Posts Tagged ‘Woody Allen’

 

August 14th, 2009

Peter Greenaway, one of cinema’s most enigmatic and striking auteurs, returns to U.S. screens in October with “Rembrandt’s J’accuse,” his labyrinthine account of the intrigue behind the 17th century artist’s “The Night Watch.”

In an extract from her new autobiography which appears this week in Granta, journalist Lynn Barber writes about how the short memoir of her life as a 16-year-old in 1961, published by Granta in 2003, became a major film and meditates on the perils of writing from memory. Directed by Lone Scherfig, written by Nick Hornby and starring Peter Sarsgaard and Carey Mulligan, “An Education” arrives in the States in October.

Opening in New York today and then gradually moving across North America , “Cloud 9,” the latest film from director Andreas Dresen, examines a 67-year-old married woman’s intimate relationship with her 76-year-old lover.

Isabelle Huppert chats openly with The Telegraph in conjunction with the release of her latest film, “Home.” Huppert — described by the paper with the dynamic bon mot, “French cinema’s most beloved psychopath” — revels in her penchant for provocative roles, noting that in a hypothetical, atypical role she might have to revert to type because “half-way through my romantic comedy I probably wouldn’t be able to stop myself from doing something a little bit,” she bites her lip, “bleak - or dark.”

One Film Wonder: In 1984, Woody Allen starred in his madcap “Broadway Danny Rose” in the titular role of a luckless talent agent whose prize client is lounge singer Lou Canova, played by Nick Apollo Forte. Mia Farrow’s Tina Vitale joins the fun, as do the mob. The 71-year-old Forte is still an active performer with an official website where he describes himself as a “Pianist, Banjo, Vocalist & Composer – Actor, Humorist & Entertainer.” There is a link on his website to purchase the only movie in which he has appeared.


June 19th, 2009

Swooped up after a frenetic bidding war at Sundance, the blaxploitation homage “Black Dynamite” arrives in theaters in September.

In August, First Independent Pictures will release “Big Fan,” the directorial debut from “The Wrestler” screenwriter Robert D. Siegel. Patton Oswalt plays Paul Aufiero, a 35-year-old parking-garage attendant from Staten Island and self-described “world’s biggest New York Giants fan.” Oswalt shared his Sundance Experience on his blog, with special lacerating wit unsheathed on the trolls of Axe.

The prodigious Woody Allen returns this month with “Whatever Works,” starring his curmudgeonly doppelganger, Larry David. It marks the 28th consecutive year that the 73-year-old director has released a film.

While helming his feature film debut, “Easier with Practice,” recent University of Miami film school grad Kyle Patrick Alvarez kept a behind-the-scenes blog journal detailing the creative process, from the earliest inklings of the story to the last moments of post-production. Based on a first-hand GQ article by Davy Rothbart, the film begins as a writer’s road trip but is interrupted by a random phone call from a stranger which unearths a new dimension of intimacy.

On his attractive blog, Alvarez includes in-depth descriptions of how he optioned the article, life on the set, and the making of the trailer. He even gives his mom a few posts. “Easier with Practice” had its world premiere at the CineVegas Film Festival last week and enjoys an international premiere this week at the Edinburgh Film Festival, where the film has already earned a strong nod from The Scotsman newspaper.

One Film Wonder: In 1966, Jocelyne LaGarde played Queen Malama in “Hawaii,” the highest grossing film of the year. She spoke only French and Tahitian so read her lines in English phonetically. LaGarde won the Best Supporting Actress accolade at the 1967 Golden Globes and was nominated for an Academy Award as Best Actress in a Supporting Role. It was her only film appearance.


Vicky Cristina Barcelona

American Paella

October 31st, 2008

penelope-cruz-barcelona

I

“Vicky Cristina Barcelona” could be a two-hour tonic for a weary American or a tourism brochure for a Gaudí city or the catalyst for an expatriate odyssey. But even for those without wanderlust, the film luxuriates in an adult, intelligent, and airy manner, gently titillating, seriously flirting.

II

Javier Bardem is a “Brings It” dude, as in “He Brings It.”  Like current contemporaries of this insatiable machismo, Clive Owen and Daniel Craig, he exudes rugged confidence with a rumpled insouciance. In “Vicky Cristina Barcelona,” even his Adam’s apple is tumescent.  

III

Fittingly, he burst onto the scene in Bigas Luna’s lusty 1992 “Jamón, jamón” as “El chorizo.”

IV

At an age where men, especially, have a startling tendency to turn inwards, mistaking obstinance for self assuredness, the 72-year-old Woody Allen is able to create as a screenwriter a multitude of distinct characters who are independent entities, viable and vibrant, who are seeking and searching for that which fulfills them. Consequences aren’t damned but honesty and openness are virtues.

V

You can detect the recalcitrant Allen persona in Rebecca Hall’s Vicky, squirming with an internal struggle between a Wall Street fiancé with polo shirts tucked into chinos and Bardem in shirts which seem buttoned with a lick of the lips. It’s navel gazing of an entirely different sort.

VI

Scarlett Johansson is an enigma.  Possessing art-house cache with turns in “Ghostworld” and “Lost in Translation,” one has suspected that her talent is more (pants) suited for a shitting on the dock of a Michael Bay blockbuster.  But she embodies Cristina effortlessly.  In the moment at a late supper, where she and Vicky first meet Bardem’s artist Juan Antonio, she sums up her character‘s sense of adventurous and autonomous sexuality.  While Vicky is loathe to reward his advances as a first impression, Cristina respects Juan Antonio’s chat up lines as refreshing, bullshit-free effusions. It is a hallmark of Allen’s dexterous script that he provides both women with believable, reasoned and witty insight.

VII

For a country where lad mags have to remind couples that they could have sex at times other than bedtime, “Vicky Cristina Barcelona” is a paean to spontaneity, an example to statesiders to not only live in the moment, but to live in your moment.  

VIII

Penelope Cruz is a powerhouse.  Reminiscent of Anna Magnani in “The Rose Tattoo,” Cruz prowls the screen as Maria Elena, Juan Antonio’s ex-wife, but hardly his ex.  A few years ago, Cruz faced a tenuous time in her career as she made a strange transatlantic crossing in projects like  “Woman on Top,” “Vanilla Sky,” and “Sahara.” But, this year, with a role of this magnitude along with a brave performance in “Elegy,”  it appears her days as Steve Zahn’s sidekick may become a trivial memory.

IX

Graced with a gossamer disposition but buoyed as an actress with acute strength, Patricia Clarkson shines in a memorable cameo as the dignified but disquieted Judy Nash, who provides Vicky and Cristina with a villa for the summer, and perspective. Ensnared in a marriage to a mashed potatoes financier, Judy finds herself in a desiccating relationship bereft of turmoil but lacking in passion, made more desperate by her husband’s obliviousness to her unease.

X

The soundtrack is a flamenco-infused delight of many moods. From the opening credits of the jaunty, toe-tapping “Barcelona” by Guilia y Los Tellarini to the dramatic, sensual guitar work of Juan Serrano on “Gorrion,” the music is riveting, essential and a character all its own.