Orange Steed

This i-Phone shot of a horse sculpture is inaccurate in one key respect. The horse, located near the foyer of a sprawling Beverly Hills McMansion where a small party was given last night, isn’t flesh-colored but bright orange. Whoever designed the huge home, owned by a French financier-producer (and previously owned, incidentally, by the late novelist Sidney Sheldon), decided to punctuate the interior with bold orange pillows, chairs, vases and whatnot. A stunning decision, to say the least. Otherwise I encountered nice vibes, the aroma of damp grass, a beautiful back lawn, violet-colored pool water and gracious hosts.

Slight Uh-Oh

The rule of thumb is that the best literary adaptations tend to be based on pulpy novels, or sometimes not even very good ones. (Mario Puzo‘s The Godfather being the paramount example of this.) The more formidable the reputation of the book that’s been made for the big screen, the greater the odds that the film will have problems of one kind or another. The motto, in short, is that it’s not the beauty of the prose but the strength of the bones that counts.

Truthfully or not, fairly or unfairly, that’s the general belief. And given this, it’s hard not to feel a little queasy about Sam MendesRevolutionary Road, the forthcoming Leonardo DiCaprio-Kate Winslet drama that’s based upon Richard Yateshugely respected novel about suburban middle-class malaise in the 1950s.
The following words of praise for Yates’ book are what gave me pause about the film: (a) “A deft, ironic, beautiful novel that deserves to be a classic” — William Styron; (b) “The Great Gatsby of my time… one of the best books by a member of my generation” — Kurt Vonnegut; (c) “Here is more than fine writing; here is what, added to fine writing, makes a book come immediately, intensely and brilliantly alive. If more is needed to make a masterpiece in modern American fiction, I am sure I don’t know what it is” — Tennessee Williams.

He Da Boss

This is a second-hand but reliably sourced story about the currently-shooting Wolverine movie, the upcoming 20th Century Fox tentpoler that’s currently being shot by Gavin Hood (Rendition, Tsotsi) and an issue that begs the question “who’s really in charge here?” In one corner is Hood, whose once-soaring stock suffered a NASDAQ falloff last year after nobody much liked Rendition, and in the other is Fox co-chairman and CEO Tom Rothman, who’s widely known for being a very willful and meticulous micro-manager.


Wolverine director Gavin Hood; 20th Century Fox co-chairman and CEO Tom Rothman.

There was/is a huge Wolverine set being recently used. I’m not even sure which lot it was built on, but the look or mood of the set is, according to a source who was told Hood’s view of things, supposed to be on the dark, dinghy and somber side. I only know what I was told, but the basics are that Hood was away from the set for whatever reason (shooting something else, taking a day or two off), and when he returned to the big somber set he was shocked to find that it had been repainted top to bottom on Rothman’s orders. The murky-scuzzy vibe was gone, and a brighter and less downish look had taken its place.
That’s all I know, but at the very least, given my confidence in the source, it suggests that a creative tug-of-war is going on, and that Rothman, one can reasonably gather, feels a certain managerial-slash-territorial investment in the X-Men franchise (the technical name of the film is X-Men Origins: Wolverine) and believes that he, being the big Fox cheese and an inheritor of the spirit of golden-age Fox strongman Daryl F. Zanuck, is more or less entitled to make his own Wolverine calls, whether or not Hood fully concurs.
That said, the situation probably isn’t quite as cut-and-dried as suggested by this story. But I do know that Hood was utterly surprised when he got back to the set and saw what had been done.

Cruz Needs The Love

Penelope Cruz‘s work in Vicky Cristina Barcelona is the most bolt-out-of-the-blue performance I have seen since Daniel Day Lewis‘ work in There Will Be Blood, which, and of itself, was the most bolt-out-of-the-blue performance since Robert De Niro‘s work as La Motta,” writes an HE loyalist and successful screenwriter. “Nothing I have ever seen from Cruz quite prepared me for what was coming. In fact, no actress’s work would have prepared me for what she gave up here — the ultimate bi-polar portrayal, equally believable in her character’s moments of hysteria and tenderness.

Woody Allen has given Cruz and costar Javier Bardem the gift of allowing them to navigate two languages within single scenes, sometimes even within phrases and sentences. Its sensational stuff and some sort of case study in reactive acting, in listening (even when she despairs in listening). VCB is loaded up with great performances, I believed every second of every look made and word uttered, but its Cruz’s show all the way.
“Give the release date of the film and my expectation that the movie will crash and burn at the box office, there will probably be no nomination for this woman. That will be an outrage we can all look back on.”

Brothers Sniff

Revised, error corrected: When Tuesday morning’s final roster of Toronto Film Festival selections is announced, I for one would love to see Jim Sheridan‘s Brothers (MGM, 12.4) included. It’s a remake of Susanne Bier‘s 2004 Danish-language original about a younger “bad” brother (Jake Gyllenhaal in Sheridan’s version) stepping into the familial shoes of his older “good” brother Tobey Maguire) after the latter disappears during an enemy skirmish in Afghanistan.


Gyllenhaal, Portman, Maguire

Natalie Portman plays the wife-mother whose loyalties shift, or at least adapt to new realities. Sam Shepard plays the gruff and disapproving pater familias, the father of Gyllenhaal and Maguire. David Benioff (The Kite Runner, The 25th Hour) adapted the screenplay.
Over the last couple of days I’ve written and called Sheridan (who’s in town) to ask if Toronto might happen, and I’ve heard nothing back. I asked incoming MGM marketing guy Mike Vollman, who said something along the lines of “I haven’t heard” or something like that. I also asked MGM corporate guy Jeff Pryor and he, too, claimed ignorance of the particulars, etc. You can interpret these three guys saying nothing as an indication of something or not. Probably not, I’m guessing, but it’s only 72 hours to Tuesday morning.


Tobey Maguire (middle), Natalie Portman (r.) talking to unidentified hooded figure on set of Brothers.

Obeisance Before God

How is a reasonably intelligent person supposed to bridge the gap between Religulous (Lionsgate, 10.3), the Bill Maher-Larry Charles doc that portrays religions as a source of endless worldwide idiocy, ignorance and acrimony (a view I personally embrace), and the spectacle of today’s civil forum discussion (5 to 7 pm) at the Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, California, between John McCain, Barack Obama and pastor Rick Warren?

The answer is to put aside the miraculous dream of a world without religions and settle into the idea that Obama could (a) diminish the idea among some evangelicals that he is a Manchurian Candidate Muslim anti-christ, and (b) that, being by all statements and appearances a more sincere and devout Christian than McCain, Obama could manage to siphon off enough evangelical votes to help alter the final tally in certain swing states.
Warren “is an anti-abortion Southern Baptist who is nonetheless part of a shift away from the religious right’s strict focus on abortion and marriage,” one summary states. “The environment, poverty and education have also become pressing concerns, especially for younger evangelicals.
“Warren is best known for building Saddleback Church into a 23,000-member megachurch in Lake Forest, Calif., and for writing the multimillion-selling book The Purpose-Driven Life.
“But he and his wife, Kay, are also leading advocates for HIV/AIDS victims worldwide. They have invested enormous resources in their PEACE Plan, now under way in Rwanda, which aims to combat corruption, illiteracy and other social problems through church partnerships with government and business.

In The Mood

This weekend, I’m thinking, things might have finally slowed down enough to allow me to impulsively see The Dark Knight in IMAX. It’s important to be able to see a film on a whimsical spur of the moment basis. You need to be able to just saunter up the box-office 15 minutes before showtime and buy a ticket and get in, with any of the bullshit.

Take The Loss

I’m not trying to sound like a putz, but if a Great Cosmic Voice were to one day inform me (while I’m in the shower or driving the bike down Beverly Blvd.) that for the rest of my time of the planet I’ll never again hear a cut by Ghostface Killah, or see him in a blink-and-it’s-gone cameo in a film like Ironman, I could probably live with that. (GK’s Wikipedia page says he’s “frequently assumed the persona of both Ironman and Tony Starks, [and] released a 1996 album titled Ironman and has drawn deeply on the Iron Man mythology.”)

Picnic

“Anything can be great. I don’t care… bricklaying can be great if a guy knows. He knows what he’s doing and why and can make it come off. When I’m really going…I feel like a…like a jockey sittin’ on his horse. He’s got all that speed and power beneath him, comin’ into the stretch, the pressure’s on, and he knows…he can just feel when to let it go and how much. Because he’s got everything going for him — timing, touch. It’s a real great feelin‘ when you’re right, and you know you’re right.”