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  • Layoffs at Variety Include Anne Thompson

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    Last week in Park City, we joked more than once about being thankful for both the recession and global warming, for making Sundance 2009 the most pleasant installment of the festival I’ve ever attended - diminished crowds and screenings and events, and 40 degree weather to enjoy whilst traveling between. One night at a dinner table, I worried aloud that this joking would look pretty bad to an outside observer — us, the elitists who still had jobs and/or travel budgets, laughingly toasting the apocalypse.

    And now, just three days later, comes the news that Variety has slashed 30 jobs, including those of Mike Jones (who I tagged in that silly Sundance meme post before seeing the news, obviously), Jeff Sneider and, maybe most surprisingly, Anne Thompson. Thompson “ankled” the Hollywood Reporter less than two years ago for the Variety job. Her most recent post on her Variety-hosted Thompson on Hollywood blog says she’ll keep the blog going, and is also “actively involved in a web start-up which is in stealth mode; details will be available soon. And I will continue teaching film criticism at USC and hosting Sneak Previews at UCLA Extension.”

    I’m sure Anne, Mike and all the smart and talented people let go today will land on their feet. But I still wish I could take back the jokes.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Sundance 8 Favorites Meme

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    Under discussion:

    Spring Breakdown  (2008)

    Big River Man  (2008)

    Moon  (2009)

    O'er the Land  (2008)

    I’ve been tagged by Indiepix’s Danielle DiGiacomo to participate in this Sundance favorites blog meme. I’ve, in turn, tagged eight over bloggers. Find out if you’re one of the lucky octuplet after the jump.

    Rules:
    1. We have to post these rules before we give you the facts.
    2. Players start with listing their Sundance favorites, separated into 8 categories.
    3. People who are tagged write their own blog post about their 8 favorites and include these rules.
    4. At the end of your blog, you need to choose 8 people to get tagged and list their names. Don’t forget to leave them a comment telling them they’re tagged and that they should read your blog.

    Here goes:
    1. Favorite feature: Moon by Duncan Jones
    2. Most problematic/interesting/thought-provoking feature: A tie between O’er the Land by Deborah Stratman and Spring Breakdown, starring Rachel Dratch, Parker Posey and Amy Poehler. I’ll be writing more about the surprising connections between the two films this week.
    3. Favorite short film: I don’t remember a single short I saw other than The Blindness of the Woods. Which was pretty great.
    4. Film most regrettably missed: Push, Big River Man, Stay the Same Never Change.
    5. Most fun party: I didn’t go to any real parties — I was not invited to the now-legendary BritDoc party, alas –– but I had a few memorable nights at the Late Night Lodge.
    6. Best post-screening Q & A: Bobcat Goldthwait’s World’s Greatest Dad on the morning of the inauguration.
    7. Favorite nonfiction character(s): If we’re confining this to characters that appear directly on screen, then Grace Coddington, The September Issue. If their presence is dramatized/implied, I’ll go with Colonel William Rankin from O’er the Land.
    8. Most memorable moment: Getting called out by Steven Soderbergh at the IFC breakfast. More details on this week’s episode of FilmCouch.

    The following 8 people, consider yourself TAGGED!

    Tom Hall

    Matt Dentler

    David Carr - The Carpetbagger

    Scott Macaulay - FILMMAKER Blog

    Alison Willmore - Indie Eye

    Mike Jones - The Circuit

    Noel Murray - The A.V. Club

    Lou Lumenick


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Rudo y Cursi Review, Sundance 2009

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    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • AN EDUCATION Review, Sundance 2009

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    Under discussion:

    An Education  (2009)

    (With Sundance rapidly wrapping up and an intimidating backlog of films to write about, I’ll be publishing a number of brief capsule reviews over the next few days. If a specific title piques your interest and you’d like to see a more substantial review, let me know in the comments.)

    Lone Scherfig’s An Education is an extremely classy film –– classy as in modish, classy as in overtly concerned with class, and both ultimately at the expense of digging as deep as it could into the gut ugliness of first heartbreak. It’s about Jenny (Carey Mulligan), an Oxford-bound beauty in 1960s suburban London, the pet of an old maid-ish English teacher (Olivia Williams) and a worthy sparring opponent for her protective dad (a sharply funny Albert Molina), who takes a vacation from smart-girl responsibility in order to lose herself in the charms of the much older David (Peter Sarsgaard). David picks her up one rainy day and proceeds to insinuate himself into the schoolgirl’s boring, middle-class life, charming her unsophisticated parents into allowing him to take their daughter on weekend trips, tempting her with the lifestyle of the full-time consort, and eventually endangering her virtue, her standing at her uptight all-girls prep school, and her future.

    Oh, young love! When An Education works, it’s because it’s capable of recreating the insane fog of love, particularly first love, which always feels like last love. To the outside eye, Jenny is a foolish girl making choices with her heart and libido at the expense of her head, but in the film’s most interesting angle, Scherfig and Hornby approach Jenny’s escape to romance as a political decision. In a post-WWII world, an antebellum age between The Blitz and The Beatles, where the spectre of mass destruction is very real just outside Jenny’s bedroom community and her Jewish boyfriend is still an outsider, she feels she’s making an informed decision to live life to the fullest while that option is still available to her. The proto-feminist option — to go as far as possible academically at the expense of expanding her horizons emotionally, with little potential reward in sight –– is, compared to the life David promises of sports cars and cocktails and other shadily acquired luxuries, a death sentence. Watching An Education, you could only wonder why such a smart, rational, good girl would so easily abandon middle class morality and lose her head so many points along the way, if you’ve either never fallen so deeply under the spell of another, or you have and have opted to forget that momentary loss of control.

    Ultimately An Education seems to take the latter option. After revealing the truth about David and Jenny’s relationship, Education opts for a kind of willfull forgetting about the ways in which youthful romantic obsession leaves its mark on relationships moving forward. The film resolves itself so easily that the last couple of scenes play as if there were a serious scene missing before the camera-drifting-off-into-the-clouds sign-off.  Never, up to this point, in charge of telling her own story, Jenny suddenly reveals her inner monolgue via voice-over in the film’s tacked-on coda. Her “and life goes on” reflections are very sensible, very classy, and very weirdly cheery, as if this girl has casually pushed aside the “education” she recieved at the hands of her older boyfriend, as if it had never happened. An Education works as a fever dream of first love, but the wake-up is oddly unsatisfying.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • He’s Just Not That Into Your Movie. Clip of the Day

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    Under discussion:

    Here’s a tip for the marketing department handling New Line’s He’s Just Not That Into You: telling guys what isn’t in your movie is not going to get them to see it. Why? Because most guys who hate chick flicks aren’t going to recognize the 10 chick flick cliches you purport are absent from the movie. I’m not a guy’s guy, and I watch a ton of movies, yet even I am not familiar with many of the genre’s conventions. Also: having three of the male leads from HJNTIY mock and act out these cliche scenarios is just going to turn guys off more. The promise of a scene featuring a skinny dipping Scarlett Johansson (even if it is non-nude) would obviously be a much better sell to men than an all-male recreation of a “falling in love montage.”

    Unfortunately, my advice comes too late, and HJNTIY already has a viral video in which Justin Long, Bradley Cooper and Kevin Connolly address male moviegoers in order to tell them that their new movie isn’t like most chick flicks and that guys “might even like it.” The six-minute clip reeks of desperation and misdirection, and if anything it should make guys even less interested.

    However, I don’t think it is impossible for guys to like this movie, even if it does seem more appropriate for groups of women rather than couples (ladies, be warned: your date may just not be that into you after you drag him to this movie). Occasionally, supposed chick flicks are actually accessible to guys, like last year’s male fantasy film Definitely, Maybe. But like with quiche and Project Runway, us guys can only discover this fact for ourselves accidentally. Not through bad gender-targeted marketing.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Spread Review, Sundance 2009

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    Under discussion:

    Spread  (2009)

    The advantage of seeing the Ashton Kutcher-starring Spread at Sundance, as opposed to in theaters down the road, isn’t just the fact that director David Mackenzie hasn’t yet been forced to neuter the film’s skintastic sex scenes (his 2003 Young Adam was shaved down for far less to get an R rating here in the States), but also the way it so nicely compliments a film that screened a few days later, Steven Soderbergh’s The Girlfriend Experience. Neither movie quite works on its own, but as a pair, they are the yin to one another’s yang — portraits of a Hollywood hustler and high-class escort that, taken together, give a well-rounded picture of that world.

    That’s the beauty of film festivals: Cramming thirty-odd films into a week’s time has a way of illuminating thematic connections between stories you’d almost certainly miss when screening them months apart at the megaplex. Autism, genocide, un-reciprocated love, sex-for-pay — all big themes at this year’s Sundance. And while neither Spread nor The Girlfriend Experience has much to say about those first few categories, they prove plenty revealing when it comes to understanding the realm of sex work.

    “I don’t want to be arrogant, but I’m a very attractive man. I can’t help it, I just am,” says Ashton Kutcher, giving us his very best Batman voice as he delivers Spread’s husky opening narration. “Nicki” goes on explain how easily he can seduce some middle-aged woman into putting a roof over his head and designer clothes on his back, while Anne Heche takes the bait before our eyes. He’s just the accessory her otherwise perfect Hollywood Hills house needs, and she … well, she’s his meal ticket.

    This is not the L.A. most Angelenos know, but some sort of fantasy version of it, the sort you might encounter in a Bret Easton Ellis novel or those Armani ads in which stylish ladies lounge among naked male models. When they have sex, it’s porn sex — every position imaginable, perfectly lit, with Heche crying out in “I’ve never had it this good” ecstasy. These montages might be laughable if they weren’t so frickin’ hot, and it’s not until Nicki’s inevitable turn for the worse that we find time to address important questions. Like, how is it that Kutcher can have no ass in jeans, and yet it can look so good scooching across the dining room table? (Heche, too, has never looked so scorching.)

    Hollywood hates it when characters succeed without earning it, so it’s no surprise that Nicki’s free ride must eventually end. But even here, real-world rules do not apply — nor do the conventions of Hollywood Icarus stories, for that matter. If this were Midnight Cowboy, he’d be blowing Bob Balaban in a bathroom, but Spread seems to be a first among hustler movies in that it doesn’t equate turning a male trick with rock bottom. Nicki’s exploits are strictly straight, and the karmic lesson the film has in mind involves watching this cool-hearted narcissist fall for a woman he can’t actually have, played by Adventureland’s Margarita Levieva.

    Spread is the very definition of a vanity project, one that allows Kutcher to demonstrate his acting chops and his chiseled abs at the same time (that cocky self-confidence is just a shield for the vulnerable child within, you see). Yet despite all its superficial pleasures, Spread never really reveals that inner soul. That’s what The Girlfriend Experience is for — sort of. Casting porn star Sasha Grey as a high-priced hooker, Soderbergh leaves the sex stuff out and focuses on the logistics of her world, from the business of improving her standing within that arena to maintaining a committed relationship. At the risk of sounding prurient, a little sex would have gone a long way in this film, which adheres to the prismatic editing style of Soderbergh’s more experimental projects but goes a good 40 minutes without giving us something to latch on to.

    And though Grey is just a notch above Paris Hilton in the acting department, her thespian shortcomings actually serve to reinforce the enigma of her persona, as she keeps her true self hidden from clients and the audience alike. What matters is that Soderbergh seems interested in exploring the identity behind that façade — unlike Mackenzie, who celebrates the superficiality of Spread. That’s not necessarily a bad thing, by the way. Speaking in purely technical terms, The Girlfriend Experience is something of a mess (granted, it was a work-in-progress that screened at Sundance), and Spread is remarkably well constructed.

    People may object to the shallowness of Mackenzie’s film, but it’s hard to fault the execution, which wraps with a poetic image: (spoiler alert) After returning to Heche’s house, this time as a delivery boy, Kutcher walks down the driveway as the electric gate swings closed behind him, shutting him out of that glamorous life. It’s an elegant metaphor, but not quite the end. Mackenzie has one more shot up his sleeve. This one we won’t spoil, except to say it expands the allegory well beyond Nicki’s situation to comment on L.A. at large — and for once, sex has nothing to do with it.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog