The Kings of Summer

Posted on June 6, 2013 at 6:00 pm

kings_of_summer_posterWhen Mark Twain had Huck Finn leave the kind-hearted widow who hoped to “civilize” him to “light out for the territories,” he tapped into the dream of all teenagers and the teenagers inside all of us to escape from all rules and restrictions and create our lives from scratch.  Peter Pan and the Lost Boys had Neverland.  Baby boomers sang along with Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young about “trying to get ourselves back to the garden.”  Every generation wishes for the simplicity and purity of the natural world.  In the wise, touching, and often wildly funny “The Kings of Summer,” three 15-year-olds follow their own call of the wild to run away from home and build a house in the woods. Their parents may see them as boys, but they want a place where they can define what it means to be men.

Nick Robinson, who perfected a look of exquisite pain at the humiliating behavior of his father in a brilliant series of Cox cable commercials, plays Joe Toy.  He lives with his widowed father, Frank (“Parks and Recreation’s” Nick Offerman in a witty and heartfelt performance).  Of course at that age, a parent does not have to do anything to be excruciatingly embarrassing.  It is bad enough that Frank actually exists, but he also has the nerve to tell Joe what to do.  Worse, he is dating someone, and worst of all he expects Joe to play a board game with her.  The horror!

Joe’s best friend Patrick (Gabriel Basso), is smoldering with his own adolescent fury.  His parents say things like, “Rope in the attitude, mister” and just because his ankle is in a cast, they want him to be careful. How dare they!  “I’m happy to be where my parents are not,” he says.

Another kid named simply  Biaggio (the wonderfully oddball Moises Arias) wants to join them.  He does not have any special problem with his family.  He just “didn’t want to do nothing.”

Joe, Patrick, and Biaggio build their house in the woods.  They breathe the air of free men and rejoice in their liberation from all rules and conventions.  They vow “to boil our own water, kill our  own food, build our own shelter, be our own men.”  If foraging for food in the woods means a stop by the Boston Market across the highway from the forest, well, no one can argue with how good it tastes.

Director Jordan Vogt-Roberts  and writer Chris Galletta bring a fresh and sympathetic eye to the story, evoking the pleasure of what feel — for a little while — like endless possibilities.   The film perfectly captures that liminal moment when teenagers live in the space between childhood and becoming an adult.  And they’re old enough to carry it off, at first.  They are young enough to be certain their parents are wrong about pretty much everything — and to be confident that they can do everything better.   The house is like something the Lost Boys might build for Peter Pan, with a stolen door from a port-a-potty for the entrance and essentials like a mailbox, a slide, a basketball hoop, and an air hockey table.As is often the case with boys of 15, they look like they are from three different planets.   Patrick is muscular and physically much more mature than the others and Biaggio could be 12.  Joe is somewhere in the middle.  Biaggio’s random and inscrutable pronouncements are amusingly accepted by the other two as if they made as much sense as anything else, or as if making sense did not matter.  And of course the most unexpected complication is when a girl comes through the port-a-potty door.

Like that other icon of the dream of escaping the oppression of civilization, Henry David Thoreau, the boys learn that there is a time to go to the woods, and a time to come home.

Parents should know that this movie has very strong and crude language and teen drinking and smoking.

Family discussion:  What was the most important thing Joe learned?  What about Frank?  What would you bring to a house in the woods?

If you like this, try:  “Stand By Me”

 

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Comedy Drama Independent

Interview: Jordan Vogt-Roberts of The Kings of Summer

Posted on June 4, 2013 at 7:17 am

Jordan Vogt-Roberts’s first feature film is “The Kings of Summer,” the story of three teenage boys who run away and build a house in the woods.  It’s one of my favorite movies of the year, so I was very glad to get a chance to talk to him about it.

How did you get involved with this project?

I made a short a few years ago called “Successful Alcoholics.”  It balanced tone in a similarly tricky way, starting out funny and then getting more serious.  And the company that did “Little Miss Sunshine” had this script.  They were looking for a director and I was looking for a movie.  I got into this business because I want to make movies.  I’d been doing TV and commercials and that’s great to work your way up.  But then I read this script and I fell in love with it.  I knew it was exactly the movie that I needed to make.  Not that I could or wanted to  — I needed to tell this story.  So I just pitched my ass off, and spent the next couple of months trying to get the job.  I didn’t want to say that someone else beat me on merit.  It had a jumping off point I wanted for my first feature, a lot of different things at once, magic and beautiful and hilarious — there was so much fun that I could have with it.

You were working with young kids, which is a challenge. 

The movie lives and dies with the kids. I have an incredible adult cast — stand-ups and improvisers and brilliant comics like Alison Brie, Nick Offerman, and Megan Mullally.  But the movie rests completely on the kids.  All of them had to be good.  When you watch “Stand By Me” or “The Goonies,” all of those kids are great.  I couldn’t cast 25-year-olds.  I had to cast kids who  as much as they could go through what the characters were going through, who could be as real and awkward as the characters they played.  And Gabe and Nick and Moises really took over the roles at a certain point.  I forgot what the characters were as scripted and it started becoming them. We did improv training, not so they’d be super-quick and witty and punchy but just so they’d be comfortable enough in their own skin so that if I didn’t yell cut or changed something on the fly, they could adapt to it.  My favorite stuff in the movie, a really important part of the movie, is those moments, just glances or mannerisms, that’s what it was to be that age.  A movie like this is made up of small, little moments, where watch it and you say, “I love that.”  I just wanted to give those kids the trust and faith so they could elevate it themselves.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kYQvwJ0G7qQ

The moments that I love are the three jump kids of him exiting the house in different ways, that’s how a kid would pass time.  That came from him and me just playing around about the best way to do it.  There are so many weird little moments that stem from them cracking me up.  I made a weird decision on set where I didn’t want them to think of me as the boss or watch themselves around me.  So they would punch me in the arm and treat me as though I was a kid.  We created a fun environment.  The stuff where they were banging on the pipe, finding out that Gabe played the violin and adding that to the movie.  That adds authenticity because it is so particular.  The unscripted things are what make me laugh.

In another movie, some of the things Joe’s father said could be disturbing, but you made it feel safe.

A lot of it is that it is from the perspective of the kids, so we know that it is heightened.  They can feel a little bit more overbearing or harsher because that is how the kids were perceiving it.  And we ran the spectrum of emotions without turning them into caricatures.  We did some ridiculously funny things but to ideally always have it be informing the character and the story and the moment.

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Directors Independent Interview

Tugg — Bringing Indie Films to a Theater Near You

Posted on March 28, 2013 at 9:20 am

You love movies, and love to read about those intriguing indies that somehow never make it to your local multiplex.  You’d like to see them in a theater, not on a laptop.  A company called Tugg has the answer.  You select one of the 1100 films from the Tugg library, everything from brand-new indies like “Bless Me, Ultima” and “Free Angela” to beloved oldies like “Road House” and “Rudy.”  If you can sell enough tickets (it can be as low as 60), your screening will be confirmed at a theater near you.  If you are not able to sell enough, the screening is cancelled and you don’t have to pay for it.  I just checked, and there are four upcoming Tugg screenings near me, including Tim Gordon‘s presentation of one of last year’s best films, “Middle of Nowhere.”

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Independent

Spirit Awards — The Best in Independent Films

Posted on February 24, 2013 at 8:24 am

I admit that the awards show I enjoy most each year is the “Spirit Awards,” and not just because I am lucky enough to get to vote for them.  They truly reflect their name in paying tribute to films that are made more for love than for money.  And they honor and support the small, the new, the passionate, and the struggle.  This year’s winners are:

Best Feature: Silver Linings Playbook (The Weinstein Company)
Producers: Bruce Cohen, Donna Gigliotti, Jonathan Gordon

Best Director: David O. Russell, Silver Linings Playbook (The Weinstein Company)

Best Screenplay: David O. Russell, Silver Linings Playbook (The Weinstein Company)

Best First Feature: The Perks of Being a Wallflower (Summit Entertainment)
Writer/Director: Stephen Chbosky / Producers: Lianne Halfon, John Malkovich, Russell Smith

Best First Screenplay: Derek Connolly, Safety Not Guaranteed (FilmDistrict)

John Cassavetes Award (For best feature made under $500,000): Middle of Nowhere (AFFRM in partnership with Participant Media)
Writer/Director/Producer: Ava DuVernay / Producers: Howard Barish, Paul Garnes

Best Supporting Female: Helen Hunt, The Sessions (Fox Searchlight)

Best Supporting Male: Matthew McConaughey, Magic Mike (Warner Bros.Pictures)

Best Female Lead: Jennifer Lawrence, Silver Linings Playbook (The Weinstein Company)

Best Male Lead: John Hawkes, The Sessions (Fox Searchlight)

Robert Altman Award: Starlet (Music Box Films)
Director: Sean Baker / Casting Director: Julia Kim / Ensemble Cast: Dree Hemingway, Besedka Johnson, Karren Karagulian, Stella Maeve, James Ransone

Best Cinematography: Ben Richardson, Beasts of the Southern Wild (Fox Searchlight)

Best International Film: Amour (France – Sony Pictures Classics) Director: Michael Haneke

Best Documentary: The Invisible War (Cinedigm Entertainment Group)
Director: Kirby Dick / Producers: Amy Ziering, Tanner King Barklow

Special Distinction: Harris Savides

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Awards Independent

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
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