Saturday, 1.10.09, 8:35 am. Renting a U-Haul this morning, driving some broken-down couches, a table and boxes of clothes to Jett’s new digs on the Syracuse campus. Limited…make that no wi-fi on the road, except at rest stops.
Big Hollywood‘s Steve Mason is reporting that contrary to yesterday’s expectations, Clint Eastwood‘s Gran Torino has cleaned the Bride Wars clock. The deeply loathed Kate Hudson-Anne Hathaway comedy made about $7.5 million yesterday for a projected $21 million by Sunday night, but Torino will beat that total by $9 million.
The wide-breaking Eastwood flick tallied $10 million yesterday and could hit $30 million by Sunday night, which would be an opening-weekend Eastwood high. (The second biggest is the $18,9 million earned by Space Cowboys followed by $15.2 million for In The Line of Fire.) Add this to the holiday platform earnings and Torino will have about $41 million.
This sort of commercial success could boost the chances of Eastwood landing a Best Actor nomination…no? Especially since he deserves one on the merits alone?
Nicole Kidman has admitted to extreme discomfort while watching Australia during the Sydney premiere screening in November. Quotes have either been heard by or passed along to the Daily Mail‘s Richard Shears that she “squirmed” in her seat, that she “can’t look at this movie and be proud of what I’ve done,” that she turned to husband Keith Urban and asked “am I any good in this movie?” and decided that it’s “just impossible for me to connect to it emotionally at all.’
I was too lazy and unfocused to reply to The Envelope/Gold Derby‘s Tom O’Neil with my Golden Globe predictions, but others got around to it. Here are calls from Thelma Adams (Us Weekly), Scott Bowles (USA Today), Peter Howell (Toronto Star), Dave Karger (Entertainment Weekly), Marshall Fine (Star Magazine, Hollywood and Fine), Kris Tapley (InContention.com), Brad Brevet (Rope of Silicon), Scott Feinberg (Feinberg Files, The Envelope), Peter Travers (Rolling Stone), Pete Hammond (Notes on a Season, The Envelope), Edward Douglas (Comingsoon.net) and O’Neil.
A female publicist friend complained earlier today about my having referred to Avi Lerner, Boaz Davidson and Danny Dumbort, producers of the upcoming Sylvester Stallone film The Expendables , as “the Bad News Jews of the 21st Century.” It just came trippingly off the tongue, but I suppose it sounded a bit raw. So I wrote her back to explain and fill things in.
Back in the ’80s, I said, the term “Bad News Jews” was a commonly used slur aimed at Cannon Films honchos Menahem Golan and Yoram Globus, who more or less pioneered the Israeli rug-merchant approach to making and producing movies. Everybody in the business used this term and joked about it, I explained, so don’t get all huffy on me — I’m just recycling.
Menahem and Yoram, whom I briefly worked for in the mid ’80s and came to know from a distance, were thought of by some as the Godfathers of the Israeli Hollywood mafia. They came from the Dino de Laurentiis/Carlo Ponti big swagger school of producing. When I worked for them they were always talking deals, territories, packages, int’l grosses, etc. but the word around Cannon was that they never read any scripts and never seemed to really get the joy and wonder and music of movies the way the real filmmakers did (and still do). And they were more or less thought of as bloated commoners, plebes, vulgarians.
In any case they paved the way for and sired their successors, in a manner of speaking, as various oily financiers, slick wheeler-dealers and hot-shot Euro-styled producers like Philippe Martinez, Elie Samaha, Giancarlo Peretti, Jean-Marie Messier, Bob Yari and Avi Lerner came along and more or less picked up the same torch and ran with it.
The L.A. Weekly‘s esteemed and highly perceptive film critic Ella Taylor was whacked earlier today, Goodfellas-style. I’m truly sorry, Ella. Brutal world, condolences, chin up.
It’s been said that as ’50s melodramas go Mad Men is richer and more layered than Sam Mendes‘ Revolutionary Road. Now Variety ‘s Todd McCarthy has gone one better in his latest “Deep Focus” column, arguing that Richard Quine ‘s Strangers When We Meet (’60) is also a fuller, more believable portrait of ’50s suburban angst than Mendes’ film. Speaking as an ardent Revolutionary Road fan, I found McCarthy’s words persuasive.
The first six minutes of Bryan Singer‘s Valkyrie are now live on Apple.
Sony Pictures Classics has announced the acquisition of North American rights to writer-director James Toback‘s Tyson, winner of the Un Certain Regard’s Knockout Prize at the Cannes Film Festival and due to have its North American preem at the Sundance Film Festival. I saw Tyson last April in Los Angeles. It’s a much sadder and more touching portrait of Tyson that you might expect.
MTV.com has the trailer for The Missing Person, the Sundance Film Festival attraction with Michael Shannon and Amy Ryan.
The difference between these French Connection frame captures, the top from Fox Home Video’s standard DVD released in ’05 and the bottom from FHV’s forthcoming Bluray disc, is obvious. The desaturated Bluray image looks sickly and anemic; the ’05 DVD looks smoother, warmer, less noisy. Read yesterday’s post about the complaints DVD fans are voicing about William Friedkin‘s decision to create a “pastel”-looking Bluray version, which he reportedly admits does not represent the way the film looked originally.
The 2008 BFCA Critics’ Choice Awards winners contain one moderate surprise — a formal splitting of the Best Actress trophy between Anne Hathaway (Rachel Getting Married) and Meryl Streep (Doubt), and a third portion of the award going to Kate Winslet by handing the Reader star the Best Supporting Actress award, which was obviously a partial nod to Winslet’s lead performance in Revolutionary Road.
Otherwise it was more of the usual-fine-yawn. Best Picture / Slumdog Millionaire; Best Actor / Sean Penn in Milk; Best Supporting Actor / Heath Ledger in The Dark Knight; Best Acting Ensemble / the Milk gang; Best Director /
Slumdog Millionaire‘s Danny Boyle; Best Original or Adapted Screenplay / Slumdog Millionaire‘s Simon Beaufoy; Best Animated Feature / WALL*E; Best Foreign Language Film / Waltz With Bashir; Best Documentary / Man On Wire.
To my great surprise and delight, Christy Hall‘s Daddio, which I was remiss in not seeing during last year’s Telluride...
More »7:45 pm: Okay, the initial light-hearted section (repartee, wedding, hospital, afterlife Joey Pants, healthy diet) was enjoyable, but Jesus, when...
More »It took me a full month to see Wes Ball and Josh Friedman‘s Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes...
More »The Kamala surge is, I believe, mainly about two things — (a) people feeling lit up or joyful about being...
More »Unless Part Two of Kevin Costner‘s Horizon (Warner Bros., 8.16) somehow improves upon the sluggish initial installment and delivers something...
More »For me, A Dangerous Method (2011) is David Cronenberg‘s tastiest and wickedest film — intense, sexually upfront and occasionally arousing...
More »asdfas asdf asdf asdf asdfasdf asdfasdf