it's like some people have grown up with me and other people are like who the hell is Keke Palmer?”, she said, laughing . “With Jordan, it just gives me the opportunit­y for people to see what I can do and for those that have grown up with me to see how I've grown, and for those that have never heard of me, get introduced to me through this and maybe have some fun going back and seeing where I do come from.”

Andrew Koji in `Bullet Train'

Andrew Koji has his mom to thank for his two biggest breaks to date. She's the one who filmed his auditions, in the garage in England, for both the television show “Warrior” and “Bullet Train,” which opens July 29.

“Bullet Train” is one of the most anticipate­d releases of the summer: An action-packed thriller from director David Leitch (“Deadpool 2”) starring Brad Pitt, Joey King, Bad Bunny, Bryan Tyree Henry, Sandra Bullock and Koji.

He was already excited about the project and working with Leitch, then he heard Pitt had signed on as well.

“It felt surreal because I never really put him and me in the same world,” Koji wrote in an email. “I never thought that my career path would ever cross with his.”

Koji's plays Kimura, one of the original characters from KÖtaÖ Isaka's popular book.

“He is going through a lot when we first meet him, and it gets worse for him throughout the film. He's a troubled beaten-down soul, who boards the train looking for redemption,” Koji said. “He is intended to be more at the dramatic core of the film to play off and balance out the more comedic lighter tones and characters.”

Though Koji has training in martial arts, he didn't actually have to draw on those skills much for “Bullet Train.” But he did have to keep his stamina up.

“I ended up having this full-on day shooting two different scenes, side by side. I was running back and forth from the 2nd unit, working on an intense fight ... to a different scene on main unit working on an emotional scene with Hiroyuki,” Koji said. “That was a real rush, I loved that day. It was one of my favorite days of filming.”

Jo Koy in `Easter Sunday'

A Netflix comedy special is always bound to get a lot of viewers and maybe even create some new opportunit­ies. But comedian Jo Koy never dreamed that one of those would come from Steven Spielberg.

The story, Koy said, is that Spielberg caught “Comin' in Hot” one night and asked Koy to pitch a movie idea. Thankfully he had something in mind: A family comedy, loosely inspired by his own Filipino American family, gathering for a holiday. The result is “Easter Sunday” (Aug. 5) in which he stars alongside Lou Diamond Phillips, Tia Carrere and Tiffany Haddish.

“It's about a family and it's all chaos and craziness and love all on the same Easter Sunday,” Koy said. “It's a normal family in America. It's something that you have seen before. The only difference is my mom happens to be from the Philippine­s.”

Growing up without the internet, he said, he was never totally sure if someone he saw on screen was Filipino. Often they'd be playing different races and ethnicitie­s and their names in the credits were usually little help. It's part of the reason he wanted to show an explicitly Filipino story. And it was an emotional experience for many. Some of the actors even told him

 ?? WARNER BROS. PICTURES VIA AP ?? Austin Butler in a scene from “Elvis.”
WARNER BROS. PICTURES VIA AP Austin Butler in a scene from “Elvis.”
 ?? UNIVERSAL PICTURES VIA AP ?? Keke Palmer in a scene from “Nope.”
UNIVERSAL PICTURES VIA AP Keke Palmer in a scene from “Nope.”

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