New York‘s “Vulture” duo, Melissa Maerz and Dan Kois, are reporting that Lionsgate marketing exec and part-time photographer Tim Palen will be publishing Guts: The Art of Marketing Horror Films in July. (No mention of it on Amazon.com) Described as “a collection of his creepiest work,” the book will include a “pornographic, absolutely not-safe-for-work portrait” of Hostel 2 director Eli Roth.
“The rediscovery and rejuvenation of Richard Yates‘s 1961 novel Revolutionary Road is due in large part to its continuing emotional and moral resonance for an early 21st-century readership,” Jane Morris wrote some time ago on the Amazon.com.uk website. The film version, starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet under director Sam Mendes, will be released on 12.18.07 by DreamWorks.
“April and Frank Wheeler are a young, ostensibly thriving couple living with their two children in a prosperous Connecticut suburb” — filming was done in Darien, Connecticut — “in the mid-1950s. However, like the characters in John Updike’s similarly themed Couples, the self-assured exterior masks a creeping frustration at their inability to feel fulfilled in their relationships or careers.
“Frank is mired in a well-paying but boring office job and April is a housewife still mourning the demise of her hoped-for acting career. Determined to identify themselves as superior to the mediocre sprawl of suburbanites who surround them, they decide to move to France where they will be better able to develop their true artistic sensibilities, free of the consumerist demands of capitalist America. As their relationship deteriorates into an endless cycle of squabbling, jealousy and recriminations, their trip and their dreams of self-fulfillment are thrown into jeopardy.
“Yates’s incisive, moving, and often very funny prose weaves a tale that is at once a fascinating period piece and a prescient anticipation of the way we live now. Many of the cultural motifs seem quaintly dated–the early-evening cocktails, Frank’s illicit lunch breaks with his secretary, the way Frank isn’t averse to knocking April around when she speaks out of turn–and yet the quiet desperation at thwarted dreams reverberates as much now as it did years ago. Like F. Scott Fitzgerald‘s The Great Gatsby, this novel conveys, with brilliant erudition, the exacting cost of chasing the American dream.”
Ulu Grosbard‘s extremely good and true Straight Time came out on DVD on 5.22, and it feels weird being in Italy (heading back to the U.S. tomorrow morning) and not being able to rent it, and not hearing or reading all that much about it online. Is everyone asleep back there? Except for Once and Knocked Up and I forget-what-other-films, the movie world is a relative desert right now, so the availability of Straight Time, Prince of the City and If… on DVD should be cause for a major heads-up. By the way, Los Angelenos will want to catch a special Straight Time screening and panel scheduled at the Los Angeles Film Festival on 6.23 at 6:30PM, at the Billy Wilder theatre in Westwood.

Live Free or Die Hard costar Justin Long has told Collider’s Steve Weintraub about how he plays the late George Harrison in Jake Kasdan‘s Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story, a kind of Elvis movie co-written by Judd Apatow.
Long also says that Jack Black will play Paul McCartney, Paul Rudd will portray John Lennon and Jason Schwartzman will embody Ringo Starr. The reason these guys aren’t listed on any semi-official cast lists is that they’ve basically done cameo walk-ons. Black did one day as Mccartney; the others did either the same or similar work time. The scene they shot is a goof on the Beatles trip to India in late ’67.
So far (i.e., Monday, 6.4.07 at 5:56 am Los Angeles time), 36% of the respondents on a Drudge Report poll are claiming that Barack Obama was the easy winner in last night’s Democratic candidate debate in New Hampshire. New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson is second at 15%, and Hilary Clinton has a 13% rating. I don’t know what kind of political-philosophical leanings Drudge Report readers have, but it’s significant that Obama, who is always ranked second-place (behind Clinton) in general political opinion polls, has come out so far ahead in this instance.
“He’s 25 now. I met him when he was 16 years old. He’s one of these freaks of nature. He came out of his mother’s womb with a fully formed comic identity.” — Judd Apatow speaking about Knocked Up star Seth Rogen.


Southeastern view from Monterosso, one of the five coastal Cinqueterre towns on the northwestern Italian coast — Monday, 6.4.07, 7:25 am; Sunday, 6.3.07, 1:55 pm; ancient cliffside condos; Monterosso cliff sculpture; ditto; 6.4.07, 9:05 a.m.
Film Ick‘s Brendon Connelly vs. Deadline Hollywood Daily’‘s Nikki Finke over Finke’s dismissal of Eli Roth‘s Hostel, Part II as “disgusting” without (apparently) having seen it.
Connelly is on the right side of the debate, of course. Hostel, Part II may indeed be vile, but it may have striking “whoa” moves at the same time. We all know what the torture-porn game is about and the core psychology driving it, but you have to give the devil (i.e., Roth) his due and watch the damn thing, or at least some of it.
Painful as it sometimes can be, you have to go to a screening (or a public performance) of a given film and sit through 20 to 30 minutes worth before venting an opinion. Obviously not about the entire film but about how those first 20 or 30 minutes were so painful to sit through that you either had to leave or shoot yourself, etc. Life is way, way too short to sit through a godawful movie. I am proud, proud, proud of my early walkouts.
Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End experienced one of the steepest post-Memorial Day opening drops in Hollywood history, plummeting 62 % for an estimated $43.2 million haul.
Box-Office Mojo’s Brandon Gray reports that the deeply loathed Jerry Bruckheimer-Gore Verbinski pic will “fall well short of” Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest‘s $423.3 million tally by the end of its run. POTC: AWE has earned $216.5 million so far. At the same point, says Gray, POTC: DMC was down 54 % to $62.3 million for a $258.4 million total.
Judd Apatow’s Knocked Up took in roughly $29.3 million on approximately 3,700 screens at 2,871 theaters. It opened on the same date as last summer’s The Break-Up, which took in $39.2 million on the first weekend.

Nellie McKay attempts a reselling of Doris Day — who she was (or seemed to be) on-screen, who she may have been off-screen, the bizarreness of her personality, her weirdly virginal nature — in a 6.3.07 N.Y. Times piece, which I for one am not buying for an instant. I admire Day’s work on behalf of animals, but she always played exceedingly strange women, especially from the mid ’50s on. Try and watch her labored performance in Alfred Hitchcock‘s 1955 version of The Man Who Knew Too Much without wincing.
“You really have to see John Travolta to believe him, especially toward the end of Hairspray when he finally lets loose — dressed in a fat suit as a woman in a red tutu and high heels — and dances up a storm in the film’s finale,” writes Fox 411’s Roger Friedman.
“I don’t know if it’s an Oscar performance, but I do know that when Hairspray is shown in big theaters (I saw it in a screening room, still a little unfinished), audiences are going to go wild with cheers and whistles. Travolta even signals the audience with his now-trademark ‘cat eye’ from Pulp Fiction as he launches like a spinning top onto the stage of the fictional Corny Collins Show. You can only love it. Somehow he brings that old Travolta warmth and charisma to a crazy costume.”
An okay but moderately boring Associated Press piece about franchise directors — Sam Raimi, Gore Verbinksi, Peter Jackson, Paul Greengrass, Tom Shadyac, etc. “Unlike Hollywood in earlier days, when any old director might take on a sequel, the same filmmaker continues to oversee the latest installments of most big franchises out this summer,” etc.


“Not happening…way too laid back…zero narrative urgency,” I was muttering from the get-go. Basically the sixth episode of White Lotus Thai SERIOUSLY disappoints. Puttering around, way too slow. Things inch along but it’s all “woozy guilty lying aftermath to the big party night” stuff. Glacial pace…waiting, waiting. I was told...
I finally saw Walter Salles' I'm Still Here two days ago in Ojai. It's obviously an absorbing, very well-crafted, fact-based poltical drama, and yes, Fernanda Torres carries the whole thing on her shoulders. Superb actress. Fully deserving of her Best Actress nomination. But as good as it basically is...
After three-plus-years of delay and fiddling around, Bernard McMahon's Becoming Led Zeppelin, an obsequious 2021 doc about the early glory days of arguably the greatest metal-rock band of all time, is opening in IMAX today in roughly 200 theaters. Sony Pictures Classics is distributing. All I can say is, it...
To my great surprise and delight, Christy Hall's Daddio, which I was remiss in not seeing during last year's Telluride Film Festival, is a truly first-rate two-hander -- a pure-dialogue, character-revealing, heart-to-heart talkfest that knows what it's doing and ends sublimely. Yes, it all happens inside a Yellow Cab on...
7:45 pm: Okay, the initial light-hearted section (repartee, wedding, hospital, afterlife Joey Pants, healthy diet) was enjoyable, but Jesus, when and how did Martin Lawrence become Oliver Hardy? He’s funny in that bug-eyed, space-cadet way… 7:55 pm: And now it’s all cartel bad guys, ice-cold vibes, hard bullets, bad business,...

The Kamala surge is, I believe, mainly about two things — (a) people feeling lit up or joyful about being...
Unless Part Two of Kevin Costner's Horizon (Warner Bros., 8.16) somehow improves upon the sluggish initial installment and delivers something...
For me, A Dangerous Method (2011) is David Cronenberg's tastiest and wickedest film -- intense, sexually upfront and occasionally arousing...