Authors Brad Schreiber and Steven Roby will read from their new book Becoming Jimi Hendrix, give a PowerPoint presentation and raffle off an electric guitar at Skylight Books this Friday, September 17 at 7:30 p.m. Get there, folks.
Wall Street Sequel Cameos: Giant Cell Phone > Charlie Sheen
By the way, I’m so stoked that Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps features a cameo from Gordon Gekko’s comically large cell phone. That thing kills, and the movie isn’t bad either. Review to soon follow, hopefully end of week.
Tekken Lands Stateside Distribution Deal
Anchor Bay snapped up U.S. and Australian/New Zealand distribution rights on Tekken, it was announced today. “The Tekken videogame franchise has sold millions of copies over the past decade,” commented Bill Clark, President of Anchor Bay Entertainment. Production company “Crystal Sky invested millions in the production, making sure they were able to convey not only the incredible fight scenes, but also the emotional journey of the main character, Jin.”
Written by Alan McElroy and directed by Dwight Little, the film is set in a world run by all-powerful corporations (reality?), of which the mightiest is the Tekken Corporation, headed by Heiachi Mishima. Because financial monopoly apparently isn’t enough, these corporations regularly send their best fighters to challenge each other in the ring. After running contraband outside the fortified walls of Tekken City, Jin Kazama (Jon Foo) returns home to witness Tekken security forces destroying his house and murdering his mother. In order to avenge her, Jin files a complaint in the form of a strongly worded letter and enters the Iron Fist Tournament, and is pitted against some of the most brutal martial artists in the world.
In addition to Foo, the film stars Kelly Overton, Luke Goss, Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa, Ian Anthony Dale, Mircea Monroe and Gary Daniels, and features real fighters and martial artists such as
Roger Huerta, Cung Le and Lateef Crowder. The film’s stunt
coordinator, Eric Norris, and fight/parkour choreographer Cyril
Raffaelli, whose credits include District B13 and Transporter,
collaborated closely to make the fight sequences as reminiscent of the
videogame as possible. Tekken will be released widely in the United States in 2011, at a date to be determined.
College, Inc.
The United States is built on the principle that higher education is attainable by anyone with the passion and work ethic to succeed. But does this still really ring true today? Hosted by Martin Smith, this hour-long entry in the award-winning Frontline investigative series puts modern education to the test, examining the world of university education and asking if a higher degree is truly necessary even though it often brings about massive student debt.
The business of higher education is booming — it’s a $400 billion industry, fueled in part by taxpayer money. But against the backdrop of faltering American test scores and a global economy, College, Inc. takes a somewhat provocative premise, arguing skeptically that most students are not getting their money’s worth out of the deal. Critics say too many college diplomas are a worthless degree that leave attendees awash in a mountain of debt. Investors insist they’re innovators, widening access to education. Smith and his producers follow the money to uncover how Wall Street and a new breed of for-profit universities are transforming the way some folks think about college in America. While certainly interesting on the surface level, and full of ample data to back up some of its assertions about educational trends, College, Inc. also infers writ-large conclusions where there are really none. Back to the drawing board and/or editing room, one wants to say to its makers.
Housed in a regular plastic Amaray case, College, Inc. comes to DVD presented in 1.78:1 widescreen, with an English language 2.0 stereo track. There are unfortunately no supplemental bonus features. To purchase the DVD via PBS, and/or purchase a copy with public performance rights, click here. Or, to purchase the DVD via Amazon, click here. C (Movie) C- (Disc)
City Island
Economy of scale and vision is an underrated thing in film, but writer-director Raymond De Felitta (Two Family House, The Thing About My Folks) has made a career out of trading in the grey area where familial exasperation and love meet in jarring fashion. Boomer-targeted audience-pleaser City Island is his latest effort, and if its narrative moves come across too often as workshopped-cute contrivances, it at least serves as a winning showcase for star Andy Garcia.
Set in a quaint, insular fishing community on the outskirts of New York City, the movie details a family whose comfortable coexistence is upended by a series of surprising revelations. Family man Vince Rizzo (Garcia) is a lifelong resident of the tiny, tradition-steeped Bronx enclave of City Island. While he makes his living as a corrections officer, Vince secretly longs to become an actor. Ashamed to admit his aspirations to his family, Vince would rather let his fiery wife Joyce (Julianna Margulies) believe his weekly poker games are a cover for an extramarital affair than admit he’s secretly taking acting classes in Manhattan.
When Vince is asked to reveal his biggest secret in class, he inadvertently sets off a chaotic chain of events that turns his suburban life upside down. Inspired by the exercise, and after stumbling across his long-lost son from a previous relationship, Tony Nardella (Steven Strait), in prison, Vince impulsively decides to force-furlough Tony and bring him home to meet his family. Soon it becomes clear that everyone — including Vince’s college student daughter Vivian (Dominik Garcia-Lorido, Garcia’s real-life daughter), teenage son Vinnie, Jr. (Ezra Miller), and charismatic acting class partner, Molly Charlesworth (Emily Mortimer) — has something to hide. As secrets of the past collide with lies and half-truthsof the present, this perfect storm of deception and confusion makes Vince and his family members realize that the truthmay not set them free, but it certainly is easier to keep track of.
DeFelitta has an unfussy directorial approach that allows for a lived-in feel, and he clearly has a nice touch with actors as well. The main problem is that City Island, which won the 2009 Tribeca Film Festival Audience Award, delivers little more than surface conflict. Much of the movie’s color and almost all of its plot details — from Vinnie, Jr.’s porn-fueled chubbie-chasing and its slow bleed into a relationship with a neighbor, to Vivian’s improbable stripping and Joyce and Tony’s flirtation with something on the side — come across as nakedly designed to just put characters at odds, and nothing else. The material would seem better suited for darker, inwardly reflected psychological exploration, but City Island is rated PG-13 (rather thinly defended by De Felitta in the DVD’s bonus material), and keeps any of these instincts at bay. Instead, it’s interested only in dizzy, theatrical-style contretemps.
The result is easy on the brain if also uninspired — a seriocomic souffle that, excepting the more quiet intrigue of Vince and Molly’s relationship, just opts to slowly turn up the volume of all its characters’ dialogue, until a conclusion that recalls any number of supposedly autobiographical plays ending with everyone arguing in melodramatic fashion and gesticulating wildly in an open street, with a nosy neighbor in curlers gawking at the familial trainwreck. (There’s no one in curlers here.) Garcia is as warm and engaging a presence as always, and he goes a long way toward making this City worth visiting, but De Felitta confuses inoffensiveness and insightfulness, and one’s esteem and appreciation for this work dissipates with each minute it recedes into memory.
Housed in a regular plastic Amaray case with a hollowed-out cover spindle, to reduce the amount of plastic used in packaging, City Island comes to DVD presented in 1.78:1 anamorphic widescreen, spread out over a dozen static menu chapter stops, with a Dolby digital 5.1 audio track and optional English SDH and Spanish subtitles. Bonus features include a feature-length audio commentary track with multi-hyphenate De Felitta and Garcia, also a producer on the film. Their rapport is warm and conversational, touching on everything from the movie’s real-life setting and De Felitta’s filmmaking advice (if one has the opportunity, point the camera at water, since it’s “free set dressing,” and immediately makes one’s movie seem to have a higher budget) to the trick of using cobbled-together production funding to bring in Polish composer Jan Kaczmarek, and the pole-dancing skills that Garcia’s daughter had to learn for the film.
Other bonus features include 15 minutes of deleted and extended scenes, as well as a “Dinner With the Rizzos” featurette which gathers the director and his cast around a table for some pasta and a back-slapping tour of reminiscence through the production, interspersed with film clips. There is also the theatrical preview for City Island and five other trailers, including for Sunshine Cleaning, Beyond a Reasonable Doubt and After.Life. The Blu-ray edition of the film includes the same bonus features, plus an iTunes-compatible digital copy of the film. To purchase the DVD via Amazon, click here. C (Movie) B (Disc)
It Was That Kind of Night…
Ran into Estella Warren at the Landmark tonight — still a total babe, at 31. We chose not to reminisce about Kangaroo Jack. And by the way Westside Pavilion folks — someone shat on/in the third level of your parking garage. Might want to look into that…
Thoughts On How To Approach Ingmar Bergman
In the L.A. Weekly this week, Mike D’Angelo takes a crack at the disparate approaches to tackling Ingmar Bergman, and the forthcoming two-week retrospective at LACMA. Meanwhile, J. Hoberman and I apparently are going to have serious beef over Samuel Maoz’s Lebanon. He loves it; me… not so much.
Gary Orona, Tabitha Stevens and Kagney Linn Karter Talk Sanatorium, Adult Industry Changes and More
Adult film isn’t typically thought of as a playground for high art, but tucked away from all the wall-to-wall gonzo and parody titles is a certain market for challenging, outré and sometimes downright bizarre features. If the sex is the sizzle that sells the finished product, auteur-minded filmmakers can sometimes be otherwise left to experiment wildly within the narrative parameters.
Case in point: writer-director Gary Orona’s Sanatorium, a twisted, labyrinthine and very stylized story about an iconic porn star (Tabitha Stevens) who discovers a secret, dark world of politicians, lawyers, priests and other do-gooders whose public images stand in stark contrast to their private lives. While awaiting a sexual liaison in his hotel suite, a U.S. Senator who enjoys kinkiness other than what his anti-porn crusading platform might suggest listens to a porn star’s story of her descent into insanity, all while waiting for his opportunity to seduce her. This twisted subplot then spins back in time, detailing her sex life and intense personal journey, and underscoring the politician’s hypocrisy.
Shot in four states over a five-year period, on both 35mm and digital high definition, the film stars Stevens, Kagney Linn Karter, Sara Sloane, Raylene, James Deen, Nick Manning, Ron Jeremy (in a non-sex role, the film’s press release somewhat amusingly stresses) and others. Accompanying the thriller is an original soundtrack composed by Guns ‘n Roses Teddy “Zig Zag” Andreadis, Billy Idol’s guitar player Steve Stevens and Static X’s Tony Campos and Koichi Fukuda. An interview with Orona, Stevens and Karter follows below:

Brent Simon: For everyone, what’s it like taking what for most people is a passionate, fun, almost extracurricular activity, let’s say, and making it fit within the confines and schedule of a regular job?
Gary Orona: There isn’t really a lot of glamour in it, because it’s very intense and there’s no such thing as a 9-to-5 day in film production, adult [or otherwise]. I come from the mainstream first, and I’ve done a lot of adult work as well, and it doesn’t change — you have 18 and 20-hour days. The interesting thing I’ve noticed is that when you go to shoot a sex scene… well, I have no idea of what the public’s perception of what that process is like, but I’ll tell you that as a filmmaker after the first 5 or 10 minutes it’s incredibly tedious. Sanatorium is an extremely unique and rare exception to that, but typically it could take you an hour or two to get all the coverage and positions you need. It’s very tedious. It takes a lot of work and time to get it done.
Tabitha Stevens: I would have to agree. Especially since I’m a producer of this film, I’m a star of the film and I have a lot of sex in the film. That makes for very long days. In my case, we shot in desert locations, and for me to stay fit into character and do sex on top of it, when I’m starving myself because I go on a vision quest in the film, so I’m not really eating and I’m going down to 89 pounds — it was intense. We had over a 100-page script for the film, so I had to learn lines and know them. And being in these crazy locations, and then doing scenes that take a long time, you do get tired. It wears on you, but as long as you know what the end product is going to be, you get excited so you give it your all. I don’t think anybody in this film lacked in any respect at all — whether it be a sexual performance or the dialogue. Everyone did a wonderful job, and seeing that unfold along the way pumped you up a little bit.
Kagney Linn Karter: I would have to say, coming from my generation, obviously this type of (adult) production is an extreme production. Where I come from, you don’t know whether you’re going to be on set four hours, two hours or 16 hours, so you have to be able to really stay professional and say, “Today could be a long day or today could be a short day.” A lot of times you might know [in what order] a studio will shoot, but sometimes you don’t so you just have to take the good and the bad, and stay on your toes.
BS: I understand this film came about through some fairly unique circumstances — that it was initially conceived of as a regular, non-adult feature film. And it was shot on both 35mm and digital. So Gary, what was it like, this five-year journey of taking an idea with the same narrative kernel, and then re-contextualizing it?
GO: We didn’t steer too far from its origins. We started five years ago, and the story was about a legendary porn superstar who’s dealing with a deep depression rooted in the stigma naturally applied to porn stars, and this journey that she goes through to find her true self. So it’s really interesting in that aspect, because you don’t typically see a porn film with that sort of storyline. It was originally designed to be R-rated, or maybe a NC-17 film. We shot it on 35mm with very high production standards, just as if I was shooting one of my HBO shows. I brought that to the table, a mainstream sensibility, if you will. Then what happened is that when we finished, we realized it was a little incomplete and we got busy with other projects. It took us about a year to get to that point. We put it on the shelf for a few years, and then a little while back we started seeing a lot of these politicians popping up in the media, leading these very twisted double lives, a very hypocritical thing. We had touched on this in the film, the fact that we’re stigmatized by people who behind closed doors are as twisted if not more so than anybody in porn ever was. Once that started happening, we realized we had a pearl incubating in a shell, and realized it was ready. We decided about five months ago to add hardcore sex scenes, which it really should have had originally because it would have told the original story better, and we added another subplot about a particular senator who’s leading a double life. And that really brought the whole thing together. That gestation period was what the film needed to become something truly original. And it’s very authentic. I think that the performances, locations, production value, what the message is — I don’t know of any other porn I’ve ever seen like this.
BS: There’s the old saying about making a film three times — in casting, shooting and post-production, but was this the most radical recombination of elements you’ve ever had professionally?
GO: Oh, absolutely. And I could have approached this in a very direct, typical, banal, Hollywood fashion, and said it’s this battle of mainstream versus pornography and the stigma, make it a very A-B-C three-act play, but I didn’t want to do it that way. I wanted it to be unique and interesting, and so being a fan of David Lynch I decided let’s go non-linear with this and bury the story with tons of symbols and metaphors and iconic images that you have to figure out. So viewers will hopefully watch a few times for the sex, and then hopefully want to watch it a whole bunch of times to figure out what the messages are. And it’s all twisted backwards and inside-out and every which way. To get to that point required what Tabitha said — the cast is phenomenal, that’s one point. It’s stellar, everyone fits perfectly. There’s hundreds of hours of editorial work that went into this to make it what it is. And typically a porn feature will be shot in maybe three days and edited a week later and then out the door, but this is completely different beast altogether. The elements that went into the production design were (very thought out). I’ll throw out one example: Kagney plays Web Girl, and the image we created at the beginning of her scene, she’s in front of this little tiny flip-camera on this big set of sticks on a big soundstage. There’s just a couple lights around her, and she’s on a little mattress. And I’m sure when people first see her they might say, “What?,” but what’s going on is that she personifies what the business is now — it’s about hard, intense aggressive performances where we don’t really care so much about the production value. As long as we get something decent that we can throw up on the Internet, that’s all that matters. Really, though, it’s all about the sexual performance.

BS: Tabitha, it sounds like you go to pretty outrageous places in the movie — you talked about starving yourself, and shooting in desert. Did Sanatorium speak to your experience in the adult industry?
TS: This is me, this is the truth, this is what I’ve gone through personally, and so that’s why it touches me more so than anything I’ve ever done. We created this story, [Gary and I]. I talked with Gary one time, and he said, “Maybe we should do something about that, maybe we should get into a story,” so pretty much what you see on film is what I’ve gone through, even with the stunt work. When you see me hanging from a tree I’m actually hanging from a tree, that’s me hanging from shark hooks by my flesh. These are other things, of course, that I wanted to do. I wanted to go through a vision quest, and feel what it was like. And I had to almost beg Gary to let me do half of the things that I do in the film, but it’s because Tabitha Stevens, the character in the film, is really the Tabitha Stevens that you’re here talking to today.
BS: Jenna Jameson once said that younger adult film starlets today are interested in sexual performance in a way that she didn’t comprehend when she entered the business.
KLK: Absolutely. For me, performance is everything. The point of being a sex symbol is to perform to your fullest, and give those who are the viewers what they want. That’s why you get into a business like this, to give to others in a way. And enhancing your performance, obviously with limits, is a way to do that — taking yourself to a place that could be a bit of a push is taking somebody else to a place where maybe they appreciate that, because it’s someplace they want to go in their fantasy. And that’s the job. That’s why it’s a job for us, and fantasy for them.
TS: And I think what Jenna was talking about was probably because Jenna was mostly shooting features — I think she only shot a couple shows that weren’t features. And being that I’ve been in the business for a very long time, since1995, I’ve shot my share of features as well as what we now call gonzo, and when you’re in a feature I think you’re more directed as to how you should have sex. I think that’s what Jenna was actually going through. It wasn’t more about, “OK, be free to be yourself, and take control.” That’s what you can mostly do in gonzo, and I believe that’s what I’ve always done. I notice that. A lot of times, in feature films you’re constantly told now do this position and this position; it’s very structured. When Gary shoots, when you watch these scenes [in Sanatorium], they’re not structured scenes. I did discuss with the talent what positions would feel comfortable, because you always want to feel comfortable, but we just went ahead and did what we felt was going to be great, and what we liked to do. I think that with most features you can’t really get to be your free self, let’s say.
BS: Visually the film seems pretty striking. But adult films and even mainstream films in general are typically less interested in trying to [explore a sort of] dream consciousness that might attract and bind us together as human beings. How did you work to achieve a sense of overarching visual style, and still fit that together with certain sex scenes?
GO: I think the film is better because it has sex in it. When we finished the film originally it [became clear it] needed it, because the film is about a porn star dealing with stigma. I think the reason you’re seeing these vivid visual elements is important because this film is extremely psychological and appealing to every single one of us. It’s part of a code. So if you watch it with the director’s commentary it’s all there, or if you want to watch it 10 times to figure it out, all the symbols are there, there are Jungian archetypes sprinkled all over, it’s a classical hero’s journey. What I did was twist the journey around a bit to make it harder to figure out. I think that makes it more fun. The sex is critical, and I think that the hardest part of producing and directing sex in a film like this is to do it in such a way that it’s not gratuitous, because by its very nature pornography is voyeuristic and gratuitous — it is what it is, and that’s its intention, and the experience. And so to try to produce a film that’s real, and doesn’t have any awkwardness when all of a sudden we’re thrown into a sex scene is difficult. In this one it works perfectly, because it’s integrated into the story, and when we shot those scenes — for instance, the one with Kagney I noticed an intense, absolute chemistry happening between herself and James Deen, and I knew well enough, through years and years of shooting linear narrative and what not, to step back and not become that over-imposing director now because the lighting is not quite right or because my camera angle is not right. I said what I’m going to do is let this thing run and I’m going to move this camera around and find my spots as quickly as I can while they go. They had something going on that rarely happens in porn, and that’s the eye contact — it was completely dialed in, as if we weren’t there. And so I let that go, I let it ride.
With Tabitha in all her scenes it was exactly the same thing. The only specific instructions I gave to her before her first interracial, which is in this movie, was do things very slowly and deliberately, and it’s almost like a worship before you start doing your thing. And: eye contact, keep those eyes connected. You don’t see those kinds of things happening in porn. What you typically see is a choice of three or four or five positions, and, “We need 10 or 15 minutes of it, flip over, blah blah blah.” It’s this very sterile, clinical process that has virtually no emotion in it. What I wanted to do was let these things go, even if the shot wasn’t perfect, because I think the realness of it completely trumps any artificial set-up. I can’t think of one instance in this movie where I think, “Wow, that kind of feels out of place.” Every sex scene is vital, furthering the story, explaining how her character is fighting her demon.
BS: Is “mainstream” part of the goal for adult film stars today, or is that just maybe an adjunct, because there are a lot of people who watch adult films but maybe don’t talk about it, so you become accidental superstars in a more digital, plugged-in world?
TS: I think it depends on the person. I got into the business I was in a marriage that didn’t have a lot of sex in it. I was 25 years old, married wealthy and was a bored housewife. It was something different. I had been doing national television commercials, I had been modeling, and I’d been going to acting classes in college. So I wanted to be more of an actress, and then I thought, “Sex would be kind of fun to do on film, why don’t we try that?” And I did, and did pretty well at it. And I’ve always liked acting, and being in front of the camera. For me, I like doing the crossover mainstream projects, I have a great time with them. I feel like I can pull off a performance, so I find it to be very sad that a lot of times in the mainstream when a porn star is cast into a role, you’re cast as either a porn star, a stripper or a hooker. That’s very sad to me. When I was given the opportunity to do the reality show Dr. 90210, we talked about plastic surgery and I went in to be truthful, and say I’m Tabitha Stevens, but I’m also a human being, and I went in to show people how I bettered myself through plastic surgery — though sometimes it can get twisted. My goal was to do things in the porn industry, but dabble in the mainstream as well. I don’t see why we can’t do both. I feel like I’m a good enough actress, and I see some actresses on television and think, “Wow, really? I think I could have done a better job myself.” (laughs) But I love what I do. I love performing for the camera and I love sex, so I think that if I can do both that would make me happy.

KLK: For me, from day one, I’ve always had high hopes and goals of creating a lot of buzz for myself. I don’t want to be a mainstream actress. I did, but when I found out you could act and have sex as well, it seemed like, “Hey!” (tilts head in mock realization) I think it’s great when people like Gary and Tabitha do movies like these because it shows that they can go together, and it can be amazing and work. Because there’s never been a film like this before, it makes me happy — because this is what mixing mainstream and porn is. So that’s definitely always a goal of mine — I want to dabble in both, and maybe bring mainstream attention to my career just because I have conviction in what I do. I think it’s wonderful, and I think everyone else should think that way too.
BS: Even mainstream studios are struggling with new ways to provide content to viewers. What about new business models for the adult industry. Has it been hit hard by the recession, or more the cratering of the DVD market as relative to what it was maybe 10 years ago?
GO: I don’t think the recession has a lot to do with it. I think it’s headed down basically the same path as the music industry, where piracy is increasing and become a huge problem. We released a film last year, and the same day as its street date it was already available on a whole bunch of bitTorrent sites, pirated all around the Internet. I know that mainstream film studios have the same problem. I don’t think the porn industry has any of the answers yet, nor the mainstream. They’ve been fighting piracy battles since even before the Internet came around, and it will continue until the encryption is better, or there’s some macrovision-esque coding that actually works, that some hacker the next day isn’t going to break. I think it’s tricky, and a bit of a slippery slope that we’re on right now, any industries that are relative to intellectual property online — we’re all sort of in that same boat, whether we want to be or not. But the DVD business is dying, and will probably be done here pretty quick. Most of it’s going online and VOD, and there will still be some broadcast outlets, but it’s a brave new world, which will create some interesting scenarios and possibilities.
BS: Tabitha and Kagney, a credit that perhaps isn’t fully bestowed upon adult performers is an entrepreneurial instinct that has to go hand-in-hand with a performer that is going to achieve success and longevity. It isn’t just about making movies. So how comfortable do each of you feel in exercising your own creative ideas as it pertains to growing your careers?
TS: That’s important. We all should have our own web sites. I think in the future the girls, or the talent, will be the ones taking over. I believe that we have the ability to create our own companies — to where I could be hiring people for my site, or we could do trading content, which is popular — where you don’t necessarily have to work for a company to be successful. And I think having a book written, that’s another step. I look at Jenna Jameson and what she’s done — telling your own personal story is very important.
KLK: Well, I have my own company, so I’m always thinking of new ways to create new jobs for myself. I have five different jobs now, all tied up in porn. I do have my own web site, but taking it a step further, like Tabitha said, [helps showcase] a more creative side in what I do, like taking more time to really produce good content for my site. Also, the book thing; and I want to do a line of DVDs: I’m really good at pole-dancing so I’d like to do volumes one through four, from beginner to excellent [or advanced] dancer, all with choreography. (laughs) It’s [all about] setting goals and accomplishing them, being the best performer that you possibly can.
For more information on Sanatorium, or to purchase the movie, click here.
It’s in the Bills
Money matters everywhere, of course, but one of the differences between truly, exactingly ordered period pieces and their more lax brethren is in the use of American currency. Twenty dollar bills, with a larger Andrew Jackson on the front, were redesigned in 1998 and 2003, so when you see an ATM spit out in new currency in a movie set in the 1980s, it’s a foul, but chiefly on whom? The script continuity person? The production designer? The director? There’s enough blame to go around, I suppose.
The American

A beautifully stark, challenging drama about an aging mercenary, Anton Corbijn’s The American, starring George Clooney and Violante Placido (above), is a work of pure cinema — a transfixing rumination on lone-wolf masculine
loneliness, and a reminder that the inner lives of screen characters can
be as gripping as any wildly manifested action. For the full original review, from Screen International, click here. (Focus, R, 105 minutes)
Rubber-Faced Nun Robbers Steal Poster for The Town
I’ve been ruminating on The Town, Ben Affleck’s directorial follow-up to Gone Baby Gone, and it seems a curious choice that the poster and billboard art for the Warner Bros. film features those rubber-faced nun robbers. They grab one’s attention, to an extreme degree, and it just doesn’t translate, on an elemental level; it muddies the water too much, and along with its nondescript title makes the film seem like more of a horror film — or at least opens it up to the interpretation of such, to a casual driver or passerby at a bus stop. It’s a great “give” in the trailer, sure, those images, but not in the print art. I guess it’s meant to be an evocation of the Point Break poster, but that was a more much rooted visual reference, whereas the masks here seem warped/melting, and more overtly creepy. I guarantee some middle-of-the-country impressionable boomers just bought a ticket for the Wall Street sequel instead.
August 31: A Day in the Life…
One missed a.m. screening due to traffic, but two other screenings, a slew of interviews and an early-morning screener today, and the final experiential tally includes two adult film starlets, someone’s car getting egged (not by me), Gemma Arterton in short-shorts, one surprising cow stampede (is there any other kind?), nicely lensed equine competition, and some greatly enjoyable work from John Malkovich.
Abandoned
The final film of Brittany Murphy arrives in the form of Abandoned, a low-grade psychological thriller put together with little imagination, and thus destined to be nothing more than the answer to a morbid trivia question.
Directed by Michael Feifer, Abandoned follows Mary Walsh (Murphy) as she delivers new-ish boyfriend Kevin (Dean Cain) to a hospital for an outpatient orthopedic surgery. But when Mary goes to take him home, Kevin is nowhere to be found. The hospital administrator (Mimi Rogers) can’t locate any record of him, and an assholish security guard, Holloway (Scott Anthony Leet), isn’t much help either. Detective Franklin (Jay Pickett) arrives, and conducts a more thorough search, but also turns up nothing. An increasingly frantic Mary is taken to a staff psychiatrist (Peter Bogdanovich), who pronounces her unstable. When a stranger informs Mary he knows of Kevin’s whereabouts, but demands a $10 million ransom, Mary attempts to spring into action to save herself and the man she loves.
It’s not nice to speak ill of the dead, I realize, but I’ll say what’s lingering in the mind of anyone who paid even just a fair amount of attention to the trajectory of Murphy’s career: her appearance had become a problem. Or maybe that’s not fair… a distraction, let’s say. An impediment. Everything that was special about Murphy in her best work — Clueless, Girl, Interrupted, Don’t Say a Word, 8 Mile — and even the buoyancy that she carried with her through paycheck projects like Just Married and Little Black Book had slowly been worn down and stripped away, replaced by a fragile performer whose lack of self-confidence in her own appearance was evident in her Botoxed lips, dyed hair and starved frame. Whatever specific problems she had offscreen, it’s clear that Murphy was trying to fit someone else’s preconceived notion of what a young actress should be, and look like, and it started to warp her work, in movies like The Dead Girl and Deadline. Over the last couple years, you couldn’t just watch Murphy in a role anymore — you saw someone whose confidence had been shattered, whose charms had disappeared or been tucked away somewhere for the moment inaccessible.
There are trace elements of her talent here — a flinty reserve of steely nerve, and flashes of quiet anger when Bogdanovich’s doctor renders his diagnosis), but they’re measurable in mere seconds, alas. Abandoned doesn’t give Murphy (or any of its other performers, really) good material with which to work, but neither does Murphy elevate it, or make it something interesting and engaging. The result is an utterly forgettable work, and a sad end to a once-promising career.
Housed in a regular plastic Amaray case, Abandoned comes to DVD presented in 1.78:1 anamorphic widescreen, with a Dolby digital 5.1 surround sound audio track. Apart from a trailer and optional English SDH and Spanish subtitles, there are unfortunately no supplemental bonus features here, further relegating the title to trivia-question-level anonymity. To purchase the DVD via Amazon, click here. D (Movie) D (Disc)
Unforgettable: The Korean War
Consistently — and, based on what I’ve heard from friends I’ve made in other parts of the country, almost everywhere — the Korean War gets the shaft when it comes to a historical conveyance to middle and high school students. Its overview, even the most basic rationale for its waging, are frequently given no more than a handful of sentences, crammed in between “sexier” lesson plans on World War II and the Vietnam War. The result is an entire generation that can literally tell you almost nothing about the conflict beyond the words 38th Parallel and whatever else they gleaned from Billy Joel’s “We Didn’t Start the Fire.”
Endeavoring to rectify that situation is Unforgettable: The Korean War, which examines the intriguing and in many ways uniquely
tragic history behind a war that has yet to end through exclusive
interviews with some of the veterans who experienced it firsthand. Written and directed by Tom Kleespie, this solid, easily digestible hour-long PBS documentary takes as its hypothetical audience an age group somewhere between today’s inquisitive college students and flag-waving boomers just now emerging from a cocoon of corporate-mandated office drudgery and catching up on their history. Its slick setting of scene is perhaps what it most has going for it — Korean War veterans recount their memories of America in the late 1940s and early 1950s, when young men from all over the country were being shipped off to defend South Korea against the advancing Red Army in the north. The juxtaposition of home life and the discovery of harsh, on-the-ground reality draw evocative comparisons, and if the macro political calculations that went into its waging are still painted in broad strokes, the “un-won” war that never really ended, and yet killed tens of thousands of U.S. soldiers and affected many more lives at home, at least finally comes into focus in for those who would have liked to learn more in school, but were failed by various teachers too busy “teaching to the test” of the moment to tread too far from the textbook.
Housed in a regular plastic Amaray case, Unforgettable: The Korean War comes to DVD presented in 1.78:1 widescreen, with an English language stereo track and static menu screen. There are unfortunately no supplemental bonus materials. To purchase the DVD, click here. B- (Movie) D (Disc)
Does The American’s Poster Art Tip Its Tone?

So I have the sneaking suspicion that the stylized poster and advertising art (above) for George Clooney and Anton Corbijn‘s The American (Focus, September 1) is saying what the TV trailers cannot, which is namely that this isn’t a commercial endeavor, and those seeking assassin-on-the-lam thrills would be wise and better served to look elsewhere. The orange background color is a purposefully jarring arthouse choice, and the female eye — at once lurking and alluring — is too esoteric a thing for Joe and Jane Popcorn. “Prepare for European styling,” the above says. Only several more hours until confirmation on this.
And So Go the Emmys…
Congratulations to Breaking Bad‘s Aaron Paul and Bryan Cranston on their deserved Emmy wins. Good to see Al Pacino doesn’t get the orchestral hook. And I guess I need to see Temple Grandin now.
$5 a Day
Christopher Walken is a multiple Oscar nominee, but his talent has been overshadowed to significant degree by both his highly imitable vocal delivery patten and penchant for eccentricity as well as, simply put, his love to work, which has led to him appearing in many dozens of films, including a lot of dreck. $5 a Day, a father-son reconciliation road movie with he and Alessandro Nivola, isn’t terrible, or worthy of inclusion in that risible, latter category of Walken’s canon, but it is a film that is illustrative of the difference between narrative charm and conflict.
Nat Parker (Walken) is an eccentric, by-the-seat-of-his-pants type of guy — a hustler content with a life of schemes and underhanded deals. He has a sponsored car with Sweet ‘N Low plastered all over it, a seemingly endless supply of phone cards with which he likes to barter, and a penchant for hitting up hotels and casinos for their free coffee, but he lacks one thing: reconciliation with his son Flynn (Nivola). Flynn has long ago ceased trusting his father — after a one-year stint in prison on a larceny charge — which has in turn greatly impacted his relationship with his girlfriend Maggie (Amanda Peet). But Nat’s time is apparently growing short. After being diagnosed with a terminal illness, Nat lures Flynn into joining him on a cross-country journey to an experimental medical facility, with special stop-offs to visit a kooky ex-babysitter, Dolores (Sharon Stone), and the blackmail of an old rival (Peter Coyote) to boot.
Nat is an eccentric character on the written page (he plans his journey west based around IHOPs he and Flynn can hit up for free “birthday” breakfasts), so Walken’s casting in some ways might seem kind of yawningly uninspired — a bit too on-the-nose. Thankfully, though, Walken doesn’t over-crank the quirkiness, instead locating in Nat a smidgen of make-it-right regret. Nivola, meanwhile, nicely modulates his exasperation, and his pairing with Walken makes for an engaging push-and-pull, scene to scene.
Directed by Nigel Cole (Saving Grace, Calendar Girls, A Lot Like Love) from a script by Neal and Tippi Dobrofsky, $5 a Day isn’t particularly egregious in any of its missteps, though it does wildly over-calculate the interest of its stopover with Stone’s Dolores, a vampy cougar on whom Flynn is supposed to nurse a curse. The chief problem is that while the movie charms, it never particularly feels propelled forward by any real conflict. Things just… happen, some of which are kind of funny, some of which a bit less so. Instead, a handful of genealogical twists and other mortal-coil issues are crammed into the final 10 to 15 minutes of the film, though not in a manner that comes across as satisfying or particularly believable. For fans of the actors and hardcore enthusiasts of the “road movie” genre — of which there are enough entrants to program its own festival — $5 a Day has enough charm to warrant a rental; others, however, may mostly shrug.
Housed in a regular plastic Amaray case in turn stored in a cardboard slipcover, $5 a Day comes to DVD presented in 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen, with a Dolby digital 5.1 audio mix, and optional, lax English and Spanish subtitles, each of which feature some errors. Bonus features consist of a choppy slate of a half dozen interviews with the cast and director Cole — a roster hamstrung by the fact that, inexplicably, Walken isn’t included. Of the bits that are included, it’s somewhat amusing to hear Stone talk about her reasons for taking the movie (“A comedy with Christopher Walken — I’m there!”), as well as first encountering Nivola while taking meetings for Basic Instinct 2. There is also a trailer for the movie, and a gallery of photo stills by Michael Parmalee. To purchase the movie via Amazon, click here; to get the Blu-ray, meanwhile, click here. The movie is also available via digital download. B- (Movie) C (Disc)
The Last Exorcism

A spare, intimately conceived demonic possession drama, The Last Exorcism wrings plenty of spooky and, early on, darkly amusing engagement out of a wry preacher’s showdown with a troubled young girl, but is crucially undone by editorial choices which betray its mock-doc framework. For the full original review, from Screen International, click here. (Lionsgate, PG-13, 88 minutes)
Chris Rock Cast in Julie Delpy’s 2 Days in Paris Sequel
Holy corn nuts, Julie Delpy is actually making a sequel to her 2 Days in Paris, and Chris Rock is in the mix? This is much better and more interesting casting news than Jessica Alba in Spy Kids 4.
Groundbreaking Nature of Twin Peaks Revisited, Again
Twenty years since its bow, Twin Peaks again gets the loving glance-back treatment in a piece by Michael Glitz for the L.A. Times. It doesn’t necessarily break much new ground, but again makes a compelling case for David Lynch and Mark Frost’s series being the godfather of The X-Files, Lost and pretty much all of cable television.
David Lynch Tabbed Guest Artistic Director for AFI Fest 2010

Filmmaker David Lynch has been named the first-ever guest artistic director for AFI Fest 2010, it was announced today. “I said yes to being the guest artistic director of AFI Fest 2010 because I love the AFI,” said Lynch in a press release. “AFI can do for others what it did for me. AFI gave me an opportunity and money to make a short film, The Grandmother, and my first feature film, Eraserhead. AFI put me on the map.”
Lynch created artwork (above) that will serve as the official image of the 24th
annual festival. As guest artistic director, Lynch will also program a special
sidebar of films that have influenced and inspired him. His selections will be announced in
October. AFI Fest 2010 will take place November 4-11 in Hollywood, at the historic
Grauman’s Chinese Theatre, the Mann Chinese 6 theatres, the Egyptian
Theatre and the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. For more information, click here.
Animal Kingdom
Writer-director David Michôd’s Animal Kingdom, winner of the Grand Jury Prize at this year’s Sundance Festival, is an involving, rangy and sneakily ambitious crime drama that pulses with a low hum of menace. Unfolding against an unfussy, decidedly non-glamorous criminal backdrop of modern-day Melbourne, the movie has intriguing characters and a broad canvas, like it could easily be spun off into a miniseries or TV serial.
When his junkie mom dies of an overdose, teenager Joshua (James Frecheville) gets taken in by his doting grandmother (Jacki Weaver), which would seem to be a good thing. Problem is, she’s den mother to a cabal of ne’er-do-wells, whose armed bank robberies have made them marked men by cops, some of whom play by the rules and some of whom have no qualms with vigilante justice. As one officer (Guy Pearce) tries to flip Joshua and make him a source, shocking twists and turns ensue.
Frecheville believably exudes naivety, and is a great anchor for Animal Kingdom, but Michôd smartly trades in organic rather than artificial thrills, making a movie about the legacy of violence that doesn’t often indulge in it. The result gets its hooks into an audience slowly. For Los Angelenos, a double-feature playdate at the New Beverly with fellow Aussie crime drama The Square most certainly awaits. For more information, click here. (Sony Classics, R, 112 minutes)
Release of Brad Schreiber’s New Jimi Hendrix Book Looms
Journalist, author and all-around talented guy Brad Schreiber has a new book coming out, Becoming Jimi Hendrix: From Southern Crossroads to Psychedelic London, the Untold Story of a Musical Genius, co-authored with Steven Roby. And you should buy it, for the music lover in your family.
Mitch McConnell Does Not Fuck Goats
Sure, we’ve all heard the stories, but when Kentucky Senator Mitch McConnell says he does not fuck goats, I take him at his word. I don’t think that’s in dispute.
Todd McCarthy Assays New York Film Festival Slate Selection
Over on his IndieWire blog, Todd McCarthy provides a glimpse behind the curtain in helping to program the New York Film Festival, and again stirs the pot regarding the up-in-the-air release date of Terrence Malick’s The Tree of Life.