Courtesy of Apple TV+Film & TVNewsWatch the trailer for On the Rocks, Sofia Coppola and Bill Murray’s reunionThe film – also starring Rashida Jones and Marlon Wayans – is the director and actor’s first theatrical release since Lost in TranslationShareLink copied ✔️August 19, 2020Film & TVNewsTextDazed Digital On the Rocks, Sofia Coppola’s new Bill Murray-starring film, has got its first trailer. The film marks Coppola and Murray’s first feature collaboration since Lost in Translation some 17 years ago (although they did work together on the 2015 Netflix special A Very Murray Christmas). On the Rocks also features Rashida Jones and Marlon Wayans, and comes from A24 and Apple TV+. The film follows “a young New York mother faced with sudden doubts about her marriage teams up with her larger-than-life playboy father to tail her husband”. “Laura (Rashida Jones) thinks she’s happily hitched, but when her husband Dean (Marlon Wayans) starts logging late hours at the office with a new co-worker, Laura begins to fear the worst,” the film’s official synopsis says. “She turns to the one man she suspects may have insight: her charming, impulsive father Felix (Bill Murray), who insists they investigate the situation. As the two begin prowling New York at night, careening from uptown parties to downtown hotspots, they discover at the heart of their journey lies their own relationship.” The trailer says that the film will be available in cinemas and on Apple TV+ in October, though with release dates constantly shifting due to coronavirus, this could all change. Watch the trailer below. Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREThe Voice of Hind Rajab, a Palestinian drama moving audiences to tearsMeet the 2025 winners of the BFI & Chanel Filmmaker AwardsOobah Butler’s guide to getting rich quickRed Scare revisited: 5 radical films that Hollywood tried to banPlainclothes is a tough but tender psychosexual thrillerCillian Murphy and Little Simz on their ‘provoking’ new film, Steve‘It’s like a drug, the adrenaline’: Julia Fox’s 6 favourite horror filmsHow Benny Safdie rewrote the rules of the sports biopic Harris Dickinson’s Urchin is a magnetic study of life on the marginsPaul Thomas Anderson on writing, The PCC and One Battle After AnotherWayward, a Twin Peaks-y new thriller about the ‘troubled teen’ industryHappyend: A Japanese teen sci-fi set in a dystopian, AI-driven future