It was that silver nitrate black-and-white noir thing…right? The Hollywood Reporter’s 35th annual Key Art Awards ceremony last Friday night gave Dimension Films’ Sin City four trophies — for best action adventure trailer, best teaser trailer, best home entertainment-consumer audiovisual, and some kind of special recognition for “character banners designed for the film”…whatever that means.
“‘Why the World Doesn’t Need Superman’ reads the title of a piece that wins Lois Lane the Pulitzer Prize in Superman Returns, the latest bigscreen revival of comicdom’s strongest and fastest hero. Not only is she wrong in the context of the story (not to mention real life), but she’ll be wrong in the court of public opinion once the world gets a look at this most grandly conceived and sensitively drawn Superman saga. Sure to rate with aficionados alongside Spider-Man 2 and, for many, Batman Begins on the short list of best superhero spectaculars, pic more than justifies director Bryan Singer’s decision to jump ship from the X-Men franchise, and will pull down stratospheric B.O. around the globe.” — from Todd McCarthy‘s review in Variety. (The Hollywood Reporter‘s Kirk Honeycutt likes it also.)
Hollywood Reporter columnist Anne Thompson (l.) interviewing “I Wake Up Screening” co-authors Laura Kim and John Anderson at a Seattle Film Festival panel discussion — Sunday, 6.18, 2:25 pm
(a) Lobby of Seattle’s W Hotel; (b) Good old early ’60s/Elvis Presley icon; (c) Snapped from confines of space needle restaurant where Golden Needles were passed out early this afternoon Sunday, 6.18, 1:35 pm; (d) Old poster image promising tour of Seattle’s shady district; (e) Mexican restaurant near Pike Street.
“Top-tier stars…stay on top by being true to their personas. We pay $10 to see Will Smith or Julia Roberts precisely because they don’t surprise us. It’s not that they’re playing themselves. It’s just that the force of their personalities swamps everything else. They’re more than actors — they’re brands. And yet Johnny Depp, 43, is almost pathologically unpredictable. He can be bizarre, hilarious, unsettling — even annoying. But he is never the same. He’s the anti-Tom Cruise. ‘Nothing against Tom, but Johnny may be a bigger star now,’ says director John Waters, who cast Depp in 1990’s Cry-Baby. ‘ Nobody is sick of Johnny Depp .'” — from Sean Smith‘s Newsweek profile of the Pirates of the Caribbean star. The piece includes a riff on the film itself. To me, Smith’s standout remark sounds thin: Pirates 2, he says, “promises to be a welcome blast of sunshine in a season when Cruise has crashed and burned, and The Da Vinci Code has proved to be a joyless blockbuster.” A goddam sunshine movie that’s good because it’s unlikely to resemble and/or repeat the box-office experience of M:I:3 or The DaVinci Code?
Winners of the 32nd annual Seattle Film Festival awards (called the “Golden Needles“) were announced about 90 minutes ago, and the audience award winner for Best Film went to Michel Hazanavicius‘ OSS 117: Nest of Spies , the French-made espionage spoof that’s been a big hit in France since opening there in early May. The audience award for Best Documentary went to Rickie Stern and Annie Sundberg‘s The Trials of Darryl Hunt.
There were several other awards I don’t have time to mention, but the jury bestowed a “special mention” upon Linas Phillips‘ Walking to Werner, a doc about a guy who’s half-imbued and half-weird (Phillips) walking all the way from Seattle to Los Angeles as a kind of tribute to director Werner Herzog. I respected Phillips for doing the walk and for shooting a mildly diverting, half-interesting record of his journey, but he is one weird cat and so is the movie.
Carl Colapert‘s G.I. Jesus, which I described last week as “the first truly exceptional Cinevegas film I’ve seen”, has been handed the Cinevegas Grand Jury Prize. The hander-outers were director Mark Pellington (Mothman Prophecies ) and film critics Jean Oppenheimer and F.X. Feeney. The negligible Park won the Audience Award, 5 Up 2 Down won a Special Award for Cinematography, and two films were given Homrable Mention status — The Favor (a pretty good ABC After-School Special film) and The 4th Dimension (missed it, heard pretty good things, would have watched if on DVD it Cinevegas (a) had DVDs to loan to critics and (b) had facilities for watching them).
(a) Following yesterday afternoon’s Capitol Hill-area screening of Eric Byler‘s Americanese and a q & a session moderated by N.Y. Times industry reporter Sharon Waxman, which didn’t make time for audience questions and left a few people grumbling as a result — Saturday, 6.17.06, 6:45 pm; (b) Looking eastward toward Bellevue , snapped from rear deck of a tres ritzy home belonging to a University of Washington supporter who hosted an early evening party for Americanese and Seattle-based author Shawn Wong, whose novel “American Knees” was the basis of the film; (c) Sycamore-lined street on way over to Americanese/”American Knees” party; (d) leftover photo taken last Wednesday night in Las Vegas suburb of Hendersonville.
Forbes has reported that Adam Sandler made $29 million between June ’05 and June ’06. But a new year has begun, so to speak, and Adam needs to start working on the next $29 million . That’s where the fans fit in. We need to go out and support Sandler’s Click (Columbia, 6.23) to keep the bandwagon rolling.
Obviously we aren’t obliged to do this, but shouldn’t we? Don’t we owe it to the guy? Sandler needs to keep rolling in clover, and he isn’t going to be pulling down the monster bucks forever — he’s working within a limited window (as we all are), and now’s the time.
I’m not saying Superman Returns is Son of Poseidon, far from it, but last Thursday’s (6.15) NRG numbers are indicating a fairly good but less-than-phenomenal July 4th holiday opening. Definite interest was at 38%, but two weeks before opening a tentpole movie of this size should be closer to 50% at this stage. (Pirates of the Caribbean‘s definite interest was at 67%, and that’s three weeks out.) Superman Returns had a first-choice rating of 9%, but at this stage of the game that number should be in the high teens. Warner Bros. has a nine-day window — Wednesday, 6.28 to Thursday July 6 — to make all the Superman dough they can before Pirates crashes through on Friday, July 7. Whatever Superman Returns does during its three-day weekend period (6.30 to 7.2) will be halved the following weekend. The domestic goal is to make $100 million over the first seven days, and then multiply that by at least 2.5 before heading off to DVD. Anything less will be considered a shortfall. I hear this, I hear this…and on some level it’s not right. Superman Returns is a true heart movie — Pirates, sight unseen, is a jackoff eye-mascara 16-ounce-can-of-Budweiser movie.
I missed this when I linked to the Forbes Celebrity 100 list a couple of days ago, but according to what Cinematical is posting, here’s what the following Hollywood heavyweights made…you know, earned…between June ’05 and June ’06: (1) Steven Spielberg — $332 million, (2) George Lucas — $235 million; (3) Jerry Seinfeld — $100 million (for doing what?); (4) Jerry Bruckheimer — $84 million; (5) Tom Cruise — $67 million; (6) The Olsen Twins — $40 million (….what?); (7) Peter Jackson — $39 million; (8) Denzel Washington — $38 million; (9) Adam Sandler, Johnny Depp and Tom Hanks — $29 million each. Remainders: Jodie Foster — $27 million; Brad Pitt — $25 million; Angelina Jolie — $14 million; Mel Brooks — $5 million; Nicole Richie — $2 million.
Quinceanera co-directors and co-writers Richard Glatzer (left) and Wash Westmoreland (right) flanking star Emily Rios after yesterday’s Seattle Film Festival screening — 6.16.06, 8:35 pm.
(a) At a Capitol Hill club called Chapel, Cinematical‘s Kim Voynar, Americanese director-writer Eric Byler, Byler’s Taiwanese ally-partner(I’m bad with names…sorry) who worked on the film, and Americanese star Allison Sie — Friday, 6.16.06, 11:40 pm; (b) Americanese star Allison Sie, director-writer Eric Byler — Friday, 6.16, 6:20 pm; (c) Seattle skies are still blue and on the bright side at 9:40 pm, obviously due to the northern lattitude; (d) this photo of an obviously pleased holder of a Brookline High School graduation diploma has zip to do with movies, but it represents the culmination of a twelve-year effort and bestowing a moment’s attention doesn’t seem out of line.
I’ve explained this a couple of times in years past, but let’s go over it again: it’s a total recipe for disaster to call any film [Fill in the blank]’s War. There have been films with titles like this before (The Private War of Major Benson, Murphy’s War, etc.), and any such title always seems to imply that the main character will be manipulative, obsessive and egoistic…and who wants to spend two hours with an asshole?. The latest is Charlie Wilson’s War , which will costar Tom Hanks, Julia Roberts and Phillip Seymour Hoffman. Mike Nichols will direct starting in October from an Aaron Sorkin script (a copy has been sitting unread on my desktop in a PDF file for over a year). Based on a book by George Crile, it’s about a renegade congressman/CIA agent who secretly funnelled arms to Afghhanistan freedom fighters in the early ’80s in their fight against Soviet troops. Just change the title…simple.
<div style="background:#fff;padding:7px;"><a href="https://hollywood-elsewhere.com/category/reviews/"><img src=
"https://hollywood-elsewhere.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/reviews.jpg"></a></div>
- Really Nice Ride
To my great surprise and delight, Christy Hall‘s Daddio, which I was remiss in not seeing during last year’s Telluride...
More » - Live-Blogging “Bad Boys: Ride or Die”
7:45 pm: Okay, the initial light-hearted section (repartee, wedding, hospital, afterlife Joey Pants, healthy diet) was enjoyable, but Jesus, when...
More » - One of the Better Apes Franchise Flicks
It took me a full month to see Wes Ball and Josh Friedman‘s Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes...
More »
<div style="background:#fff;padding:7px;"><a href="https://hollywood-elsewhere.com/category/classic/"><img src="https://hollywood-elsewhere.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/heclassic-1-e1492633312403.jpg"></div>
- The Pull of Exceptional History
The Kamala surge is, I believe, mainly about two things — (a) people feeling lit up or joyful about being...
More » - If I Was Costner, I’d Probably Throw In The Towel
Unless Part Two of Kevin Costner‘s Horizon (Warner Bros., 8.16) somehow improves upon the sluggish initial installment and delivers something...
More » - Delicious, Demonic Otto Gross
For me, A Dangerous Method (2011) is David Cronenberg‘s tastiest and wickedest film — intense, sexually upfront and occasionally arousing...
More »