Archive for June, 2008

Paul Newman IS Battling Cancer, Says the Actor’s Friend

Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

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This morning I was happy to read a post at the Orlando Sentinel, which said that they spoke to Paul Newman's agent, Toni Howard, and she says the reports that he is terminally ill with lung cancer are "not true."

For a while, official confirmation had seemed inevitable. Paul Newman had pulled out of production of John Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men, which he was slated to direct for Connecticut's Westport Country Playhouse. He looked frail during a Polo for Children benefit with Martha Stewart. And the most brow-raising of them all -- he handed over his ownership of Newman's Own to charity.

So, the rumors started to bubble up -- he was diagnosed at a center in New York, was getting treatment, was terminally ill ... so on and so forth. But then I started finding reports that were much more cryptic, saying that he is"doing nicely." Now, Jam Showbiz!/AP reports that friend and writer A.E. Hotchner (who helped start the salad dressing company) says that he is, indeed battling cancer. "I know that it's a form of cancer," Hotchner told The Associated Press. "It's a form of cancer and he's dealing with it." He went on to say: "He's battling. He's doing all the right stuff. Paul is a fighter. He seems to be going through a good period right now. Everybody is hopeful. That's all we know." Mr. Newman, our thoughts are with you.

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Review – The Incredible Hulk (2008)

Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

Dave Corkery

Let’s start this review the pretentious, profound way. With a quote:

“Hulk…. Smash!” - The Incredible Hulk

Wise words there. And words that nicely sum up the intentions of Louis Letterier and co. when they decided to have their own go at bringing Marvel’s Green Giant to the big screen. “More action!” they told us, “More smashing!” they said. The fans crossed their fingers, the pessimists said ‘why bother’, but most people agreed that with safe-bet Edward Norton penning and starring in Marvel’s second solo gambit, this would be a cleaner, smarter flick than Ang Lee’s 2003 let-down. And, of course, with more action.

Gary Coleman Wrestles a Taco

Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

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Don't worry, this story isn't about a former television star battling food issues. Gary Coleman, still best known for TV's Diff'rent Strokes, but beloved by some of us for his immortal film work (On the Right Track, Jimmy the Kid), was spotted in downtown Dallas this week fighting a taco.

Dallas Morning News reporters on their lunch break stumbled onto the odd scene. "We noticed a couple of people engaged in a struggle for money, and not far from them, a short black guy tumbled around on the ground with a person in a taco costume," Tawnell Hobbs said. "When the little guy emerged from the brawl, I was shocked to see that it was Gary Coleman ... I whispered to my colleagues that they were likely making a commercial -- but another guy next to me whispered that it was a movie and not to laugh." Please, please, somebody tell me you have this on video!

The movie in question is a mockumentary entitled A Tribute to Big Red. A DMN reader found a casting call for extras that included a synopsis: "This is the hilarious story and behind-the-scenes look of an epic competition with surprising twists and turns, as well as personal trials, tribulations, and triumphs of those involved." I've searched but not found anything else on the movie, but now I can't wait to see it!

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Robin Williams gets political

Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

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Two tales of New England's darker side are coming to movie theaters.

Per the Hollywood Reporter, Robin Williams has tentatively signed up to play a corrupt politican in "The Prince of Providence," a bio-pic drama about Providence R.I. mayor Buddy Cianci. The film's based on Michael Stanton's 2003 book of the same name and will star Oliver Platt as Cianci. David Mamet wrote the script and longtime Mamet collaborator Michael Corrente (the wonderful "Outside Providence", the less so "Brooklyn Rules,") will direct; shooting starts in Providence later this summer.

The film's been a long time in the making; as this pungent New York Observer article from 2005 notes, Paul Giamatti was at one time considering playing Cianci. Guess John Adams felt like a better fit. A recent blog entry from the Providence Journal, where Stanton has won a Pulitzer for his investigative journalism, mentions that Nic Cage and Russell Crowe were in consideration too. I don't know -- looking at those pics above proves that no one may wear Buddy's hair as well as Platt.

Also, director Brian DePalma has signed on to direct "The Boston Stranglers," based on Susan Kelly's 1996 non-fiction book that claimed that Albert DeSalvo was not the man who murdered 13 Boston-area women between 1962 and 1964 -- or at least not the only man (thus the title). No cast or start date has been set. Think DePalma will be able to replicate the terse Joe Friday-meets-the Hub vibe of Richard Fleischer's 1968 "The Boston Strangler," starring Tony Curtis (see below)? He can't do any worse than "The Black Dahlia" or "Redacted."

Interview: M. Night Shyamalan

Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

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He goes by "Night," but it's hard to dispute his sunny disposition. Just a few minutes into a conversation with M. Night Shyamalan in a New York City hotel room yesterday, it was obvious to me that the director has managed to occupy such a unique niche in the Hollywood landscape because he's immediately likable. Of course, a little movie released in 1999 called The Sixth Sense didn't hurt, either.

After landing two Oscar nominations and international acclaim for his masterful ghost story, Shyamalan continued to market himself as a brand. Since then, the results have been mixed. Signs was an indisputable hit. Unbreakable has its supporters. Lady in the Water? Not so much. But that failure hasn't prevented the filmmaker from dealing with audacious material: His latest movie, The Happening, finds a married couple (Mark Wahlberg and Zooey Deschanel) thrust into a world where people inexplicably become suicidal after getting struck by an ominous, unseen toxin. Forces of evil usually remain unseen in Shyamalan's films, and The Happening is no exception to that rule. I spoke to the 37-year-old Philadelphia resident about the personal philosophies guiding his career choices, the polarized reactions to his work, and what the future will bring.

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Will ‘Hancock’ and Marvel Ruin ‘Iron Man 2’?

Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

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As you Iron Man fans know, the number one question everyone's been throwing at Favreau and Robert Downey Jr. has centered on which storyline we might see in Iron Man 2. The popular consensus was the famous Demon in a Bottle storyline, where poor Tony Stark hits rock bottom in his battle with alcoholism.

But that storyline might actually be in jeopardy due to another summer superhero movie: Hancock. Favreau told Collider, "The comic book fans might see Demon in a Bottle as a fresh story line but I haven't seen Hancock yet. From what I've seen it seems there is a lot of imagery that seems to be shared. Him flying through billboards and things. The idea of the hero whose biggest enemy is himself, and him fighting through his demons, you want to come at the audience with something fresh. You don't want to feel like you are echoing something that somebody else is doing." Hopefully, Hancock will keep clear of Stark's territory, and we might end up with that fresh storyline after all. Pop on over to Collider to read the rest of the interview.

Oh, but we're not done! Earlier today, Erik shared the news that Favreau was being very vocal on MySpace regarding the Iron Man 2 release date and how there needed to be more time to create a successful sequel. He mentioned that perhaps Iron Man should take the three-year route, like Nolan's Batman films. Then, IESB dropped the bomb that the reason Marvel hadn't signed Favreau yet was because he wanted more money and they didn't feel he deserved it. Apparently, Marvel's David Maisel thinks an Iron Man sequel would kill with or without Favreau. Read more about that here.

Continue reading Will 'Hancock' and Marvel Ruin 'Iron Man 2'?

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The triumph of product integration

Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

At a USC forum last Saturday, a writer asked whether it was worth considering product integration when writing a script. She said her project would lend itself really well to a major brand like Starbucks.

I told her that I’d often heard plans of trying to bring advertisers in on the ground floor of a movie, but that it never seemed to work out. The gap between commercials and big-screen entertainment was just too wide.

Well, I stand corrected.

Lee, Eastwood at war over war and race

Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

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In a surprise undercard to McCain-Obama, the flap started last month at Cannes when Spike Lee pointed out that neither of Clint Eastwood's two Iwo Jima movies -- "The Flags of Our Fathers" and "Letters from Iwo Jima" -- featured black actors. Lee made his comments while promoting "Miracle at St. Anna," (pictured above) his own upcoming WWII drama about the all-black 92nd "Buffalo" Infantry Division and the four of its soldiers who save a boy in a Tuscan village. Lee's observation set off a firestorm that's still burning. Eastwood himself responded in a very interesting interview published Friday in the British newspaper The Guardian. ?The story is ?Flags of Our Fathers,? the famous flag-raising picture, and they didn?t do that,? Eastwood said. ?If I go ahead and put an African-American actor in there, they?d say, ?This guy?s lost his mind.??

Now the controversy's focal point is Eastwood's insistence that "a guy like him should shut his face." Lee, in turn, responded with a comment published on ABCNEWS.com. "First of all, the man is not my father and we're not on a plantation either," he said. "He's a great director. He makes his films, I make my films. The thing about it though, I didn't personally attack him. And a comment like 'a guy like that should shut his face' -- come on Clint, come on. He sounds like an angry old man right there."

The argument between these two is a lot less ridiculous than it seems. Some observers want to frame the disagreement, unfairly, as a matter of Lee's envy with Eastwood's Oscar success. What's being debated is the factual record as refracted through the movies. Where's the line separating historical accuracy from artistic license? Eastwood's defense of his casting makes sense: Where in his films would these omitted black soldiers go? In bit parts, most likely. But Lee's greater issue, while aimed at Eastwood's movies, is really about the movies themselves: Why haven't black soldiers figured into more WWII films. "St. Anna" could work as both a rebuke and the beginning of some larger, necessary expansion.

What's really incredible to me in that Guardian interview is how animatedly aggravated Eastwood sounds. It's been a while since we've seen that Clint in a movie. He's miffed about Lee in a way that underscores an interesting difference in perception.

In 1999's "True Crime" Eastwood directed himself as a disgraced reporter redeemed by his efforts to get a black guy (Isaiah Washington) off death row. The movie is about Eastwood's character more than it is Washington's and at some point he tells one character that none of this business has anything to do with race. Eastwood's stance in that film sounds defensively full of hubris. He could hear what the black characters were saying to him. He just didn't buy it.

It'd be terrific if some of this fight about race made into Eastwood's planned next movie about how Nelson Mandela parlayed South Africa's victory in the 1995 Rugby World Cup to promote national unity.

Timur Bekmambetov Punks the World With Viral Video

Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

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For a few weeks now, a grainy video has been circling the Internet of an office worker going absolutely insane. It originated on Break.com, and I've included it after the jump for your critical enjoyment.

Those fearing that their cubicle neighbor might engage in similar hysterics can breathe easy -- it was all a sly bit of viral marketing from Timur Bekmambetov for Wanted. He revealed the stunt over on his personal blog, where he allegedly had a good laugh at the gullibility of the West. I'm not seeing any geographic mockery here, so quite possibly he took that down.










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I Served the King of England – Trailer

Tuesday, June 10th, 2008
  I Served the King of England - Trailer
Jan Dítì (Ivan Barnev) is short in height, but high in ambition. To put it bluntly, the young provincial waiter wants to become a millionaire. And he knows just how to do it: by hearing everything, seeing everything, and creating opportunities at every turn. Armed with this knowledge and an irrepressible wish to please, he soon leaves his first place of employment, a pub, for a luxury brothel and, finally moving onto an elegant Art Nouveau Prague restaurant. But by the late 1930s, things are changing: Hitler has taken the Sudetenland region and is breaking apart Czechoslovakia. Jan falls in love with Líza (Julia Jentsch), a Sudeten German proud of her Aryan blood. They marry, and soon after Líza is sent to serve on the Polish front, while Jan remains behind to serve as a nurse in a Nazi SS Research Hospital, but when she returns, she has a fortune in rare stamps that Jews had ‘left behind’ … After Líza’s less than heroic death, Jan sells the stamps and becomes … a millionaire. But he only has three years to enjoy his fortune: the new Communist regime puts him behind bars for 15 years, one for each of his millions… Upon his release from jail, Jan is sent to live in a decrepit border town. Here Jan reflects on the events that have shaped his life – and to reflect on what might have happened if he had played a different role in these events.
Directed by: Jiri Menzel
Starring: Ivan Barnev, Oldrich Kaiser, Julia Jentsch