The Sensational Hollywood Costume Exhibit Comes to LA

Posted on September 28, 2014 at 8:00 am

hollywood costume
Copyright 1998 Miramax

The gorgeous Hollywood Costume exhibit that has been getting rave reviews and massive crowds at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London is coming to Los Angeles, its final stop.  The costumes will be on display from October 2, 2014 to March 2, 2015 in the historic Wilshire May Company Building, the future location of the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures, at Wilshire Boulevard and Fairfax Avenue. The companion book, Hollywood Costume is by curator Deborah Nadoolman Landis, who created Indiana Jones’ iconic look as well as the costumes for Michael Jackson’s “Thriller.”  The exhibit includes more than 145 costumes, many from Oscar-winning designers, with an additional 40 added to the original show, including  Jared Leto’s costume from Dallas Buyers Club (Kurt and Bart, 2013) – a recent acquisition from the Academy’s Collection – as well as costumes from such recent releases including The Hunger Games (Judianna Makovsky, 2012), Django Unchained  (Sharen Davis, 2012), Lee Daniels’ The Butler  (Ruth E. Carter, 2013), The Wolf of Wall Street  (Sandy Powell, 2013), American Hustle  (Michael Wilkinson, 2013), and The Great Gatsby  (Catherine Martin, 2013).  

Costumes are more than just pretty.  They are a vitally important a part of telling the story.  They help to define the characters and show us where to look.  It is very satisfying to see the brilliance of these designers, from Edith Head and Adrian in the classic films of the 1930’s-50’s to contemporary stars like Colleen Atwood and Catherine Martin.

Here’s a television report on the Victoria and Albert exhibit.

Deborah Nadoolman Landis talks about the highlights of the show.   Be sure to look at the note from the designer of Marilyn Monroe’s iconic dress from “The Seven Year Itch.”  It says, “I’m going to have my precious baby standing over a grate.  What would I give her to wear that would blow in the breeze and be fun and pretty?”

Of course, this is fun and pretty.  And unforgettable.

And here’s an interview with some of the top costume designers working today.

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Behind the Scenes Film History

Boxtrolls: Interviews at Comic-Con

Posted on September 24, 2014 at 8:00 am

boxtrolls bug lunch
Copyright Nell Minow 2014

In honor of the release of “The Boxtrolls” this week, I’m sharing some of the photos I took in July at Comic-Con, where I interviewed the cast and filmmakers and attended an “Eat Like a Boxtroll” lunch made up of insects. Star Isaac Hempstead Wright (of “Game of Thrones”) was clearly not excited about eating bugs, no matter how delectably prepared, but he was a very good sport.

Copyright 2014 Nell Minow
Copyright 2014 Nell Minow

I admit, I tried some grubs, but drew the line at anything crunchy or with legs.

copyright Nell Minow 2014
copyright Nell Minow 2014

Later, I sat with Sir Ben Kingsley, who plays the villain, to talk about performing all by himself, in a studio near his home in England. He described his character as “a social climber. He spends a lot of his energy trying to get into that club that doesn’t really want him to join. It’s a small, exclusive clique of guys who run the community. They’re quite reluctant to let him in. So he invents an enemy — politicians often do this — and says, ‘I’ll rid you of that enemy.'” He wants to power himself by destroying these very sweet, harmless creatures.” He was especially happy to work with LAIKA studios, producers of “Coraline” and “Paranorman,” because they are “quite fearless in family movies, putting light and shade together, bitter and sweet.”He modeled the voice and accent of his character on a man he knows who is anything but villainous, and said that to play a bad guy “I find the flaw, the one part in me that can’t be healed. I look for the crack and feel empathy for it. And love it….Storytelling is profoundly healing. And he told me the secret of his performance: he did all of the recording lying down. “Not a tense bone in my body, completely relaxed. If there’s tension in your neck and shoulders, it will show.”

Isaac Hempsted Wright and Elle Fanning play the film’s two main characters, Eggs, a boy raised by boxtrolls, and Winnie, the daughter of the town’s most important citizen, a wealthy and powerful man who is far more interested in tasting exotic cheeses than in noticing his daughter.boxtrollscastFanning, whose sister played the title role in LAIKA’s first film, “Coraline,” said that the script arrived with a box of drawings to give her a sense of what the setting and characters would look like, but she learned more every time she would record. She described Winnie as “spoiled, looking for someone to listen to her, but brave, and having to learn to grow up fast.” Hempsted Wright said Eggs is “plucky, feral, raised away from people and society, surrounded by class struggles and ‘cheese struggles.’ He has the best of both, the kindness of the boxtrolls and the bravery of humans.”

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Behind the Scenes

Exclusive Featurette: Last Weekend

Posted on September 12, 2014 at 3:58 pm

Patricia Clarkson plays a sometimes-outrageous and insensitive mother of adult children in “Last Weekend,” written and co-directed by Tom Dolby.  I’m delighted to be able to share an exclusive behind-the-scenes glimpse.

Here’s the trailer.

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Behind the Scenes Trailers, Previews, and Clips

Behind the Scenes: The Boxtrolls

Posted on September 9, 2014 at 8:00 am

I’m delighted to share some of the behind-the-scenes artistry that went into LAIKA Studios’ “The Boxtrolls.”  You can see some of what I found so enchanting on my visit to the studio last spring.

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Animation Behind the Scenes Shorts
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