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Storytelling
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Directed by Todd Solondz.
From the controversial director of Happiness comes another dark look at New Jersey, this time broken into two separate stories. The first is a 26-minute segment entitled "Fiction," which highlights the life of Marcus (Leo Fitzpatrick), an aspiring writer who was born with deformities due to cerebral palsy. He unsuccessfully tries to read a new short story to his girlfriend Vi (Selma Blair), and leaves her after the story is similarly dismissed by his fellow students and teacher, Mr. Scott (Robert Wisdom), a black Pulitzer Prize winner. Vi approaches Mr. Scott in a bar one night and agrees to go home with him, recalling a "fictional" account of their experience in the next class. The second segment, titled "Nonfiction," follows Toby Oxman (Paul Giamatti), a thirtysomething sad sack who gets the idea to make a documentary of contemporary suburban teenage life. Looking for subjects, he runs into Scooby (Mark Webber), a disaffected, dim young man who dreams of being a TV star. Scooby's home life is highly dysfunctional, with a strict father (John Goodman), a prim and proper mother (Julie Hagerty), a football player brother (Noah Fleiss), and a younger brother Mikey (Jonathan Osser), who continually chats up the family's put-upon maid Consuelo (Lupe Ontiveros). Consuelo is soon banished from the household due to her involvement with Mikey, becoming an outcast just like Scooby. ~ Jason Clark, All Movie Guide
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mercurialmercurial Re:Recasting THE BREAKFAST CLUB ...
by mercurial in Recasting couch
loved it.
"The Breakfast Club Brady Corbet - Andrew Clark (The Athlete) Jay Baruchel - Brian Ralph Johnson (The Brain) Mark Webber - John Bender (The Criminal) Blake Lively - Claire Standish (The Princess) Nora Zehetner - Allison Reynolds (The Basket Case) Paul Giamatti - Richard Vernon (The Principal) Scott Bakula - Carl (The Janitor) Brady Corbet (Funny Games) fits perfectly in the All-American Jock stereotype. Jay Baruchel (Almost Famous) plays the geek better than most. Mark Webber (Stroytelling) is a genuinely disaffected youth. Blake Lively (The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants) looks like a prom queen. Nora Zehetner (Brick) could definitely pull off the fragile, awkward loner. Paul Giamatti (Sideways) will bring a touch of class to the production as the irksome school principal. Scott Bakula (American Beauty) has that wisdom-spouting man with a mop quality that would be perfect for the janitor. " [More]
paulpaul SXSW 2008: Mark Webber & Franki ...
by paul in paul on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"Mark Webber has been an actor in the independent scene for a long time (Jesus’ Son, Storytelling, Broken Flowers) and he premiered his first feature film as director here at SXSW. Explicit Ills has an incredible cast including Paul Dano, Lou Taylor Pucci and Rosario Dawson getting a run for their money from non-actors like 8 year old Francisco Burgos. Frankie Shaw also stars in Explicit Ills (and happens to be carrying Webber’s unborn bambino). In the “green room” at the Alamo Draft House theater, I talk to her and Mark Webber about how the movie is less story, more mosaic of an American city: Philadelphia. And how casting a city in the starring role exposes the real and present ills facing our country. SXSW 2008: Mark Webber & Frankie Shaw interview Explicit llls SXSW news, reviews, interviews and discussions Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » Paul " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog SXSW 2008: Mark Webber & Franki ...
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"Mark Webber has been an actor in the independent scene for a long time (Jesus’ Son, Storytelling, Broken Flowers) and he premiered his first feature film as director here at SXSW. Explicit Ills has an incredible cast including Paul Dano, Lou Taylor Pucci and Rosario Dawson getting a run for their money from non-actors like 8 year old Francisco Burgos. Frankie Shaw also stars in Explicit Ills (and happens to be carrying Webber’s unborn bambino). In the “green room” at the Alamo Draft House theater, I talk to her and Mark Webber about how the movie is less story, more mosaic of an American city: Philadelphia. And how casting a city in the starring role exposes the real and present ills facing our country. SXSW 2008: Mark Webber & Frankie Shaw interview Explicit llls SXSW news, reviews, interviews and discussions Originally posted on:SpoutBlog " [More]
BigJeffLebowskiBigJeffLebowski Re: Deception
by BigJeffLebowski in Philosophy of Film
hasn't rated it.
"As far as manipulation is concerned, I'm much more offended by poorly executed music swells and slow motion. Even if you're watching a documentary, there's always an element of the artist's stamp. In Storytelling, there's a character who says "once you start writing, it all becomes fiction," which is certainly true to a degree. I was happy to see The Shape of Things brought up almost immediately. Aside from being one of my favorite films, it brings up one of the key philosophical tenets with I grapple almost daily: all reality is subjective, and our reactions are informed less by what actually happens than by a combination of how we perceive it and how aware we are of the deception and/or our bias. It isn't the act of deception which offends us so much as admitting that we were deceived. Would it be simplistic to say that being offended by Fargo's rather daft conceit indicates a more deeply seated sense of gullibility? Wouldn't that kind of rea ... " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re: Telling A Story Backwards
by Risselada in PulpFiction1975
hasn't rated it.
"That is true. Although with each new scene we think we know the story, but each new scene shows us something new that shows us we really didn't know the whole story. So by the end of the film we feel like we aren't sure if we still actually know the whole thing. If we were able to keep seeing more scenes that took place earlier and earlier we migh discover our idea of the situation was still way off. In this way, we still are like Leonard. We think we know, but we really can't be sure. We feel almost better to convince ourselves that we do know. That's what I gathered from Happiness. I have several friends who utterly hate the film. But it seems to walk into deep shameful places so openly. I think people don't like it because they don't want to confront those things, but I am sick of all the bullshit. I want to see some truth! I hope to see Storytelling soon. " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
Todd Solondz mines familiar territory with Storytelling, but adds a large dose of self-consciousness. Obviously Solondz has heard his critics who complain that he is a manipulative writer interested in little more than cruelty and pain; he has characters in both of these stories voice these complaints to the two characters who are attempting to work out their personal lives in their art. While the "fiction" half of the film addresses its difficult issues with the shockingly cold deadpan humor and the bored "in-your-face" style that is familiarly Solondz, the much longer "non-fiction" portion is little more than the work of a director who, with nothing new to say, simply attempts to answer his critics. Giamatti is made to physically resemble Solondz, and his battles with his editor allow Solondz the chance to have a character voice towards his look-alike the complaints levied against Solondz and his earlier films. While apparently self-critical, Solondz turns the tables on his critics by showing an audience laughing appreciatively at the cruel film his character has created. Solondz is less interested in analyzing why he is drawn to this material than he is in blaming his audience for liking his (according to his critics) "mean-spirited" films. This disturbing attack might work if there was a narrative to go with it, but the story of the family that Giamatti is chronicling is barely more than a tired and redundant retread of Happiness and Welcome to the Dollhouse. Storytelling is the work of a man at a crossroads, which is an uncomfortable place to be for a director who has thus far blazed his own trail. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
 



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