Archive | December, 2007

ATWI… INTERVIEW SERIES

20 Dec

<center><b><i>ATWI</i>… INTERVIEW SERIES</b></center>

VIGGOOOOOAL!

AFTER STARRING IN THE THREE BIGGEST MOVIES OF THE CENTURY, VIGGO MORTENSEN COULD HAVE DONE JUST ABOUT ANYTHING. RATHER THAN ANOTHER BLOCKBUSTER, HE MADE A MOVIE ABOUT A HORSE, HOOKED UP WITH DAVID CRONENBERG, AND IS NOW A GOLDEN GLOBE NOMINATED ACTOR FOR EASTERN PROMISES.


Where were you born and raised? What were some of your childhood interests? And how did you develop an interest in acting?
Well, I was born in New York City, but shortly thereafter moved. My dad got work in South America, and I lived for a year as a child—before my brother was born—in Venezuela. And then we moved—I guess around the time he was born, I can’t remember—to Argentina, and I lived there ‘til I was eleven. And then moved to the United States. And my parents split up. And, I don’t know, I always liked short stories, and poems, and books, and history, and eventually plays and movies, like most people. And I was living in lots of places—in Denmark, and stuff—and I’d moved to New York. And I was just starting to think about it, because when I was in Europe I was seeing a lot of movies that I hadn’t known, and so I was getting an education, or educating myself about the history of movies—like, seeing a lot of Scandinavian movies, and seeing a lot of French movies, Russian movies, Tarkovsky, Bergman, Carl Dreyer, Ozu, you know? All the greats. Pasolini, Bertolucci. And I just had no idea. And I started to look at better performances including, at that time, I guess, people like, I don’t know, Meryl Streep, or Chris Walken in The Deer Hunter, for example, or any number of movies that I saw at that time. I had made a transition to not just being entertained or moved, but wondering how it worked. What was the trick to doing something in a way that I felt a connection and that I would be moved emotionally, sitting there in the theater long after the fact of the movie having been made, not just the projection of it? How is that done? Or, on the stage, same thing. So I was just curious, and it was one of many things that I tried at that age. It sort of stuck, I think, mainly because I had a good teacher, a man named Warren Robertson. He worked with me, and kind of encouraged me, and felt I had some, you know, raw talent or whatever. Everybody needs a little encouragement.

On that note, actually, I’m very interested to know how you tackle a part. Some people cite the Method, some people cite other techniques. Do you have a specific approach?
Well, every part’s a little different, you know? I did a movie this summer called Good, and a lot of it ended up being music. I ended up—I got ahold of a piano so that I could play every evening before going to bed. And instead of looking at the script, which I already basically knew, I would play the piano. Because this character—it’s a movie called Good, from a C.P. Taylor play—when he stresses out, the more stressed out he gets as things are changing in the thirties in Germany, and his family is in upheaval and stuff, and he feels guilty about a lot of things, these choices he’s making as he goes along professionally and personally—his outlet, or his escape, is music. He imagines that people are singing—on the street, and wherever he is, in parks, or in buildings, at work—and they’re not really. The music’s being played, and then he takes a second look, and they’re not. He’s, like, feeling like he’s losing his mind, you know? For him, the escape isn’t alcohol, or drugs, or whatever—it’s music. And so I started playing the piano every night, and as I was playing I would be thinking about what we had done that day, and what we were going to do tomorrow, and any number of things about the story. And I’d never tried that, and it worked, you know? So who knows what works, you know? Obviously, for Eastern Promises, the language was very important, and going to Russia was very helpful. But the one thing I always do, and I’ve always done from the beginning instinctively—because it’s interesting, and it’s the fun part, regardless of how the shoot goes, or what the result is of the movie—I can always count on the benefits of asking the question: “What happened between the cradle and page one for this character?” And that answer is endless, you know? It’s as big an answer and as complicated and layered an answer as you want it to be. And I never stop working at that. All during shooting, I’m always coming up with stuff so when I meet another character and I’m talking, I know exactly where I came from, you know, irregardless of whether, as usually is the case, that’s never mentioned, you know?

For many years, you played a lot of very good roles, but not the sort that would attract superstar attention. And then, when you were offered The Lord of the Rings, I gather that your gut was to not do it, but that you were ultimately convinced to do it. Since that’s what many people you with when they hear your name, I have to ask: How were you convinced to do it? And, looking back at those three films, which seem very different from the other sorts of work that you’ve done over your career, are you pleased with your decision to have done them?
Yeah. I mean, I worked in the same way even though it’s a fantasy and, you know, its invented worlds, and languages, and so forth. You know, the foundation of The Lord of the Rings, as Tolkien readily admitted, was Celtic mythology, but especially Nordic mythology, and sagas, and history, and, you know, the epic poems from the Middle Ages and all that, and old English poems, all kinds of stuff, “Beowulf,” “The Volsunga Saga”—a lot of different characters which, from my childhood reading and adolescent reading, I recognized, to my relief, because I hadn’t read the book, and I’m on the plane—I basically got cast and had to go fly there the next day, and it’s a twelve hour flight, so I read a lot of the book, and I was relieved, not too far into it, to start to recognize some of the ideas, some of the descriptions, the characters, you know? There was a feeling of it being familiar. But when I was first offered it the day before, I said, “I don’t think it’s a good idea. I’m very flattered.” You know, and at the time, nobody knew what it was gonna be. It sounded like a grand project, but I hadn’t read it, and I knew they’d been there for months rehearsing, and they’d been shooting a couple of weeks, and I just thought that I wouldn’t be the ideal choice for them—better they find an actor who was familiar with the material, at least, you know? So I kind of said, “Let me think about it for a little bit, but I don’t think I’m gonna do that.” And I hung up, and my son was there—who was eleven at the time—and he was familiar with the story, and he had overheard, and he said, “Is that Lord of the Rings you’re talking about?” And I said, “Yeah.” And he said, “What character?” And I said, “Oh, it’s Strider”—back then I guess he was called something else—and he goes, “That’s the guy who’s the king!” And I said, “Well, whatever.” And he said, “No, it’s really good. You should do it.” I said, “Well, you know, it means that I’ll be away a lot.” It was longer than I thought—I thought I was going to be able to come back a lot. But he said, “No, you should do it.” It wasn’t the final, convincing thing, but it encouraged to at least thing about it a lot more seriously—not that I wasn’t, but to actually think about doing it. And, in the end, I just figured the combination of him saying that and also just a slight curiosity—thinking, “Well, if I don’t do this—it sounds like an unusual thing to do three movies like that—if I don’t do it I may regret it.” But as soon as I started reading the book, I thought, “Oh, this is good. I’m enjoying this. This is very interesting. This will be a real education and re-education, as far as mythology.” I mean, I read so much and learned so much during that shoot.

I’m very interested to know how you then arrived at the decisions to do Hidalgo, which is a really nice movie, and then to make two films with David Cronenberg, A History of Violence and Eastern Promises. Also, I wonder if you feel, as I do, that those two movies seem somewhat related, in that they are both about men with secret pasts who have a much greater capacity for violence than the people around then might have imagined…
First, Hidalgo was just sort of a—in some way a family movie, but in some other ways a very serious movie. I mean, I like horses, and I’m interested in history, and Native American history, in particular. And I was aware of what happened, in reality, in 1890 at Wounded Knee, and that it wasn’t generally—you know, Dee Brown’s book notwithstanding, Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, and specials that had been on TV about it, and a lot of other writings, but for the general population it’s a forgotten kind of ‘lie’ in our history, and a real black mark, really. You know, close to three hundred, I guess, unarmed Lakota people were gunned down, and it was just a mess—you know, a lot of nervous soldiers shooting, and shooting each other, and just a mess, really—certainly not a shining moment in history. But, at the time, it was reported in the papers as a great victory for the U.S. Army, and revenge for Custer, and twenty-seven medals for bravery, I think, were handed out to these guys—and, you know, that was wrong. And I thought that in a popular entertainment kind of medium, you know, a movie that would reach millions of people, as it did and has done even more on DVD—I said that was worth doing just for that, just ‘cause it shows that. But, you know, without Lord of the Rings being successful, as it was, you know, I wouldn’t have had that role, Frank Hopkins, and neither would I have gotten A History of Violence. You know, the fact that Dave wanted me to do it—he still needed the producer to say, “Yeah. Yeah, we can get behind that.” So you need to get lucky, too, and I was in the right place at the right time for that. As far as violence that surprises people, I don’t think—the violence in Eastern Promises—that it’s surprising that this guy’s capable of that. You know, you know right away that that’s his job—I mean, I’m a babysitter, a bodyguard, a troubleshooter—that’s pretty clear. I guess how tenacious he is maybe is a little bit of a surprise. And they do deal, as many of his movies do, you know, touch on that—the themes of identity, or confusion of identity, or reconstruction of personalities, or deconstruction of personalities, all that. But the difference, I think, between the two characters, generally, is that in the one case in History of Violence, the character is deluding himself, not just others, to some degree. In Eastern Promises, the character is not deluding himself at all. He knows exactly what he’s doing, and the risks he’s taking, and why he’s doing what he’s doing. He’s very clear on his objectives. But, nonetheless, when he meets Naomi Watts’ characters, she brings certain things out of him—she provokes a further kind of compassion, maybe, a little more, or brings out a certain side of him, just as he brings out a certain side of her. It’s an interesting kind of a very subtle dance between them, you know, where they don’t connect at first, and then they gradually do, and then they basically start to understand each other’s humor, and start to trust each other a little more, and it’s kind of interesting.

I want to give you an opportunity to talk about the extensive preparation that you did for Eastern Promises, because everyone who works with you talks about how well prepared you always are—the things you did with the accent, and reading up on tattoos, and traveling to Russia and meeting with people who, I gather, would be something like your character…
Well, the first question: By the time I went to Russia, which was only a couple of weeks before we started shooting, I had done most of my preparation—I mean, I had met Russian people here, and I’d done a lot of research, read a lot, watched a lot of Russian movies, listened to a lot of Russian poets on recordings, and got translated by an academic translator here, a Russian, all of my dialog and all the dialog of any potential Russian speakers in any scene I was in, just to have it and make it available to David and whoever was interested, if they wanted to try any of it. And then I was lucky to meet someone else, who wasn’t academic, who was actually a guy who had been in one of the prisons that, you know, I purport to have been in, and had a couple of tattoos, and just knew that life, and he was able to take what I translated and change it to where the slang was correct and, you know, that it was more like someone would speak from my background—my character’s background—having been in those prisons and come from a certain part of the country, a specific part of the country. And all that was helpful, so that by the time I got to Russia I was, kind of, ready. But that was really the icing on the cake, and there was a lot of hard to describe things that just made me feel more confident about who I was playing, and that I was on the right track, or that tweaked it in a certain way, you know? Once I had been in the village where I’m from, once I had seen the way people dress, and look at each other, and interact, and what they laugh about, and what they don’t think is funny, how much or little they look at each other, how quiet or not quiet they are, you know, how it is to ride the subway, and the bus, and the train, and to walk around in towns, and cities, and countrysides, the weather, the food—all those things that you can read about, but to experience it is a whole ‘nother thing. By the time I got to London from Russia, I was really ready to go, and I was ready to be useful to David, I think, and also to the other actors, you know, to Naomi. That ‘otherness’ that I represent was specific to me—what that otherness was—and therefore I believed in it, and it was easier, maybe, for her to believe in it, and hopefully the audience, you know? But it was pretty extensive compared to a lot of other roles ‘cause there was so much I didn’t know—the language, the culture, you know, and everything else.

Also—and I apologize, because I’m sure this is something you’re a little sick of being asked to discuss, but—I have to ask about the steam bath scene. I gather the script was vague in terms of what the scene called for, but you were convinced that it was necessary to do it the way it was done, and I’m interested to know what led you to make that kind of a brave decision…
Well, we were pretty open with each other. You know, David said, “What do you think about this towel business?”—something like that—and, “What are we gonna do?” And I said, “Well, that’s gonna come off pretty quick anyway, so it might as well be over my shoulders like I’ve seen guys do, you know, ‘cause it’s very hot the higher up you are—you know, your shoulders and head—so they often will cover themselves like that, just sit there, and stew. And it just seemed right. It’s gonna come off anyway, so why not, for the sake of continuity and being efficient, just let it be off, ‘cause it’s gonna be off in a second anyway once I start getting thrown around. And he knew and I knew that, because I couldn’t have pads on, that I was gonna get banged up a little bit, which I did. But, you know, fortunately he was very efficient, and shot it relatively quickly compared to what other directors would have done, you know? He accomplished the shooting of a very ambitious sequence visually and, you know, geographically [laughs] or whatever, with a minimum, really, of takes and angles. He really got it down fast.

One last thing that occurs to me: I remember that in 2004, after The Lord of the Rings, you had been invited to join the Academy, but declined. Now, with Oscar buzz surrounding another performance, I’m sure a question will be whether or not you are amenable to awards, or do you share Marlon Brando’s idea—
No, no. I mean, look, first of all, I haven’t any—much of any—experience with that. I mean, I was pleasantly surprised to hear, a week or two ago, that I had won an award in England for the British Independent Film Award—Best Actor, you know, and against some really fine actors over there. And that was a very nice surprise. I couldn’t go ‘cause I was in New Mexico shooting Appaloosa; I would have gone had I been able to. I was nominated for Spain’s equivalent of the Oscar for Alatriste, also, earlier in the year. And I was able to get that Sunday to go and come back on the Monday morning. David gave me permission—I was shooting Eastern Promises at the time—and I went. Didn’t win, but I went. So my feeling about it is I’m not gonna go just to go to one of those things. I think it just seems like a terrifying thing. But if you’re nominated, I think, in my opinion, you know, you go. And if I were, I would be flattered, and grateful, and all that—even knowing that it’s kind of a crapshoot, and a lot of mediocre gets recognized, for some reason, above other stuff that should be, including, say, David Cronenberg, who’s never been nominated, which I find puzzling, or Tim Burton. I mean, Werner Herzog probably won’t get nominated for Rescue Dawn, but he should, as should some of the actors, but they probably won’t. I guess the best way to describe it would be to quote, you know, of all people, Winston Churchill—and I’m not a big fan of his, by the way. I know that he was a pioneer in promoting the aerial bombing—just to try out the equipment, basically, in the 1920s—aerial bombing of Iraqi civilians. So he did, you know, a lot of good things that he’s remembered for—said a lot of good things, anyway—but he also did a lot of bad things, so I have mixed feelings about him. But one thing he said about medals—his thoughts on medals—which you could apply if you just change the word ‘medals’ for ‘awards’—he said something that I think I agree with, which is: “Never seek them. Always accept them. Never wear them.” And so that’s how I feel about it. If it happens, fine. I’ve also been in the business long enough that I know that if the movie—if any of the principal actors; or if the director, importantly, or the movie itself, even more importantly—gets nominated for an important award, that means that the movie probably will get to be in the movie theaters again in this country, which is where I think it ought to be, you know? I think people ought to get a chance to see it who haven’t yet, ‘cause it’s a great movie. And I hope that, you know, Cronenberg won’t, for some reason, get overlooked—unjustly, in my opinion—this time as he was completely for A History of Violence. I hope that won’t happen. We’ll see. If it doesn’t happen, though, it’s not gonna change my opinion of the movie. I’m not gonna suddenly go, “Well, it didn’t get nominated for Best Movie. I guess it’s not such a good movie.” I know it’s a good movie. [laughs] I don’t need convincing, you know? But sure, it would be flattering.

FINAL SAG PROJECTIONS

18 Dec

We are at an interesting point in the race: the field of films and people who appear to have a serious shot at a nomination has not been and will not again as large as it is right now, just days after the major critics groups announced their winners and the media groups (Broadcast Film Critics Association, Hollywood Foreign Press) announced their nominees. As we await the media’s winners, we are also moving into the critical phase that will filter the legitimate contenders from the wannabes: on Thursday, the Screen Actors Guild, or actors’ union, will announce its nominees. This is a vastly more significant indicator of the state of the race than anything that has come before, because SAG represents the choices of the largest sample of actors out there, and actors make up the largest segment of Academy voters, which is why the nominees of SAG and the other guilds (DGA, PGA, etc.) historically tend to be the most accurate indicator of the way their corresponding Academy branches will vote. Here are my projections:

BEST ENSEMBLE
(1) No Country for Old Men
(2) Atonement
(3) Juno
(4) Into the Wild
(5) Michael Clayton
(Alt) American Gangster

BEST ACTOR
(1) Daniel Day-Lewis (There Will Be Blood)
(2) Johnny Depp (Sweeney Todd)
(3) Denzel Washington (American Gangster)
(4) George Clooney (Michael Clayton)
(5) Ryan Gosling (Lars and the Real Girl)
(Alt) Frank Langella (Starting Out in the Evening)

BEST ACTRESS
(1) Marion Cotillard (La Vie En Rose)
(2) Ellen Page (Juno)
(3) Julie Christie (Away from Her)
(4) Laura Linney (The Savages)
(5) Cate Blanchett (Elizabeth: The Golden Age)
(Alt) Keira Knightley (Atonement)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
(1) Javier Bardem (No Country for Old Men)
(2) Hal Holbrook (Into the Wild)
(3) Tom Wilkinson (Michael Clayton)
(4) Casey Affleck (The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford)
(5) Philip Seymour Hoffman (Charlie Wilson’s War)
(Alt) Tommy Lee Jones (No Country for Old Men)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
(1) Cate Blanchett (I’m Not There)
(2) Amy Ryan (Gone Baby Gone)
(3) Tilda Swinton (Michael Clayton)
(4) Saoirse Ronan (Atonement)
(5) Ruby Dee (American Gangster)
(Alt) Vanessa Redgrave (Atonement)

THE NBC NIGHTLY NEWS… WITH MICHAEL DOUGLAS?

18 Dec

The new ‘voice’ of The NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams was revealed last night, and it belongs to none other than the Academy Award winning actor Michael Douglas (Wall Street). Howard Reig had introduced the newcast for the Peacock Network from 1952 until his retirement in 2005, and a recording of his voice had been from that time until last night. Williams, apparently a fan of Douglas, called the actor to see if he would consider lending his familiar Gekko-esque voice to the top of the broadcast, the actor said yes, and the rest is history… or, rather, the future. Not sure what this says about the current state of Douglas’ career, but take a listen…

alt : http://www.youtube.com/v/vSfkGejjQn0&rel=1

ENCHANTINGLY HILARIOUS

18 Dec

I came to this hilarious, profanity-laced positive review of Enchanted (Disney) via RedCarpetDistrict. Odd as it may seem, there is something about a grown man cheerfully discussing a G-rated Disney princess and then suddenly flipping out that is utterly hilarious…

MAKING A LIST,
CHECKING IT TWICE

18 Dec

Partly because I hope to post my top 10 list (or do I reveal all 60 or so?) before New Years Day, and partly because I have been involuntarily snowed-in for much of the past week, I have recently pounded through several of my last remaining screeners from the 2007 awards season. Here are some general thoughts/reactions:

  • Maldeamores (Maya Films) This comedy, which alternates between light and dark humor, premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival this past April, and is Puerto Rico’s 2007 submission for consideration in the Best Foreign Film category. Maldeamores, which was co-directed by Carlos Ruiz Ruiz and Mariem Perez Rivera and executive produced by island hero Benicio Del Toro, translates to mean ‘lovesickness,’ and addresses that condition in all of its forms and in people of all ages: two young cousins fumble towards their first kiss (or lick), a middle-aged couple is broken up by adultery, an elderly couple’s lives are interrupted by the return of her ex-husband, a troubled young man insists that a woman marry him even though she doesn’t know him, etc. At the end of the day, it is essentially Love Actually for realists—some storylines end happily, but some don’t. It features excellent music, surprisingly funny dialog and situations, and first-rate acting from its entire ensemble, but especially from elderly woman-in-the-middle Silvia Brito and cheating husband Luis Guzman, one of our finest character actors. Incidentally, I ran into Guzman last week at the There Will Be Blood premiere in New York—he is a regular in Paul Thomas Anderson’s movies, but was not in this one for obvious reasons—and he and his friends got so excited when I mentioned that I had seen and enjoyed Maldeamores, of which he is very proud.
  • Things We Lost in the Fire (Paramount, trailer) After high pre-release expectations, the early word on this Suzanne Bier (After the Wedding) film was that it was a downer with no awards prospects. With so many other buzzed-about contenders to see, I put off seeing this until recently, when I could no longer ignore Jeff Wells’ constant drum-beating about the film’s performance by none other than Benicio Del Toro. True enough, Del Toro is extraordinary as a heroin addict, albeit one whose hair always seems perfectly mussed. Halle Berry generated a little buzz herself as the widow of Del Toro’s childhood best friend who, like her deceased husband, tries her best to help him through his rough patches, but she is left with little to do but look alternatively pretty and sad. Essentially, the scenes with Del Toro play like gangbusters, while the scenes without him feature characters and dialog that are just too predictable and cliched. Del Toro is very good, but not as great as Wells has indicated, and the film is quite weak, but not as bad as some have made it out to be.
  • 4 Months, 3 Weeks, and 2 Days (IFC Films, trailer) This Romanian film written and directed by Cristian Mungiu won the Palm d’Or at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival, became a critics’ darling, and is in all likelihood on its way to earning a well-deserved Best Foreign Film nomination from the Academy. That said, it is quite possibly the most disturbing film of the year: where Knocked Up, Juno, and Waitress effectively went one way and told stories of undesired pregnancies carried out to term, it goes the other and shows the brutal psychological and physical risks and consequences of abortion, especially in Communist-era Romania. It is not shy when it comes to being graphic, either. (Spoilers: we are shown the entire process of the abortion taking place, as well as a long-holding shot of the resulting dead fetus.) It is ironic, to say the least, that a movie about such an ugly situation is filmed so beautifully. Much like the other major example of a new Romanian cinema, the heavily-praised The Death of Mr. Lazarescu (2005), there are either lengthy tracking shots or claustrophobic static shots. Remarkably, the film’s 29 year old lead actress, native-Romanian Anamaria Marinca (also now starring in Coppola’s Youth Without Youth), playing the roommate of the pregnant mother who assists in her efforts to procure an underground abortion, is in nearly every shot of the nearly two hour movie, and you wouldn’t want it any other way. The bewildered pregnant woman is also believably portrayed by Laura Vasiliu, a relative newcomer, and the seedy abortionist is played by Vlad Ivanov, who last week was named the year’s Best Supporting Actor by the Los Angeles Film Critics Association.
  • Man in the Chair (Outsider, trailer) A fairly predictable film about cross-generational friendship (like Harold and Maude and Venus) is elevated exponentially by an awards-worthy performance from Christopher Plummer (The Sound of Music), who has inexplicably never received so much as an Oscar nomination, let alone a statuette, over the course of his illustrious career. Plummer would help his distributors and his own cause if he would get out and do some press for the film, which with some exposure would undoubtedly appeal to an older crowd nostalgic for classic movies like Citizen Kane, on which Plummer’s character ‘Flash’ once worked as a gaffer. Flash, like most of his surviving contemporaries, has faded into obscurity, and is now a miserable, grumpy old drunk. He only leaves the Motion Picture Retirement Home to check out screenings of old movies and berate the screener. He usually bothers the other patrons, but on one occasion catches the eye of a troubled high school student (Michael Angarano) whose obsession for old movies and desire to win a filmmaking contest might be the only thing keeping him out of jail. Can the kid convince the old timer that he still has something to offer?

I also want to thank Gerald Granozio, who was kind enough to send me a copy of his new book So You Think You Know Oscar?, which is a compilation of Academy Awards-related crossword puzzles, fill-in-the-blanks, and the like that would be a neat holiday gift for any movie trivia buff.

RUSH LIMBAUGH
IS A BIG FAT IDIOT

18 Dec

This, as you may or may not remember, is the title of a book that comedian Al Franken wrote about Rush Limabugh, the conservative radio talk show host, back in 1999. I don’t regularly discuss politics here, but I cannot ignore this absurd, sexist, hateful statement by Limbaugh, who parlayed an equally stupid story by Matt Drudge about presidential candidate Hillary Clinton into a full thesis. I’m not saying that I love her or that you should—but you shouldn’t have to love her to recognize that this fat, bald, pill-popper of a bigot should not be dissecting a middle-aged woman’s looks, and by so doing really earns Franken’s title. If he thinks this sort of smut will help Republicans hold on to the White House in 2008, he really should be taking prescription meds. It is crap like this that drives all people, including Hollywood actresses, to feel so insecure about their looks that they feel compelled to have plastic surgery, which leaves them looking like a deer in headlights just as often as a better version of themselves.

EBERT CELEBRATES JUNO: “BEST MOVIE OF THE YEAR!”

16 Dec

Everyone knew that Roger Ebert saw and adored Juno in Toronto based on his blog write-up, but his full review has just posted, and it is an all-out endorsement of the film—and we all know that an Ebert endorsement can have a massive impact. Make no mistake about it: when Ebert says he has seen the film three times before its release (ahem… as have I!) and writes this gushingly about it, it is a huge boost for the film’s awards prospects. Here are some excerpts from the dean of film critics:

  • Juno is just about the best movie of the year.”
  • Has there been a better performance this year than Ellen Page‘s creation of Juno? I don’t think so.
  • “Page’s presence and timing are extraordinary. I have seen her in only two films, she is only 20, and I think she will be one of the great actors of her time.
  • “The screenplay by first-timer Diablo Cody is a subtle masterpiece of construction.
  • “Juno informs her parents in a scene that decisively establishes how original this film is going to be. It does that by giving us almost the only lovable parents in the history of teen comedies.”
  • “It is uncanny how Page shows us, without seeming to show us, the deeper feelings beneath Juno’s wisecracking exterior.”
  • “There are moments of instinctive, lightning comedy… moments that blindside us with the truth… moments that reveal… and the breathtaking scene when Juno and Vanessa run into each other in the mall and the future of everyone is essentially decided. Jennifer Garner glows in that scene.
  • “It is so very rare to sit with an audience that leans forward with delight and is in step with every turn and surprise of an uncommonly intelligent screenplay. It is so rare to hear laughter that is surprised, unexpected, and delighted. So rare to hear it coming during moments of recognition, when characters reflect exactly what we’d be thinking, just a moment before we get around to thinking it. So rare to feel the audience joined into one warm, shared enjoyment. So rare to hear a movie applauded.”
  • No wrong scenes, no extra scenes, and characters you want to hug.

Ebert has also posted a profile of director Jason Reitman, in which he adds:

  • Jason Reitman “emerged in full flight in his first feature, the pitch-perfect Thank You for Smoking, and with only two films has moved onto the A list.
  • Page “will be nominated for Best Actress and has a good shot at winning.
  • Page “is, in fact, a phenomenon, one of those young performers who emerge seemingly from nowhere to create a character we respond to in a way that reminds us of other great breakthrough performances… Page was amazing earlier a movie titled Hard Candy, but Juno puts her in another dimension altogether.”
  • Cody “is about to pull off the biggest career leap of the movie season, from stripper to Oscar nominee. Her story has become part of the film’s growing legend.”
  • “Audiences love Juno‘s parents in the movie [J.K. Simmons and Allison Janney], who are a little older and a lot wiser than parents of movie teenagers are usually allowed to be. Don’t be surprised by supporting nominations.

BEST ACTOR:
DECEMBER SURPRISE?

15 Dec

“Hey! Remember this: the glitter ends at La Brea.”

“What does that mean?”

“You see the glitter that the city puts in on the pavement where the stars are?”

“Yeah.”

“Well, look! It ends at La Brea. No stars, no glitter. In other words, it don’t last forever. Like fame in Hollywood, it lasts for only a second, if at all, so don’t freaking worry about getting famous. Get good at your job! If fame comes along, so be it.”

“You’re famous to me.”

“That’s because you don’t know anybody else.”

IT’S NEVER TOO EARLY…

15 Dec

Has the 2008 awards season already begun even though we are still months away from dishing out the 2007 Academy Awards? Believe it or not, it may have, as AwardsDaily called to my attention: Universal has released this sneak peak at one of its presumptive awards hopefuls for 2008: Mamma Mia! (7/18, Universal), an adaptation of a popular Broadway musical, will star Meryl Streep (synonym: Oscar), Colin Firth, Pierce Brosnan, Stellan Skarsgard, Julie Walters, Christine Baranski, Dominic Cooper, and Amanda Seyfried. It is slated to hit theaters next summer…

alt : http://www.youtube.com/v/w7P2Q_jf4os&rel=1&border=0

OLD TIMERS FOR JUNO

14 Dec

By way of Juno (12/14, Fox Searchlight) director Jason Reitman, I came across this hilarious review of the film by an elderly couple who critique films on a YouTube series called “Reel Geezers.” This might allay some of the concerns that Juno will only appeal to the YouTube generation…

alt : http://www.youtube.com/v/hZPF7DdVrwI&rel=1

Addendum: In related news, Juno scribe Diablo Cody has signed on to do a regular column with Entertainment Weekly. In the first installment, Cody describes—in a style only Cody couldthe craziness of her prolonged international press tour on behalf of the film.