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						 Actor-director 
						Krasinski mines tears, laughs in 'The Hollars' 
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						[August 25, 2016]   
						By Piya Sinha-Roy 
						LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - An 
						aging matriarch's brain tumor diagnosis may not be the 
						obvious scenario for a comedy, but actor-director John 
						Krasinski wanted to show in his movie "The Hollars" that 
						life does not always differentiate between tragedy and 
						humor. | 
			
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				 "You don't have time to prepare for the bad moments in your 
				life, and you don't have time to prepare for the good moments in 
				your life," Krasinski said. "They just sort of happen to you." 
 "The Hollars," out in theaters on Friday, follows the immediate 
				aftermath of Sally Hollar's brain tumor diagnosis. Her 
				dysfunctional family comes to her aid, each bringing his own 
				baggage.
 
 Laid up in the hospital, Sally (Margo Martindale) comforts her 
				adult sons Ron (Sharlto Copley) and John (Krasinski), one 
				dealing with divorce and the other on the cusp of becoming a 
				father, while her husband Don (Richard Jenkins) struggles to 
				keep his business afloat.
 
 "It was a very honest look at life, an honest look at a 
				situation (with) a surprising and messy family, and extremely 
				funny," Martindale said. "It's the way you hope life is in a 
				very tragic situation."
 
				
				 Krasinski said Martindale was so integral to the role of Sally 
				that he would not have made the movie without her. In one 
				emotional scene, "she brought something so real, so personal, so 
				vulnerable, so primal that that's not an acting performance," he 
				said.
 As the Hollars deal with their circumstances, much of the humor 
				comes from supporting characters such the jealous nurse (Charlie 
				Day), the patient priest (Josh Groban), the neurotic pregnant 
				girlfriend (Anna Kendrick) and the matter-of-fact doctor 
				(Randall Park).
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             "The Hollars" is the second directorial film from Krasinski, 
				who is best known for playing nice guy Jim Halpert in NBC's 
				long-running "The Office" sitcom.
 Krasinski said he found an advantage in being both actor and 
				director in "The Hollars," working closely with the cast to 
				deliver emotional and comedic scenes while telling the story of 
				a woman in the later stages of her life.
 
 "I loved being part of a movie and being part of a story about a 
				mother and a woman at her age and her situation," he said. 
				"Those are the stories that need to be told, not just ones about 
				super-beautiful kids under 30."
 
 Martindale said she hoped audiences come away with one thought: 
				to call their mothers.
 
 (Reporting by Piya Sinha-Roy; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)
 
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