Friday, January 30, 2015

'American Sniper' Likely to Retain Its #1 Spot Despite Lack of Katy Perry Intermission

Apparently there's a sporting event that people are going to be paying attention to this weekend? No idea what's up with that--I'll be catching up on my grocery shopping. Among the people who are going to movies instead of doing that other thing, it's looking like a good chunk of them will catch Clint Eastwood's American Sniper, enough to make it the #1 movie domestically for the third straight weekend. It's adding 180 theatres, bringing its theatre count to a record-breaking (for an R-rated movie) 3,885, and the money it earns this weekend should bring it within spitting distance (not sniping distance--that's much longer) of $250 million domestically.

Project Almanac
The found footage time travel flick Project Almanac is looking to poach some of our nation's teenagers, and the fact that it doesn't have any new release competition on that front should help. Less helpful: It is an awful film, with a 30% Rotten Tomatoes rating. Then again, Taken 3 had a surprisingly robust opening weekend of $39.2 million, and its approval rating was only 10%, so what do I know? Without any Liam Neeson-sized stars, though, Almanac will likely only pull in between $15 and $20 million. (Paramount's expectations are a more modest $10 to $12 million.)

Getting similarly bad reviews is Black or White, about a white man (Kevin Costner) fighting for custody of his granddaughter against her black grandmother (Octavia Spencer). If the stars align, it could squeak into the top five, though getting to the level of a $10 million gross is unlikely. Expect The Loft, Erik Van Looy's remake of his own 2008 Dutch thriller, to fare even worse. Unlike Black or White's Costner and Spencer, The Loft's cast--which includes James Marsden and Karl Urban--is recognizable but not really all that marketable. Marketing has been minor, and buzz has been lukewarm. On the plus side, it was probably cheap to make.

"Game of Thrones," The Watchers on the Wall
J.C. Chandor's A Most Violent Year is expanding to wide release after a month-long limited run that's earned it $1.3 million so far. And people with an interest in the future of exhibition will want to keep an eye on the theatrical release of HBO's blockbuster fantasy series "Game of Thrones," two episodes of which (season four's "The Watchers on the Wall" and season finale "The Children") are coming to 205 IMAX screens.

Among the specialty movies opening in New York and/or LA are the Jason Statham actioner Wild Card; the Oscar-nominated Timbuktu; Girlhood; and Shorts HD's release of the Oscar-nominated animated, live-action and documentary shorts.

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Heading into the week with Sundance Buzz: Dope, Brooklyn, Nightmare and others.

Oh, the festival exuberance that forces many to pull the information trigger too quickly. I have reported in my previous dispatch –after double-checking on several trades and online outlets - that the sale price for Me and Earl and the Dying Girl was $12 million. But in the last 24 hours, several outlets have now corrected this information. It sounds like the deal actually closed for a number around $4.7 million instead (Source: Slash Film) though other numbers that are close are also flying around. Thus, Little Miss Sunshine still maintains its record, being the most expensive acquisition of Sundance history, with a $10.5 million sale price.

This last couple of days, I have been playing catch up with titles that generated strong buzz throughout the festival’s first weekend. It’s tough to go into a movie with high expectations that only escalate with each passing day. On one hand, it’s an exhilarating feeling to have them preset for you. On the other, hype always comes with an element of caution. Therefore, I was very pleased to see that writer/director Rick Famuyiwa’s Dope (US Dramatic Competition) not only lived up to its hype, but also exceeded my high expectations. (Those who stand by the already-overused phrase “Dope is dope” are correct.) Dope, with a $7 million distribution deal from Open Road and Sony already under its belt (which I covered in my previous dispatch), has confidently established itself as one of this year’s true breakouts and at once became the kind of movie people hope to see when they make the effort to trek up to Sundance. Set in Los Angeles, Dope tells the story of a trio of misfit teenagers; geeks of their high school and easy targets of the street smart kids of their crime-filled neighborhood in Inglewood. The heart of this geek squad is the straight-A student Malcolm (Shameik Moore) who dares to dream big for his future. He wants nothing more than getting a college education from Harvard, despite constantly being discouraged by his environment and even his high school advisor. Working through his unusual personal statement, preparing for SATs and having scored a vital interview with an educational advisor in the process, Malcolm accidentally finds himself at a crossroads: his dreams vs. the corrupt world of drugs and gangsters that mean business, outlining a plot Malcolm and his geeky pals involuntarily get pushed into. The question is: will they be able to pull a complex ploy off and put it all behind? The pulsating and often electrifying Dope is a beautiful homage to the 90s (Rachel Morrison’s cinematography paints the film with a vibrant energy), and already drawing comparisons to Spike Lee’s cinema as well as Pulp Fiction for good reason. Filled with high-energy music (hint: Malcolm and his pals have a band) and tightly navigated set pieces, the ultimately uplifting Dope is a sure-bet crowd pleaser. In the film’s post-screening Q&A, the breakout actor Shameik Moore –who oozes with humble disbelief and pride, the kind of honest authenticity and excitement one hopes to witness in Sundance- talked about his audition when he sent his tape all the way from Atlanta. “You send in so many auditions,” he said. “And you stop believing that it will ever happen.” But it did happen for him. As I was leaving Prospector after the screening, I witnessed him sharing an embrace with a member of his team –possibly his manager- who said: “You are here. And no matter what happens from now on, I’m proud of you.”

Including Dope, I was able to see 8 films during Monday and Tuesday of the festival; the final two days of Sundance that unveil the remaining competition titles (with rest of the days through Sunday being encores.) Among them is the US Dramatic Competition title Results (by the Computer Chess director Andrew Bujalski), an offbeat comedy about two hardheaded gym workers/personal trainers (Guy Pearce and Cobie Smulders) and a new wealthy Client (Kevin Corrigan). Despite engaging performances and a promising concept, Results (bought by Magnolia at the top of the festival) seems to be one edit away from having a more coherent structure. The film’s 3rd act seems shaky with questionable cuts that hamper and muddy the story and its organic humor. Another effort I caught up with, Jennifer Phang’s truly original Advantageous (US Dramatic), is an elegant, minimalist sci-fi refreshingly revolving around the story of a mother-daughter while inventively tackling a chilling near-future hypothesis on racism, and capitalism’s insistence on dehumanization. Chloé Zhao’s Songs My Brothers Taught Me, which also competes in US Dramatic, is a mature, clear-eyed debut from a young director that tells a small coming of age story of a high-school student living in Pine Ridge Reservation, whose future plans get put on hold with his father’s unexpected death. Playing at the Midnight section, Eli Roth’s semi-campy, Fatal Attraction-meets-Misery-meets-Funny Games flick Knock Knock unsatisfactorily offers up cheap thrills and uncomfortable humor in a story about a wealthy LA man who finds himself as the subject of two attractive female intruders’ sex-filled game. Festival’s early buzz title The Witch (US Dramatic, directed by debuting name Robert Eggers) proved to be a truly creepy, intensely atmospheric tale of mythical witches in 1692’s New England, led by a superb performance by Anya Taylor Joy.

The Room 237 director Rodney Ascher’s Nightmare, another Midnight entry of the festival, will perhaps be the most memorable title of this year, for reasons that reach beyond the quality of filmmaking. Not only because its topic is stylishly presented through Ascher’s now signature command on details and imaginative reenactments of stories told by talking heads, but also because of the fact that Nightmare is truly one of those horror films that will ruin your sleep for many days to come (I’m talking with first hand experience here.) The subject Ascher takes on is “sleep paralysis”, a condition, or rather a phenomenon, in which one would experience a state of half asleep/half awake period with complete inability to speak, move or react. But that is not all. All those Ascher has interviewed explain a similar chain of signals and symptoms that start with a tingling sensation taking over their body, followed by shadowy figures appearing one by one and slowly approaching their bed, invading their personal and psychological space. And there is nothing you can do but stare in silence and terror, hoping it would end soon. In several instances, subjects swear to do things in their sleep before paralysis overtakes their body (in one instance, a New York man says he received a phone call from a devilish voice and smashed his cell phone.) And everyone describes their state of paralysis and being under-attack by truly frightening figures in the same way: “It was like dying.” In the film’s post-screening Q&A (which I was too frightened to stay for), Ascher reportedly asked the audience to raise hands if they had ever experienced similar episodes. And apparently there were many hands up. Tweets from the Q&A confirm one woman actually broke down in tears, talking about her own paralysis. I dare you to watch Nightmare and get a comfortable night’s sleep immediately after.

Crawling out of bed the next morning –after a truly ruined, almost non-existent sleep, compliments of Rodney Ascher-, I ran to Eccles to catch John Crowley’s Premiere title Brooklyn. Crowley, with previous films like Boy A and Is Anybody There?, is an unassuming storyteller. He knows how to make an audience feel. And with Brooklyn, led by a radiantly truthful performance by Saoirse Ronan, he masters his poignancy. In the film’s introduction, it was appropriately noted that Brooklyn, being a period drama, is a rarity of Sundance. Telling the story of an Irish immigrant girl who settles in 1950s Brooklyn at an all-girls boarding house, the film gracefully navigates the story of Ellis Lacey who yearns to establish a life away from home and struggles with her identity and future decisions when she temporarily goes back to Ireland with grim news from her family. Brooklyn is a gorgeous, straightforward and tear-jerking drama, ripe with earnest melancholy (in my view, superior to James Gray’s The Immigrant) and rich with period details. Grabbed by Fox Searchlight, Brooklyn is one of the titles out of this year’s Sundance to watch for.

While the party scene in the last couple of days in Park City was equally vibrant as the weekend, I found myself willingly skipping many gatherings (except for a quick stop at the Duplass Brothers’ party on Monday afternoon), desperately trying to recover from a cold (some call it “The Sundance Flu”), which is currently showing no signs of vacating my body. Turns out, you can take all the necessary precautions (like obsessively using hand sanitizers), but this thing will still get a hold of you somehow. Yet in Sundance, flu -like hunger or sleep deprivation- is just one of those things to ignore until you’re on a return flight back to the real world. And that’s what I’ll be doing.

Monday, January 26, 2015

'American Sniper' Is Full Steam Ahead with a Record-Breaking Second Weekend

American Sniper

American Sniper sees you saying "January movies don't do well!," and it lauuuughs and laughs. After a record-shattering opening last weekend (it made more than double what January's previous best opener, Ride Along, did), the six-time Oscar nominee pulled in $64 million this weekend, for the highest-grossing second weekend in January and the eight highest-grossing second weekend ever. It's already earned nearly $250 million worldwide and could easily make $350 million by the end of its run, which--considering its Christmas Day release--would make it 2014's highest-grossing film. Sorry, Mockingjay - Part 1. You thought you had it in the bank, and then this latecomer comes along and messes with your laurels.

The highest-grossing new release was walking disaster (or camp masterpiece--depends on whom you ask) The Boy Next Door, which made $15 million against a production budget of $4 million. The rest of the top five were holdovers Paddington (weekend gross $12.3 million, total gross $40 million), The Wedding Ringer ($11.6 million; $39.6 million) and Taken 3 ($7.6 million; $76 million).

Mortdecai
Abysmal reviews hurt Disney's Strange Magic and Lionsgate's Mortdecai, which earned only $5.5 million and $4.1 million, respectively. That's Depp's second-worst opening of the last ten years; the only movie that opened with less is a documentary he narrated that only ever played in eight theatres. Looks like Depp's 'stache won't become the next big fashion trend, after all.

The much-buzzed-about Cake opened in limited release and took in approximately $1 million in 482 theatres. Whiplash finally expanded to over 500 theatres and saw its box office more than double. So far it's earned $8.5 million, making it the lowest-grossing Best Picture nominee, not that that means much this year.

Other movies out in limited release were Black Sea ($35,000), Song One ($23,800), Mommy ($21,000), Red Army ($20,100) and The Duke of Burgundy ($13,000).

Sunday, January 25, 2015

Sundance Weekend Recap: The Diary of a Teenage Girl, Z for Zachariah, The End of the Tour...

Me and Earl and the Dying Girl. Directed by Alfonso Gomez-Rejon and competing as a US Dramatic title, this is the movie everyone is talking about today at Sundance, at the end of the festival’s first weekend. It has taken the crowd in Park City by quite an emotional storm (many reports of wiped tears and broken hearts on Twitter) and following much speculation about what studio might grab its distribution rights, Fox Searchlight has only just landed a record-breaking $12 million deal just a few hours ago, even further raising the film's hot ticket status in the days ahead. Yesterday’s buzz on the other hand, was all about Rick Famuyiwa’s Dope, which secured a stellar distribution deal at Open Road and Sony. According to Deadline, “the deal is worth $7 million in minimum guarantee, with a $15 million P&A.” I’m happy to report that I have already planned to see both titles later in the week, partly in response to the overwhelmingly positive word. In the meantime, I was busy tackling other titles, some with pre-buzz and other being complete discoveries. And not all of them proved to worth the time or effort.

On Saturday, I managed to fit five movies into my schedule. The day started early with a 9am screening of The Spectacular Now director James Ponsoldt’s The End of the Tour, screening as part of this years Premieres program. Already grabbed by A24 (one of Sundance’s busiest and most tasteful buyers, that also distributed Ponsoldt’s earlier film), The End of the Tour is the story of the five-day interview between Rolling Stone reporter David Lipsky (with real Lipsky being in attendance at the premiere) and highly acclaimed novelist David Foster Wallace that took place in 1996. The dialogue-driven, highly conversational The End of the Tour is written with tremendous honesty and originality. A bookish, brainy Almost Famous that romances journalism while patiently crafting a bond between the writer and the reporter, The End of the Tour reaches deep into the reluctant, and disarmingly sweet mind of David Foster Wallace, and celebrates the author’s authenticity and humanity. Jason Segel portrays Wallace with a hazy goofiness and emotional earnestness. Jesse Eisenberg, who plays Lipsky, significantly dials down his trademark neurotic act and instead, delivers an assured performance as a confident journalist. The road friendship of the two men is a joy and their conversations beam with the truth rarely found in movies, bringing Linklater to mind. Plus, it features a delightful performance by Joan Cusack, who drives the two men around as part of Wallace's book tour.

I was also lucky with my second movie of the day on Saturday, which will easily become one of my 2015 Sundance favorites along with Ponsoldt’s film. On paper, first time director Marielle Heller’s The Diary of a Teenage Girl initially looks like the blueprint of a quirky coming-of-age Sundance film about an unusual teenager’s self discovery. And on screen, the elements we came to expect from this genre are surely there, but thankfully Heller –who is also the sole screenwriter on this- gives us a lot more. First off, the teenager in question –Minnie Goetze- is allowed an almost completely guilt free sexual empowerment, so much that in one scene, her lustful appetite scares off one of her casual flings of her own age. But Minnie apparently has no patience for boys her age anyway, as she is already buried deep into a messy affair with her mother’s boyfriend Monroe (played by Alexander Skarsgard.) This may sound like Andrea Arnold’s Fish Tank at first, but given the film’s humorous tone and the fact that it is set amid the sexual revolution of the 70s in San Francisco, the air is significantly lighter despite well-timed dramatic turns in the story that feel just dangerous enough. But more importantly, unlike Fish Tank's Mia, Minnie never comes across as a manipulated victim here, even at her most vulnerable. Kristen Wiig gives a superb performance as Minnie’s mother (she should be given dramatic roles more often) but this is undoubtedly the newcomer Bel Powley’s show, who knocks it out of the park with a secure and mature performance. We watch her attend school, master her comic drawing, fool around, have (lots of) sex, do drugs, lose control and find it again. In the film’s post-screening Q&A, Heller mentioned that Powley (who was also in attendance) sent in an audition tape from England and landed the part. Expect to hear her name frequently in the coming years. She is one of this year’s discoveries. 

Mississippi Grind, my third film of Saturday, was a true letdown. Directed collaboratively by Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck –whose previous works, such as Half Nelson, Sugar and It’s Kind Of A Funny Story I am a big fan of– the film didn’t connect with me on any level despite its strong performances by Ryan Reynolds and Ben Mendelsohn. I walked out an hour into the film, and therefore am unable to offer a full-fledged opinion.

I had better luck with the rest of the day, however. Competing in World Cinema Dramatic, Gerard Barrett’s Irish Glassland chillingly portrays an alcoholic (the always wonderful Toni Collette) with raw realism while keeping the focus on the love of a son (Jack Reynor) for his mother. Reynor might be known for Transformers: Age of Extinction primarily, yet his quiet and stirring performance in Glassland awards him a much higher status and makes one look forward to the advancement of his career in this new path.

Z for Zachariah, a consistently anticipated US Dramatic Competition title in many critics’ Sundance previews, premiered on Saturday night with director Craig Zobel (of Compliance), and stars Margot Robbie, Chiwetel Ejiofor and Chris Pine in attendance for the screening. Set in a nuclear post-apocalyptic world during an undefined era, Ann Burden (Robbie) and a scientist named Loomis (Ejiofor) defiantly fight for survival and reluctantly fall in love, until their orderly life in Ann’s farm gets disturbed when suddenly another survivor named Caleb (Chris Pine) appears out of thin air and joins the duo. Zobel, true to his signature slow-burning style, craftily controls the tension in suggesting there might be something off about each and every one of these people, but loses credibility when Nissar Modi’s script pays too much attention to the ill-fated love triangle between the three. Still, Z for Zachariah is handsomely made and one of this year’s better offerings so far with an intriguing storyline packed with metaphors and led with top-rate performances. It also features an inherently strong female character. In the post screening Q&A, Robbie said she wanted her character to be capable and not always innocent, and still maintain a mental and emotional spirituality. The film also features a stellar score by Heather McIntosh who was supported by the Sundance Lab for composers.

Sunday started with one of this year’s biggest disappointments: Sleeping with Other People, a tired, unfunny and offensive romantic comedy written and directed by Leslye Headland. The filmmaker defines this film as a “When Harry Met Sally for assholes", and despite certain elements of the plot that feel like a rip off of the rom-com classic, it’s important to denounce this comparison from the get-go. This is a film where successful, competent women obsess about men who don’t deserve them and find nothing better to do with their time than to talk about them (note: the film only barely passes the Bechdel Test –where two women should talk about something other than a man- with only a couple of minor lines.) It is sad to watch a female filmmaker submit her could-have-been-interesting characters to the genre’s worst crimes. Even the hard-work of its cast can't save this otherwise charmless effort.

Thankfully, the next stop was Sean Baker’s Tangerine; a crass comedy with a big heart, set on Christmas Eve in Los Angeles. An alternative to family-friendly Christmas classics (being only for adults), Tangerine revolves around working girls of LA while they fight for money, love and friendship. Shot on an iPhone 5s (now we’ve heard it all in Sundance) and featuring trans actors playing trans characters as leads on screen, Tangerine, which is still waiting to land on a distribution deal, is beautifully original and exceptionally funny.

Sunday’s final film for me was writer/director Michael Almereyda’s Experimenter, starring Peter Sarsgaard and Winona Ryder. Telling the true story of Stanley Milgram, the famous social psychologist that conducted a set of controversial behavioral experiments on obedience –trying to understand the mindset of people who obey authority even under extreme conditions (such as war time)- Experimenter is a tad repetitive and technical, yet it feels almost instantly dangerous with the right atmospheric choices and assured performances from Sarsgaard and Ryder. It’s tough to guess this highly technical film’s theatrical prospects –the storyline does get too academic at times- and it will be interesting to watch where it will find a home.

The weekend’s screenings might have wrapped (save for the Midnight titles at The Library), but the parties are just heating up, with the "National Lampoon Toga Party" starting shortly on Main Street. Film Journal International will be on the scene.

Saturday, January 24, 2015

2015 Sundance Film Festival Kicks Off: What Happened, Miss Simone?, The Overnight, True Story...

A tangible excitement has taken over the streets of Park City one more time, as the 2015 edition of the Sundance Film Festival, which kicked off on Thursday, is well underway. Last year’s festival is still fresh in minds, largely due to its rich crop of critically-acclaimed titles such as Whiplash (2014 opening night film), Boyhood, Life Itself, Love is Strange, The Babadook, Obvious Child and A Girl Walks Home Alone At Night proving to have legs beyond the mountains, and with the first two even scoring a number of Academy Awards nominations in major categories. This year’s festival has certainly a lot to live up to and during the festival’s Day 1 press conference, festival director John Cooper (joined by Robert Redford and Sundance Institute’s Executive Director Keri Putnam) promised nothing less in saying that the audiences would feel a wild ride.

As he often does, Robert Redford celebrated the notion of “change” –how it affects the world and the society we live in- during the conversation moderated by Salt Lake Tribune film critic Sean Means, setting the stage for the days ahead. The trio focused on interconnected topics around episodic storytelling in response to the blurring lines between TV and Film (reminding everyone that their lab model has expanded to offer help to filmmakers and storytellers in building episodic content), documentaries, distribution models and diversity issues in film industry. 

Tackling a question related to distribution (especially of the currently distribution-less Sundance title A Walk In The Woods starring Redford himself), Redford said he’s had some experiences with his own films that had either no or poor distribution, perhaps subtly referring to his remarks around All Is Lost in last year’s press conference that Roadside Attractions has handled the film unsatisfactorily (which was on the same day as Academy Awards nominations when he didn’t get a Best Actor nod.) “What’s the mindset of a distributor? What moves and galvanizes them? I don’t know. It’s weird,” said Redford. Touching upon alternate alleys of distribution while not alienating the traditional models, Putnam talked about “The Artist Services Program” carried out by the Sundance Institute year around to help artists both creatively tell their stories, and tactically and strategically connect with audiences. “It is about providing opportunities to filmmakers who want to be more entrepreneurial about releasing their films after the festival or at any point,” said Putnam. “We have a new partner we’re very excited about this year: Quiver Digital. They built a dashboard where all filmmakers using this tool can see how their film is doing. It’s really great transparency of data.”

Speaking of a visible festival trend this year, Cooper mentioned documentary filmmakers thinking about the cinematic experience from a use of story and character standpoint. “It’s not just about getting the information out there but also about how to engage an audience.” Answering a question from the crowd about why there seems to be a disconnect between Hollywood and the independent world in Sundance when it comes to the diversity of players, Putnam said; “If we had the answer to that question, we would be publicizing it pretty widely. We have done our own research with USC. The pipeline of young talent interested in telling stories is there but somewhere along the way, they fall out of the equation. When money comes in, it changes. One of the biggest obstacles towards changing it is there wasn’t even awareness this was a problem.” Then Cooper added, “I will just say that Ava DuVernay won the best directing award here with Middle of Nowhere,” delicately driving attention to her snub at the Oscars as a Best Director nominee and highlighting an attitude that sets Sundance apart from mainstream Hollywood.

The opening night films of the festival didn’t offer up the next Whiplash perhaps, but Liz Garbus’ Nina Simone documentary What Happened, Miss Simone? (screening as part of festival’s Doc Premieres slate) was a showstopper, and in many ways, brought home the points made at the press conference around documentaries and diversity. With the use of an extensive, stunning wealth of archival footage and a number of talking heads interviews, Garbus evidently chose to tell the well-known and widely unknown parts of the icon’s life story in a steady, straightforward manner and let the wonderful music and rich archival material speak for themselves. And what a deeply affecting result she has achieved in building Nina Simone first and foremost as an inimitably talented artist, but also as a fragile human being whose talents and eventual artistry were hindered by systemic racism of the time, despite her stardom and influential role at the Civil Rights movement. Nina Simone was originally trained to become a classical pianist, but she could never realize her true dream after getting rejected by the music school she applied to; a decision made due to her race. With her film, Garbus gracefully explores the truth about an international talent who never felt she was given a chance to rise up to her true calling in life. What Happened, Miss Simone? was especially powerful when the story reached to the heat of the Civil Rights movement, pointedly blasting Simone’s emotionally gripping “Mississippi Goddam” as well as footage of the Selma march and its aftermath; in a way, bridging the conversations the film industry has been having the past couple of weeks around Selma’s absence at the Oscars, with Sundance. Selma director Ava DuVernay was also at the screening. So was John Legend –an Oscar nominee this year for Best Original Song (“Glory” from Selma)- who sang a number of Nina Simone songs on the piano at the end of the screening; making a memorable night at Sundance even more special with “Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood.”

Before making it to the next opening night film in my schedule, I accepted Anne Thompson’s kind invitation to stop by Indiewire’s infamous annual chili party at their condo and somehow managed to grab a bowl of delicious chili and a glass of wine, before running back to the Eccles Theater in time for Bryan Buckley’s US Competition title The Bronze – a film that only deserves a gold medal for featuring the raunchiest, funniest and the most borderline ridiculous sex scene in recent memory (hint: it’s a sex scene between competing gymnasts, so use your imagination.) However, the film itself was largely a flop, despite conjuring many uncomfortable laughs from the audience, unsure of what to do with poorly written material, delivered by its hilarious lead Melissa Rauch with distinguished comic timing. In The Bronze, Rauch plays a once-upon-a-time bronze medalist gymnast who’s now wasting her days in her dad’s basement watching videos of her expired glory, consuming thousands of calories a day (yet, still managing to stay inexplicably skinny) and swearing like a sailor to whomever and whatever crosses her path. I give it credit for its female-driven story where we get to watch women obsessing about things that have nothing to do with men and are given the luxury of being and acting gross, but The Bronze unfortunately uses up this credit of goodwill too quickly by becoming an often unfunny comedy, about 20 minutes too long.

Festival’s second day –which is its first full day with screenings starting as early as 8:30am- offered many hotly anticipated titles across a variety of programs. I gave my best shot to get into the Press & Industry screening of Robert Eggers’ US Dramatic Competition title The Witch, but unfortunately got shut out of it despite showing up 45 minutes early, and decided to see Mark Cousins’ 6 Desires: DH Lawrence and Sardinia instead (showing in Documentary Spotlight) which was the next viable option. Constructed as a letter to Lawrence to the accompaniment of footage of Sardinia as well as cinematic clips as references, I am sorry to say this project would have been better off if it stayed solely as a written essay. Offering no visual interest or imagery that is remotely cinematic (it takes a lot for one to make Sardinia look ugly), this little experiment was a puzzling choice for Spotlight, not to mention for a slot at the press screenings, where the theaters are already small and crowded.

Next, I watched Nikole Bekwith’s Saoirse Ronan-starrer Stockholm, Pennsylvania, a harrowing abduction story founded on a pretty unsound metaphor around love. The film, like Ronan’s character who returns in her early 20s after living in the captivity of her abductor for over 15 years, asks the question whether love evokes and fuels a sense of ownership and entitlement over one and other. Ronan, and Cynthia Nixon (who plays her mother) deliver fine performances, but the film only resonates to a limited degree.

The US Dramatic Competition title The Overnight (directed by Patrick Brice), if my prophecy holds, might become a sleeper hit of sorts of this year’s festival. The crowd at the Eccles certainly signaled it. Produced by Adam Scott and the Duplass Brothers (who are synonymous with Sundance at this point) and starring Scott, Jason Schwartzman, "Orange Is The New Black"’s Taylor Schilling and Judith Godreche, The Overnight is a sharply written comedy that dares to be a hipster-ized, 21st Century “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?”, with intellectualism replaced with sexual humor. Watch out for plenty of full-frontal shots of Schwartzman and Scott (who ruined the fun by revealing "They are both prosthetics!" at the premiere's Q&A at the Eccles.)

My last stop on Friday was Jonah Hill, James Franco and Felicity Jones-starrer True Story, one of this year’s bigger offerings which distributor Fox Searchlight along with Plan B producers brought to Park City. The screening was attended by the director Rupert Goold, James Franco and to everyone’s surprise, Brad Pitt as one of the film’s Executive Producers at Plan B. True Story tells, um, a true story adapted from Michael Finkel’s book with same title. As a now jobless but once on-the-rise journalist (played by Jonah Hill), Finkel is confronted by the disturbing news that a potential killer of his wife and three young children (played by Franco) has used his identity when he was captured in Mexico. Interviewing the suspect in building an exclusive story with hopes of a comeback, Finkel unveils dark secrets amid a cat and mouse game where truth takes many shapes. Confidently directed and shot, True Story only falls short when it comes to a miscast James Franco (an artist whose versatility I generally admire), who frequently shows he’s ‘acting’ as opposed to ‘being’. Plus, an under-utilized Felicity Jones –who plays Finkel’s wife- makes one wish for more scenes with her. Still a respectable, competent feature debut that makes me look forward to theater-hailer Goold’s next feature. 

Friday ended with a quick stop at True Story’s after-party at Main Street, but in an effort to save my energy for Saturday morning’s 9am screening of The End Of The Tour, I called it an early night in anticipation of the days ahead.

Friday, January 23, 2015

The classic 'Merry Widow' operetta: Even merrier on HD screens

by Doris Toumarkine

Fathom Events provided a merry evening indeed in theatres on Wednesday with its sparkling encore presentation of the Metropolitan Opera’s production of the beloved Franz Lehár operetta The Merry Widow, originally broadcast to cinemas as part of its hugely successful Live in HD series on January 17th.

It was palpable in the house (New York’s Regal at Union Square) that audiences — a true cross-section of quality-seeking patrons that also included a small smattering of the greying gang of culture-vultures — were delighted with the sold-out show.

The program ran almost three hours. Packed into its audience-appropriate pre-show and intermission (the screen during intermission, as mercifully happens in this Met HD series, conveniently delivered a countdown of when the program would return) were interviews, a little fundraising, some promos for upcoming opera events, and plugs for backers like the Neubauer Foundation and Bloomberg. All ancillary to the “merry” main event but highly watchable.

The Merry Widow performance was nothing short of spectacular. Legendary turn-of-the-century Austro-Hungarian composer Lehár ((1870-1948) wrote the operetta in 1905. Much of the feel-good, very merry plot (unfolding as a mix of dialogue and song in English and accompanied by English subtitles!) explodes with romantic intrigue, romantic game-playing and the irresistible allure of storied Paris club Chez Maxim and its flirtatious, almost scandalous chorus girls, in 1905. It’s sort of a turn-of-the-century look at a slightly retro Euro-trash bunch back in their homeland.

The delightful if schmaltzy story largely revolves around a diplomatic plot, hatched by Pontevedria’s Ambassador to France Baron Zeta (Sir Thomas Allen) to marry off that small Balkan country’s wealthy widow (the great soprano Renée Fleming as Hanna) to Count Danilo Danilovitsch (Nathan Gunn), a Pontevedrian First Secretary to the embassy in Paris. Most importantly, he’s a Pontevedrian citizen; the country, you see, is about to go bankrupt and Zeta needs Danilo because the country needs her dough.

Creating only some of the obstacles are the facts that Hanna and Danilo were once lovers and he’s a party animal with an addiction to Maxim’s and its storied dancers. Furthermore, Zeta’s younger wife is the somewhat louche and loose Valencienne (Kelli O’Hara) who has adulterous designs on Count Camille de Rosillon (Alek Shrader), French attaché to the Pontevedian embassy.

So much pomp and romantic entanglements unravel in three grand Paris locations: a diplomatic party at the Pontevendira Embassy in Paris, Hanna’s elegant Paris house which hosts a celebration of Pontevedrian dance and folk costumes, and Maxim’s itself where the grissettes (the sexy club dancers) hold nothing back, especially in the way of costumes.

The Merry Widow's elaborate sets and rich Lehár score (the Met’s orchestra was conducted by the famed Andrew Davis) delight. And the Metropolitan Opera, one of the world’s most glorious opera venues, and the Met audience are also given their dazzling close-ups. High bling throughout.

HD cameras flow gracefully around the stage during the performance, sneak up on the audience and even stagehands, and also capture backstage interviews with the stars. Truly helpful in immersing audiences in the operetta itself — a mix of dialogue and the arias — were the many close-ups of the star performers. Also bringing the program alive were the English subtitles, even though the operetta was entirely performed in English.

But like some of the operetta characters (especially the seemingly incurable bon vivant Danilo), the presentation itself leaves room for a little tweaking. One true fan of the series in the audience (she catches the Fathom HD opera series at both New York and Long Island theatres) expressed disappointment that the Regal provided no program whatsoever. Hey, even a one-sheet printed on two sides (cheap, cheap to produce) could have given cinema-goers much helpful information about the major players involved (stars, Lehár, the story, songs, etc.) and some background on Merry Widow director Susan Stroman, a seasoned Tony Award-winning Broadway director making her Metropolitan debut here. And how about a few words about the wonderfully witty English translation from the German and the spectacular sets and those gorgeous costumes worn by so vast a cast?

The all-around lavish look of what was onscreen suggested another tweak that will inevitably come by way of the next great wave of projection illumination that will pop all that color and beauty to the max. Such a screen bursting with talent and bling will deliver the Fathom Event shows that art and fun-loving audiences and all those on the creative and technical side deserve.

Fathom Events brought The Merry Widow as “Live” and “Encore” to more than 650 U.S. theatres. Prices vary within the 20s (seniors and others are discounted), but the clearly very “merry” sell-out crowd that exited The Merry Widow at Regal’s Encore show suggested a huge level of satisfaction. This “encore” was a pre-recorded taping of the live broadcast that Fathom delivered to cinema audiences via satellite on their digital broadcast network. The Merry Widow is further proof that big events have an even bigger future on the big screen. And Fathom owners Regal, AMC and Cinemark know that. So — let’s get illuminated!

(Photo by Brigitte Lacombe)

'American Sniper' (And Its Creepy Doll Baby) Are Going to Beat the Heck Out of the Box Office This Weekend

American Sniper
Last weekend American Sniper broke records at the box office, earning $89.5 million (from Friday-Sunday, not including Martin Luther King Day) and blowing poorly reviewed competition The Wedding Ringer and Blackhat out of the water. This weekend is looking to be a repeat, with Clint Eastwood's brilliant, patriotic, propagandistic or downright racist (depends on whom you're talking to) Iraq war movie poised to soundly defeat new wide releases The Boy Next Door, Strange Magic and Mortdecai

American Sniper is expanding to 3,705 theatres, the widest release ever for an R-rated movie--that, combined with Oscar buzz and the movie's watercooler factor (thinkpieces upon thinkpieces upon thinkpieces about everything from its accuracy to its politics to that creepy fake baby), should bring it a second-weekend gross in the $50 million range. 


The Boy Next Door
The Jennifer Lopez erotic thriller The Boy Next Door will likely come in second place--reviews have been atrocious (14% on Rotten Tomatoes), but I personally found it enjoyable in an it's-so-bad-it's-good sort of way. The eponymous Boy charms Jennifer Lopez by giving her a first-edition copy of The Iliad. Let me repeat that: A first-edition copy of an ancient Greek epic poem. No, it's not on parchment. This movie was written by drunk squirrels.

Disney's Strange Magic, the brainchild of George Lucas, looks to be more like a The Phantom Menace than a The Empire Strikes Back. It may even be a (dare I say it) Howard the Duck. Reviewers are panning everything from its look to its apparently nonsensical plot to its musical choices (a Lady Gaga song puts in an appearance). Disney, likely sensing they have a stinker on their hands, has distanced themselves from the film's marketing. It's probably going to end up under $10 million, despite the fact that it's playing in over 3,000 theatres. 


Mortdecai
But nothing--nothing--compares to the mess that is Johnny Depp's Mortdecai, which is rocking an 8% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes. It will likely be the latest in a long string of Depp-starring flops, including Transcendence, The Lone Ranger and Dark Shadows.

The Oscar-nominated Whiplash is finally expanding to wide release after drumming up over $6.5 million in just under four months of limited. Expect it to earn another cool mil from people who have yet to see J.K. Simmons doing what J.K. Simmons does best: Being the greatest gosh-darn character actor there ever was.

Among the films hitting limited release in New York and/or LA are Cake, starring non-Oscar-nominee (despite the studios' best efforts) Jennifer Aniston as a woman who suffers from chronic pain; Mommy, the critically acclaimed fifth feature by 25-year-old Xavier Dolan (feel old yet?); Kevin MacDonald's Black Sea, which will have submarine enthusiasts lining up at the doors; and a pair of S&M-themed erotic movies, Drafthouse Films' R100 and IFC Films' The Duke of Burgundy. Both will likely be exponentially better than the infamous 50 Shades of Grey, hitting theatres on Valentine's Day weekend.