Tonight is Gambler night at the Dolby. Can’t wait, has to be better than “good,” etc. I’ll be shocked if it isn’t at least an 8 or an 8.5. Particularly Mark Wahlberg‘s performance as James Caan in a manner of speaking, John Goodman‘s as Paul Sorvino (ditto) and Jessica Lange‘s as Jacqueline Brooks, etc. This afternoon I spoke with James Toback, exec producer and author of the original screenplay of The Gambler (’74), which is a blend of the Dostoevsky original plus his own experiences with games of chance. He’s seen the newbie a couple of times and is particularly enthused about Wahlberg. He’s in the middle of penning a Vanity Fair Hollywood issue piece about being adapted twice — this plus Fingers (’78) being adapted into Jacques Audiard‘s The Beat That My Heart Skipped. He told me a great story that I’ll pass along tonight — have to get down there now.
People tend to think of cats as generally contented as long as they have plenty to eat and get their usual 18 hours of daily shut-eye. But half the time Zak, my seven-month-old ragdoll, tells me that he’s bored stiff and wants to go out and look at the sky and smell the air and run around. He looks at me several times a day with an expression that says, “Are you kidding me? You’re serious? This is my life, just sitting around and plotzing?” And so we go out. A lot. We’ve been to a certain Indian restaurant on La Brea a couple of times. Zak is like a dog with a fairly high IQ. He’s totally cool sitting in a moving car — he actually likes staring out the rear window as we buzz around. Sometimes I’ll take him with me while shopping at Pavillions or getting gas or whatever. Last weekend I took him to an afternoon lunch at a friend’s place and he spent a couple of hours roaming around a huge back yard. Loud cars freak him out but he loves staring at people and generally absorbing new aromas and environments. He really, really doesn’t like sitting around. Like me his philosophy is “life is short.” He doesn’t need to intellectually know that — he just instinctually knows this is the only attitude worth having. A regular “go for the gusto” type.
If you know Michael Mann‘s Thief you know there’s a first-act scene in which James Caan sits down at a diner with Tuesday Weld, whom he’s getting to know, and halfway through the conversation he takes out a postcard-sized collage of photos and pasted magazine clippings and shows it to her, and thereafter explains that the images sum up his life, loves and aspirations. This was my first thought was I saw this Judd Apatow collage on Twitter this morning. To me these words and images are the loves, memories and aspirations of a fairly happy guy. Not to mention a guy with excellent taste in movies (“Why aren’t you at Birdman?”) I could put together a collage like this. Maybe when I get better on Photoshop.
There was a nice, low-key, no-big-deal 100th birthday gathering for Norman Lloyd yesterday afternoon in Pacific Palisades, at the home of Norman’s neighbors Linda Daly and husband Michael Alexander. It pains me to admit that while I managed to get myself invited, I wasn’t able to make it. A friend’s report: “It began around 1 pm, and Norman was in great spirits, as you might guess. Plenty of friends attended, none of them nearly his age. Judd Apatow (who directed Norman in the forthcoming Trainwreck) hung around a long time, very approachable. Elliott Gould, Tom Luddy, Gary Meyer, Todd McCarthy, Allan Arkush (who directed Norman on TV) and many others. You and Quentin Tarantino were the only no-shows I know of. We left when Norman did around 4:30 pm.”
So much for the less-than-likely prospect of Clint Eastwood‘s American Sniper being the AFI Fest’s “secret screening” on Tuesday night. AFI Fest has just announced that American Sniper will in fact fill the slot at 9 pm tomorrow. The tragic biopic of Navy SEAL Chris Kyle (Bradley Cooper) will play directly after the special AFI Fest screening of Ava Duvernay‘s Selma at Hollywood’s Egyptian Theatre.
With Gabe Polsky‘s Red Army opening in New York this Friday (11.14, expanding in January), here’s the tightest assessment I’ve written this far (posted in Cannes on 5.16): “Red Army is a soulful humanistic doc about Russian hockey, struggle, destiny, love of country, recent Russian history and the things that matter deep down, which is to say the things that last. In a marginal or tangential sense you could also call Red Army the flip side of Gavin O’Connor‘s Miracle, the 2004 sleeper about the U.S. Olympic hockey team’s victory over the Russians at Lake Placid in 1980. In that film Russia’s Olympic hockey team was a gang of formidable ogres — here they’re revealed as men struggling with loves and longings like anyone else. The central figure is Vyacheslav Fetisov, the Russian hockey superstar who reigned from the mid ’60s to late ’90s, initially as a Russian player and then with the New Jersey Devils and the Detroit Red Wings. His story is the story of Russia from the bad old Soviet days of the ’70s to the present. The film is crisply shot and tightly cut — it moves right along with efficiency and pizazz, and is augmented by Polsky’s dry sense of humor and a general undercurrent of feeling. Cheers to Polsky, Fetisov, producers Werner Herzog and Jerry Weintraub and the two dps — Herzog collaborator Peter Zeitlinger and HE’s own Svetlana Cvetko.
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