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Karina on SpoutBlog

  • Joey McIntyre, Actor/Singer, THE MEDIA DIET

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    Between the early-90s demise of his Boston-bred boy band and their current resurgence, youngest New Kid on the Block Joey McIntyre established an acting career. He landed a regular role on the TV drama Boston Public, appeared on Broadway, and appeared in a movie called On Broadway. An indie drama also featuring Will Arnett and Eliza Dushku, McIntyre stars as an amateur playwright who mounts his premiere production not in New York’s famous theater district, but in the back of a Boston bar. With On Broadway debuting today for streaming and download on Amazon.com, we talked to Joey about the books, movies and music he used to amuse himself when he’s not contributing to NKOTB’s tour blog. Check out his answers below, and the trailer for On Broadway above.

    What films have you seen recently? Which ones stuck with you and why?

    Joey McIntyre: One that comes to mind is The Assassination of Jesse James By the Coward Robert Ford. Very real, puts you right there in that time and space. Illuminated the living conditions of the 1800’s. And I love good movies that take their time –– the stillness of them. Brad Pitt was great and I think Casey Affleck’s role was made for him, or he was so good that it felt that way.

    What do you consider can’t-miss TV?

    The Tudors.

    How often do you read fiction, and what have you read lately?

    I don’t read enough. Last book I read was The Fountainhead. And right now I’m reading David McCullough’s John Adams, which inspired the amazing HBO series.

    Is newsprint dead? If your answer is yes, where do you get your news? If your answer is no, what physical newspapers and magazines have you read lately?

    I don’t believe its dead. I get the New York Times daily and it blows my mind how they or any other newspaper puts it together every day, in this or any other era. I think no matter what the marketplace, the best will stick around and The Times is the best.

    What are your five take-to-a-desert-island bands?

    U2, Queen, Gap Band, Journey, Count Basie and His Orchestra

    If you could collaborate with one filmmaker, who would it be and why?

    Garry Marshall, because I have had the privilege of working with him in theatre and I’m scheming to get with him on a film. He’s a prince, but he’s hungry like a pauper.

    What would be the ideal pairing of filmmaker and musician for a concert film?

    On paper, can anyone beat Scorsese and The Stones?

    What was the last thing you saw on YouTube (or other online video source) that blew your mind?

    Mr. Turner gets arrested for DUI. Didn’t really blow my mind, but its one of Donnie Wahlberg’s favorites.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » Karina Longworth

  • Todd Solondz Casts Pee Wee, Omar, Paris Hilton in HAPPINESS Sort-of Sequel

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    Happiness  (1998)

    It’s been almost a year since we heard word on Todd Solondz’s long awaited follow-up to Palindromes. The last we heard, the project was still called Life During Wartime, and it was pitched as a sort-of sequel to Solondz’s two most popular films. Paul “Pee Wee” Ruebens confirmed at the time that the script involved “characters from Welcome to the Dollhouse and Happiness whose paths converge. It’s all different people playing the same roles [from] those movies.” With little else to go on, we tried to guess which Solondzverse character would be assigned to Ruebens, and concluded: “Given Reubens’ personal history, the Dylan Baker character is probably the most obvious, but I think the Jon Lovitz character might be more interesting.”

    There’s finally new news about the project today, and it looks like we guessed right!

    On indieWIRE and on his blog, Peter Knegt confirms that Life During Wartime (which may no longer be called that — IMDb has it listed as Untitled Todd Solondz Project) has overcome the financing troubles alluded to by Ruebens in January, thanks to an influx of cash from new production company Werc Werk Works. In fact, shooting is apparently underway as we speak in Puerto Rico.

    Now, for the casting candy: according to Knegt’s blog, Reubens, as we hoped, is playing Andy, the character originated by Jon Lovitz in Happiness. Ciarin Hinds, Plainview’s right hand man in There Will Be Blood, has been cast as Bill, the father-turned-pedophile played by Dylan Baker in the first film. British actress Shirley Henderson will take over for Jane Adams as Joy, and in maybe the most explosive bit of re-casting, Michael Kenneth Williams, AKA Omar from The Wire, is stepping into the part of Allen, the phone breather originally played by Phillip Seymour Hoffman. Knegt also reports that Paris Hilton has been cast, but there’s no indication as to what (if any) character from Happiness she plays.

    So: clink the links above for more info, and join us in mildly bewildered, um, happiness.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » Karina Longworth

  • A CHRISTMAS TALE (Un Conte de Noel) Review

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    Kings and Queen  (2005)

    Arnaud Desplechin makes movies that play like epic novels built out into live-sized pop-up books. Virtually Cubist in their multi-faceted narrative complexity, they cast such a spell that they’re almost interactive. When you watch a Desplechin film, you can smell perfume and feel bass shaking a room, and you feel the burden of each character’s long-simmering loves and resentments as if they were your own. Beyond surround sound, it’s surround space, surround time, surround life.

    A Christmas Tale (Un Conte de Noel), Desplechin’s latest, is a darkly comic dysfunctional family fairy tale, more Meet Me In Saint Louis than The Royal Tenenbaums, with a healthy dose of A Midsummer Night’s Dream thrown in.  With its whimsies and excesses playing out under the oddly liberating spectre of expected death, the whole thing is infused with a fin de sicle sensibility. While ailing matriarch is Junon Vuillard (Catherine Deneuve) infuriatingly matter-of-fact regarding what may be her own last holiday (she explains the seriousness of her condition to her husband in their warmly-lit budoir, backed by the strains of cafe jazz), her grown-up kids reflexively take the reminder of the ticking clock as an opportunity for boozy, reckless revelry, as an excuse to fight and to stop fighting repressed desires. Weird, warm, gleefully funny and unavoidably heartrending, this grand tale of a family reunited by mortality is, in it’s most impressive trick, not a bitmorose. To borrow a line from Desplechin himself, speaking after a screening at the New York Film Festival the Vuillards “don’t have time for melancholy”; to borrow a line from his script, “suffering is a painted backdrop” for the business of getting through the day.

    Via a prologue heavy with flashback shadow puppets giving way to direct camera address, we learn that Junon and husband Abel (Jean-Paul Roussillon) lost a child to cancer forty years earlier when a bone marrow donor couldn’t be found; at the beginning of the story’s present day, Junon learns she’ll die without the same procedure. And so her adult children and their own lovers and kids are asked to get their marrow tested and then come home to Roubaix. There’s humorless oldest sister Elizabeth (Anne Consigny), a genius playwright; pretty boy Ivan (Melvil Poupaud), who arrives with wife Sylvia and two young sons in tow; and Henri (Mathieu Amalric), the irresistibly charismatic bad seed middle child who Elizabeth “banished” five years earlier under mysterious circumstances. Also on hand for this holiday steeped in wine and old fights: Cousin Simon (Laurent Capelluto), whose life-long crush on Sylvia will require dealing with; Paul (Emile Berling), Elizabeth’s troubled teenage son who may or may not have some sort of psychic sensitivity; and Faunia (Emmanuelle Devos), Henri’s new, “bombshell” Jewish girlfriend, who swallows the rowdy familial scene with a sly smile and bespectacled outsider eyes.

    There are layers of in-joke here for the initiated, both snarky and rather sweet. Junon admits that her least favorite houseguest is Sylvia, the motherly but secretly restless wife of Junon’s youngest son Ivan; Sylvia is played by Chiara Mastroianni, Deneuve’s real-life daughter. In Desplechin’s last film, Kings and Queen, Devos played the ex-wife of Almaric’s Ismael Vuillard. Although Desplechin insists that Ismael is no relation to these Vuillards, A Christmas Tale reunites Devos and Almaric as an oil and water romantic unit, as if giving their doomed lovers from Kings the last chance that narrative logic wouldn’t previously let them have.  Devos is a sideline character in Christmas, but an important one: her unfathomably calm tolerance of Henri’s uncontrollable impulse for destruction is an emblem of Desplechin’s unique humanism. One doesn’t come to care for a creature of chaos like Henri in spite of their warts and flaws, but because of them.

    (It’s worth noting that Almaric is so compelling here that it’s hard to find words that can do the experience of watching him justice, but to even say that is to state something painfully obvious –– I’m not sure there’s any more fun to found in international cinema right at this moment than an Almaric performance in a Desplechin film.)

    Desplechin’s pleasure-desperate heroes (often embodied by Almaric) make bad, impulsive decisions, and watching them can touch off a kind of gleeful voyeurism, as if to exclaim, “How can they get away with that?!?” We react this way, probably, because we’re so used to people in movies letting their id take over only to run up against near-instantaneous punishment; we think it’s normal to see adults treated like children when they behave like adults. But in real life, we torture ourselves more often (and more intensely, and more effectively) than we suffer recrimination at the hands of the people we anger or disappoint, and the cycle of self-pity/self-realization/self-flagellation is a long one.

    In other words, we get away with it until we don’t, and here Desplechin is cheifly concerned with the giddy high of being In It, with consequences left for sorting out on a longer timeline than the film has in mind. And why not? The Vuillards are a family united by an impending mortality, united in irrationality, passion, casually crippling depression, self-medication. They’re a family where the most sedate member, the fixer, visits his adolescent nephew in a mental ward with booze and smokes in tow. They’re sequestered together in the enchanted space of a slightly crumbly, possibly haunted manse, where no one will ask them to pay for their mistakes until after the holiday. With death on the horizon, Desplechin’s imagined family are liberated to push their lives to the limit, most thrillingly in Almaric’s winking, balls-out bravado. Desplechin pledges solidarity with his chracters by rendering their story via ample, borderline whimsical formal gambles and dizzying montage. A Christmas Tale feels thoroughly like a magic hour scramble. How does he get away with it? Form follows content.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » Karina Longworth

  • Who Wants A Sundance Boycott?

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    Last week after California passed the gay marriage ban Proposition 8, gay rights advocate and blogger John Aravosis called for a boycott of Utah businesses, specifically the Sundance Film Festival, which is headquartered at the Park City Marriott, which is owned by pro-Prop 8 donor Brent Andrus. Aravosis’ logic was that if the Mormon church was going to pump money into supporting a law that would impact Hollywood liberals, Hollywood liberals should enact their revenge by refusing to pump money into Mormon businesses.

    I didn’t hop on this story when I first heard about it over the weekend, because it seemed so obviously crazy that I thought it would never stick. With Prop 8 now in the hands of the appellate courts, why waste energy on a revenge gambit that would inflict major collateral damage on innocent bystanders? And in fact, by Monday the indie film community at large began speaking out against the proposed boycott.

    Yesterday, the festival released a statement urging against the boycott: “Sundance Institute was founded on the idea of championing diversity and freedom of expression. It would be a grave disappointment to us if our Festival were to be singled out for a boycott, especially as we celebrate 25 years of showcasing independent voices.” And at indieWIRE, Eugene Hernandez collected further statements from the Sundance camp, as well as criticism of the boycott from filmmaker Alison Anders and producer Ross Katz. Other members of the indie film world, including producer Bob Hawk and AFI’s Shaz Bennett, chimed in with  anti-boycott sentiment in the comments.

    Even Republican governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has given his blessing to the ongoing Prop 8 protests (and in the language of bodybuilding metaphor, no less!), but –and do correct me if I’m wrong — I can’t find evidence that anyone in the film community thinks the Sundance boycott is a good idea. Aravosis hasn’t published anything about it since Friday; it’ll be interesting to see if he keeps fighting for the boycott in the face of so much indie film opposition, or if he just quietly lets the idea die.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » Karina Longworth

 


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