Sue Naegle, my TV agent, is the new president of HBO Entertainment. I’ll miss her as an agent, but I’m very excited to see what she does with the network.
Archive for April, 2008
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Thursday, April 10th, 2008Northeaster
Thursday, April 10th, 2008
I spent five days in Maine, writing and researching my next project. A few observations, in bullet point form:
Part of my motivation for visiting Maine was that I’ve always claimed to have visited all 48 contiguous states, thanks to endless summer roadtrips with my family growing up. But my mom recently told me that we’d never been to Maine, which kicked in my set-completion instinct.
I was reluctant to try to pronounce any place names in front of people. Bar Harbor is on Mount Desert Island. “Desert” is pronounced like “dessert,” which conjures images of a fantasyland of fudge and sprinkles.
Even though a screenwriter isn’t trying to capture an accent per se, it’s important to choose words and patterns that can work with the accent when spoken by the actor. (”Down the road apiece. Can’t miss it.”)
That said, I feel lucky that this won’t be a big accent movie, because several Mainers were adamant that Hollywood always gets the accent wrong. Which is probably true. But what I resisted pointing out was that no two Mainers I met had the same accent. It’s all over the place, particularly when you talk to people under 30.
Going somewhere to write has become my standard operating procedure. I barricade myself somewhere without TV, internet or familial distractions, and crank through as many hand-written pages as possible in three or four days. I fax these pages back to Los Angeles, both for safety and to let my assistant type them up. This time, I faxed to an eFax account, which had the bonus of creating a digital backup in .pdf form.
I took a lot of photos, which you can see on Flickr. It wasn’t really location scouting — we’re not at that point yet. But since there’s already a director on board, it can give him some sense of the place.
One place had flies. A lot of flies.
Man, I was lucky not to be flying on American. Or ATA. Or SkyBus. Or Aloha. (Though the last one would have been an unlikely choice.)
Another reason for the trip: we had to have our house tented for termites. This is probably alien to readers in colder climates, but in Southern California, termites can become pervasive enough that you need to nuke the house. Generally, you do it when the house is sold (and thus empty), but we’re not moving anytime soon, so we had to bite the bullet. But it looked cool, like a Christo project.
Anthony Minghella lives on
Thursday, April 10th, 2008

This just in: the decidedly odd couple of Shia LeBoeuf and Julie Christie will appear together in a segment of the upcoming anthology film "New York, I Love You" that was penned by Anthony Minghella before his unexpected death last month. The Hollywood Reporter has the details.
Minghella was intending to direct as well; "Elizabeth" helmer Shekhar Kapur has stepped in to take his place.
Currently filming, the film's a spin-off of the recent omnibus "Paris, Je T'aime," which unloosed 18 directors (and a lot of actors) on 18 stories set in the City of Light. It's a franchise now, apparently, with entries spotlighting Shanghai, South America, and Africa to follow in due time.
The directors for the segments in "New York, I Love You" -- I do hope they've got the rights to the great LCD Soundsystem song of that name -- are an art-house dream: Mira Nair ("The Namesake"), Fatih Akin ("Head-On"), Yvan Attal ("Happily Ever After"), Andrei Zvyagintsev ("The Return"), Joshua Marston ("Maria Full of Grace"). Natalie Portman and Scarlett Johansson will both be making their directing debuts; Portman has already fallen afoul of the local Hasidic community by casting one of their own as her husband (he was pressured to quit).
The most intriguing part of the Minghella-penned segment -- in which movie legend Christie and Indiana Jones plaything LeBeouf are cast as two people who meet in a hotel that is "between worlds" -- is that someone compares it to the director's early masterpiece "Truly, Madly, Deeply." Okay, count me in.
Will Some of Heath’s Joker Scenes Be… Bagged?
Thursday, April 10th, 2008Filed under: RumorMonger, Celebrities and Controversy, Comic/Superhero/Geek, Remakes and Sequels
Unlike The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus, Heath Ledger completed his scenes for The Dark Knight before his shocking death. But one of the first questions to pop up in the aftermath was how this would affect the film -- could viewers stomach his portrayal in the same way? It's impossible to eradicate thoughts of his death from the mind as the news continues to grow and audiences finally break through the doors to see for themselves.However, according to Cinema Blend, there have already been screenings, and they've presented problems for the dark and sure-to-be-awesome film. One scene in particular has been bothering audiences to the point that it might be completely removed from the film.
Hit the jump to find out more, but move on if you want no details about the brief scene.
Continue reading Will Some of Heath's Joker Scenes Be... Bagged?
Permalink | Email this | CommentsFour Minutes – Trailer
Thursday, April 10th, 2008![]() | Four Minutes - Trailer Jenny is young. Her life is over. She killed someone. And she would do it again. When an 80-year-old piano teacher discovers the girl’s secret, her brutality and her dreams, she decides to transform her pupil into the musical wunderkind she once was. Directed by: Chris Kraus Starring: Monica Bleibtreu, Hannah Herzsprung, Sven Pippig, Richy Müller, Jasmin Tabatabai |
The Fall – Trailer
Thursday, April 10th, 2008![]() | The Fall - Trailer Los Angeles, circa 1920‘s, a little immigrant girl (Catinca Untaru) finds herself in a hospital recovering from a fall. She strikes up a friendship with a bedridden man (Lee Pace) who captivates her with a whimsical story that removes her far from the hospital doldrums into the exotic landscapes of her imagination. Making sure he keeps the girl interested in the story he interweaves her family and people she likes from the hospital into his tale. Directed by: Tarsem Singh Starring: Lee Pace, Catinca Untaru, Justine Waddell, Julian Bleach, Leo Bill |
Mongol – Trailer
Thursday, April 10th, 2008![]() | Mongol - Trailer Award-winning Russian filmmaker Sergei Bodrov (PRISONER OF THE MOUNTAINS) illuminates the life and legend of Genghis Khan in his stunning historical epic, MONGOL. Based on leading scholarly accounts and written by Bodrov and Arif Aliyev, MONGOL delves into the dramatic and harrowing early years of the ruler who was born as Temudgin in 1162. As it follows Temudgin from his perilous childhood to the battle that sealed his destiny, the film paints a multidimensional portrait of the future conqueror, revealing him not as the evil brute of hoary stereotype, but as an inspiring, fearless and visionary leader. MONGOL shows us the making of an extraordinary man, and the foundation on which so much of his greatness rested: his relationship with his wife, Borte, his lifelong love and most trusted advisor. Directed by: Sergei Bodrov Starring: Tadanobu Asano, Khulan Chuluun, Honglei Sun |
Film Clips: Where are the Movies Where Unattractive Women Score Hot Guys?
Wednesday, April 9th, 2008Filed under: Celebrities and Controversy, Columns, Film Clips

One of my favorite bloggers, Jim Emerson, gives Hollywood Elsewhere's Jeff Wells a virtual bitchslap for a recent post Wells made on his favorite topic: how he doesn't believe guys who look "normal" (i.e., to him, fat and ugly) really score with beautiful women. In a post last month titled "Eclipse of the Hunk," Wells starts off by talking about the opening of the Judd Apatow-produced Forgetting Sarah Marshall, then goes on to mourn the loss of sexy, buff leading men and the success of Judd Apatow's films, in which dorky guys like Seth Rogen and Jason Segel get the hot chicks. Emerson excerpts my favorite quote from Wells piece:
"Taking their place are guys who look like real guys, which means almost never slender or buffed, and frequently chunky, overweight or obese. And usually with roundish faces with half-hearted beard growth, hair on their backs, man-boobs with tit hairs, blemishes, and always horribly dressed -- open-collared plaid dress shirts, low-thread-count T-shirts with lame-ass slogans or promotions on the chest, long shorts and sandals (or flip-flops), monkey feet, unpedicured toenails."
Continue reading Film Clips: Where are the Movies Where Unattractive Women Score Hot Guys?
Permalink | Email this | CommentsDavid in iD
Wednesday, April 9th, 2008d1 Model Management continues their collection of covers with David’s new iD with Agyness Dean. With VMan, Another and now iD, expect David and his adorable braces to be shining up many more of the men’s fashion bibles.

Photo: Alasdair McLellan for iD magazine

Photo: Alasdair McLellan for iD magazine

Photo: Alasdair McLellan for iD magazine
Jason Reitman and Kevin Smith Become Sports Bloggers
Wednesday, April 9th, 2008Filed under: Sports, Celebrities and Controversy
No, this isn't an acting gig for the two directors, nor is it a new collaborative effort to come after a little Zack and Miri porno. It is actual, real-life sports blogging. Yahoo/AP reports that both Jason Reitman and Kevin Smith will join The Hills' Lauren Conrad, and country music star Dierks Bentley to write blogs professing their love of hockey for the National Hockey League's website. This is cool and all, but where's Mike Myers?Well, at least there's the Juno director and a man who loves watching kids say "aboot." Reitman says: "I'd come to really love the game and I was just a little upset because I felt there was more of an opportunity, for particularly Americans, to know about the game and follow the game." For the director, who is a fan of two teams that didn't make the playoffs (the Canucks and the Kings), he plans to "write a kind of mythical blog about what the Canucks and Kings would be doing had they still been in. In my version, for the first time in NHL history, the Canucks and the Kings will be the first two Western conference teams to actually meet in the Stanley Cup finals." There is no word on what Smith's plans for the blog are, but considering the fact that the filmmaker is an old-school blogger, it should be fun.Permalink | Email this | Comments


