Thursday, April 29, 2010

Movie News!

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So let’s dive right in here with a story I literally just read but am very jazzed about. Several months ago, the History Channel announced that they would be airing their first scripted drama in 2011 in the form of an 8-part miniseries about the life of JFK called “The Kennedys”. Some people (myself included) have expressed some concern over the fact that it is being written and produced by the people who made 24 as they are openly conservative. However, I have faith that the History Channel is aware of how much hype this thing is already getting and they’ll make sure it’s as legit as it can be. And with the new announcement of casting, it sounds like they will be successful. John F. Kennedy will be played by Greg Kinnear with Katie Holmes as Jackie. They have also cast Barry Pepper as Robert F. Kennedy and ultimate mini-series actor Tom Wilkinson as Joseph Kennedy. Personally, I am stoked. Kinnear is one of my favorite actors and I never actually realized how much he looks like JFK until just now. And finally, FINALLY Katie Holmes has found her chance to actually prove herself as an actress and not just the brain-washed kept woman of a psychopath.

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Other casting news, Penelope Cruz has dropped out of Lars Von Trier’s upcoming film “Melancholia” to be replaced by…Kirsten Dunst? This is where the info gets fuzzy because Charlotte Gainsbourg is also cast and I have a much easier time believing that she could take over a Penelope Cruz role than Kirsten Dunst, who I’m pretty sure is the complete visual opposite of Penelope Cruz. Not surprisingly, Cruz has opted to do the fourth Pirates of the Caribbean film over Von Trier’s film. On the one hand, I’m sad because I’m sure she would be phenomenal in it and I’m always looking to see her in meaty roles, but on the other, a gal’s gotta make money. And she is literally the only reason I will see the Pirates movie so I think it’s for the best.

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Now for some DEVASTATING casting news. As you recall, in my last Movie News post, I expressed utter glee and delight at the news that Christoph Waltz would be playing Sigmund Freud in the upcoming film “The Talking Cure.” Well….now he isn’t. It’s Viggo Mortensen. I love Viggo, I really do, but if there was ANYONE who was truly meant to play Freud it is Christoph Waltz. On top of this, they’ve changed the name of the film to “A Dangerous Method” which, at the risk of sounding stupid, sounds really stupid.

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In lighter events, Carey Mulligan has now officially been cast in Emma Thompson’s remake of My Fair Lady AND an English version of The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo. Not sure what’s happening with the film of The Seagull, but if I find out it’s been scrapped I will probably injure someone. This Christoph Waltz business is bad enough.

Monday, April 5, 2010

Their Lives in Art: Summer Hours.

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Pictured (from left to right): Jeremie Renier, Juliette Binoche, Charles Berling


It is a shared belief among many a writer that a person’s true nature is best seen through his or her coping mechanisms. Indeed, the death of a loved one is probably the most direct route by which one can discover what is truly important both emotionally and materially speaking. Such is the thematic backbone of Olivier Assayass’ hypnotically restrained Summer Hours.

The plot follows the siblings Marly: Frederic (Charles Berling), the eldest, Adrienne (Juliette Binoche), and Jeremie (Jeremie Renier), the youngest, as they cope with the death of their mother Helene while attempting to decide what to do with her extensive and valuable art collection. Frederic is a romantic, believing that it is in everyone’s best interest to preserve their mother’s idyllic country home for future generations to enjoy and act as a kind of home base for the family. Adrienne and Jeremie, however, find their lives taking them abroad, Adrienne to New York to be with her American fiancĂ©, and Jeremie to China as a move up the corporate ladder with no use for the house but a need for the financial stability selling it would create. Yet Frederic remains loyal, unable to part with the objects and locations that defined him as a child and that he desperately wishes would define him as an adult.

Despite the film’s ebb and flow that does indeed evoke a feeling similar to that of a cool summer’s day, there is an underlying magnitude assigned to these objects and to the mother’s life in general that gives the film its richness. In several moments throughout the film it is alluded that Helene had a relationship with her uncle, the artist whose work adorns the house, that went beyond affectionate relatives. Adrienne and Jeremie have already made their peace with this notion, but Frederic cannot nor does he want to wrap his head around such an idea. When their lawyer describes to him that Helene was the artist’s “last great passion,” Frederic assumes the least offensive definition for that term. However we can understand his decision to do so, as he so dearly holds this place to his heart. To learn that it contains secrets even he cannot unravel would naturally come as a hindrance to his need for preservation.

It is this idea, this need for preservation, that makes the ending so perplexing to me. Without going into too much detail, I found it quite troubling to see this beautifully intricate study of three adults finally coming of age boil down to a message of little more than “kids these days.” The last image pulls it enough out of this rut to be satisfying, but I confess it did leave me with an unpleasant taste in my mouth. That aside, the rest of the film is fascinating enough that it is more than worth the watch.


NOTE: Of course, with any quality foreign film, an American remake is bound to happen. Tom Hanks snapped up the option for this almost immediately after it came out. The main issue I have with this is that there is something about this film that is unique to France. I’m sorry but I don’t know of anywhere in the United States that can truly mimic the feeling of a lush garden home in Provence. This is also annoying because let's face it, there is a 99% certainty that Hanks is going to cast himself as Frederic (or whatever 'American' name they give him).