Why Is There Only One American Actor in a Movie Set in NY?

Posted on August 20, 2012 at 3:55 pm

Cosmopolis” is a new movie based on a book by American author Don DeLillo.  It is a story about Americans who work in the world of finance and takes place entirely in New York City.  It stars British actor Robert Pattinson, best known for another American role, Edward in the “Twilight” series.

A number of British actors play Americans very convincingly, including Hugh Laurie in “House,” Tom Hardy in next week’s “Lawless,” and Christian Bale as Batman in the Dark Knight movies.  And Americans play Brits, too, like Gwenyth Paltrow in “Shakespeare in Love,” “Emma,” and “Sliding Doors” and Meryl Streep’s Oscar-winning role as Margaret Thatcher in “The Iron Lady.”

I’m in favor of casting the best actor for the role without regard to his or her native accent.  But there’s more to the story in the casting for “Cosmopolis.”  According to Slate, director David Cronenberg explained that the movie was a co-production financed by Canada and France, and so was limited to just one American actor.  He wisely chose Paul Giamatti for a small but crucial role.  Pattinson’s EU passport qualified as a part of the French component of the film.

I understand that compromise is a part of any project as expensive as this one.  But I am sorry to think that decisions so central to the quality of a film are being made for reasons that have so little to do with the quality of the film.

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Commentary Understanding Media and Pop Culture

Tribute: Director Tony Scott

Posted on August 20, 2012 at 9:33 am

We had some very sad news this morning.  Director Tony Scott has died at age 68, an apparent suicide.  Like his older brother, Ridley Scott, Tony will be remembered for a powerfully imaginative visual style.  He is best known for testosterone-fueled films like “Top Gun,” “Crimson Tide,” “Days of Thunder,” “True Romance,” and “Enemy of the State,” but he worked with his brother and other directors on a wide range of productions that included cult classic “Donny Darko” and the hit television series “The Good Wife.”  May his memory be a blessing.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qAfbp3YX9F0
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Directors Tribute

Women In and About Hollywood

Posted on August 20, 2012 at 8:00 am

The New York Times convened a panel of women who work in Hollywood to talk about the barriers they face.

For the top 250 domestic films of 2011, only 18 percent of behind-the-camera positions, including producer and director, were held by women. Hollywood is still mostly men making movies for men.   Manohla Dargis recently said that one problem was Hollywood’s lack of faith in movies for women, “which paints women as fickle instead of reliable repeat customers.’’

I especially liked the comments of Melissa Silverstein, who points out that studio executives are too quick to attribute the failure of any women-focused films to a lack of audience rather than treating them as evidence of poor quality of the product like “John Carter” or “Battleship.”  She says, “Men fail up in Hollywood and women fail out.”

Hollywood is one of the only industries that does not take the female consumer seriously. It does not cater to or produce nearly enough content for women, who make upwards of 80 percent of all consumer-spending decisions. Forget trying to find movies if you are in your 40s and female. It’s like you don’t even exist. But the reality is that women in midlife finally have time to go to the movies when they are freed from raising the kids. Honestly, if Hollywood could wrap its collective brain around the fact that women want to see and talk about movies just as much as men do, then more jobs for women in film would follow.

“Brave’s” Brenda Chapman spoke candidly about how difficult it was for her to be replaced as director of the film, which would have been the first Pixar movie directed by a woman and which was her original idea.

It has been a heartbreakingly hard road for me over the last year and a half. When Pixar took me off of “Brave” – a story that came from my heart, inspired by my relationship with my daughter – it was devastating.  To keep my name attached to ‘Brave,’ I was persistent and stuck to my principles. Animation directors are not protected like live-action directors, who have the Directors Guild to go to battle for them. We are replaced on a regular basis – and that was a real issue for me. This was a story that I created, which came from a very personal place, as a woman and a mother. To have it taken away and given to someone else, and a man at that, was truly distressing on so many levels. But in the end, my vision came through in the film. It simply wouldn’t have worked without it (and didn’t at one point), and I knew this at my core. So I kept my head held high, stayed committed to my principles, and was supported by some strong women (and men!). In the end, it worked out, and I’m very proud of the movie, and that I ultimately stood up for myself, just like Merida, the protagonist in “Brave.”  Sometimes women express an idea and are shot down, only to have a man express essentially the same idea and have it broadly embraced. Until there is a sufficient number of women executives in high places, this will continue to happen.

There is some talk of a female “Expendables,” but I am pretty sure that is not what these women have in mind.

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Behind the Scenes

VOD: Bringing More Choices Home

Posted on August 19, 2012 at 3:58 pm

Washington Post movie critic Ann Hornaday has a very good piece in today’s paper about video on demand.  Like Ann, I would much rather see a movie in a theater.  The experience of taking the actual journey to a special place away from the phone and other distractions of home and sharing those moments in the dark with others who are there at the same moment for the same purpose cannot be replicated by watching in your house while you do laundry and sort the mail.  But like Hornaday, I love the availability of small movies by VOD that would not otherwise reach local theaters.  As Morgan Spurlock told me when we spoke about his Comic-Con documentary:

With “Pom Wonderful Presents The Greatest Movie Ever Sold,” we had so much press leading up to that film, and the week before the movie opened I was on Conan, Colbert, Jimmy Kimmel, all within ten days and then the movie opened on 18 screens.  So the majority of the people in the United States couldn’t even see the movie. I’m a film-maker, and I have yet to have a movie show in my own home town in West Virginia where I grew up. There’s got to be a better way—especially when it comes to documentaries.

If you’re not making a big, giant, huge mainstream Hunger-Games-esque film that’s going out on 3000 screens, how do you start to compete with those movies? For me, the best way to compete is by collapsing the window, giving anyone across the country who wants to see this film access to it immediately. You know, there’s a great line in ‘The Greatest Movie Ever Sold,” “In today’s world, in today’s media landscape, there is a cultural decay rate of ideas that is about two weeks.” So you basically have two weeks to capitalize on whatever surge you have around your moment, your film, your music, whatever it is, get people to get excited about it, to see it, to consume it, to share it—because really soon, something else will jump in there—there’ll be another movie, there’ll be something else that’s the conversation driver. So, for me this weekend, I just wanted to make sure that anyone who wanted to see this film could see it.

And as Hornaday puts it:

here low-budget independent films huddle for warmth against encroaching extinction, the simultaneous release of films in theaters and on VOD — rather than the traditional months-long window between the two — has proved to be a sustaining, even crucial survival strategy.

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Independent

“Magic Schoolbus: The Complete Series” — Contest for Teachers Only

Posted on August 19, 2012 at 3:55 pm

This year’s back-to-school contest for teachers only is really special — Magic School Bus: The Complete Series.  Join Ms. Frizzle and her students on field trips that go to outer space, inside the human body, back in time to see the dinosaurs, and learn about science, history, and the pleasures of curiosity.

To enter: send me an email at moviemom@moviemom.com with “Schoolbus” in the subject line and tell me the name of your school and the grade you teach.  Don’t forget your address!  I will pick a winner at random on August 26.

 

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Contests and Giveaways Early Readers Elementary School
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