Watchers

A critic friend just told me I’m not missing very much by not being at this morning’s Eccles showing of Adventureland. But a producer friend who saw it last night said he “loved it…a more realistic version of 500 Days of Summer, which is much more stylized.”


N.Y. Times columnist/reporter David Carr (right profile, notepad), producer Albert Berger (Little Miss Sunshine).

Inside Spur Bar & Grill –1.20.09, 11:07 am

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What He Said

Here’s a Twitter text post from last night: “Remember not to forget [that Steven] Soderbergh‘s The Girlfriend Experience sneak-screens tomorrow at Eccles Theatre at 6:15!” Well, maybe. But when I asked Soderbergh about the Girlfriend Experience rumor yesterday morning he said, “Where’d you hear that?” From everyone, I said. It’s just a rumor but it’s been passed all around. “Really?” he said. So what is going to happen on Tuesday? I asked. “All I’ve heard is showing some clips and my doing some talking,” he said.

Reminder

Armando Iannucci‘s In The Loop played like gangbusters during yesterday’s press screening at the Yarrow. Here’s a link to my 1.13.09 rave and chat with Iannucci.

Big Day

A portion of the Sundance critic and entertainment journo community will attend the Obama Inaugural breakfast viewing party that starts at 8 am. The invite said 8:30 but some of us leaned on publicist Mickey Cottrell to at least open the doors by 8. The gathering is partly in honor of Bill Benenson and Gene Rosow‘s Dirt!, a thoughtful, quietly stirring tutorial doc that I saw last night. Today, in any event, is the day. Here’s to a great speech and the turning of the page.

IFC On-Demand Alert

The gist of IFC’s breakfast news conference this morning was to announce the availability of day-and-date video on demand and festival premieres. There was also an announcement of a partnership with South by Southwest. Steven Soderbergh attended, partly to talk about Che going into video-on-demand and partly to discuss the basic viewing landscape out there. Here‘s part of what he said.

Would Have Worked

I received an email yesterday (or was it Saturday?) saying that Taking Chance director Ross Katz wanted to sit down and dispute my 40% positive, 60% negative review of his film and explain how I’d misunderstood it. I wrote back to say “cool, let’s do it, I’m game.” I respect any filmmaker who stands up and argues back. But that was the end of it from his end.

Noted

“You should really check out Don’t Let Me Drown at Sundance,” a guy just wrote me. “It’s by far the best movie here,” he said. How does he know that, and what dies “best” mean? I’ve heard good recommends from two others, but not along the lines of it being the mother of all 2009 Sundance flicks. I’m catching the press and industry screening at 6 pm — an hour from now.

The Pull-Down

You can’t do the kind of column I usually do (seven or eight stories daily, if not more) and see three films daily plus attend a social function at day’s end and get five or six hours in the sack — it just doesn’t work. One or the other has to suffer. And these eighteen-hour days wear you down after four or five days. Not so much physically as emotionally, psychologically.

It’s right around this time during Sundance — middle of the fifth day, three nights and two days to go — that the sum total of all the films you’ve missed and are likely to miss come crashing down upon you. And you begin to feel almost paralyzed. And if that isn’t enough to make you want to reach for medication, there’s also knowing that you’re not posting enough. (I’ve experienced or have been told about several intriguing things since last Thursday morning, and written about none of them.) On top of which is the presumption that HE’s Sundance readership tends to be a bit less because people don’t kow the movies, don’t relate, etc.

I’ll snap out of my funk before long. The process has already begun by writing this item.

Blockage

A guy just wrote me about this 500 Days of Summer trailer and asked what I thought of the finished film. I’ve had two chances to see it, I told him, but I’ve wound up doing other things because of my Joseph Gordon-Levitt problem, which is fairly severe. I don’t want to get hung up on this, but his internally mannered acting style bugs the hell out of me. It began with Brick and intensified with The Lookout. For me, I mean.

Mulligan, You Bet

I spoke briefly to An Education’s Carey Mulligan — the big breakout star of Sundance ’09 — yesterday at a post-screening party that was held at Park City’s Village at the Yard. Mulligan is easy to talk with and sharp as a tack, which is always the case with the super-talented. She’s just starting to happen with the press due to the wow eception to Lone Scherfig‘s film here at Sundance, but the talent community has been on to her for a while now.


An Education‘s Carey Mulligan, CAA agent Chris Andrews.

Besides her supporting role The Greatest, a Sundance film which I haven;t yet seen, she also has a small role in Michael Mann‘s Public Enemies . But her career is only now about to take off.

I couldn’t believe it when Mullligan told me she’s sat down with Warren Beatty to talk about a project. Beatty is all but out of the business as far as the public is concerned, but he’s just as plugged in as ever to the latest whatever and whomever. The meeting happened with the facilitation of her CAA agent Chris Andrews.

I told Mulligan I’d seen her performance as Nina in the Broadway production of The Seagull (which also starred Kristin Scott Thomas and Education costar Peter Sarsgaard) but didn’t mention that I didn’t recognize her when I saw An Education, probably because she wore a blonde wig in the play. I think I’ve fulfilled my inanity quotient for the day with this last paragraph.

Benjamin Gump

A lot of people said “Gump!” when Benjamin Button was first screened. This video is for those astute minds who initially waved the comparison off.