When Tragedy Collides With Entertainment

Posted on July 27, 2012 at 9:01 am

Both nationwide movie releases this week were intended to be light entertainment and both found themselves having to respond to real-life events that they inadvertently evoke.  “The Watch,” an action comedy with Ben Stiller, Vince Vaughn, and Jonah Hill, was originally titled “Neighborhood Watch” until the Treyvon Martin shooting by a self-styled “neighborhood watch” member prompted the studio to change the name.  And “Step Up Revolution,” the fourth in the series that features wildly creative and highly stylized dance numbers, jarred preview audiences with a scene featuring dancers wearing gas masks that triggered associations with the tragic shooting in Colorado last weekend.  Reportedly, the studio considered deleting the scene.  It is no longer featured in the trailer and advertising, but the scene is still in the movie.  Summit said, “Because of last week’s tragic events in Colorado, Summit immediately removed television advertising that briefly showcased that scene from the film. The scene also briefly appeared in a trailer released three months ago that the studio is no longer actively servicing. Having taken these steps, Summit will open this inspirational, nonviolent film in theatres nationwide this weekend as originally edited.”

Some “The Dark Knight Rises” shows were preceded by a trailer for “Gangster Squad” that included a shoot-out in a theater.  The trailer has been pulled from release and the movie’s opening has been postponed.  It takes years to make a movie and there is no way to anticipate what the headlines will be when it is ready for release.  “Step Up Revolution” reflects last year’s headlines with elements of the Occupy demonstrations and when it was being filmed the people who made it could not have anticipated that the gas masks would have painful associations.  Unfortunately, sometimes audiences who go to theaters for an escape find themselves sharply reminded of real life.

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Commentary

Ruby Sparks

Posted on July 26, 2012 at 6:04 pm

B+
Lowest Recommended Age: Mature High Schooler
MPAA Rating: Rated R for language including some sexual references and some drug use
Profanity: Very strong and explicit language
Alcohol/ Drugs: Drinking, some drug use
Violence/ Scariness: Intense and emotional confrontations
Diversity Issues: None
Date Released to Theaters: July 27, 2012
Date Released to DVD: October 29, 2012
Amazon.com ASIN: B008220BA2

The idea of bringing a dream significant other to life goes back at least as far as the ancient Greek myth of the sculptor Pygmalion, who created a statue so beautiful he fell in love with her.  Modern versions and variations include  the sublime (“My Fair Lady,” based on a play by George Bernard Shaw called “Pygmalion”) and the sillly (“Mannequin,” “Weird Science,” and “Mr. Right”).  “Ruby Sparks,” written by its star, Zoe Kazan, is a smart and endearing variation on the theme with emotional resonance that goes beyond the usual “be careful what you wish for” fairy tale.  It plays with the very notion of the prevalence of the girl whose job in the movie is to be the life force (memorably termed the “manic pixie dream girl” by critic Nathan Rabin).  The story may be about the writer who dreams up Kazan’s character, but it is Kazan’s voice telling the story.

Paul Dano (Kazan’s real-life boyfriend) plays Calvin (the names are well chosen), a writer of retro tastes (he uses a typewriter and drives a vintage car) who dresses in beiges and is struggling to write again after publishing an influential and critically acclaimed best-seller when he was a teenager.  His therapist (Elliott Gould)  has suggested that Calvin get a dog to help him go out and meet people.  And he tells Calvin to just write something, anything, even something awful, to get going.  Calvin gets caught up describing a warm-hearted and high-spirited girl named Ruby Sparks.  And the next morning, when he goes downstairs, there she is, matter-of-factly making breakfast, as though she is there every morning.

He understandably thinks he has lost his mind.  But then it turns out other people see her, too.  And it turns out that when he goes back upstairs to type additional information, she becomes whatever he writes.  When he writes that she speaks French, she speaks French.  She is literally a dream come true.  And at first, that seems perfect.

Kazan the screenwriter understands Calvin’s conflict.  He wants Ruby to be exactly what he has created, but he wants her to love him of her own volition, and he understands, at some level, that he cannot have both.  “I want to be what’s making her happy without making her happy,” he says.

Kazan’s fantasy is soundly based and superbly structured.  As Ruby expands Calvin’s plain, ordered world, their scope widens to include Calvin’s family and colleagues.  They visit his beaming child-of-the-universe mother (Annette Bening, embracing the caftan) and her sculptor boyfriend (a marvelous Antonio Banderas as Mort) and attend his publisher’s party.  Ruby becomes more and more her own person, which makes Calvin become his own person, too.

Directors Valerie Faris and Jonathan Dayton (“Little Miss Sunshine”)  make this world believable and inviting.   They keep the fantasy ligh but understand the emotional core that makes it bloom.

Parents should know this film has strong and explicit language, some crude references, brief drug use, and a non-explicit sexual situation.

Family discussion: Where did Ruby come from?  What other stories do you know about people who created their dream significant other?

If you like this, try: “Stranger than Fiction” and “happythankyoumoreplease”

 

 

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Tribute: Frank Pierson

Posted on July 25, 2012 at 4:12 pm

One of Hollywood’s most distinguished and influential writers, Frank Pierson, died this week at age 87.  He won an Oscar for “Dog Day Afternoon,” and was nominated for the comic western “Cat Ballou.”  The American Film Institute included his line of dialogue as 11th on their all-time great list: “What we have here is a failure to communicate.”  Pierson also served as the President of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and was a devoted mentor to aspiring screeenwriters.

The New York Times obituary has a telling story about his work on “Dog Day Afternoon” that sheds light on his exceptional insight and character:

Mr. Pierson said he struggled mightily with that script — and he later used his struggle as a teaching tool. He told students that he had been unable to capture the essence of the central character, the leader of an inept gang of bank robbers who winds up taking hostages.

He broke through after concluding that the thief, based on a real-life robber and played by Al Pacino, was a pleaser, someone trying in his flawed way to make others happy.

I spoke to Mamie Mitchell, who worked with Pierson, and told me of his graciousness, generosity, and class.  She said,

I had the great good fortune to edit the book  A Nation Lost And Found: 1936 America Remembered by Ordinary and Extraordinary People, for Frank Pierson and Stanley Sheinbaum, in 2000-2002.   At our first lunch meeting to discuss the overview of the book, I took the opportunity to ask Frank who he thought were the best screenwriters in Hollywood.  Mind you this was summer 2000.  He said, “Aaron Sorkin, David Milch….there are many good screenwriters, the problem is that there are hardly any people left in Hollywood that can recognize good writing”.

Frank had great hope and passion for this book….unfortunately 9/11 coincided with the release of  “A Nation Lost and Found” and it was glossed over.  In this current time in the history of our country, it would be wise reading to reflect back on 1936 and the resilience, engagement, awareness and perseverance of the people at that time. The book holds up.
Pierson, who began his career as a journalist, had a reporter’s ability to observe and eye for detail.  His films reflect a broad and compassionate humanity.  May his memory be a blessing.
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Tribute Writers

Tribute: Sherman Hemsley

Posted on July 25, 2012 at 11:59 am

Sherman Hemsley, best known for playing the outspoken George Jefferson on the classic Norman Lear sit-com “The Jeffersons,” died this week at 74.  It was a challenge to play the role of George Jefferson, who was often referred to but never seen for many episodes of one of the most popular and influential television shows of all time, “All in the Family.”  Creator Norman Lear wanted to come up with a worthy foil the his conservative and bigoted Archie Bunker played by Carroll O’Connor.  The idea of a black man who was as prejudiced against white people as Bunker was against non-whites was surprising and provocative.  At first, viewers only heard about George from his wife, played by Isabel Sanford.  But when Hemsley stepped into the role he made the peppery and sometimes arrogant character who moved like a bantam rooster so appealing soon he and Sanford were starring in the spin-off, with its unforgettable theme song.  It ran for 11 years.  Hemsley later starred in “Amen” as a church deacon and as George Jefferson again in “Tyler Perry’s House of Payne.”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L09qnRfZY-k

The New York Times noted

High-strung and irrepressible, George Jefferson quickly became one of America’s most popular television characters, a high-energy, combative black man who backed down to no one — something that had rarely been seen on television. At the same time, however, he was vain, snobbish and bigoted (“honky” was one of his favorite epithets directed at whites), and flaunted his self-regard like a badge. Each week, his wife or their irreverent maid, Florence (played by Marla Gibbs), would step up to scuttle his wrongheaded schemes or deflate his delusions of grandeur.

Hemsley’s great gift was to make us understand that beneath his bluster, George Jefferson loved his family and worked hard for his success.  He surrounded himself with people who were not above putting him down and at some level he enjoyed it.  May his memory be a blessing.

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