Mark Ruffalo will soon be seen on the small screen in “Task,” Back at HBO in the original drama series that debuted on Sunday, September 7. Brad Ingelsby’s follow up “Mare of Easttown” Centers on “I know this much is true” Emmy winner as an FBI working group agent assigned to a number of armed robbery, led by a family man (Tom Pelphrey), which hardly fits the profile for a career crime.
IndieWire captured Ruffalo at the NYC premiere on the series, Fresh Off the Heels of Wrapping Lena Dunham’s Next feature, “Good sex,” A few weeks ago in New York City. “I had the best time to work with Lena,” Ruffalo told IndieWire. “I love her.”
“I knew her a little when she was younger,” he continued. “But we had the best time, Natalie PortmanThe Role model(and me). It is twisted – Lena’s things can be very twisted. It’s super sexy, and it’s a lot of fun, and it has a rare quality of a romantic comedy that is actually romantic and fun. “Role model, whose real name is Tucker Pillsbury, debuts in the project.
“He will surprise everyone,” added Ruffalo. He joked, “I mean, I hate him because he was so natural. God fuck you. Good fucking you, Tucker,” he laughed. “He’s so good in it.”
“Good sex” follows a 40-year-old couple therapist, played by Portman, who is back in the dating game after breaking away a decades long relationship. The love triangle consists of a successful Manhattan -Man in the 50s, played by Ruffalo, and a Brooklyn -Hipster in the 20th century, played by role model. Netflix bought ROM-COM for reported $ 55 million And will reportedly skip a theater edition.
“I really just want people to sit on a couch with their mothers and their besties and lean in,” Dunham said in an interview with Amount. “I love looking at other filmmakers fight for the theatrical element-but I don’t think this will live or die from it.”

In his review of “task” Ben Travers writes that the series can “think of Michael Mann’s ‘HEAT‘And Ben Afflecks’ The Town’ or Bruce Springsteen’s’ The River ‘and Ruffalo’s last HBO series, “I know this is true” -Films, songs and show that runs the tendency of their recognition of the distinctions that make us unique, the commonness that connects us to each other and the hands of fate that too often make you wonder what could have been. “