Good Thursday morning, America!
OCCUPY!
I have (and will) continued my "#occupyoscar" movement on Twitter advocating for some "dark horse" Oscar candidates. Check it and follow me on Twitter @Gort2.
THE DESCENDANTS DROPS
It will come as no surprise to anyone that MTFB/FAC leads off with an immense amount of coverage of Alexander Payne's "The Descendants" which opened on the coasts last night and goes wider tomorrow. The George Clooney starring vehicle has been the talk of Oscar bloggers since it opened up the Telluride fest as the patrons preview screening on the Friday afternoon that opened the festival (complete with Clooney and Payne and a brief opportunity for to meet and converse with these two men who in all likelihood will be nominated for Oscar for their work on the film). It was a fun afternoon. You can actually read my Playlist review here: http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/alexander_payne_george_clooney_riff_on_family_love_loss_death_and_the_choic
So without any further dithering, here is a ton of "Descendants" coverage, interviews and reviews from the past two days or so...
REVIEWS:
Peter Travers/The Rolling Stone: http://www.rollingstone.com/movies/reviews/the-descendants-20111115
The Playlist (New, not mine): http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/review-george-clooney-grapples-with-life-death-fatherhood-in-the-descendants
Alonso Duralde/The Wrap: http://www.thewrap.com/movies/column-post/%E2%80%98descendants%E2%80%99-mid-life-crisis-hawaiian-style-32785
A.O. Scott/The New York Times: http://movies.nytimes.com/2011/11/16/movies/descendants-with-george-clooney-review.html
Leonard Maltin/Movie Crazy: http://blogs.indiewire.com/leonardmaltin/the-descendants
The Daily Mubi Roundup of Reviews (this has a link to Telluride reviews which includes mine...by name...crazy huh?): http://mubi.com/notebook/posts/alexander-paynes-the-descendants
INTERVIEWS:
Shailene Woodley interviews with...
Jeff Wells/Hollywood Elsewhere: http://hollywood-elsewhere.com/2011/11/grace_under_pre.php
Katey Rich/Cinema Blend: http://www.cinemablend.com/new/Descendants-Breakout-Star-Shailene-Woodley-Reveals-What-George-Clooney-Has-Taught-Her-27917.html
Clooney and Payne...
Greg Ellwood/HitFix: http://www.hitfix.com/blogs/awards-campaign/posts/george-clooney-and-alexander-payne-talk-shooting-on-the-descendants-and-praise-the-wire
John Horn/The LA Times: http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-ca-descendants-payne-20111113,0,1621276.story
GENERAL STORIES:
Fox Searchlight: http://content.foxsearchlight.com/inside/node/5027
Pamela McClintock/The Hollywood Reporter: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/george-clooney-descendants-twilight-breaking-dawn-box-office-261881
Benjamin Mercer/The Atlantic: http://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2011/11/why-eternal-bachelor-george-clooney-makes-for-a-great-family-man/248019/
PICTURES
The Playlist: http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/the-descendants-new-images
Go see it. It's good.
Descendats' IMDb: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1033575/
BUTTER PIX
One of the lesser lights of this year's fest (in my opinion...at The Playlist here: http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/telluride_11_review_jennifer_garners_butter_churns_and_churns_but_doesnt_pr ) was the Jennifer Garner vehicle "Butter". Word now comes that The Weinstein Company has moved its release to March of 2012.
New pictures are out at a variety of online venues. Here's a link to //Film's story: http://www.slashfilm.com/olivia-wilde-hugh-jackman-butter/
Butter's IMDb: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1349451/
SILVER LININGS
And a new film to add to the TFF #39 watchlist..."The Silver Linings Playbook". Weinsteins have announced its planned release date and it seems very Telluride-friendly. Check the release story from The Playlist: http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/david-o-russells-the-silver-linings-playbook-gets-november-21-2012-release-date
Silver Linings IMDb: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1045658/
ALBERT NOBBS NEWS
Anne Thompson at Thompson on Hollywood talks to both Glenn Close and Janet McTeer about the gender bending period piece which is still generating Oscar buzz for Close and also some buzz for McTeer as well. Check out my Telluride review for The Playlist here:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/telluride_11_review_albert_nobbs_glenn_close_mia_wasikowska
Thompson with Close: http://blogs.indiewire.com/thompsononhollywood/oscar-watch-glenn-close-talks-gender-bender-albert-nobbs
Thompson with McTeer: http://blogs.indiewire.com/thompsononhollywood/oscar-watch-janet-mcteer-talks-stealing-albert-nobbs-from-glenn-close
Albert's IMDb: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1602098/
OSCAR PICKIN'
New Oscar prognostications and analysis from...
Movie City News' Gurus of Gold: http://moviecitynews.com/2011/11/gurus-o-gold-november-15-2011/
Sasha Stone/Awards Daily/State of the Race: http://www.awardsdaily.com/2011/11/the-state-of-the-race-a-storms-coming/
Oscar Poker: http://www.awardsdaily.com/podcasts/oscarpoker/episode55.mp3
Greg Ellwood's Contender Countdown at HitFix: http://www.hitfix.com/blogs/awards-campaign/posts/contender-countdown-can-margin-call-crash-the-oscar-party
ODDS AND ENDS
The Village Voice talks to David Cronenberg about "A Dangerous Method": http://www.villagevoice.com/2011-11-16/film/freudian-trip-in-dialogue-with-david-cronenberg/
24 Frames talks to the cast of "The Artist": http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/movies/2011/11/the-artist-cast-talks-envelope.html
The Playlist talks to Werner Herzog about (among other things) "Into the Abyss: http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/interview-werner-herzog-talks-teaching-lock-picking-being-a-living-legend-and-into-the-abyss
FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER @Gort2 #occupyoscar
Showing posts with label Butter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Butter. Show all posts
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Monday, September 19, 2011
Toronto: The Reults and The Bounce/Critical Response at TIFF/Feinberg at THR (the first list)/Clips/Shame News/Butter News/Descendants News/Malick News
Welcome to the now twice weekly MTFB and The Film Awards Clearinghouse. We'll be posting on Mondays and Thursdays (at least that's the plan for the foreseeable future) with more frequent updates should breaking news warrant it.
TORONTO: THE RESULTS
Well, there were surprises yesterday when Toronto organizers announced their audience prizes. Most observers thought Telluride favorites "The Artist" or "The Descendants" would win the main prize. Um...no. The big winner is Lebanon's entry for the Foreign Language Oscar "Where Do We Go Now?" from director Nadine Labaki. It's IMDb page is here:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1772424/
A couple of Telluride films did get mentioned in the announcements...
"A Separation" was the runner-up to the main prize and "The Island President" won the documentary prize.
The Hollywood Reporter provides a complete list of Toronto's announcement here:
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/toronto-2011-full-awards-roster-236841
THE BOUNCE
With the conclusion of the Toronto International Film Festival this past weekend comes a reckoning from pundits and prognosticators as to which films earned a bounce in the awards season parade and which took a hit. Today we'll examine three of those posts and parse the meaning for films that played at TFF #38.
The Hollywood News/Awards Alley:
Bounce for:
George Clooney (tributee this year) for Best Actor in "The Descendants" (also some bounce for his direction and writing and for Best Pic for his "Ides of March).
"The Descendants" for many potential noms including Best Picture.
Glenn Close and Janet McTeer in "Albert Nobbs" for Best Actress and Supporting Actress respectively.
"The Artist" for many potential noms including Best Picture.
Michael Fassbender in "Shame" as a possible Best Actor nom.
Fassbender, Viggo Mortensen, and Keira Knightley in "A Dangerous Method" for acting possibilities plus a possible Adapted Screenplay nom (really???)
Look at the complete article for the other non-Telluride pics/peeps that THN says earned a bump from Toronto:
http://www.hollywoodnews.com/2011/09/16/george-clooney-brad-pitt-lead-list-of-those-boosted-by-tiff-2011-awards-alley/
HitFix:
Bounce for :
Fassbender/Shame-Best Actor
Robert Forester in "The Descendants" for Supporting Actor (interesting)
Taking a hit:
"A Dangerous Method" in the BP race as well as "Butter"...exactly...
HitFix's complete article:
http://www.hitfix.com/blogs/awards-campaign/posts/toronto-who-got-an-oscar-bounce-and-who-didnt
The Wrap:
Bounce for:
Fassbender and Shame
Pina (foreign language Oscar race)
In Darkness (also FLF)
Tilda Swinton in "We Need to Talk About Kevin"
"The Island President" (documentary)
The complete slide show is at:
http://www.thewrap.com/movies/slideshow/torontos-big-winners-slideshow-31027
CRITICS AT TIFF
IndieWire has updates their round-up of critical response to films that have played the last week and a half as a part of the Toronto Fest. Here's how TFF #38 films have fared:
The highest rated film thus far is Steve McQueen's "Shame."
A- Ratings (the top): "A Separation" "Shame" "The Turin Horse"
B+ Ratings: "The Artist" "The Descendants" "Le Havre""The Kid with a Bike" "Pina"
B Ratings: "A Dangerous Method" "Into the Abyss" "We Need to Talk About Kevin"
B- Ratings: "Albert Nobbs" "Footnote"
To see the complete list of films that have been rated go to:
http://www.indiewire.com/article/criticwire_tiff_shame_tops_critics_as_fest_winds_down/
FEINBERG'S FIRST FORECAST AT THR
Scott Feinberg (whom I met this year just before we saw the Dardennes Brothers"The Kid with a Bike"...we had a very nice conversation) has his first forecast for Oscar since joining The Hollywood Reporter. Breaking it down by Telluride #38 films:
Picture:
Frontrunners include "The Artist" and "The Descendants"
Major Threats include: "A Dangerous Method"
Possibilities include: "Albert Nobbs" and "We Need to Talk About Kevin"
Director:
Frontrunners: M. Hazanavicius/The Artist
Major Threats: A. Payne/The Descendants, D. Cronenberg/A Dangerous Method
Possibilities: R. Garcia/Albert Nobbs, L. Ramsay/We Need to Talk About Kevin
Actress:
Frontrunners: G. Close/Albert Nobbs
Major Threats: K. Knightley/A Dangerous Method
Possibilities: T. Swinton/Kevin, J. Garner/Butter (uh...no)
Actor:
Frontrunners: G. Clooney/The Descendants, J. Dujardin/The Artist
Major Threats: M. Fassbender in both Shame and A Dangerous Method
No other possibles from TFF
Supporting Actress:
Frontrunners: S. Woodley/The Descendants
Major Threats: J. McTeer/Albert Nobbs
Possibles: C. Mulligan/Shame
Supporting Actor:
No Frontrunners from TFF #38
Major Threats: V. Mortensen/A Dangerous Method
Possibilities: E. Miller/Kevin
Adapted Screenplay:
Frontrunners: The Descendants
Major Threats: A Dangerous Method
Possibilities: Albert Nobbs, Kevin
Original Screenplay:
Frontrunners: The Artist
No other threats or possibilities from Telluride.
Feinberg's totals for the Big 8 categories for TFF #38:
Frontrunners: 9
Major Threats: 9
Possibilities: 10
By film:
The Descendants: Fronts: 4, Threats: 1
The Artist: Fronts: 4
A Dangerous Method: Fronts: 0, Threats 6
Albert Nobbs: Fronts: 1, Threats: 1 Possibles: 3
Shame: Fronts: 0, Threats: 1, Possibles: 1
Kevin: Possibles: 5
Butter: Possibles: 1
CLIPS
There are some new clips and teasers out this week from some of this year's Telluride films. Links below...
"George Harrison:Living in the Material World" from The Playlist (indieWire):
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/watch_clip_from_george_harrison_living_in_the_material_world_doc_gives_a_ta/
"The Artist" also from The Playlist:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/watch_six_clips_from_crowd-pleasing_silent_oscar_contender_the_artist/
"The Descendants" from, you guessed it, The Playlist (the story also features a link to my review of "The Descendants" for them):
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/george_clooney_needs_parenting_help_in_a_new_clip_from_alexander_paynes_the/
SHAME NEWS
Perhaps no film has created as much of a stir during its run at Telluride, Venice and Toronto over the past three weeks as Steve McQueen's uncompromising "Shame." It is not a film for everyone. It is explicit. Michael Fassbender gives what is likely the best performance by an actor this year. Carey Mulligan is better than she's ever been. But because of the nature of the film's subject (sex addiciton) and because it pulls very few punches, it's not a film that is going to be Oscar friendly and that's to bad.
Here are a few posts/articles that have turned up the last week or so about the film:
An indieWire interview with the director and co-writer Steve McQueen:
http://www.indiewire.com/article/steve_mcqueen/
More from McQueen from the LA Times:
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/movies/2011/09/shame-michael-fassbender-mcqueen-naked-movie-nc-17-rating-release-date.html
BUTTER NEWS
If you read this space much, you know I wasn't a big fan of "Butter." Nevertheless, I'm keeping an eye on it as I do all the Telluride offerings now that we are moving into the post TFF/TIFF/Venice autumnal period. So here are some "Butter"-centric posts:
"Butter" will get an Oscar qualifying run...from The Playlist:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/butter_to_get_one_week_run_in_2011_before_wide_release_in_2012/
The Playlist also had another review of the film from one of their regular writers (they had my review which they published on Sept. 4...it's here: http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/telluride_11_review_jennifer_garners_butter_churns_and_churns_but_doesnt_pr/ )
and their regular guy...sounds a lot like me:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/tiff_11_review_butter_starring_jennifer_garner_hugh_jackman_olivia_wilde/
DESCENDANTS NEWS
Alexander Payne's "The Descendants" and Michel Hazanavicius' "The Artist" were the two titles coming out of Telluride and into Toronto with the most heat. Toronto didn't diminish the fervor for either. Payne's "Descendants" has kept up a steady drumbeat of P.R. and here is some of it from the last week:
Anne Thompson of Thompson on Hollywood (indieWire) was generally positive, but not exactly over the moon:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/thompsononhollywood/2011/09/14/day_six_36th_toronto_international_film_festival_the_descendants_moneyball_/
Scott Feinberg of The Hollywood Reporter sat down with Descndnats co-star (and generating some Oscar buzz) Shailene Woodley for an interview:
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/race/toronto-2011-shailene-woodley-how-234742
HitFix (among others) posted some of Geroge Clooney from a Telluride Q & A:
http://www.hitfix.com/blogs/awards-campaign/posts/exclusive-george-clooney-talks-the-descendants-and-a-sneak-peek
MALICK NEWS
After the two year long dance of infatuation I did with Terrence Malick's "The Tree of Life" I've found it difficult to let go of obsessing about what he's doing. Fortunately for me there is no paucity of material floating around out there in web land to stoke the flames of that small obsession. It would appear that Malick has started work on his second post-Tree project and that it involves Christian Bale and may focus on music. Check the following posts:
From Johnny Garcia and @jarrettem via twitter actual video of Malick and Bale filming in Austin (it's about 3 min. long):
http://www.twitvid.com/TSXER
Malick and Bale at Austin City Limits...The Playlist:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/what_were_terrence_malick_christian_bale_doing_at_the_austin_city_limits_fe/
Also FirstShowing.net:
http://www.firstshowing.net/2011/is-terrence-malick-already-filming-christian-bale-in-his-next-project/
Also The Daily Mubi:
http://mubi.com/notebook/posts/daily-briefing-what-are-terrence-malick-and-christian-bale-up-to
Potential casting news of a relative unknown, again The Playlist:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/terrence_malick_chooses_relative_haley_bennett_for_christian_bale_drama/
And RYAN GOSLING????
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/nicolas_winding_refns_ryan_gosling_terrence_malick/
See you Thursday!
TORONTO: THE RESULTS
Well, there were surprises yesterday when Toronto organizers announced their audience prizes. Most observers thought Telluride favorites "The Artist" or "The Descendants" would win the main prize. Um...no. The big winner is Lebanon's entry for the Foreign Language Oscar "Where Do We Go Now?" from director Nadine Labaki. It's IMDb page is here:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1772424/
A couple of Telluride films did get mentioned in the announcements...
"A Separation" was the runner-up to the main prize and "The Island President" won the documentary prize.
The Hollywood Reporter provides a complete list of Toronto's announcement here:
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/toronto-2011-full-awards-roster-236841
THE BOUNCE
With the conclusion of the Toronto International Film Festival this past weekend comes a reckoning from pundits and prognosticators as to which films earned a bounce in the awards season parade and which took a hit. Today we'll examine three of those posts and parse the meaning for films that played at TFF #38.
The Hollywood News/Awards Alley:
Bounce for:
George Clooney (tributee this year) for Best Actor in "The Descendants" (also some bounce for his direction and writing and for Best Pic for his "Ides of March).
"The Descendants" for many potential noms including Best Picture.
Glenn Close and Janet McTeer in "Albert Nobbs" for Best Actress and Supporting Actress respectively.
"The Artist" for many potential noms including Best Picture.
Michael Fassbender in "Shame" as a possible Best Actor nom.
Fassbender, Viggo Mortensen, and Keira Knightley in "A Dangerous Method" for acting possibilities plus a possible Adapted Screenplay nom (really???)
Look at the complete article for the other non-Telluride pics/peeps that THN says earned a bump from Toronto:
http://www.hollywoodnews.com/2011/09/16/george-clooney-brad-pitt-lead-list-of-those-boosted-by-tiff-2011-awards-alley/
HitFix:
Bounce for :
Fassbender/Shame-Best Actor
Robert Forester in "The Descendants" for Supporting Actor (interesting)
Taking a hit:
"A Dangerous Method" in the BP race as well as "Butter"...exactly...
HitFix's complete article:
http://www.hitfix.com/blogs/awards-campaign/posts/toronto-who-got-an-oscar-bounce-and-who-didnt
The Wrap:
Bounce for:
Fassbender and Shame
Pina (foreign language Oscar race)
In Darkness (also FLF)
Tilda Swinton in "We Need to Talk About Kevin"
"The Island President" (documentary)
The complete slide show is at:
http://www.thewrap.com/movies/slideshow/torontos-big-winners-slideshow-31027
CRITICS AT TIFF
IndieWire has updates their round-up of critical response to films that have played the last week and a half as a part of the Toronto Fest. Here's how TFF #38 films have fared:
The highest rated film thus far is Steve McQueen's "Shame."
A- Ratings (the top): "A Separation" "Shame" "The Turin Horse"
B+ Ratings: "The Artist" "The Descendants" "Le Havre""The Kid with a Bike" "Pina"
B Ratings: "A Dangerous Method" "Into the Abyss" "We Need to Talk About Kevin"
B- Ratings: "Albert Nobbs" "Footnote"
To see the complete list of films that have been rated go to:
http://www.indiewire.com/article/criticwire_tiff_shame_tops_critics_as_fest_winds_down/
FEINBERG'S FIRST FORECAST AT THR
Scott Feinberg (whom I met this year just before we saw the Dardennes Brothers"The Kid with a Bike"...we had a very nice conversation) has his first forecast for Oscar since joining The Hollywood Reporter. Breaking it down by Telluride #38 films:
Picture:
Frontrunners include "The Artist" and "The Descendants"
Major Threats include: "A Dangerous Method"
Possibilities include: "Albert Nobbs" and "We Need to Talk About Kevin"
Director:
Frontrunners: M. Hazanavicius/The Artist
Major Threats: A. Payne/The Descendants, D. Cronenberg/A Dangerous Method
Possibilities: R. Garcia/Albert Nobbs, L. Ramsay/We Need to Talk About Kevin
Actress:
Frontrunners: G. Close/Albert Nobbs
Major Threats: K. Knightley/A Dangerous Method
Possibilities: T. Swinton/Kevin, J. Garner/Butter (uh...no)
Actor:
Frontrunners: G. Clooney/The Descendants, J. Dujardin/The Artist
Major Threats: M. Fassbender in both Shame and A Dangerous Method
No other possibles from TFF
Supporting Actress:
Frontrunners: S. Woodley/The Descendants
Major Threats: J. McTeer/Albert Nobbs
Possibles: C. Mulligan/Shame
Supporting Actor:
No Frontrunners from TFF #38
Major Threats: V. Mortensen/A Dangerous Method
Possibilities: E. Miller/Kevin
Adapted Screenplay:
Frontrunners: The Descendants
Major Threats: A Dangerous Method
Possibilities: Albert Nobbs, Kevin
Original Screenplay:
Frontrunners: The Artist
No other threats or possibilities from Telluride.
Feinberg's totals for the Big 8 categories for TFF #38:
Frontrunners: 9
Major Threats: 9
Possibilities: 10
By film:
The Descendants: Fronts: 4, Threats: 1
The Artist: Fronts: 4
A Dangerous Method: Fronts: 0, Threats 6
Albert Nobbs: Fronts: 1, Threats: 1 Possibles: 3
Shame: Fronts: 0, Threats: 1, Possibles: 1
Kevin: Possibles: 5
Butter: Possibles: 1
CLIPS
There are some new clips and teasers out this week from some of this year's Telluride films. Links below...
"George Harrison:Living in the Material World" from The Playlist (indieWire):
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/watch_clip_from_george_harrison_living_in_the_material_world_doc_gives_a_ta/
"The Artist" also from The Playlist:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/watch_six_clips_from_crowd-pleasing_silent_oscar_contender_the_artist/
"The Descendants" from, you guessed it, The Playlist (the story also features a link to my review of "The Descendants" for them):
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/george_clooney_needs_parenting_help_in_a_new_clip_from_alexander_paynes_the/
SHAME NEWS
Perhaps no film has created as much of a stir during its run at Telluride, Venice and Toronto over the past three weeks as Steve McQueen's uncompromising "Shame." It is not a film for everyone. It is explicit. Michael Fassbender gives what is likely the best performance by an actor this year. Carey Mulligan is better than she's ever been. But because of the nature of the film's subject (sex addiciton) and because it pulls very few punches, it's not a film that is going to be Oscar friendly and that's to bad.
Here are a few posts/articles that have turned up the last week or so about the film:
An indieWire interview with the director and co-writer Steve McQueen:
http://www.indiewire.com/article/steve_mcqueen/
More from McQueen from the LA Times:
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/movies/2011/09/shame-michael-fassbender-mcqueen-naked-movie-nc-17-rating-release-date.html
BUTTER NEWS
If you read this space much, you know I wasn't a big fan of "Butter." Nevertheless, I'm keeping an eye on it as I do all the Telluride offerings now that we are moving into the post TFF/TIFF/Venice autumnal period. So here are some "Butter"-centric posts:
"Butter" will get an Oscar qualifying run...from The Playlist:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/butter_to_get_one_week_run_in_2011_before_wide_release_in_2012/
The Playlist also had another review of the film from one of their regular writers (they had my review which they published on Sept. 4...it's here: http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/telluride_11_review_jennifer_garners_butter_churns_and_churns_but_doesnt_pr/ )
and their regular guy...sounds a lot like me:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/tiff_11_review_butter_starring_jennifer_garner_hugh_jackman_olivia_wilde/
DESCENDANTS NEWS
Alexander Payne's "The Descendants" and Michel Hazanavicius' "The Artist" were the two titles coming out of Telluride and into Toronto with the most heat. Toronto didn't diminish the fervor for either. Payne's "Descendants" has kept up a steady drumbeat of P.R. and here is some of it from the last week:
Anne Thompson of Thompson on Hollywood (indieWire) was generally positive, but not exactly over the moon:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/thompsononhollywood/2011/09/14/day_six_36th_toronto_international_film_festival_the_descendants_moneyball_/
Scott Feinberg of The Hollywood Reporter sat down with Descndnats co-star (and generating some Oscar buzz) Shailene Woodley for an interview:
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/race/toronto-2011-shailene-woodley-how-234742
HitFix (among others) posted some of Geroge Clooney from a Telluride Q & A:
http://www.hitfix.com/blogs/awards-campaign/posts/exclusive-george-clooney-talks-the-descendants-and-a-sneak-peek
MALICK NEWS
Bale and Malick in Austin, TX on Saturday
After the two year long dance of infatuation I did with Terrence Malick's "The Tree of Life" I've found it difficult to let go of obsessing about what he's doing. Fortunately for me there is no paucity of material floating around out there in web land to stoke the flames of that small obsession. It would appear that Malick has started work on his second post-Tree project and that it involves Christian Bale and may focus on music. Check the following posts:
From Johnny Garcia and @jarrettem via twitter actual video of Malick and Bale filming in Austin (it's about 3 min. long):
http://www.twitvid.com/TSXER
Malick and Bale at Austin City Limits...The Playlist:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/what_were_terrence_malick_christian_bale_doing_at_the_austin_city_limits_fe/
Malick and Haley Bennett in Austin, TX. on Saturday
Also FirstShowing.net:
http://www.firstshowing.net/2011/is-terrence-malick-already-filming-christian-bale-in-his-next-project/
Also The Daily Mubi:
http://mubi.com/notebook/posts/daily-briefing-what-are-terrence-malick-and-christian-bale-up-to
Potential casting news of a relative unknown, again The Playlist:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/terrence_malick_chooses_relative_haley_bennett_for_christian_bale_drama/
And RYAN GOSLING????
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/nicolas_winding_refns_ryan_gosling_terrence_malick/
See you Thursday!
Thursday, September 15, 2011
Foreign Submissions/Close Gets Close/Toronto's Telluride Echoes/Carving Butter/Dialing It Back
Good Morning Ladies and Germs...
FOREIGN SUBMISSIONS
Word from two nations over the past 48 hours about their submissions for the Foreign Language Best Pic Oscar race and both announcements deal with films from TFF #38.
Norway has announced that its submission will be Aki Kaurismaki's "Le Havre." A pleasant enough exercise but rather arid for my tastes. The story can be found from The Hollywood Reporter here:
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/aki-kaurismakis-le-havre-finlands-235447
Le Havre's IMDb page:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1508675/
For my money the much superior film will be Iran's entry in the FLF Oscar sweepstakes; Asghar Farhadi's " A Separation." That story via Incontention.com here:
http://incontention.com/2011/09/12/irans-a-separation-latest-to-enter-oscar-race/#more-42822
A Separation's IMDb page:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1832382/
As a side note: News yesterday that Incontention.com was joining HitFix...so congratulations to Kris Tapley and Guy Lodge. This news comes on the heels of the move of Scott Feinberg to The Hollywood Reporter. Oscar season is going to look and feel different this year.
CLOSE GETS CLOSE
Glenn Close has an new interview posted just yesterday at Hollywood News yesterday wherein she talks about TFF #38 film "Albert Nobbs." The film has garnered mixed reviews but I quite liked it. You can read my full review here from The Playlist:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/telluride_11_review_albert_nobbs_glenn_close_mia_wasikowska/#
Close's Hollywood News interview is here:
http://www.hollywoodnews.com/2011/09/14/glenn-close-on-the-long-heartfelt-journey-of-albert-nobbs-awards-alley/
Albert's IMDb page is here:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1602098/
TORONTO'S TELLURIDE ECHOES
A good deal has been written about the fact that Telluride may well have stolen a big chunk of Toronto's thunder this year (as if that's not true every year...at least I think so) and that sentiment is driven home by indieWire's Toronto critic's project. Just as they did during Cannes, the indieWire folk are collating critical response to a number of films during the TIFF. Yesterday saw their first post as results are starting to become available. Leading the pack (and not to my surprise) Steve McQueen's "Shame." Other TFF #38 films that you'll find (and their aggregate grade) on the first listing include:
Pina
A Separation
The Turin Horse
The Artist
The Descendants
Le Havre
The Kid with a Bike
A Dangerous Method
We Need to Talk About Kevin
Footnote
Into the Abyss
Check their scores at:
http://www.indiewire.com/article/criticwire_tiff_shame_tops_critics_as_fest_winds_down/
CARVING BUTTER
A lot of hoopla over a Harvey Weinstein stunt in Toronto to intensify publicity for his Telluride sneak peak film "Butter." He had actress Olivia Wilde, who stars in the film, do an "introduction" designed to tie the film and its political satire element and the current political climate together. All this was reported in a number of news outlets the last 24 hours.
If you read this space often you know that I wasn't a real fan of the film. My complete review of "Butter" for The Playlist can be found here:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/telluride_11_review_jennifer_garners_butter_churns_and_churns_but_doesnt_pr/#
Interestingly, at least to me, was this story of the P.R. stunt from The Olympian and the mention in the fifth paragraph that TWC is re-editing the film after its Telluride sneak.
Here's the story:
http://www.theolympian.com/2011/09/14/1799639/harvey-weinstein-carves-butter.html
Kind of hope I had something to do with that...
DIALING IT BACK
Well, it's time to dial back MTFB for the fall. Now that the 38th edition of the Telluride Film Festival is in the books (and school is under way in earnest) I'm going to go to a twice a week publication format (Mondays and Thursdays is what I'm going to try for). Of course there will always be the option to publish more often should news warrant.
The focus now shifts to the other part of the blog's name "The Film Awards Clearinghouse" as I'll track the awards season fortunes of this year's crop of Telluride films through the Globes, the Guilds, the Critics and finally Oscar night.
It should be fun!
Next post on Monday, Sept. 19th!
FOREIGN SUBMISSIONS
Word from two nations over the past 48 hours about their submissions for the Foreign Language Best Pic Oscar race and both announcements deal with films from TFF #38.
Norway has announced that its submission will be Aki Kaurismaki's "Le Havre." A pleasant enough exercise but rather arid for my tastes. The story can be found from The Hollywood Reporter here:
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/aki-kaurismakis-le-havre-finlands-235447
Le Havre's IMDb page:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1508675/
For my money the much superior film will be Iran's entry in the FLF Oscar sweepstakes; Asghar Farhadi's " A Separation." That story via Incontention.com here:
http://incontention.com/2011/09/12/irans-a-separation-latest-to-enter-oscar-race/#more-42822
A Separation's IMDb page:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1832382/
As a side note: News yesterday that Incontention.com was joining HitFix...so congratulations to Kris Tapley and Guy Lodge. This news comes on the heels of the move of Scott Feinberg to The Hollywood Reporter. Oscar season is going to look and feel different this year.
CLOSE GETS CLOSE
Glenn Close has an new interview posted just yesterday at Hollywood News yesterday wherein she talks about TFF #38 film "Albert Nobbs." The film has garnered mixed reviews but I quite liked it. You can read my full review here from The Playlist:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/telluride_11_review_albert_nobbs_glenn_close_mia_wasikowska/#
Close's Hollywood News interview is here:
http://www.hollywoodnews.com/2011/09/14/glenn-close-on-the-long-heartfelt-journey-of-albert-nobbs-awards-alley/
Albert's IMDb page is here:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1602098/
TORONTO'S TELLURIDE ECHOES
A good deal has been written about the fact that Telluride may well have stolen a big chunk of Toronto's thunder this year (as if that's not true every year...at least I think so) and that sentiment is driven home by indieWire's Toronto critic's project. Just as they did during Cannes, the indieWire folk are collating critical response to a number of films during the TIFF. Yesterday saw their first post as results are starting to become available. Leading the pack (and not to my surprise) Steve McQueen's "Shame." Other TFF #38 films that you'll find (and their aggregate grade) on the first listing include:
Pina
A Separation
The Turin Horse
The Artist
The Descendants
Le Havre
The Kid with a Bike
A Dangerous Method
We Need to Talk About Kevin
Footnote
Into the Abyss
Check their scores at:
http://www.indiewire.com/article/criticwire_tiff_shame_tops_critics_as_fest_winds_down/
CARVING BUTTER
A lot of hoopla over a Harvey Weinstein stunt in Toronto to intensify publicity for his Telluride sneak peak film "Butter." He had actress Olivia Wilde, who stars in the film, do an "introduction" designed to tie the film and its political satire element and the current political climate together. All this was reported in a number of news outlets the last 24 hours.
If you read this space often you know that I wasn't a real fan of the film. My complete review of "Butter" for The Playlist can be found here:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/telluride_11_review_jennifer_garners_butter_churns_and_churns_but_doesnt_pr/#
Interestingly, at least to me, was this story of the P.R. stunt from The Olympian and the mention in the fifth paragraph that TWC is re-editing the film after its Telluride sneak.
Here's the story:
http://www.theolympian.com/2011/09/14/1799639/harvey-weinstein-carves-butter.html
Kind of hope I had something to do with that...
DIALING IT BACK
Well, it's time to dial back MTFB for the fall. Now that the 38th edition of the Telluride Film Festival is in the books (and school is under way in earnest) I'm going to go to a twice a week publication format (Mondays and Thursdays is what I'm going to try for). Of course there will always be the option to publish more often should news warrant.
The focus now shifts to the other part of the blog's name "The Film Awards Clearinghouse" as I'll track the awards season fortunes of this year's crop of Telluride films through the Globes, the Guilds, the Critics and finally Oscar night.
It should be fun!
Next post on Monday, Sept. 19th!
Sunday, September 4, 2011
Half Way Mark/Day Three/Sunday's TBA Sked/ Albert Nobbs/Butter/The Artist
HALF WAY THROUGH...
As I get ready to set out for the third day of the 38th Telluride Film Festival I have theses observations:
1) It's much more difficult to get in as many films as you want when you're also doing peripheral tasks...
2) I haven't yet been bowled over by any thing at this point...liked "Descendants" liked "Albert Nobbs" liked "The Artist." haven't really loved any title yet. And then there's "Butter"...mmmm...I didn't actively hate it, but...eh...not that good.
3) Heading to the Opera House this morning for the first time this year for "Le Havre." Cannes scuttlebutt was good, but it was a long time in finding a distributor...
4) Day Two celeb sightings: Glenn Close, Jennifer Garner, Tilda Swinton, Penelope Ann Miller (said hello to her), Ty Burrell and Fisher Stevens who appears to be here as a regular film goer...
DAY THREE...
My hope today is that I get in "Le Havre" "A Dangerous Method" and "Shame." The Chief Executive and I have dinner reservations for tonight and then depending what's happening and our energy level, we might try to get in one more film. Right now, the plan is to get "Kevin" in on Monday.
SUNDAY'S TBA/SNEAK SKED (from the TFF website):
TBAs • Sunday September 4, 2011
• 11b We Need to Talk About Kevin P/ Sun 12:15 PM
Lynne Ramsay (RATCATCHER, MOVERN CALLER) reminds us that pregnancy
doesn’t always turn out for the best, as Eva, an American travel
writer (Tilda Swinton), copes with terrible deeds committed by her
son. Told both in present day, with Eva a recluse abused by people in
the street, and in a flashback past, as a wealthy wife and mother of a
nasty and manipulative boy. Ferociously powerful, with a gut-wrenching
portrayal of emotional devastation from Swinton, KEVIN features an
astonishing range of dazzling images. (U.K., 2011, 112m)
In person: Rory Kinnear, Lynne Ramsay, Tilda Swinton
SNEAK PREVIEW
• Crazy Horse S/ Sun 11:30 AM
From mental institutions to ballets to boxing gyms, Frederick Wiseman
excels in revealing the mechanics of our institutions. This
refreshingly positive portrait of Paris’s glamorous Crazy Horse
Cabaret, “the best chic nude show on earth,” captures the directors,
dancers, costume designers, wig-makers, lighting technicians, and even
the janitors. Using mesmerizing visual spectacle (silhouettes,
chiaroscuro, and blocks of color) Wiseman recontexualizes the dancers’
exquisite bodies in surprising and beautiful ways. CRAZY HORSE begins
with shadows on stage—an allusion to the magic lantern, one of
cinema’s precursors—and ultimately celebrates the play of light and
movement that is the essence of cinema itself. (U.S., 2011, 134m)
SNEAK PREVIEW
• Butter Q & A P/ Sun 9:00 PM
An edgy satire, set during the Iowa State Fair.
In person: Ty Burrell, Jennifer Garner, Jim Field Smith
• 12 The Artist S/ Sun 4:30 PM
• 31 The Island President M/ Sun 3:45 PM
• 42 Great Expectations N/ Sun 6:15 PM
Featuring JOURNEY OF NO RETURN and CRULIC.
In person: actor Vlad Ivanov
• 43 Calling Cards C/ Sun 11:00 PM
• I Tropicália B/ Sun 2:15 PM
• SEMINAR:
Sunday, 12 noon, Elks Park
Documentary’s Narrative Strategies: As nonfiction filmmakers draw from
a more expansive toolbox, how is our understanding of reality
shifting?
Werner Herzog, Joshua Marston, Wim Wenders, Michel Hazanavicius
NO TBA CONVERSATION h
"CRAZY HORSE"???? DID NOT SEE THAT COMING.
"ALBERT NOBBS" REVIEW:
Glenn Close Reveals Herself by Hiding as “Albert Nobbs”
“Albert Nobbs” gives us Glenn Close in a performance that seems destined to earn her a sixth Oscar nomination and perhaps her first win. It would be well deserved. The film has had a lot of pre-festival buzz about her performance but it’s much more than a one woman show. “Albert Nobbs” is an engaging, entertaining and enlightening piece of work that is richly dramatic and is underscored by moments of wry, quiet humor. Solid, sometimes incredible supporting performances, an able script that cleverly avoids hackneyed plot turns and sure handed direction from Rodrigo Garcia combine to make it a film well worth seeing. “Albert Nobbs” mines a rich vein of personal identification to slowly earn its emotional resonance.
Central to the film is the class structure of the time and place. Garcia gives us a 19th century Ireland that is rigid with class distinctions. Every soul has her or her place that has been prescribed by the station at birth. Escape from one’s station is virtually unheard of. This is the tableau against which the plot of the film is set.
In the film Close plays a woman who is passing as a man, the Albert Nobbs of the title. She does this in order to survive and, perhaps, through careful planning, find a way to fulfill her closely held dreams and better her place in the harsh Irish society. She’s butler in a Dublin hotel, the Morrison. Albert is precise, quiet, and as would be expected of a butler, almost invisible. She’s frugal too; saving up money over the years with a goal of buying and running her own tobacco shop.
Two events occur almost simultaneously that propel the arc of the story forward. The hotel’s owner hires a painter and when he needs to spend a night to finish the job he’s assigned to room with “Albert”. Obviously Albert is afraid that her gender will be discovered. At nearly the same time a young handyman who has been fired from his position at another Dublin hotel scams his way into a job at Morrison’s. He, too, may pose a threat to Albert’s identity and dreams for the future.
But Close’s performance isn’t the only selling point of the piece. We also glimpse the lives of the rest of the hotel staff. These co-workers have dreams of escape too. Of course we see the “other half” as well, the hotel owner, the well-to-do-guests, some lower level royalty that occasional while away a day or two in the establishment. These characters are also crucial to establishing the social strata and feel of the period and Albert’s environs.
So, yes, the film has a lot more going on than just Close’s highly anticipated performance but it would be ridiculous to suggest that her performance isn’t the core of the film. She creates a male character that is so honestly convincing that you find yourself forgetting that you’re looking at Glenn Close in reverse drag. It is an exquisitely detailed performance that audiences are not likely to forget. She pays infinite attention to creating Albert fully from facial and physical details to his posture and the way that he walks. Close manages to do one of the most difficult things to do on film and that is to convey emotion that is hidden by repression. What makes that portrayal all the more difficult and intriguing is that the nature of the character as a quiet, reserved butler, a profession in which the ability to “blend into the woodwork” was a prized asset. It provides Close with immense challenges that she meets again and again. It’s a remarkable immersion of actor into character.
As mentioned earlier, the supporting cast is excellent headlined by Brendan Gleeson as an in house hotel doctor, Mia Wasikowska as a hotel maid and Janet McTeer who shines the most in support as a visitor to the Morrison Hotel.
The film was shot in present day Dublin but you’d never know it from the look and feel of the cinematography, costuming and set design. Dublin in the 1800’s has been rendered authentically and beautifully. The makeup, which plays a huge role in transforming Close from a woman into a man, is spectacular. Music takes a back seat in the film. Its infrequent use may be as a result of the fact that the screenplay is based in part on the stage play of the same title that Close starred in back in the early 1980’s
Much has been made of Close’s passion to turn the play into a film. That’s evident from her position as producer and co-writer of the screenplay. She has been actively pursuing the notion of “Nobbs” as a film for the last 15 years. Her commitment to the story and character may well pay off come Oscar time. Other members of the Albert Nobbs crew could also enter the conversation about nominations: makeup, costuming, art direction, cinematography. Janet McTeer should get some notice for a supporting actress nomination. In all of the buzz about Close’s performance, we haven’t heard much about McTeer who has made her name primarily as a stage actress and on British television but the Academy should take note. McTeer matches Close scene for scene when they’re on screen together.
“Albert Nobbs” is likely to get a good boost from the Telluride presentation owing to its excellent acting and finely drawn technical work and it should. It should also burnish Glenn Close’s reputation as one of the finest actresses working in film. It is a film that you should not miss this fall. [A-]
BUTTER REVIEW
This Butter Churns and Churns But Doesn’t Produce Cream
“Butter” premiered at the Telluride Film Festival Saturday night to a sold out house. Not a spare seat to be had. That being the case, you know that a comedy is in serious trouble when the place is jammed and there are long stretches of the film’s running time where no one laughs. That’s what happened with “Butter.” Another sign your comedy is in trouble: when veteran comedian Rob Corddry gives the most fully developed performance. No knock on Corddry but he’s in a film with other actors who have given better performances in the past but who seem helplessly trapped here. You’d expect better from Jennifer Garner (who also produced) and Hugh Jackman.
“Butter” has that feel of trying to glue too many concepts together without the singular vision to take those separate concepts and form them into a unified whole. It wants to be political satire, a sex comedy, a quirky character study, a send-up of the over-competitiveness in our society, a commentary on race and heart- warming. Oh, does it ever want to be heart-warming. It doesn’t succeed at melting those concepts together and, unfortunately, it doesn’t succeed at any of those concepts individually either.
“Butter” is set in the world of the Iowa State Fair competition for butter carving which apparently really does exist. 15 time champion Bob Pickler is prohibited from seeking the crown a 16th time. Determined to keep the butter carving dynasty in the family, and perhaps parlay the fame and fortune that comes from the butter championship into a political career, Bob’s wife Laura (Garner) enters the contest on her own. She is unexpectedly challenged by a 10 year old African American girl named Destiny (Yara Shahidi) whose butter carving talents are unformed but evident. Destiny is a foster child who has recently been placed with a new white foster family. The film’s slim plot focuses on the twists and turns that occur on the road that these characters must navigate to qualify for the state butter carving competition.
Across the board there are acting problems. Garner is rigidly one dimensional which could work if the film didn’t want to turn that on its head suddenly in the third act. The jarring shift has no context to provide believability. Jackman is wasted. His Boyd Bolton character is an old Laura Pickler flame and she uses him to advance her own evil ends. He’s in two scenes and struggles to maintain the dialect that he used for his run years ago in “Oklahoma” on Broadway. Ty Burrell plays Garner’s husband and who is engaging as Phil Dunphy in television’s “Modern Family” gives us the very same character here. Alicia Silverstone is serviceable as Corddry’s wife and Destiny’s new stepmom. The young Shahidi also suffers from problems with character dimension. She’s flat and often seems lifeless. Olivia Wilde appears as a stripper with vengeance on her mind in a subplot that stretches the limits of credibility from the moment her character is introduced. Ashley Greene is similarly lost in the script’s shuffle as the Pickler daughter.
The film’s director is Jim Field Smith who has one other feature film credit (She’s Out of Your League) and a slew of British television credits to his name. The screenplay was written by first timer Jason Micallef. Both men have to own a good deal of responsibility for this the mess that is this film.
All this isn’t to say that there aren’t some moments of humor along the way. Corddry and Shahidi share a memorable scene in the family car just outside the Moose Lodge where butter carving entries are being taken. Corddry’s foster father character challenges Destiny to overcome any fears she might have by imagining the worst that could happen. Their interchange as they explore various worst case scenarios is truly funny and actually comes close to earning the kind of audience empathy that the film wants to get at by the time the credits roll. There are also some nice comic moments from Kristen Schall (The Daily Show) as the leader of the Bob Pickler fan club and Phyllis Smith (The Office) as a county butter carving official but they come few and far between.
“Butter” was added to the Telluride lineup as one of the two films that the organizers will “sneak” over the Labor Day weekend. Last year “sneaks” included “Black Swan” and “127 Hours.” “Juno” was a “sneak” here in 2007. With that track record, festival patrons were anticipating great things from “Butter” but because the film can’t seem to decide what it wants to be and what it wants to say those expectations were not met. [C-]
THE ARTIST
Quick note or two...some moments are genius...the opening sequence, dream sequence. Great performances from Jean Dujardin and Berenice Bejo. Nice support from John Goodman and Uggy the dog. Maybe a shade over long. Audience ate it up. [A-]
OH...and the blog passed its 20,000th view Saturday. Thanks to all!!!
As I get ready to set out for the third day of the 38th Telluride Film Festival I have theses observations:
1) It's much more difficult to get in as many films as you want when you're also doing peripheral tasks...
2) I haven't yet been bowled over by any thing at this point...liked "Descendants" liked "Albert Nobbs" liked "The Artist." haven't really loved any title yet. And then there's "Butter"...mmmm...I didn't actively hate it, but...eh...not that good.
3) Heading to the Opera House this morning for the first time this year for "Le Havre." Cannes scuttlebutt was good, but it was a long time in finding a distributor...
4) Day Two celeb sightings: Glenn Close, Jennifer Garner, Tilda Swinton, Penelope Ann Miller (said hello to her), Ty Burrell and Fisher Stevens who appears to be here as a regular film goer...
DAY THREE...
My hope today is that I get in "Le Havre" "A Dangerous Method" and "Shame." The Chief Executive and I have dinner reservations for tonight and then depending what's happening and our energy level, we might try to get in one more film. Right now, the plan is to get "Kevin" in on Monday.
SUNDAY'S TBA/SNEAK SKED (from the TFF website):
TBAs • Sunday September 4, 2011
• 11b We Need to Talk About Kevin P/ Sun 12:15 PM
Lynne Ramsay (RATCATCHER, MOVERN CALLER) reminds us that pregnancy
doesn’t always turn out for the best, as Eva, an American travel
writer (Tilda Swinton), copes with terrible deeds committed by her
son. Told both in present day, with Eva a recluse abused by people in
the street, and in a flashback past, as a wealthy wife and mother of a
nasty and manipulative boy. Ferociously powerful, with a gut-wrenching
portrayal of emotional devastation from Swinton, KEVIN features an
astonishing range of dazzling images. (U.K., 2011, 112m)
In person: Rory Kinnear, Lynne Ramsay, Tilda Swinton
SNEAK PREVIEW
• Crazy Horse S/ Sun 11:30 AM
From mental institutions to ballets to boxing gyms, Frederick Wiseman
excels in revealing the mechanics of our institutions. This
refreshingly positive portrait of Paris’s glamorous Crazy Horse
Cabaret, “the best chic nude show on earth,” captures the directors,
dancers, costume designers, wig-makers, lighting technicians, and even
the janitors. Using mesmerizing visual spectacle (silhouettes,
chiaroscuro, and blocks of color) Wiseman recontexualizes the dancers’
exquisite bodies in surprising and beautiful ways. CRAZY HORSE begins
with shadows on stage—an allusion to the magic lantern, one of
cinema’s precursors—and ultimately celebrates the play of light and
movement that is the essence of cinema itself. (U.S., 2011, 134m)
SNEAK PREVIEW
• Butter Q & A P/ Sun 9:00 PM
An edgy satire, set during the Iowa State Fair.
In person: Ty Burrell, Jennifer Garner, Jim Field Smith
• 12 The Artist S/ Sun 4:30 PM
• 31 The Island President M/ Sun 3:45 PM
• 42 Great Expectations N/ Sun 6:15 PM
Featuring JOURNEY OF NO RETURN and CRULIC.
In person: actor Vlad Ivanov
• 43 Calling Cards C/ Sun 11:00 PM
• I Tropicália B/ Sun 2:15 PM
• SEMINAR:
Sunday, 12 noon, Elks Park
Documentary’s Narrative Strategies: As nonfiction filmmakers draw from
a more expansive toolbox, how is our understanding of reality
shifting?
Werner Herzog, Joshua Marston, Wim Wenders, Michel Hazanavicius
NO TBA CONVERSATION h
"CRAZY HORSE"???? DID NOT SEE THAT COMING.
"ALBERT NOBBS" REVIEW:
Glenn Close Reveals Herself by Hiding as “Albert Nobbs”
“Albert Nobbs” gives us Glenn Close in a performance that seems destined to earn her a sixth Oscar nomination and perhaps her first win. It would be well deserved. The film has had a lot of pre-festival buzz about her performance but it’s much more than a one woman show. “Albert Nobbs” is an engaging, entertaining and enlightening piece of work that is richly dramatic and is underscored by moments of wry, quiet humor. Solid, sometimes incredible supporting performances, an able script that cleverly avoids hackneyed plot turns and sure handed direction from Rodrigo Garcia combine to make it a film well worth seeing. “Albert Nobbs” mines a rich vein of personal identification to slowly earn its emotional resonance.
Central to the film is the class structure of the time and place. Garcia gives us a 19th century Ireland that is rigid with class distinctions. Every soul has her or her place that has been prescribed by the station at birth. Escape from one’s station is virtually unheard of. This is the tableau against which the plot of the film is set.
In the film Close plays a woman who is passing as a man, the Albert Nobbs of the title. She does this in order to survive and, perhaps, through careful planning, find a way to fulfill her closely held dreams and better her place in the harsh Irish society. She’s butler in a Dublin hotel, the Morrison. Albert is precise, quiet, and as would be expected of a butler, almost invisible. She’s frugal too; saving up money over the years with a goal of buying and running her own tobacco shop.
Two events occur almost simultaneously that propel the arc of the story forward. The hotel’s owner hires a painter and when he needs to spend a night to finish the job he’s assigned to room with “Albert”. Obviously Albert is afraid that her gender will be discovered. At nearly the same time a young handyman who has been fired from his position at another Dublin hotel scams his way into a job at Morrison’s. He, too, may pose a threat to Albert’s identity and dreams for the future.
But Close’s performance isn’t the only selling point of the piece. We also glimpse the lives of the rest of the hotel staff. These co-workers have dreams of escape too. Of course we see the “other half” as well, the hotel owner, the well-to-do-guests, some lower level royalty that occasional while away a day or two in the establishment. These characters are also crucial to establishing the social strata and feel of the period and Albert’s environs.
So, yes, the film has a lot more going on than just Close’s highly anticipated performance but it would be ridiculous to suggest that her performance isn’t the core of the film. She creates a male character that is so honestly convincing that you find yourself forgetting that you’re looking at Glenn Close in reverse drag. It is an exquisitely detailed performance that audiences are not likely to forget. She pays infinite attention to creating Albert fully from facial and physical details to his posture and the way that he walks. Close manages to do one of the most difficult things to do on film and that is to convey emotion that is hidden by repression. What makes that portrayal all the more difficult and intriguing is that the nature of the character as a quiet, reserved butler, a profession in which the ability to “blend into the woodwork” was a prized asset. It provides Close with immense challenges that she meets again and again. It’s a remarkable immersion of actor into character.
As mentioned earlier, the supporting cast is excellent headlined by Brendan Gleeson as an in house hotel doctor, Mia Wasikowska as a hotel maid and Janet McTeer who shines the most in support as a visitor to the Morrison Hotel.
The film was shot in present day Dublin but you’d never know it from the look and feel of the cinematography, costuming and set design. Dublin in the 1800’s has been rendered authentically and beautifully. The makeup, which plays a huge role in transforming Close from a woman into a man, is spectacular. Music takes a back seat in the film. Its infrequent use may be as a result of the fact that the screenplay is based in part on the stage play of the same title that Close starred in back in the early 1980’s
Much has been made of Close’s passion to turn the play into a film. That’s evident from her position as producer and co-writer of the screenplay. She has been actively pursuing the notion of “Nobbs” as a film for the last 15 years. Her commitment to the story and character may well pay off come Oscar time. Other members of the Albert Nobbs crew could also enter the conversation about nominations: makeup, costuming, art direction, cinematography. Janet McTeer should get some notice for a supporting actress nomination. In all of the buzz about Close’s performance, we haven’t heard much about McTeer who has made her name primarily as a stage actress and on British television but the Academy should take note. McTeer matches Close scene for scene when they’re on screen together.
“Albert Nobbs” is likely to get a good boost from the Telluride presentation owing to its excellent acting and finely drawn technical work and it should. It should also burnish Glenn Close’s reputation as one of the finest actresses working in film. It is a film that you should not miss this fall. [A-]
BUTTER REVIEW
This Butter Churns and Churns But Doesn’t Produce Cream
“Butter” premiered at the Telluride Film Festival Saturday night to a sold out house. Not a spare seat to be had. That being the case, you know that a comedy is in serious trouble when the place is jammed and there are long stretches of the film’s running time where no one laughs. That’s what happened with “Butter.” Another sign your comedy is in trouble: when veteran comedian Rob Corddry gives the most fully developed performance. No knock on Corddry but he’s in a film with other actors who have given better performances in the past but who seem helplessly trapped here. You’d expect better from Jennifer Garner (who also produced) and Hugh Jackman.
“Butter” has that feel of trying to glue too many concepts together without the singular vision to take those separate concepts and form them into a unified whole. It wants to be political satire, a sex comedy, a quirky character study, a send-up of the over-competitiveness in our society, a commentary on race and heart- warming. Oh, does it ever want to be heart-warming. It doesn’t succeed at melting those concepts together and, unfortunately, it doesn’t succeed at any of those concepts individually either.
“Butter” is set in the world of the Iowa State Fair competition for butter carving which apparently really does exist. 15 time champion Bob Pickler is prohibited from seeking the crown a 16th time. Determined to keep the butter carving dynasty in the family, and perhaps parlay the fame and fortune that comes from the butter championship into a political career, Bob’s wife Laura (Garner) enters the contest on her own. She is unexpectedly challenged by a 10 year old African American girl named Destiny (Yara Shahidi) whose butter carving talents are unformed but evident. Destiny is a foster child who has recently been placed with a new white foster family. The film’s slim plot focuses on the twists and turns that occur on the road that these characters must navigate to qualify for the state butter carving competition.
Across the board there are acting problems. Garner is rigidly one dimensional which could work if the film didn’t want to turn that on its head suddenly in the third act. The jarring shift has no context to provide believability. Jackman is wasted. His Boyd Bolton character is an old Laura Pickler flame and she uses him to advance her own evil ends. He’s in two scenes and struggles to maintain the dialect that he used for his run years ago in “Oklahoma” on Broadway. Ty Burrell plays Garner’s husband and who is engaging as Phil Dunphy in television’s “Modern Family” gives us the very same character here. Alicia Silverstone is serviceable as Corddry’s wife and Destiny’s new stepmom. The young Shahidi also suffers from problems with character dimension. She’s flat and often seems lifeless. Olivia Wilde appears as a stripper with vengeance on her mind in a subplot that stretches the limits of credibility from the moment her character is introduced. Ashley Greene is similarly lost in the script’s shuffle as the Pickler daughter.
The film’s director is Jim Field Smith who has one other feature film credit (She’s Out of Your League) and a slew of British television credits to his name. The screenplay was written by first timer Jason Micallef. Both men have to own a good deal of responsibility for this the mess that is this film.
All this isn’t to say that there aren’t some moments of humor along the way. Corddry and Shahidi share a memorable scene in the family car just outside the Moose Lodge where butter carving entries are being taken. Corddry’s foster father character challenges Destiny to overcome any fears she might have by imagining the worst that could happen. Their interchange as they explore various worst case scenarios is truly funny and actually comes close to earning the kind of audience empathy that the film wants to get at by the time the credits roll. There are also some nice comic moments from Kristen Schall (The Daily Show) as the leader of the Bob Pickler fan club and Phyllis Smith (The Office) as a county butter carving official but they come few and far between.
“Butter” was added to the Telluride lineup as one of the two films that the organizers will “sneak” over the Labor Day weekend. Last year “sneaks” included “Black Swan” and “127 Hours.” “Juno” was a “sneak” here in 2007. With that track record, festival patrons were anticipating great things from “Butter” but because the film can’t seem to decide what it wants to be and what it wants to say those expectations were not met. [C-]
THE ARTIST
Quick note or two...some moments are genius...the opening sequence, dream sequence. Great performances from Jean Dujardin and Berenice Bejo. Nice support from John Goodman and Uggy the dog. Maybe a shade over long. Audience ate it up. [A-]
OH...and the blog passed its 20,000th view Saturday. Thanks to all!!!
Saturday, September 3, 2011
Day One of the 38th/Then Day Two/Sneak #1/The Descendants Reviewed
Day One...short on film, long on hobbing and nobbing.
First, A Big Thank You to everyone who came to "The Guide to the Ride, The Flow of the SHOW" at The River Club yesterday evening. It was a lot of fun to get to chat with everyone about the festival, film and the blog. I t was truly a "hoot." I was humbled by the kindness of strangers...paraphrasing Tennessee Williams and Blanche DuBois.
Also a shout out to Eugene Novikov of FilmBlather.com who was kind enough to drop by and participate in the discussion.
And immense gratitude to my hosts (and former students) who so graciously make it possible for me to play this game every year: Mitzi and Larry Mallard of The River Club...you have no idea!
Really enjoyed getting re-acquainted yesterday with Alexandra and Mark Helfrich...very nice, kind and funny people...
And...Tilda Swinton sighted!
DAY TWO...
The plan as of 7:15 this morning:
Albert Nobbs
The Artist
A Dangerous Method
Sneak Preview (see below) or Clooney Tribute
Maybe Goodbye First Love
SNEAK
All signs point to "Butter" starring Jennnifer Garner, Hugh Jackman and Olivia Wilde as the first "sneak preview" and likely tonight. Ms. Garner (Mrs. Affleck) has been reportedly sighted in and around town. Looking forward to it.
As to the other "sneak" I have no strong indicators...though...I still wouldn't be 100% surprised if it turned out to be Clooney's "The Ides of March" which TFF officials completely deny...
Or "Marilyn"
Or "Miss Bala"
Or...really...a lot of things...
SNEAK PREVIEW
• Butter G/ Sat 8:15 PM • C/ Sat 10:45 PM
In person: Jennifer Garner, Jim Field Smith, Ty Burrell
• 21 The Kid With a Bike L/ Sat 3:45 PM
• 2 Le Havre L/ Sat 10:45 PM
G = Galaxy
C= Chuck Jones
L= Le Pierre
THE DESCENDANTS REVIEWED...
Yes...I spoke with George Clooney. He laughed at me (not with me...at me) and Alexander Payne...(he said "thanks"
Kristy, my wife, has the much better Clooney and Payne stories...see her...ask her...they are cool stories...
Here's my review...(pssst...I liked it):
“The Descendants” premiered Friday afternoon at the 38th Telluride Film Festival where it was greeted by vigorous applause at its conclusion.
To tell the tale, Payne needs a strong male lead that is capable of accessing intense vulnerability. In “About Schmidt” (2002) he needed the same abilities and found it in Jack Nicholson’s Oscar nominated performance. Two years earlier, in his sublime “Sideways” (for which he shared the Oscar for Best Screenplay with Jim Taylor) he split those duties in performances from Paul Giamatti and Oscar nominated Thomas Haden Church. In “The Descendants” Payne casts George Clooney who takes on the role and succeeds at every level.
Payne opens the film with a shot of a woman in a speedboat screaming across a bay with Hawaiian mountains as the backdrop. She appears to be very nearly at the verge of ecstasy. Fade to black. We then discover that she is Elizabeth King and moments after the fade out of the opening scene she has experienced a catastrophic accident that has left her in a coma. Her husband, Matt (Clooney) soon learns that her condition is irreversible and that her advanced directive leaves no room for doubt as to the course of action she desires…no heroic measures, pull the plug.
Matt is left to pass that news to friends and family including the two daughters for whom he admits he is the “backup” parent. In the process of breaking the news, Matt finds out that his wife has had a secret of her own and that secret propels the story forward.
All of this occurs against the backdrop of a potential sale of 25,000 acres of pristine Hawaiian countryside over which Matt is the trustee on behalf of the extended King family. His decision alone determines the fate of the land and the millions of dollars it is worth.
Alexander Payne hasn’t directed a feature film since 2004 (About Schmidt). He’s been away too long. Payne has created a moving, effective observation on family relationships and how they are tested, torn and re-structured in the face of sudden challenges in his latest film, “The Descendants” based on the novel by Kaui Hart Hemmings (Payne co-wrote the screenplay with Nat Faxon and Jim Rash).
It is Clooney’s picture to carry and he masters the challenges at every turn. He was lauded in 2009 for stretching his acting chops in “Up in the Air” and has clearly continued to look for ways to explore his abilities with this role. Clooney’s willingness to allow us to see Matt’s naked vulnerability and the character’s struggles to make choices that he can live with form the spine of the film’s narrative. Payne and Clooney were on hand following the film’s presentation and in the course of the Q and A Payne insisted that Clooney had provided him with the best acting collaboration of any of his films.
Clooney is ably assisted with strong performances from Shailene Woodley as his eldest daughter and Judy Greer and Matthew Lillard as couple whose lives become intertwined with Matt’s. Also very effective is veteran actor Robert Forster as Matt’s father-in-law. Forster’s character is oblivious to reality, blinded by his love for his daughter.
Payne has opted to follow the same structure cinematically that he has used before in both “Schmidt” and “Sideways.” Payne uses a quiet first act that slowly pulls the viewer into the orbit of the characters but maintains an almost astringent stand-offishness and then, before you realize it, he’s managed to engage you emotionally. It’s subtle and effective as Payne balances universal moments, (the loss of a loved one, the love for a child, and the emotional pull of familial obligations) with the quirkiness that viewers have come to expect from an Alexander Payne film.
Thematically “The Descendants” asks to contemplate what we owe to those who came before us, what we owe to those who come after us and what we owe ourselves and how we assess those debts in terms of the choices that we make. One of the magical truths of the film is that those choices will differ depending on the lense from which they are viewed.
Gorgeously shot on location in Hawaii, Payne doesn’t shirk from contrasting the visual paradise and harmony of Hawaii with the disharmony and dysfunction that occurs in the King family after Elizabeth’s accident. The film is knock-out beautiful to look at.
Ultimately “The Descendants” is a family dramedy at its core and bolstered by Clooney’s solid performance, it’s a film very, very worth seeing. [A-]
Telluride fireworks on July 4, 2011 (Larry Mallard)
First, A Big Thank You to everyone who came to "The Guide to the Ride, The Flow of the SHOW" at The River Club yesterday evening. It was a lot of fun to get to chat with everyone about the festival, film and the blog. I t was truly a "hoot." I was humbled by the kindness of strangers...paraphrasing Tennessee Williams and Blanche DuBois.
Also a shout out to Eugene Novikov of FilmBlather.com who was kind enough to drop by and participate in the discussion.
And immense gratitude to my hosts (and former students) who so graciously make it possible for me to play this game every year: Mitzi and Larry Mallard of The River Club...you have no idea!
Really enjoyed getting re-acquainted yesterday with Alexandra and Mark Helfrich...very nice, kind and funny people...
And...Tilda Swinton sighted!
DAY TWO...
The plan as of 7:15 this morning:
Albert Nobbs
The Artist
A Dangerous Method
Sneak Preview (see below) or Clooney Tribute
Maybe Goodbye First Love
SNEAK
All signs point to "Butter" starring Jennnifer Garner, Hugh Jackman and Olivia Wilde as the first "sneak preview" and likely tonight. Ms. Garner (Mrs. Affleck) has been reportedly sighted in and around town. Looking forward to it.
As to the other "sneak" I have no strong indicators...though...I still wouldn't be 100% surprised if it turned out to be Clooney's "The Ides of March" which TFF officials completely deny...
Or "Marilyn"
Or "Miss Bala"
Or...really...a lot of things...
SNEAK PREVIEW
• Butter G/ Sat 8:15 PM • C/ Sat 10:45 PM
In person: Jennifer Garner, Jim Field Smith, Ty Burrell
• 21 The Kid With a Bike L/ Sat 3:45 PM
• 2 Le Havre L/ Sat 10:45 PM
G = Galaxy
C= Chuck Jones
L= Le Pierre
THE DESCENDANTS REVIEWED...
Yes...I spoke with George Clooney. He laughed at me (not with me...at me) and Alexander Payne...(he said "thanks"
Kristy, my wife, has the much better Clooney and Payne stories...see her...ask her...they are cool stories...
Here's my review...(pssst...I liked it):
“The Descendants” premiered Friday afternoon at the 38th Telluride Film Festival where it was greeted by vigorous applause at its conclusion.
To tell the tale, Payne needs a strong male lead that is capable of accessing intense vulnerability. In “About Schmidt” (2002) he needed the same abilities and found it in Jack Nicholson’s Oscar nominated performance. Two years earlier, in his sublime “Sideways” (for which he shared the Oscar for Best Screenplay with Jim Taylor) he split those duties in performances from Paul Giamatti and Oscar nominated Thomas Haden Church. In “The Descendants” Payne casts George Clooney who takes on the role and succeeds at every level.
Payne opens the film with a shot of a woman in a speedboat screaming across a bay with Hawaiian mountains as the backdrop. She appears to be very nearly at the verge of ecstasy. Fade to black. We then discover that she is Elizabeth King and moments after the fade out of the opening scene she has experienced a catastrophic accident that has left her in a coma. Her husband, Matt (Clooney) soon learns that her condition is irreversible and that her advanced directive leaves no room for doubt as to the course of action she desires…no heroic measures, pull the plug.
Matt is left to pass that news to friends and family including the two daughters for whom he admits he is the “backup” parent. In the process of breaking the news, Matt finds out that his wife has had a secret of her own and that secret propels the story forward.
All of this occurs against the backdrop of a potential sale of 25,000 acres of pristine Hawaiian countryside over which Matt is the trustee on behalf of the extended King family. His decision alone determines the fate of the land and the millions of dollars it is worth.
Alexander Payne hasn’t directed a feature film since 2004 (About Schmidt). He’s been away too long. Payne has created a moving, effective observation on family relationships and how they are tested, torn and re-structured in the face of sudden challenges in his latest film, “The Descendants” based on the novel by Kaui Hart Hemmings (Payne co-wrote the screenplay with Nat Faxon and Jim Rash).
It is Clooney’s picture to carry and he masters the challenges at every turn. He was lauded in 2009 for stretching his acting chops in “Up in the Air” and has clearly continued to look for ways to explore his abilities with this role. Clooney’s willingness to allow us to see Matt’s naked vulnerability and the character’s struggles to make choices that he can live with form the spine of the film’s narrative. Payne and Clooney were on hand following the film’s presentation and in the course of the Q and A Payne insisted that Clooney had provided him with the best acting collaboration of any of his films.
Clooney is ably assisted with strong performances from Shailene Woodley as his eldest daughter and Judy Greer and Matthew Lillard as couple whose lives become intertwined with Matt’s. Also very effective is veteran actor Robert Forster as Matt’s father-in-law. Forster’s character is oblivious to reality, blinded by his love for his daughter.
Payne has opted to follow the same structure cinematically that he has used before in both “Schmidt” and “Sideways.” Payne uses a quiet first act that slowly pulls the viewer into the orbit of the characters but maintains an almost astringent stand-offishness and then, before you realize it, he’s managed to engage you emotionally. It’s subtle and effective as Payne balances universal moments, (the loss of a loved one, the love for a child, and the emotional pull of familial obligations) with the quirkiness that viewers have come to expect from an Alexander Payne film.
Thematically “The Descendants” asks to contemplate what we owe to those who came before us, what we owe to those who come after us and what we owe ourselves and how we assess those debts in terms of the choices that we make. One of the magical truths of the film is that those choices will differ depending on the lense from which they are viewed.
Gorgeously shot on location in Hawaii, Payne doesn’t shirk from contrasting the visual paradise and harmony of Hawaii with the disharmony and dysfunction that occurs in the King family after Elizabeth’s accident. The film is knock-out beautiful to look at.
Ultimately “The Descendants” is a family dramedy at its core and bolstered by Clooney’s solid performance, it’s a film very, very worth seeing. [A-]
Saturday TBAs
SNEAK PREVIEW
• Butter G/ Sat 8:15 PM • C/ Sat 10:45 PM
In person: Jennifer Garner, Jim Field Smith, Ty Burrell
• 21 The Kid With a Bike L/ Sat 3:45 PM
• 2 Le Havre L/ Sat 10:45 PM
G = Galaxy
C= Chuck Jones
L= Le Pierre
• Butter G/ Sat 8:15 PM • C/ Sat 10:45 PM
In person: Jennifer Garner, Jim Field Smith, Ty Burrell
• 21 The Kid With a Bike L/ Sat 3:45 PM
• 2 Le Havre L/ Sat 10:45 PM
G = Galaxy
C= Chuck Jones
L= Le Pierre
Wednesday, August 31, 2011
The Invite/Late Breaking/Miss Bala with a Bullet and Some Butter/Drive Posters/Eye on Ides/And a Teaser
Hello to everyone dropping into MTFB to scan the Telluride possibilities for 2011. Jeez, I hope I'm close to right on some of this...
2 DAYS! Come on!
THE INVITE
Come and join me for the first ever Michael's Telluride Film Blog wing-ding called: "The Guide to the Ride; The Flow of the SHOW" on Friday, Sept. 2 from 5:00 to 5:30 PM in The River Club in Telluride. Larry and Mitzi Mallard of the Club will be our hosts and I am told that refreshments will be provided. The River Club is located at 550 Depot in Telluride. That's 4 blocks west of the Gondola station. Come by and say hello and we'll talk a little film.
LATE BREAKING
The New York Post reporting on George Clooney in Venice for "The Ides of March" claim sources have said that Clooney will be "honored" at Telluride and that "Ides" will lay in the festival.
See here:
http://www.nypost.com/p/pagesix/clooney_rolls_with_his_pals_cNHop2Y03Ie9UvnfqBZy3M?utm_campaign=Post10&utm_source=Post10Alpha
AND...
Eugene Novikov at FilmBlather.com reports that the newly released trailer for "A Dangerous Method" says it is a Telluride selection. Thanks, Mr. Novikov!
MISS BALA AND BUTTER
Late late Monday night came some evidence that the competitive butter carving comedy (you read that right) "Butter" would play in Telluride. The film stars Jennifer Garner, Hugh Jackman and Olivia Wilde. That info came via a randomly culled tweet from what would appear to be a legit crew member...so, I slipped it into yesterday's blog post at the last minute. "Butter" has been a film that I have mentioned in this space before as one of those that intuitively seemed like it would be a Telluride possibility. So it was easy to buy into the notion that it might make the list (I added it to this week's "Bets" at #19).
Butter's IMDb page:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1349451/
Then this morning Shadow and Act, a blog that makes its home at IndieWire made the claim that Mexican thriller "Miss Bala" would be playing Telluride as well. No attribution, but it is IndieWire and the story was unequivocal...so...slap it on the list at #20.
You can see the Shadow and Act story and link to the "Miss Bala" trailer here:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/shadowandact/archives/2011/08/30/watch_trailer_for_thriller_about_kinapped_mexican_beauty_queen_miss_bala_mi/#
You can also catch the trailer at FirstShowing.net as well:
http://www.firstshowing.net/2011/must-watch-first-trailer-for-cannes-fave-mexican-thriller-miss-bala/
Miss Bala's IMDb page:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1911600/
Recapping this week's revise Ten (plus) Bets list:
1) The Descendants (dir. Alexander Payne, Stars: George Clooney)
2) Into the Abyss (dir. Werner Herzog)
3) The Artist (dir. Michael Hazanavicius, Stars: Jean Dujardin)
4) A Trip to the Moon (compiled by Serge Bromberg)
5) We Have to Talk About Kevin (dir. Lynne Ramsay, Stars: Tilda Swinton)
6) Le Havre (Dir. Aki Kaurismaki)
7) Shame (dir. Steve McQueen, Stars: Michael Fassbender, Carey Mulligan)
8) Goodbye First Love (dir. Mia Hansen-Love)
9) The Skin I Live In (dir. Pedro Almodovar, Stars: Antonio Banderas
10) Footnote (dir. Joseph Cedar)
11) A Dangerous Method (dir. David Cronenberg, Stars: Viggo Mortensen, Michael Fassbender, Keira Knightley)
12) Prohibition (dir. Ken Burns & Lynn Novick)
13) The Birds Upstairs (short/dir. Christopher Jarvis)
14) Drive (Dir. Nicolas Winding Refn, Stars: Ryan Gosling, Carey Mulligan)
15) Dark Horse (dir. Todd Solondz, Stars: Christopher Walken, Selma Blair)
16) The Kid with a Bike (dir. Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardennes)
17) The Lady (dir. Luc Beeson, Stars: Michelle Yeoh, David Thewlis)
18) Martha Marcy May Marlene (dir. Sean Durkin, Stars: Elizabeth Olsen)
19) Butter (dir. Jim Field Smith, Stars: Jennifer Garner, High Jackman, Olivia Wilde)
20) Miss Bala (dir. Gerardo Naranjo, Star: Stephanie Stigman)
And let me just say...I'm getting hinky about: Kid with a Bike, Dark Horse, Drive and Le Havre...no buzz, no murmur...I'm feeling awful lonely on these four pictures right now....
SPEAKING OF DRIVE...
Want it to be there (and Ides of March and Coriolanus). Still crossing my fingers. That said, the fine folks at Rope of Silicon put up a nifty post with multiple character posters for the Nicolas Winding Refn film that stars Ryan Gosling, Carey Mulligan and Albert Brooks. They're interesting and may have to suffice in lieu of the actual film if it's not playing in the San Juans this weekend...at least for a while...
Here's the link to that post:
http://www.ropeofsilicon.com/article/posters-drive-spoil-film-9
Drive's IMDb page:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0780504/
EYE ON IDES
In a similar vein, I'd really love to see George Clooney's "Ides of March" show up. I think the only way that happens is if Clooney also appears to take part in the presentation of "The Descendants." and happens to also bring along his own film. Yesterday's blog mentioned that the appearance of "Michael Clayton" as the Thursday night pre-SHOW presentation might portend his appearance as a tributee. I had a good deal of traffic today that suggested that could also just as easily pre-sage a tribute to Tilda Swinton as she won her Supporting Actress for that film...point well taken! (and I'm fairly confident that her "We Need to Talk About Kevin" is going to play in the fest).
All that to say this...there's a new clip out and about from "The Ides of March" and you can take a look at it here via a link from Anne Thompson of Thompson on Hollywood at IndieWire:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/thompsononhollywood/2011/08/30/ides_of_march_clip_evan_rachel_wood_outsmarts_the_charms_of_ryan_gosling#
AND A TEASER
Late day rumors as I was going to bed last night had it that Glenn Close would be in T-ride which would mean "Albert Nobbs"! But remember... IT"S A RUMOR!
Also, we haven't touched on the whole Lauren/Bush nuptials that are taking place there in Telluride this weekend as well...former Presidents (plural) in town??? Of both parties??? Again, IT'S JUST A RUMOR! Well, not the wedding, that's real...but some high profile attendees are certainly likely! Maybe they politicos and fashionistas will join us film geeks on Colorado Ave.
More on the Morrow...and then on to Telluride!
FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER
@Gort2
2 DAYS! Come on!
THE INVITE
Come and join me for the first ever Michael's Telluride Film Blog wing-ding called: "The Guide to the Ride; The Flow of the SHOW" on Friday, Sept. 2 from 5:00 to 5:30 PM in The River Club in Telluride. Larry and Mitzi Mallard of the Club will be our hosts and I am told that refreshments will be provided. The River Club is located at 550 Depot in Telluride. That's 4 blocks west of the Gondola station. Come by and say hello and we'll talk a little film.
LATE BREAKING
The New York Post reporting on George Clooney in Venice for "The Ides of March" claim sources have said that Clooney will be "honored" at Telluride and that "Ides" will lay in the festival.
See here:
http://www.nypost.com/p/pagesix/clooney_rolls_with_his_pals_cNHop2Y03Ie9UvnfqBZy3M?utm_campaign=Post10&utm_source=Post10Alpha
AND...
Eugene Novikov at FilmBlather.com reports that the newly released trailer for "A Dangerous Method" says it is a Telluride selection. Thanks, Mr. Novikov!
MISS BALA AND BUTTER
Late late Monday night came some evidence that the competitive butter carving comedy (you read that right) "Butter" would play in Telluride. The film stars Jennifer Garner, Hugh Jackman and Olivia Wilde. That info came via a randomly culled tweet from what would appear to be a legit crew member...so, I slipped it into yesterday's blog post at the last minute. "Butter" has been a film that I have mentioned in this space before as one of those that intuitively seemed like it would be a Telluride possibility. So it was easy to buy into the notion that it might make the list (I added it to this week's "Bets" at #19).
Butter's IMDb page:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1349451/
Then this morning Shadow and Act, a blog that makes its home at IndieWire made the claim that Mexican thriller "Miss Bala" would be playing Telluride as well. No attribution, but it is IndieWire and the story was unequivocal...so...slap it on the list at #20.
You can see the Shadow and Act story and link to the "Miss Bala" trailer here:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/shadowandact/archives/2011/08/30/watch_trailer_for_thriller_about_kinapped_mexican_beauty_queen_miss_bala_mi/#
You can also catch the trailer at FirstShowing.net as well:
http://www.firstshowing.net/2011/must-watch-first-trailer-for-cannes-fave-mexican-thriller-miss-bala/
Miss Bala's IMDb page:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1911600/
Recapping this week's revise Ten (plus) Bets list:
1) The Descendants (dir. Alexander Payne, Stars: George Clooney)
2) Into the Abyss (dir. Werner Herzog)
3) The Artist (dir. Michael Hazanavicius, Stars: Jean Dujardin)
4) A Trip to the Moon (compiled by Serge Bromberg)
5) We Have to Talk About Kevin (dir. Lynne Ramsay, Stars: Tilda Swinton)
6) Le Havre (Dir. Aki Kaurismaki)
7) Shame (dir. Steve McQueen, Stars: Michael Fassbender, Carey Mulligan)
8) Goodbye First Love (dir. Mia Hansen-Love)
9) The Skin I Live In (dir. Pedro Almodovar, Stars: Antonio Banderas
10) Footnote (dir. Joseph Cedar)
11) A Dangerous Method (dir. David Cronenberg, Stars: Viggo Mortensen, Michael Fassbender, Keira Knightley)
12) Prohibition (dir. Ken Burns & Lynn Novick)
13) The Birds Upstairs (short/dir. Christopher Jarvis)
14) Drive (Dir. Nicolas Winding Refn, Stars: Ryan Gosling, Carey Mulligan)
15) Dark Horse (dir. Todd Solondz, Stars: Christopher Walken, Selma Blair)
16) The Kid with a Bike (dir. Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardennes)
17) The Lady (dir. Luc Beeson, Stars: Michelle Yeoh, David Thewlis)
18) Martha Marcy May Marlene (dir. Sean Durkin, Stars: Elizabeth Olsen)
19) Butter (dir. Jim Field Smith, Stars: Jennifer Garner, High Jackman, Olivia Wilde)
20) Miss Bala (dir. Gerardo Naranjo, Star: Stephanie Stigman)
And let me just say...I'm getting hinky about: Kid with a Bike, Dark Horse, Drive and Le Havre...no buzz, no murmur...I'm feeling awful lonely on these four pictures right now....
SPEAKING OF DRIVE...
Want it to be there (and Ides of March and Coriolanus). Still crossing my fingers. That said, the fine folks at Rope of Silicon put up a nifty post with multiple character posters for the Nicolas Winding Refn film that stars Ryan Gosling, Carey Mulligan and Albert Brooks. They're interesting and may have to suffice in lieu of the actual film if it's not playing in the San Juans this weekend...at least for a while...
Here's the link to that post:
http://www.ropeofsilicon.com/article/posters-drive-spoil-film-9
Drive's IMDb page:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0780504/
EYE ON IDES
In a similar vein, I'd really love to see George Clooney's "Ides of March" show up. I think the only way that happens is if Clooney also appears to take part in the presentation of "The Descendants." and happens to also bring along his own film. Yesterday's blog mentioned that the appearance of "Michael Clayton" as the Thursday night pre-SHOW presentation might portend his appearance as a tributee. I had a good deal of traffic today that suggested that could also just as easily pre-sage a tribute to Tilda Swinton as she won her Supporting Actress for that film...point well taken! (and I'm fairly confident that her "We Need to Talk About Kevin" is going to play in the fest).
All that to say this...there's a new clip out and about from "The Ides of March" and you can take a look at it here via a link from Anne Thompson of Thompson on Hollywood at IndieWire:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/thompsononhollywood/2011/08/30/ides_of_march_clip_evan_rachel_wood_outsmarts_the_charms_of_ryan_gosling#
AND A TEASER
Late day rumors as I was going to bed last night had it that Glenn Close would be in T-ride which would mean "Albert Nobbs"! But remember... IT"S A RUMOR!
Also, we haven't touched on the whole Lauren/Bush nuptials that are taking place there in Telluride this weekend as well...former Presidents (plural) in town??? Of both parties??? Again, IT'S JUST A RUMOR! Well, not the wedding, that's real...but some high profile attendees are certainly likely! Maybe they politicos and fashionistas will join us film geeks on Colorado Ave.
More on the Morrow...and then on to Telluride!
FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER
@Gort2
Tuesday, August 30, 2011
Tapley's Take/Connecting Some Dots/Skin Is Showing/Eyeing Tilda/Oscar, Oscar, Oscar
Good Morning everyone. Excitement is building!
3 Days...and it's getting closer...
YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED
Come and join me for a Michael's Telluride Film Blog soiree called: "The Guide to the Ride; The Flow of the SHOW" on Friday, Sept. 2 from 5:00 to 5:30 PM in The River Club in Telluride. Larry and Mitzi Mallard of the Club will be our hosts and I am told that refreshments will be provided. The River Club is located at 550 Depot in Telluride. That's 4 blocks west of the Gondola station. Come by and say hello and we'll talk a little film.
TAPLEY'S TAKE
Film blogger Kristopher Tapley at Incontention.com had his latest fall festival preview post up yesterday and it focused specifically on 25 films that will be a big part of the conversation over the next three weeks as we move from Venice (opens tomorrow), Telluride (come on, baby!) and Toronto opening Sept. 8. He tackles his best stab at what he thinks, feels, intuits or plays heads and tails with as far as the Telluride lineup is concerned.
You can read the complete (and it is fairly comprehensive) article here:
http://incontention.com/2011/08/29/off-the-carpet-fall-fests-look-to-boost-early-oscar-hopes/#more-41266
Breaking down the specific references to T-ride, here's a thumbnail of the films he references in regard to our 38th fest and what he has to say:
Albert Nobbs- "The film could stop off in Telluride..."
The Artist- "I think The Weinstein Company will bring it to Telluride..."
Carnage- "The high profile New York berth means IT'S OUT for Telluride..." (my emphasis added)
Coriolanus- TWC "picked it up and might stop it off in Telluride..."
A Dangerous Method- "Cronenberg's latest looks to drop early at Telluride, I'm hearing..."
The Descendants- "The most sense for a Telluride bow (and I'm hearing that it will show up there)"
The Ides of March- "Fingers crossed for this to show up in Telluride, though it seems doubtful..."
The Lady- "Telluride is looking like a possibility..."
Shame- "It looks to be Fassbender's second film at Telluride this year."
Take This Waltz- Paraphrasing here...Tapley wonders if the lack of a big gala for this film means that it "was due to Telluride scheduling."
Tinker, Tailor...-"...doesn't look like this...will be making the Telluride trip..."
W.E.- "I don't think Telluride is in the cards, but maybe it'll surprise."
We Need to Talk About Kevin- "Telluride looks like a definite possibility..."
Wuthering Heights- "Arnold really dug Telluride...so maybe we'll get first dibs there."
So of the 25 Tapley mentions in the post, he references Telluride in respect to 14 of them. By my estimation Tapley feels pretty confident about:
The Artist, A Dangerous Method, The Descendants, Shame, and We Need to Talk About Kevin (#3, #11, #1, #7, #5 respectively on this week's MTFB Ten Bets list)
Those that seem to be in his 50/50 club:
Albert Nobbs, Coriolanus, The Lady, Take This Waltz, and Wuthering Heights.
(All of these have been in my Telluride conversation at various times since spring. Currently The Lady is at #17 on my list...the other three have floated in and out and around the Ten Bets).
Those that seem unlikely but that Tapley hasn't completely ruled out:
The Ides of March, W.E.
And the two that he shoots through the heart (as I pretty much have as well):
Carnage and Tinker, Tailor...
My take away is optimism that we still have a decent shot at Albert Nobbs and Coriolanus and that Tapley still thinks that their is a sliver of hope for both Ides and W.E.
Check out Tapley's post for the other 11 films he lists (and which he doesn't rule in or out for Telluride...so, you know...those could be possibles as well). None of them are currently on the Ten Bets list, but all have been at least a part of the conversation up to this point.
CONNECTING SOME DOTS
So, as I was working last night on this morning's post I came across an entry from Telluride Inside and Out concerning how to do the festival on a shoestring (relatively speaking). I thought, "that would be a useful article to link to for my readers." So I pull it up and peruse it.
"Hey," I say to myself, "they got some pre-SHOW film info. Cool. Then I get to this line:
"Thursday's film is "Michael Clayton," starring George Clooney..."
My interior monologue goes: "Hmmm, that's interest....wait a minute..."
I flash back to last year's Thursday night pre-SHOW film..."Once Upon a Time in America" which featured Claudia Cardinale...one of the three TFF TRIBUTEES last year...so does this mean???
Could George Clooney BE one of the three Tributees this year?
Food for thought, isn't it? Of course, I could be completely wrong, too...
Here's the link to the complete TIO article:
http://www.tellurideinside.com/2011/08/this-festival-the-telluride-film-festival-is-characterized-by-its-small-size-and-friendly-atmosphere-if-there-were-a-few-k-1.html
SKIN IS SHOWING
Pedro Almodovar's "The Skin I Live In" (#9 on the List this week) is close to a lock as far as I can tell. It stars Antonio Banderas and showed at Cannes in May. You can take a look at the new trailer for the film at Yahoo Movies and also a The Playlist (at IndieWire)
Yahoo here:
http://movies.yahoo.com/movie/1810221069/trailer#26453309
Playlist here:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/watch_antonio_banderas_strange_contribution_to_human_progress_in_new_the_sk/
Incidentally, The American Film Institute has announced that Almodovar will betheir guest director for their fest in November. Busy fall for Pedro!
Check that here from Deadline Hollywood's Pete Hammond:
http://www.deadline.com/2011/08/pedro-almodovar-to-be-guest-artistic-director-at-afi-fest/
EYEING TILDA
An Oscar winner and potential Oscar nominee who could (and I stress "could") be in Telluride this weekend in support of her film is Tilda Swinton (Kevin). Hollywood News is profiling films and stars that will be playing Toronto and these are, of course, also films we could see this weekend at 9000 feet. Check their entry for:
We Need to Talk About Kevin:
http://www.hollywoodnews.com/2011/08/29/tilda-swinton-in-we-need-to-talk-about-kevin-tiff-2011/
OSCAR, OSCAR, OSCAR
Man, everybody and their dog is doing "fall previews' and "Oscar watch" articles and as you might expect, they are loaded with Telluride possibilities. Take a look at some of these overviews of the coming fall crop of films:
The Atlantic Monthly highlights 12 films including: Moneyball, The Ides of March, Martha Marcy May Marlene, The Descendants, A Dangerous Method, The Artist, W.E., Albert Nobbs and Rampart.
It's here:
http://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2011/08/fall-movies-preview-12-oscar-contenders-to-watch-for/244246/#slide1
IndieWire has a really interesting article up entitled: "For Your Consideration: 10 Things the Fall Fests Can Tell Us About Award Season". Read it here:
http://www.indiewire.com/article/2011/08/29/for_your_consideration_10_things_the_fall_fests_might_tell_us_about_award_s
And Pete Hammond at Deadline Hollywood asks," Can Indies Steal Oscars Again?" as he breaks down the pre-Oscar field studio by studio. You can find that here:
http://www.deadline.com/2011/08/hammond-big-names-in-small-films-can-indies-steal-the-oscars-again/
And in an interesting bit of counter coverage, The Playlist posts an article concerning the wisdom of NOT playing the festival circuit. Interesting stuff here:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/2011/08/29/the_amazing_race_is_hiding_your_films_til_dec_anti-_film_festival_circuit_b/
AND FINALLY...
On the basis of a random tweet I mined late last night, put "Butter" (dir. Jim Field Smith, Stars: Jennifer Garner, Hugh Jackman and Olivia Wilde) on the Ten Bets list at #19...I think it may be in Telluride...
More on the morrow, boys and girls...
FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER
@Gort2
3 Days...and it's getting closer...
YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED
Come and join me for a Michael's Telluride Film Blog soiree called: "The Guide to the Ride; The Flow of the SHOW" on Friday, Sept. 2 from 5:00 to 5:30 PM in The River Club in Telluride. Larry and Mitzi Mallard of the Club will be our hosts and I am told that refreshments will be provided. The River Club is located at 550 Depot in Telluride. That's 4 blocks west of the Gondola station. Come by and say hello and we'll talk a little film.
TAPLEY'S TAKE
Film blogger Kristopher Tapley at Incontention.com had his latest fall festival preview post up yesterday and it focused specifically on 25 films that will be a big part of the conversation over the next three weeks as we move from Venice (opens tomorrow), Telluride (come on, baby!) and Toronto opening Sept. 8. He tackles his best stab at what he thinks, feels, intuits or plays heads and tails with as far as the Telluride lineup is concerned.
You can read the complete (and it is fairly comprehensive) article here:
http://incontention.com/2011/08/29/off-the-carpet-fall-fests-look-to-boost-early-oscar-hopes/#more-41266
Breaking down the specific references to T-ride, here's a thumbnail of the films he references in regard to our 38th fest and what he has to say:
Albert Nobbs- "The film could stop off in Telluride..."
The Artist- "I think The Weinstein Company will bring it to Telluride..."
Carnage- "The high profile New York berth means IT'S OUT for Telluride..." (my emphasis added)
Coriolanus- TWC "picked it up and might stop it off in Telluride..."
A Dangerous Method- "Cronenberg's latest looks to drop early at Telluride, I'm hearing..."
The Descendants- "The most sense for a Telluride bow (and I'm hearing that it will show up there)"
The Ides of March- "Fingers crossed for this to show up in Telluride, though it seems doubtful..."
The Lady- "Telluride is looking like a possibility..."
Shame- "It looks to be Fassbender's second film at Telluride this year."
Take This Waltz- Paraphrasing here...Tapley wonders if the lack of a big gala for this film means that it "was due to Telluride scheduling."
Tinker, Tailor...-"...doesn't look like this...will be making the Telluride trip..."
W.E.- "I don't think Telluride is in the cards, but maybe it'll surprise."
We Need to Talk About Kevin- "Telluride looks like a definite possibility..."
Wuthering Heights- "Arnold really dug Telluride...so maybe we'll get first dibs there."
So of the 25 Tapley mentions in the post, he references Telluride in respect to 14 of them. By my estimation Tapley feels pretty confident about:
The Artist, A Dangerous Method, The Descendants, Shame, and We Need to Talk About Kevin (#3, #11, #1, #7, #5 respectively on this week's MTFB Ten Bets list)
Those that seem to be in his 50/50 club:
Albert Nobbs, Coriolanus, The Lady, Take This Waltz, and Wuthering Heights.
(All of these have been in my Telluride conversation at various times since spring. Currently The Lady is at #17 on my list...the other three have floated in and out and around the Ten Bets).
Those that seem unlikely but that Tapley hasn't completely ruled out:
The Ides of March, W.E.
And the two that he shoots through the heart (as I pretty much have as well):
Carnage and Tinker, Tailor...
My take away is optimism that we still have a decent shot at Albert Nobbs and Coriolanus and that Tapley still thinks that their is a sliver of hope for both Ides and W.E.
Check out Tapley's post for the other 11 films he lists (and which he doesn't rule in or out for Telluride...so, you know...those could be possibles as well). None of them are currently on the Ten Bets list, but all have been at least a part of the conversation up to this point.
CONNECTING SOME DOTS
So, as I was working last night on this morning's post I came across an entry from Telluride Inside and Out concerning how to do the festival on a shoestring (relatively speaking). I thought, "that would be a useful article to link to for my readers." So I pull it up and peruse it.
"Hey," I say to myself, "they got some pre-SHOW film info. Cool. Then I get to this line:
"Thursday's film is "Michael Clayton," starring George Clooney..."
My interior monologue goes: "Hmmm, that's interest....wait a minute..."
I flash back to last year's Thursday night pre-SHOW film..."Once Upon a Time in America" which featured Claudia Cardinale...one of the three TFF TRIBUTEES last year...so does this mean???
Could George Clooney BE one of the three Tributees this year?
Food for thought, isn't it? Of course, I could be completely wrong, too...
Here's the link to the complete TIO article:
http://www.tellurideinside.com/2011/08/this-festival-the-telluride-film-festival-is-characterized-by-its-small-size-and-friendly-atmosphere-if-there-were-a-few-k-1.html
SKIN IS SHOWING
Pedro Almodovar's "The Skin I Live In" (#9 on the List this week) is close to a lock as far as I can tell. It stars Antonio Banderas and showed at Cannes in May. You can take a look at the new trailer for the film at Yahoo Movies and also a The Playlist (at IndieWire)
Yahoo here:
http://movies.yahoo.com/movie/1810221069/trailer#26453309
Playlist here:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/watch_antonio_banderas_strange_contribution_to_human_progress_in_new_the_sk/
Incidentally, The American Film Institute has announced that Almodovar will betheir guest director for their fest in November. Busy fall for Pedro!
Check that here from Deadline Hollywood's Pete Hammond:
http://www.deadline.com/2011/08/pedro-almodovar-to-be-guest-artistic-director-at-afi-fest/
EYEING TILDA
An Oscar winner and potential Oscar nominee who could (and I stress "could") be in Telluride this weekend in support of her film is Tilda Swinton (Kevin). Hollywood News is profiling films and stars that will be playing Toronto and these are, of course, also films we could see this weekend at 9000 feet. Check their entry for:
We Need to Talk About Kevin:
http://www.hollywoodnews.com/2011/08/29/tilda-swinton-in-we-need-to-talk-about-kevin-tiff-2011/
OSCAR, OSCAR, OSCAR
Man, everybody and their dog is doing "fall previews' and "Oscar watch" articles and as you might expect, they are loaded with Telluride possibilities. Take a look at some of these overviews of the coming fall crop of films:
The Atlantic Monthly highlights 12 films including: Moneyball, The Ides of March, Martha Marcy May Marlene, The Descendants, A Dangerous Method, The Artist, W.E., Albert Nobbs and Rampart.
It's here:
http://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2011/08/fall-movies-preview-12-oscar-contenders-to-watch-for/244246/#slide1
IndieWire has a really interesting article up entitled: "For Your Consideration: 10 Things the Fall Fests Can Tell Us About Award Season". Read it here:
http://www.indiewire.com/article/2011/08/29/for_your_consideration_10_things_the_fall_fests_might_tell_us_about_award_s
And Pete Hammond at Deadline Hollywood asks," Can Indies Steal Oscars Again?" as he breaks down the pre-Oscar field studio by studio. You can find that here:
http://www.deadline.com/2011/08/hammond-big-names-in-small-films-can-indies-steal-the-oscars-again/
And in an interesting bit of counter coverage, The Playlist posts an article concerning the wisdom of NOT playing the festival circuit. Interesting stuff here:
http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/archives/2011/08/29/the_amazing_race_is_hiding_your_films_til_dec_anti-_film_festival_circuit_b/
AND FINALLY...
On the basis of a random tweet I mined late last night, put "Butter" (dir. Jim Field Smith, Stars: Jennifer Garner, Hugh Jackman and Olivia Wilde) on the Ten Bets list at #19...I think it may be in Telluride...
More on the morrow, boys and girls...
FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER
@Gort2
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