Trailer: Kodachrome

Posted on April 9, 2018 at 8:04 am

Coming April 20, 2018 in theaters and on Netflix: “Kodachrome”

An estranged father and son make a pilgrimage to the last place that can develop rolls of Kodachrome film on this movie starring Ed Harris, Elizabeth Olson, and Jason Sudeikis, inspired by a true story.

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Based on a true story Trailers, Previews, and Clips

Liberal Arts

Posted on September 13, 2012 at 6:00 pm

B
Lowest Recommended Age: Mature High Schooler
MPAA Rating: Unrated
Profanity: Strong language
Alcohol/ Drugs: Drinking, drugs
Violence/ Scariness: Suicide attempt (off-screen)
Diversity Issues: None
Date Released to Theaters: September 14, 2012
Amazon.com ASIN: B0090SI3HU

It is true.  At heart, everyone is 19, except for the people who actually are.  “How I Met Your Mother” star Josh Radnor has followed his promising debut as a writer/director with the uneven but intriguing “Liberal Arts,” a throwback to the neglected tradition of the college-based story that has almost nothing to do with getting wasted or pranks.  Radnor also stars as Jesse, a New York City-based college admissions officer who (like the characters he plays in his television series and his previous film) seems stuck in that stage between being in school and being a grown-up.

He is delighted when one of his favorite professors from his own college days calls to invite him back to the campus in Ohio.  (The never-named small but prestigious liberal arts school is played in the film by Kenyon College.)  The professor (Richard Jenkins as lefty Peter Hoberg) is retiring, and he invites Jesse to come to his farewell dinner and say a few words.  Also on campus for the dinner are a couple whose daughter is a sophomore at the school (Elizabeth Olson as Elizabeth, nicknamed Zibby).  Jesse and Zibby hit it off, quickly developing a nice rapport. She makes a mix CD for him and he promises to write her a real letter with his reactions.  Jesse also meets the morose Dean (John Magaro), a brilliant but troubled student, and a non-student named Nat who is just hanging around campus being all adorably whimsical played as winningly as is humanly possible by Zac Efron, despite the considerable handicaps of an impossibly fey character and one of those knit ski caps with the strings and the tassel that has never done anyone any favors.

Jesse and Zibby have a refreshingly retro epistolary conversation and in one of the movie’s sweetest sequences he writes to her about the way her classical music mix CD has transformed his interaction with the world around him.  Not knowing what kind of relationship she has in mind but tantalized by her, he returns to the campus and again encounters not just Zibby, Dean and Nat but also Peter and his other favorite professor, the icy Judith Fairfield (Alison Janney).  Peter is already regretting his retirement.  Dean is struggling and feels isolated.  Zibby is the only one who seems comfortable with where she is, a large part of what draws him.  “I just can’t figure out whether it’s because you’re advanced or because I’m stunted,” he says, making her the adult.

But as he shows quite literally with calculations on a legal pad, the numbers do not add up.  Zibby, too, is trying to be a different age.  The only one who is completely comfortable with who and what he is is the guy in the ski hat, who is at this point in the movie further burdened with an excruciating speech about, oh, dear, caterpillars turning into butterflies.  I’m pretty sure Professors Hoberg and Fairfield would take out their red pens and write “TRITE” over that one.

The Dean character does not work well, either, even if you give Radnor the benefit of the doubt and think of Dean, Nat, and even Zibby and Peter as ways for Jesse to confront versions of himself rather than genuine characters.  Lovely moments like the classical music discussion, a genuinely moving passion for the written word, and nuanced performances (Radnor is tops in casting and directing actors) may make you smile mistily about being 19, no matter which side of it you’re on.

 

 

Parents should know that this film has strong language, a suicide attempt, sexual references and situations, drinking and drunkenness.

Family discussion:  How many different ways does this story present the struggle people have to act their age?  What does Jesse miss about his time at Kenyon?  What does he learn from Zibby, Nat, and Dean?

If you like this, try: “Happythankyoumoreplease” by the same writer/director and “Garden State”

 

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Interview: Elizabeth Olson of ‘Martha Marcy May Marlene’

Interview: Elizabeth Olson of ‘Martha Marcy May Marlene’

Posted on October 19, 2011 at 3:59 pm

Martha Marcy May Marlene” is the story of a young woman who returns after living off the grid in a remote group home with a predatory, cult-like leader.  She moves in with her newlywed sister (Sarah Paulson) after years of no contact.  We never get the details of the source of their estrangement or why the young woman who at various times goes by all of the names in the title wanted to give herself to an abusive man.  But we do see that the experience has left her almost feral, without the most basic ability to recognize social norms.

Copyright 2012 This is That

The young woman who plays Martha Marcy May Marlene is an extraordinary young actress named Elizabeth Olson, who has two more movies coming out and is still completing her studies at NYU.  She is the younger sister of Mary Kate and Ashley Olson, the actresses/producers/moguls, who named one of their fashion lines after her.  She and I sat down for a quiet chat that covered everything from how she came up with the way her character in the film eats, to why she’s not a method actor, and putting on a family-friendly version of “A Chorus Line” at summer camp.

Tell me about looking at the script for the first time.

You don’t get to read many good scripts and this instantly stood out.  It’s a part that gets to navigate so many different experiences and emotions it seemed like something I would have to wait to do, to do the bad stuff before I would get a chance to get to the good stuff.   But they wanted an unknown actress so it was like being in the right place at the right time.  I read twice, first the diner scene and a lighter scene with the sister.

What was the best part of making the film?

Sean Durkin and I work really well together, really honest and direct but he is very gentle so it isn’t off-putting. I said, “I trust you.  Save time and don’t beat around the bush.  If I am not getting it, just tell me.  Tell me if I’m not giving you what you need or if I’m having an off-time.”  I wish I could say that I trusted everyone that much.

You worked with one of my favorite actresses, Sarah Paulson, who plays your sister.  The movie does not tell us very much about their family history.  Did the two of you work something out to fill in those blanks?

We worked six to eight weeks and filmed all the farmhouse stuff first.  She came in and she and Hugh Dancy (who plays her husband) went over things together about their relationship and then she and I sat down and tried to make a timeline that was as specific as possible and understand when was the time that she left and at what point was my character fully abandoned.  In order to figure out all the tensions in the script we had to be so clear with what happened in the past.   Families sometimes do not talk about the things in the past that affect them today.  My family is very good at communicating.  But some never learn how to do that.  This is one of those examples.  We do mention in the film the mother passing away and living with the aunt, so there are those hints.

This character is a challenge because she is so internal.  How do you convey all of her fragility and fear without being able to talk about it?

I kept thinking of the risks that she was willing to take and showing too much fear or vulnerability was a risk for her.  So in every scene, even if she was by herself there had to be something she was reacting against or towards.  There was always something she was in relation to, a sound on the roof, a car outside.  How much she was willing to give that away was the meter I was playing with.  And she has so much energy.  There is an absurd humor in a way at times and projecting anger onto people.  What are the instigators for when that happens?  I am really an analytical person so to try to figure out at what point she was comfortable and when was the peak of her fear was really fun to navigate.  You have do do work.  We all gotta do work on things.

You have classical training as an actress.  How did that affect the way you approached this role?

I studied at the Atlantic Theater Conservatory, founded by William H. Macy and David Mamet.  It’s based off a writer’s view of approaching the script.  Everything the actor does is to serve the script and the story.  Every action you have is to tell the story.  It has nothing to do with your own experience.  It has to do with the function of what you are trying to accomplish.  Another thing that is fundamental is that you are not your character.  They don’t believe in method or emoting.  For something like this, that couldn’t be more helpful!  I had to have an outside perspective and make concrete things happen that I had control over and trust that the story-telling of the script and editing is going to tell the other part.  I don’t have to do the whole thing.

One very telling detail in the movie is your character’s style of eating.  Was that in the script or was it something you developed?

Those things are really fun to play.  She has not eaten in the presence of a man for all the time she has been away.  So at the lake house , for the first time she is eating with a man at the table.  So I played with the fact that I am watching him eat and trying to figure out what our relationship is. And she is used to not being allowed to eat until late in the afternoon, so that seemed odd to her.  Those things that are out of the norm added to what seemed slightly off.  Because she had something happen to her that the audience is trying to figure out as the story goes on, it was fun to try to figure out how much of the backstory I understood, to unravel it myself.

What draws someone to a cult?

For this character I think it was a feeling of purpose and being part of something larger than yourself, that you actually have a home somewhere.  And she felt she had unconditional love.

What movies made you want to act?

When I was young, “Singin’ in the Rain,” “Guys and Dolls,” “Gypsy,” “Pal Joey.” That is what spurred my interest and I went to musical theater camp.  They wouldn’t pay for the rights so we did our own versions.  We did “A Kid’s Chorus Line,” so with different lyrics, and “A Comedy Tonight,” which was our version of “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum.”  My favorite was playing Ado Annie in “Oklahoma.”  I was in 5th grade and my sisters were in 8th grade and brought their guy friends and I was so embarrassed that they were there.  My dream role was Adelaide in “Guys and Dolls.”  My brother influenced me and he has darker taste, like “Return to Oz” and then I started to love Woody Allen and Wes Anderson and as I got older P.T. Anderson and of course “Star Wars” and “Lord of the Rings” and “Gone with the Wind.”  I don’t just want to do indie films; I’d like to try it all!

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