Saturday, February 29, 2020

Nicolas Cage on Why His First Superhero Costume Did Not Go Well

Nicolas Cage reminisces about the first time he wore a superhero costume and the traumatic Halloween that followed in this exclusive video from Rolling Stone. According to the Mandy actor, he was five or six-years-old when his grandmother bought Cage and his other brother Batman costumes on Halloween.

Just beautiful Batman costumes with masks and beautiful capes and yellow utility belts, Cage remembered to Rolling Stone. But for some reason they lost my cape I had the costume and the mask, but no cape and they gave me this drab green plaid blanket, and said, Thatll be good enough, wont it Nicky? And they tied it on me and it was scratching It just wasnt good enough. It was subpar. I was very upset about it.

Cage added, That was the first time I wore a superhero costume.

Of course, the actor would go on to don the costumes of Marvels Ghost Rider and Kick-Ass Big Daddy on the big screen, as well as the Man of Steel in the never-made Superman Lives.


Nicolas Cage on Why His First Superhero Costume Did Not Go Well

Little Trailer: Watch Regina Hall, Issa Rae in Body-Swap Comedy

Regina Hall, Issa Rae and Marsai Martin co-star in the upcoming body-swap comedy Little, which hits theaters on April 12th. The Tina Gordon-directed film follows ruthless tech mogul Jordan Sanders (Hall), who after angering a young girl and facing a magic spell wakes up in her swanky penthouse as her 13-year-old self (Martin).

The clip opens with the adult Sanders tormenting her mild-mannered assistant, April (Rae), with poorly timed phone calls and casting aside her career aspirations. I really think I could help this company if you just gave me a chance, April says, earning the dismissive reply, Just concentrate on being my assistant.

But the power dynamic shifts to a sort of combative mother-daughter scenario after Sanders wakes up as a teenager. Child Protective Services demand that the child be enrolled in school, as April takes over with more responsibility at the office. The trailer concludes with a parking lot spanking that a security guard dubs a BMW situation: black mama whoopin.'

Will Packer, producer of Girls Trip, Night School and the Ride Along franchise, produced the film, which Gordon co-wrote with Tracy Oliver.


Little Trailer: Watch Regina Hall, Issa Rae in Body-Swap Comedy

Friday, February 28, 2020

Gloria Bell Trailer: Julianne Moore as Divorce Finds New Love on Dance Floor

Julianne Moores hits the dance floor and discovers new love following divorce in the new trailer for Gloria Bell. Directed by Sebastin Lelio, the film is a remake of his own 2013 Chilean-Spanish dramedy,Gloria.

In the clip, Moore works through the aftermath of divorce touching base with her son, going through the motions of work and at night, she cuts loose to disco music at nightclubs, where she meets Arnold (John Turturro). There is strong chemistry and their relationship blossoms as Gloria navigates this new chapter in her life, until Arnold meets Glorias ex-husband and family and tensions mount.

The film, which hits theaters on March 8th, premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival, where Rolling Stones Peter Travers named Moores performance as a possible 2019 Best Actress Oscar contender.

The cast includes Michael Cera as Glorias son, Caren Pistorius, Brad Garrett, Jeanne Tripplehorn, Rita Wilson, Sean Astin and Holland Taylor. Its Lelios third recently released film, following his Oscar-winning foreign movie A Fantastic Woman and the Rachel Weisz and Rachel McAdams-starring Disobedience.


Gloria Bell Trailer: Julianne Moore as Divorce Finds New Love on Dance Floor

The Final Year Review: Posthumous Portrait of Obamas Presidency Will Have You in Tears

Remember the last months of the Obama administration, when diplomacy was still a preferred form of negotiation? If so, youre likely to lose your mind watching The Final Year, a hindsight-is-20/20 documentary in which we watch a government crumble. Fully expecting a Democratic victory in the 2016 elections, the White House gave director Greg Barker an unprecedented 90 days to follow President Obamas foreign policy team to 21 countries as they chased peace in Syria, a climate accord in Paris and a nuclear arms deal in Iran. Cementing relationships with Vietnam and opening doors to Cuba were also on the agenda. Participants included Secretary of State John Kerry, Deputy National Security Advisor Ben Rhodes and U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Samantha Power.

8 Things We Learned From David Letterman's Interview With Barack Obama

Just dont expect to be privy to every aspect of these discussions. Theres an official stamp to much of whats presented in this posthumous portrait of a late-act presidency that suggests Obamas legacy is whats at stake here and not the full story. Still, there are choice moments, notably In Nigeria where Power labors to arrange the release of girls taken by Boko Haram; in Greenland, where Kerry dolefully lays eyes on a shrinking glacier; and in Japan, where Obama becomes the first American President to speak at Hiroshima. Notably, the cameras are also rolling in D.C. on election night, where Rhodes a speechwriter known as the voice of Obama looks on in horror as Hillary Clinton is not elected the first female leader of the free world.

What chills most about The Final Year is how unprepared Team Obama was for the victory of Trump and the ease with which many of its hard-won policies could be unraveled. Was it blindness, hubris or a combination of both? The documentary lets that question hang in the air as a cautionary tale about what happens when a democracy is caught by surprise. It cant happen here? It just did. Now what? Welcome to our new national nightmare.


The Final Year Review: Posthumous Portrait of Obamas Presidency Will Have You in Tears

A Star Is Born: Sexual Harassment Claims Surface Against Producer

A Star Is Born, coming off its acclaimed premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival, hit a speed bump on the way to awards season when it was revealed that Jon Peters, one of the films producers, was accused of sexual harassment on multiple occasions. However, A Star Is Borns studio Warner Bros. clarified Peters role on the film Tuesday, and the Producers Guild of America announced Peters would not be eligible for any trophies come awards season.

Peters, Barbra Streisands onetime hairdresser who produced the 1976 version of A Star is Born starring the singer, has been sued for sexual harassment at least five times, Jezebel reported Tuesday, with some of the lawsuits settled out of court. Given Peters history, Warner Bros distanced itself from the producer, who is credited on the upcoming remake.

Jon Peters attachment to this property goes as far back as 1976. Legally, we had to honor the contractual obligation in order to make this film, Warner Bros. told Rolling Stone in a statement.

Conveniently timed to Jezebels report but independently decided, the Producers Guild of America announced Tuesday that Peters would not be eligible for an Academy Award if A Star Is Born wins the Best Picture Oscar or any other awards season accolades.

A spokesperson for the Guild told Variety that while Peters helped facilitate the production of Bradley Coopers A Star Is Born following a decade-long development, Peters failed to meet the substantial involvement necessary to be credited as a certified, awards-eligible producer on the film. Additionally, Peters is not a member of the PGA, although its the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences that ultimately determines nominees.

A Star Is Born arrives in theaters on October 5th.


A Star Is Born: Sexual Harassment Claims Surface Against Producer

Thursday, February 27, 2020

Oscars 2019: Green Book, Bohemian Rhapsody, Roma Win Big

Diversity, lighthearted silliness and many shots of Queen guitarist Brian Mays luxurious gray mane took centerstage at the 91st Academy Awards on Sunday night during an otherwise unorthodox ceremony without a host. But even without a leader, the show went on, and Green Book, Bohemian Rhapsody, Black Panther and Roma each won multiple awards.

But even though the night got off to a bumpy start an incredible performance by Queen and Adam Lambert followed by a clunky montage of films the lack of direction made for an interesting night that emphasized the awards over the usual shtick. Green Book, a film about the unlikely bond between a black pianist and an Italian-American roughneck, won Best Picture. (Heres what that could mean.) Meanwhile, the Queen biopic Bohemian Rhapsody scored a trophy for Rami Maleks portrayal of Freddie Mercury and several for technical categories. The comic-book adaptation Black Panther won in three technical categories. And Roma, a film about a familys struggle in Seventies Mexico City and the projected favorite for the night, scored nods for Best Director (Alfonso Cuarn) and Foreign Language Film.

Oscars 2019: Watch Lady Gaga, Bradley Cooper's Intimate 'Shallow' Performance Oscars 2019: Queen, Adam Lambert Open Show With Pair of Hits Watch Lady Gaga's 'Shallow' Oscar Speech: 'If You Have a Dream, Fight for It'

The general freewheeling nature of the evening also lent itself to unusually fun surprises. Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooper performed a chemistry-filled, intimate rendition of A Star Is Borns Oscar-winning Shallow without an introduction; moreover, the whole thing was shot with the audience as the backdrop. Melissa McCarthy and Brian Tyree Henry dressed to the 99s to present the costume trophy; McCarthy looked like the queen from The Favourite, except her costume was decorated with all of Oliva Colmans bunnies (and she even had a bunny puppet). And Amy Poehler, Tina Fey and Maya Rudolph had the honor of announcing the first award a distinction that allowed them to highlight that they were not the evenings hosts but, as Fey said, were gonna stand here a little too long so that the people who get USA Today tomorrow will think that were hosting.

The lack of a ringleader also allowed for some of the more poignant moments to stand out on their own. With no Jimmy Kimmel serving as court jester this year (or, mercifully, no Kevin Hart who was supposed to host the show but stepped down amid controversy over homophobic tweets in December and was not replaced), most of the commentary about todays social issues came from the winners and even some of the presenters. Chef Jos Andrs recognized the invisible people in our lives immigrants and women when introducing Roma as a Best Picture contender.

More of the winners this year, too, were people of color. Rami Malek, who won the Best Actor trophy for playing Freddie Mercury in Bohemian Rhapsody, proudly told the audience that he was the son of Egyptian immigrants and said that people should find both his and Mercurys stories. I think to anyone struggling with [their identity] and trying to discover their voice, listen, we made a film about a gay man, an immigrant who lived his life just unapologetically himself, he said. And the fact that Im celebrating him and this story with you tonight is proof that were longing for stories like this. (Strangely, the music he was played off to was America from West Side Story.)

Elsewhere, the Asian-American filmmakers behind the winning documentary Free Solo, praised the hiring of more women and people of color. Javier Bardem, when introducing the Foreign Film category, said (in subtitled Spanish), There are no borders or walls that can restrain ingenuity and talent. That categorys winner, Cuarn, who is Mexican, joked that he grew up on foreign films like Citizen Kane, Jaws and The Godfather. Black Panther costumer Ruth E. Carter, the first African-American woman to win that award, said she was proud to be honoring African royalty and the empowered way women can look and lead onscreen. The team behind Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse took pride in making a film where non-white filmgoers could say, He looks like me or They speak Spanish like us.

Domee Shi, the Chinese-Canadian director of the Oscar-winning short Bao, encouraged young women to follow their muses. To all of the nerdy girls out there who hide behind their sketchbooks dont be afraid to tell your stories to the world. And Rayka Zehtabchi, one of the filmmakers of Period. End of Sentence, the winning short documentary about the stigmatization of menstruation in rural India, said she wanted to empower women. Im not crying because Im on my period or anything, she said. I cant believe a film about menstruation won an Oscar.

When Green Book was named the Best Picture, filmmaker Peter Farrelly spoke of the films commentary on race relations (even if it was reductive of the larger issue). The whole story is about love, he said. Its about loving each other despite our differences and finding out the truth about who we are. Were the same people. After climbing up Samuel L. Jackson out of sheer glee, Spike Lee used his mic time for his adapted screenplay win to call for people to mobilize and be on the right side of history in advance of the 2020 presidential election. Lets do the right thing, he said. And then he laughed, You know I had to get that in there.

Although giving voices to the voiceless was a thread throughout the night, it was a different shade than last year, when fallout from the Harvey Weinstein scandal overtook the evening. Notably, ABCs red-carpet hosts started asking actresses Who are you wearing? again (a conversation that was frowned upon last year, thanks to the Times Up initiative) and despite Bohemian Rhapsody winning so many awards, nobody so much as mentioned the name of its director, Bryan Singer, who is facing allegations of sexual misconduct.

Another tectonic shift that went uncommented upon was the fact that the streaming service Netflix has started to take more of a hold on Hollywood. Romas success is a testament to the services power, as is the documentary Period. End of Sentence, which the platform produced. Studio heads are likely shaking in their boots.

But even if it wasnt underscored with cringe-worthy gags this year, the Oscars proved that Hollywood is changing. Its something that Cuarn lightly underscored in his acceptance speech for Best Director. After thanking the Academy for recognizing a film about an indigenous woman, he spoke to the power of cinema. As artists, our job is to look where others dont, he said. This responsibility becomes much more important in times when we are being encouraged to look away.


Oscars 2019: Green Book, Bohemian Rhapsody, Roma Win Big

On the Basis of Sex: Watch First Trailer for Ruth Bader Ginsburg Biopic

Felicity Jones plays a pre-Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg in the upcoming biopic On the Basis of Sex, which focuses on her fight for equal rights for women.

The film tells an inspiring and spirited true story that follows young lawyer Ruth Bader Ginsburg as she teams with her husband Marty to bring a groundbreaking case before the U.S. Court of Appeals and overturn a century of gender discrimination, the films synopsis says.

There are 178 laws that differentiate on the basis of sex, says Jones Ginsburg in the trailer. Protests are important, but changing the culture means nothing if the law doesnt change if the law differentiates on the basis of sex, how will woman and men ever be equal.

On the Basis of Sex which arrives this Christmas, honoring the 25th anniversary of Ginsbergs Supreme Court tenure also stars Armie Hammer as Ginsburgs husband Marty as well as Justin Theroux, Kathy Bates and Sam Waterston. Longtime television director Mimi Leder helmed the biopic, which follows the recent documentary RBG.


On the Basis of Sex: Watch First Trailer for Ruth Bader Ginsburg Biopic

Wednesday, February 26, 2020

Greta Gerwig Says She Regrets Working With Woody Allen

Greta Gerwig said she would not have acted in Woody Allens 2012 film To Rome With Love had she known about the allegations of sexual misconduct and abuse against him.

In an interview with The New York Times, the Lady Bird director said, If I had known then what I know now, I would not have acted in the film. I have not worked for him again, and I will not work for him again. Dylan Farrows two different pieces made me realize that I increased another womans pain, and I was heartbroken by that realization. I grew up on his movies, and they have informed me as an artist, and I cannot change that fact now, but I can make different decisions moving forward.

Dylan Farrow Hopes 'Time's Up' Movement Will Affect Woody Allen

Allen was accused of abusing his adoptive daughter, Dylan Farrow, in 1993, around the same time the filmmaker and his then-girlfriend, Mia Farrow, split. Allen was never prosecuted and has denied any wrongdoing, but in 2014 after Allen received the Golden Globes lifetime achievement award Farrow penned an open letter inThe New York Times in which she reiterated her allegations of abuse against Allen.

Gerwigs statement comes after she was criticized for giving a non-response to a question about working with Allen following the Golden Globes this weekend. Its something that Ive thought deeply about, and I havent had an opportunity to have an in-depth discussion where I come down on one side or the other, Gerwig said at the time.

In her interview with The Times, Gerwig acknowledged her reticence to speak on the issue, saying, I have been asked about a couple of times recently, as I worked for him on a film that came out in 2012. It is something that I take very seriously and have been thinking deeply about, and it has taken me time to gather my thoughts and say what I mean to say.

Farrow responded to Gerwigs Timesinterview on Twitter, saying, Greta, thank you for your voice. Thank you for your words. Please know they are deeply felt and appreciated.

Farrow and her brother Ronan the biological son of Allen and Mia Farrow have both been vocal critics of Allen over the past few years (Ronan Farrow also helped break the Harvey Weinstein scandal). After this years Golden Globes, Dylan Farrow posted several tweets in which she spoke about what has, and hasnt, changed since her 2014 op-ed, and how she hoped the Times Up movement would affect Allen. No predator should be spared by virtue of their talent or creativity or genius,' she said. No rock should be left unturned. The principles of the movement need to be applied consistently and without exemption.


Greta Gerwig Says She Regrets Working With Woody Allen

Trailers of the Week: Ad Astra, Martin Scorseses New Dylan Doc

Finally an Ad Astra trailer! Weve been waiting to catch a glimpse of the James Gray/Brad Pitt sci-fi opus, and the first look at what these gentleman have in store for people who like space and headscratching existentialism more than delivers. Also: extended peeks at Martin Scorseses incredible new Bob Dylan documentary, a feel-good indie involving self-esteem and running, a horror flick produced by Guillermo Del Toro, the last season of Jessica Jones and Transparents musical swan song. Here it is, your trailers-of-the-week round-up.

Ad Astra
So you like outer space and father issues, but theres only so many times you can watch Interstellar in an endless loop? Good news: James Gray and Brad Pitt have your back. The world-class director (The Yards, We Own the Night, The Lost City of Z) and the A-list star bring you the story of an astronaut who has to track down his long-lost dad (Tommy Lee Jones). It seems Pops has been experimenting with some highly dangerous, potentially cosmos-destroying matter at the galaxys edge. Judging from the trailer, were in for cerebral sci-fi with the an occasional moon-buggy chases and shoot-outs, which immediately makes this the No. 1 movie we want to see this year. It hits theaters Sept. 20th.

Brittany Runs a Marathon
God bless Jillian Bell, comic dynamo and clutch supporting player and now, finally, a lead in a feel-good indie movie about a lady trying to get her life together. The trailer lays it out: Brittany is in a state of perpetual postcollegiate hard-partying and on the edge of an existential funk. So she starts running. First, she makes it to the end of the block. Then shes doing laps in the park. After that, well, see the title. Aug 23rd.

New Doc on Suicide Text Case Dives Into Mental Health Struggles 'Stranger Things' Details Season 3 Soundtrack

Honeyland
A minor sensation at this years Sundance, this lyrical documentary about the last female beehunter in Europe has already been racking up accolades by the dozens now the good folks at Neon are bringing this tale of old-world methods vs. new-world modernity to the greater hivemind. Come for the sweet look at a dying culture; stay for the stinging social critique. (Sorry.) July 26th.

Jessica Jones, Season 3
One of the last Netflix/Marvel series left standing returns for its final season, which finds Krysten Ritters super-powered screw-up taking on a brainiac psychopath named Gregory Salinger (Jeremy Bobb who, between Godless and Russian Doll, has been a lucky charm for the streaming service). This clip gives the impression that the show will be going out with a bang, along with a lot of fighting, grunting and female bonding. Well miss you, Jessica. June 14th.

Luce
Lets say you adopt a kid from a foreign war zone. You rename him Luce, you raise him right, you watch as he becomes a model student (thats his high schools principals description). Then you find out from one of his teachers that hes written a paper about violence as a cleansing element. We sense a white-liberal-parents-nightmare drama on the horizon. Naomi Watts, Tim Roth, Octavia Spencer and Kelvin Harrison Jr. star. Aug. 2nd.

The Quiet One
Once upon a time, Bill Wyman traveled the world, played before millions of people in the worlds greatest rock & roll band and enjoyed the, shall we say perks of the touring musicians life. He also kept a fairly comprehensive archive of his misadventures as a postwar British kid and a member of the Rolling Stones. Now, thanks to this doc, you get to tag along on his trip down memory lane, complete with vintage footage and famous talking heads. June 21st.

The Rolling Thunder Revue: A Bob Dylan Story by Martin Scorsese
Hes already covered the moment that Dylan went electric now Martin Scorsese takes on the Rolling Thunder Revue, the legendary 1975-1976 tour featuring King Bob, Joan Baez, Roger McGuinn, T-Bone Burnett, Mick Ronson, Sam Shepard, Alan Ginsberg and a lot face paint and masks. Finally, someone has figured out how to put all that Renaldo and Clara footage to good use! If its half as exciting as this trailer, this may be the music documentary to beat this year. It hits theaters and Netflix on June 12th.

Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark
Spooky scarecrows! Haunted houses! A corpses in search of her missing toe! Bugs coming out of peoples faces! A creepy book that makes horror tales come to life! Given that this is cowritten and coproduced by Guillermo Del Toro, you can assume this movie will live up to its name, and also probably get fairly gross. Aug. 9th.

Them That Follow
Remember when Olivia Colman won an Oscar? Man, that was a great moment. The British actress is cast here as the matriarch of a religious sect devoted to snake-handling; one of the young members of the community, played by Alice Englert, starts to think that she may be interested in a life outside the holy-rolling reptile-loving world she grew up in. Naturally, that does not sit well with everyone. Walton Goggins, Jim Gaffigan, Booksmarts Kaitlyn Dever and Thomas Mann costar. Aug. 2nd.

Transparent: The Series Finale
How do you conclude a show that changed how we think of an entire community, won awards, turned its showrunner into a cultural spokesperson and then became mired in scandal? With a finale that kills off the main character and morphs into a huge musical number. The teaser alone has us tapping our feet. We have a good feeling about this. Coming this fall.


Trailers of the Week: Ad Astra, Martin Scorseses New Dylan Doc

Scientists Warn About Mankinds Future in Let Science Speak Trailer

Scientists fret over the future of mankind in the face of growing misinformation in the new trailer for Let Science Speak, a six-part documentary series coming to YouTube in September.

The series aim is to combat the escalating efforts to suppress environmental science and silence scientists, as well as stress the importance of the work scientists are doing.

Its not just scientists who lose when science is suppressed. The health, safety and security of every citizen is also at risk, series creator and executive producer Christine Arena said in a statement. That is why we aim to call Americas attention to the stakes, while portraying scientists as unsung heroes that people will want to support and rally around.

Let Science Speak features a score by Fall Out Boys Patrick Stump, who said of the docuseries in a statement, When I was a little kid, if you had asked me what I wanted to be when I grew up I would always say Scientist, without hesitation. So to use my music to help tell the stories of these people who are essentially my heroes is very cool.

The docuseries will premiere on YouTube and the Let Science Speak website on September 20th to coincide with the first anniversary of the devastating Hurricane Maria that ravaged Puerto Rico to highlight what is at risk for our health, our homes and our planet when science is under attack.


Scientists Warn About Mankinds Future in Let Science Speak Trailer

Tuesday, February 25, 2020

Bill Cosby, Roman Polanski Expelled From Oscars Organization

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences decided to strip Bill Cosby and Roman Polanski of their membership. Variety reports that the Academys Board of Governors made the decision Tuesday night with a statement to the press on Thursday.

The Academy has voted to expel actor Bill Cosby and director Roman Polanski from its membership in accordance with the organizations Standards of Conduct, the statement read. The Board continues to encourage ethical standards that require members to uphold the Academys values of respect for human dignity.

Cosby, who has never been nominated for an Oscar, was found guilty of sexual assault in a criminal trial last week. He is currently under house arrest and awaiting sentencing. Cosbys wife, Camille, said in a statement Thursday that she hoped to clear his name, alleging judicial misconduct. I am publicly asking for a criminal investigation of that district attorney and his cohorts, she wrote in a statement. This is a homogeneous group of exploitive and corrupt people, whose primary purpose is to advance themselves professionally and economically at the expense of Mr. Cosbys life.

Bill Cosby's Wife: 'This Is Mob Justice, Not Real Justice'

Polanski won the Oscar for Best Director in 2003 for his work on The Pianist and has been nominated four other times. He has been living in exile since 1978, after fleeing the United States after accepting a plea bargain to a charge of unlawful sexual intercourse with a minor. He left before he could be sentenced. He was arrested and detained in Zurich in 2009, but Swiss authorities refused to extradite him to the U.S. the following year. At the time, more than 100 people in the film industry, including Woody Allen and Martin Scorsese, endorsed a letter calling for his release from custody and Harvey Weinstein campaigned for the same thing. The director sent a petition to an appellate court but the U.S. denied it, saying he was able to represent himself fine when he was arrested in 1977. Last year, an L.A. County Superior Court judge denied a request from Samantha Geimer, the young woman who was 13 at the time Polanski violated her, to dismiss the case.

The Academy expelled producer Harvey Weinstein last year after multiple women accused him of sexual misconduct in The New York Times and The New Yorker. We do so not simply to separate ourselves from someone who does not merit the respect of his colleagues but also to send a message that the era of willful ignorance and shameful complicity in sexually predatory behavior and workplace harassment in our industry is over, the Academy said in a statement. Whats at issue here is a deeply troubling problem that has no place in our society.


Bill Cosby, Roman Polanski Expelled From Oscars Organization

Fall Movie Preview 2018: From Oscar Hopefuls to Big-Name Blockbusters

Ah yes, the Fall Movie Season when studios file away their summer flings with big-budget blockbusters and concentrate on the autumnal pleasures of prestige pics and tony, based-on-a-true-story dramas. At least, thats how things used to work. Now, you get big-name superhero epics and brand-tested I.P. spectacles all year round, even when the annual awards-circuit death march kicks in to high gear. In late 2018, you can literally walk out of a biopic of Neil Armstrong and right into a new Marvel antihero movie, or theater-hop from Aquaman to Alfonso Cuarns 135-minute black-and-white arthouse movie about Mexican domestic workers. You want a new Coen brothers project and a new Kevin Hart comedy? Outrageous Italian horror remakes and Oscar-friendly IRL handwringers? We have just the season for you.

Rather than try to cover what promises to be a packed few months of everything-under-the-sun programming and really, is there anything else you need to know about something like Bumblebee (Dec. 21) besides a Transformers flick by any other name smells just as rancid? weve narrowed down our Fall Movie Preview to a mere 50 titles. Some are exactly the kind of statue-courting films you expect to see in the pre-holiday months; others are the sort of multiplex fare that Hollywood pumps out to keep its bottom line humming along; still others are docs, defiantly left-of-center indies and a few decidedly unclassifiable gems. All of them, however, have us interested enough to get in line and buy tickets ASAP. Behold, your Fall Movies gallery consider this your must-see checklist.

CLICK HERE TO SEE GALLERY


Fall Movie Preview 2018: From Oscar Hopefuls to Big-Name Blockbusters

Tab Hunter, Fifties Film Star and Gay Icon, Dead at 86

Tab Hunter, the Fifties actor who became a gay icon following the publication of his 2005 memoir, has died at the age of 86.

The Facebook page tied to Tab Hunter Confidential, the 2015 documentary about the actor, announced Hunters death Monday. Tab passed away tonight three days shy of his 87th birthday. Please honor his memory by saying a prayer on his behalf. He would have liked that, the account wrote. The Hollywood Reporter later confirmed the death with Hunters spokesperson, although no cause of death was revealed.

A heartthrob matinee idol during Hollywoods Golden Age, Hunter starred in films like 1958s Damn Yankees, Battle Cry and Westerns like Track of the Cat and The Burning Hills.

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Rumors regarding Hunters sexuality during a conservative era in Hollywood threatened to derail the young actors career. A 1955 article in the gossip magazine Confidential attempted to out Hunter, while gossip columnists at the time would subtly hint at Hunters homosexuality in items about the actors publicity department-orchestrated relationships with good friends Natalie Wood, who co-starred with Hunter in the 1956 romantic comedy The Girl He Left Behind, and Debbie Reynolds.

Hunter remained closeted until 2005, when he confirmed that he was gay in his memoir Tab Hunter Confidential: The Making of a Movie Star; a documentary about the book, produced by Hunters longtime partner Allan Glaser, was released in 2015.

If I had come out during my acting career in the 1950s, I would not have had a career, Huntertold the Pocono Record in October 2017. Not much in Hollywood has changed in 60 years. I really didnt talk about my sexuality until I wrote my autobiography. My film career had long since been over by then. I believe ones sexuality is ones own business. I really dont go around discussing it. Call me old school on that topic.

The actor added, There still isnt a romantic male lead in films who is actively working who has come out as gay. Perhaps there has been on TV, stage and in different arenas in the entertainment business, but not a major male movie star. Film actors today still fear that coming out would damage their career.

Following his brief tenure as a leading man, Hunter continued to act on the big and small screens as well as on stage. In the early Eighties, Hunter enjoyed a brief career comeback with roles in Grease 2 and John Waters Polyester; Hunter would appear alongside actress and fellow LGBT icon Divine in three Eighties films, including Divines final film Out of the Dark.

At the height of his film career, Hunter recorded the hit single Young Love in 1957; the song spent six weeks at Number One on the Hot 100 after knocking Elvis Presley out of the top spot. Hunter, who as an actor was under contract with Warner Bros., would later claim that studio boss Jack Warner was infuriated that the Paramount Pictures-owned Dot Records, which released Young Love, was profiting off a Warner actor. As a result, the studio founded Warner Bros. Records in 1958, with Hunter its first signee.

Hunters death comes a month after the announcement that Tab & Tony, a film about the actor and Psycho star Anthony Perkins secret love affair, was in the works, with J.J. Abrams and Zachary Quinto producing a screenplay penned by Pulitzer Prize winner Doug Wright.

Quinto wrote on Instagram, So sad to wake up to the news of the passing of Tab Hunter. I was honored to get to know him in the past year and am so grateful to have experienced his sheer joy and love of life.and what a life! such a rich experience. such a vital and generous nature. and such a pioneer of self-acceptance and moving through this world with authenticity as his guide. he will be missed greatly. may he rest in peace.

Elton John tweeted, RIP to the most handsome and special man. Young Love forever.


Tab Hunter, Fifties Film Star and Gay Icon, Dead at 86

Monday, February 24, 2020

Freddie Goes to Hollywood: How Bohemian Rhapsody Finally Got Made

When the teaser trailer for the upcoming Queen biopic Bohemian Rhapsody hit the Internet in May, the entire world finally got to see Mr. Robot star Rami Maleks stunning transformation into Freddie Mercury. What they didnt see was the long, torturous journey this movie took before filming wrapped which included casting dilemmas that went extremely public, the near impossible task of cramming the entire saga of a legendary rock band into a two-hour movie and the departure of director Bryan Singer near the end of the production. It was frustrating, says producer Graham King. By hook or by crook I was determined to make this movie.

The saga begins nearly a decade ago, when guitarist Brian May began mentioning a potential Queen movie that would feature Sacha Baron Cohen playing Freddie Mercury. Talks between the two camps broke down very early in the process, however; in 2016, the Borat star gave his side of the story to Howard Stern, claiming that a member of the band said that Mercury would die halfway through the movie. I go, What happens in the second half of the movie?' the actor said. He goes, We see how the band carries on from strength to strength. I said, Listen, not one person is going to see a movie where the lead character dies from AIDS and then you see how the band carries on.' (May emphatically denied Cohens version of events at the time.)

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Sacha was never officially attached to this project, King says. I never thought Freddie could be played by a white actor. And there was never a script where Freddie Mercury dies halfway through the movie. Never. I kept my mouth shut through that whole thing, but Ill go official on that now.

There was briefly talk of Ben Winshaw taking on the part, but that changed when Kings fellow producer Denis OSullivan phoned in one day and said three words: I found Freddie. He sent over a video of Malek doing his best Mercury. I was like, Thats him,' says King. Done. Found him. There was never a second look or waiver from our side that this guy wasnt Freddie Mercury.

That sort of enthusiasm was completely shocking to Malek. I thought someone was playing a joke on me, he says. But when I spoke to Graham I got the sense this could actually be real. That was flooring. I felt massive excitement [which] was followed by the extreme, daunting weight of the thing. It felt like something that could go away in a heartbeat.

To prep for the role, Malek got his hands on as many Queen books, documentaries and interview clips as he possibly could. He also spoke to Brian May and Roger Taylor in great detail about their bandmate. They told me he was the peacemaker, he says. You could tell there was a unique bond between them that will exist throughout time in their music. It was a beautiful thing to get it from them in person and see how much they cared for him.

Getting into character also required extensive work with a movement coach to nail his distinct dance moves and a dialogue coach to get the accent right. He also was fitted with prosthetic teeth because Mercury had a famous overbite and four extra upper teeth. He had a real insecurity about that, says Malek. If you watch an interview with him you see how often hes trying to cover up his teeth with his lips or his hand.

One thing he couldnt recreate, however, was Mercurys singing voice. Most singing scenes in the movie rely on either vocal stems from Queen master tapes or new recordings by Marc Martel, a Canadian Christian rock singer whose voice is practically identical to the late frontmans. Literally, you could close your eyes and its Freddie, says King. And thats a very tough thing to do.

And long before Malek signed on, the filmmakers wrestled with basic questions about the screenplay. How much of Mercurys pre-fame life should be shown? How much time should be devoted to his personal life and sexuality? Should the audience see Mercury in the final years of life as AIDS ate away at his body? It was just about getting the balance right of the storytelling, says King. It was a very complicated film to put together.

In the end, they decided to center the movie around the groups historic set at Live Aid, which is recreated in stunning detail near the climax of the movie. Great attention is paid to key moments like the painstaking recording process for Bohemian Rhapsody, but the story doesnt extend beyond 1985. We felt there was no need to go up to his death, says King. We didnt want to go that dark. What we did want to do was really do get into the underbelly of Queen and how they worked together and how they put these amazing library of songs together.

Shortly before filming wrapped, director Bryan Singer left the project after persistent rumors he was clashing with the cast and crew. Dexter Fletcher finished it off, though Singer will receive sole credit. I felt a little bit like Freddie throwing hurdles at me all the way during this film, says King. Of course it was hard [when Singer left the project], but it was what it was. We were never going to not finish the film.

When they did wrap, Malek says he had an even greater respect for Mercurys talents than he did at the beginning. Heres a man that would sing We Are The Champions in an arena to thousands of people and theyre all singing it back to him, he notes. His ability to unify people, no matter who they are, was so far ahead of its time. I cant think of anyone else that was capable of that.


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Can a Beatles Fan Believe in Yesterday?

Yesterday is a movie full of existential questions: What if the Beatles never happened? What if nobody knew their songs? Would people still fall in love without Eight Days a Week to show them how? Would people feel sorry for themselves without For No One or Youve Got To Hide Your Love Away or While My Guitar Gently Weeps? And what if we heard their songs now for the first time? And, most importantly: What if some charmless guitar-slinging douchebag just happened to show up one day with 100 or so of the greatest songs ever written?

Its a movie that turns these existential queries into a Fab Four-themed rom-com, written by the British titan of the genre Richard Curtis, whos made the claim that the Beatles have been the most important thing in my life. He bends the premise into a straight-down-the-middle love story where a woman spends the whole movie begging for some attention from a guy way below her league. The plot is basically, Im just a Sexy Sadie, standing in front of a Hey Jude, asking him to And I Love Her.

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Its not like a musical, director Danny Boyle told Rolling Stones David Browne. Youre not just covering the Beatles songs but recovering them from the dustbin of memory and re-presenting them to the world. Imagine: An adult in 2019 thinking its necessary to rescue the Beatles from the dustbin of memory. But thats the idea behind Yesterday.

Saving the Beatles from obscurity is a long and dotty Hollywood tradition. One of the Seventies most hyped flicks: The Bee Gees making a movie version of Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band, starring themselves as the band and Peter Frampton as Billy Shears. Kids today dont know the Beatles Sgt. Pepper, Robin Gibb explained in 1977. You see, there is no such thing as the Beatles. They dont exist as a band and never performed Sgt. Pepper live, in any case. When ours comes out it will be, in effect, as if theirs never existed.

Spoiler: Robin Gibb was slightly wrong about this.

People really thought this way in the Seventies, just as they do now. Hollywood gets frightful at the prospect of kids today forgetting the Beatles, who have never been in the slightest danger of being forgotten, least of all by kids, and whose music pimps itself better than anyone else has ever pimped it. So can a Beatles fan believe in Yesterday? Not surprisingly, it comes down to the music. The movie depends on the songs to carry the weight, and they deliver plenty of charm and emotion, even in the inferior remakes here. Its a more enjoyable movie than the Bee Gees Sgt. Pepper, if only because it doesnt have Steve Martin crooning Maxwells Silver Hammer.

Yesterday is the story of a sad sack named Jack (Hamish Patel), who gets hit by a bus and wakes up in a world where nobody knows about the Fabs except him. So he passes the songs off as his own, leading to fame and fortune. Nobody understands him except his lovesick manager Ellie, who keeps throwing herself at him until shes got blisters on her fingers. (Ellie is played by the effervescent Lily James, a.k.a. Lady Rose on Downton Abbey, a.k.a. the young Meryl Streep in Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again.) Shes slightly too good for Jack, the way Paul McCartney was slightly too good for Denny Laine.

We are not talking about a Black Mirror episode here theres no attempt to have fun with the Twilight Zone possibilities. Theres no humor about the butterfly effect in erasing the Beatles from the world they changed. Its a parallel universe where Coldplay and Neutral Milk Hotel exist without the Fabs, and where all the men have longish haircuts that would have been unthinkable before the mop tops came along. As British critic Dorian Lynskey noted, A world without the Beatles is a world thats infinitely worse, says one character, in a film where a world without the Beatles is almost exactly the same.

The unfixed hole at the heart of Yesterday is the leading man, or lack thereof. Jack doesnt have the charm, humor or charisma of Neil Aspinall, much less the Beatles. Its hard to tell if Patel (famous from the British soap EastEnders) is an awful actor or its just a drearily conceived part, but as George put it so eloquently in A Hard Days Night, hes a drag, a well-known drag. Jacks only likeable quality is that hes into the Pixies (he has their poster on his wall) and wears a Fratellis T-shirt. Honestly, the idea of a world where nobody knows the Beatles is nowhere near as surreal as a world where people remember the Fratellis. (Note: I love the Fratellis, and could sing their 2006 U.K. hit Chelsea Dagger for you right now.)

Yesterday would have been a much livelier tale if Ellie were the one with the guitar and Jack were her dour, no-fun manager. She has more of the Beatles spark. Theres a scene where Ellie joins him in the studio, banging her tambourine, singing along, and its an electric moment ah yes, a rock group, people making music together. Then the moment ends, and Yesterday turns back into the continuing story of the grumpy dude with an acoustic guitar. But it continues the weirdest and most noxious trend in the nouveau breed of rock flicks, like A Star Is Born, Bohemian Rhapsody, The Dirt: there is never the slightest suggestion that female musicians exist. The idea just never comes up. (In A Star Is Born, when Gaga sleeps under a Carole King album cover, its a shock because Carole is the only other female presence in the movie who listens to music, much less performs it.)

Ed Sheeran gets the funniest moment, where he gives Jack notes on a song and convinces him to change it to Hey Dude the movie could have used a lot more of that irreverent cheek. Ed is easily the films most enjoyable presence, willing to mock himself. Theres a scene where he banters on the plane with a roadie You might be right, enjoy the flight. Thats an arcane in-joke for Swifties, based on Ed and Taylors bedtime texts. (Like you said, Ed. Thats okay, Tay.) It stands out because its one of the few moments where 21st century pop is acknowledged at all. (And it gives the pop girls in the theater a chance to one-up their know-it-all dads.) Kate McKinnon is hilarious hamming it up as an industry shark the equivalent of Victor Spinetti in the Beatles flicks.

If youre a hard-line pedantic Beatleologist, actively looking for things to hate, you wont find any Bohemian Rhapsody-style factual gaffes to cluck over. (I say that as someone who actively enjoyed the errors in BoRhap they were the comic highlights of the movie.) The closest thing is when Jack visits Liverpool to see the grave of Eleanor Rigby, a grave none of the Beatles ever visited or knew existed. It wasnt until the Eighties anyone noticed there was a real-life Eleanor Rigby buried near Liverpool. When Paul wrote the song, he just made the name up. (Still, the grave does exist, and Paul recalls sneaking into that churchyard to party with John, so its a legit coincidence.)

Yesterday barely presents any of the songs in full, as if they felt wed get bored after a verse or two. It takes nearly half the movie to get to any George songs, to the point where you start worrying they forgot George was in the band; when Jack visits L.A., we get snippets of Here Comes The Sun and Something. (But not Georges ode to L.A., Blue Jay Way.) The idea of I Want To Hold Your Hand as a solo folkie showcase is just absurd the song is designed for hormonally crazed lunatics to scream together. The only singer in history to get away with a solo vocal on I Want To Hold Your Hand is Al Green, and no, Hamish Patel is not quite in Reverend Als league. At the very end of the movie, we get one complete song in its original Beatle performance. By then, youre so hungry to hear the whole band, you want to stay for the credits.

But nothing about Jacks rise to fame makes sense, really. He plays Back in the U.S.S.R. in Moscow without changing a word. (Fun fact: The Ukraine and Russia are no longer the same country! Thousands of people have been killed fighting over this!) There are no teenage girls in his audience, even though teenage girls invented the Beatles and everything halfway cool ever since. For a prototypical Beatle fan in 2019, just look to Emma Gonzalez, the Florida teen who became a gun-control (and LGBTQ) activist last year. Shes a Ringo stan who loves to wear her Fabs shirt in TV interviews and wrote on Twitter, I feel like Beatles songs were made to be sung by powerful women. Like so many fans, yesterday and today, she was only waiting for this moment to arise.

It never even enters Jacks mind to use these songs to court women, which is weird because John, Paul, George and Ringo never made any effort to pretend that wasnt their prime motivation. Michelle is a ditty Paul wrote in his teens for the specific purpose of impressing art-school girls at Liverpool parties by pretending he was French. As he says in the bio Many Years From Now, Me trying to be enigmatic to make girls think, Whos that very interesting French guy over in the corner?' But to Jack, its just another song title on just another Post-It on his wall.

For the Beatles, their music was all about communicating with women, either in their lives or in their audience. As Paul told Beatle scholar Mark Lewisohn in 1987, At the time we were 18, 19, whatever, so youre talking to all girls who are 17. We were quite conscious of that. We wrote for our market. We knew that if we wrote a song called Thank You Girl that a lot of the girls who wrote us fan letters would take it as a genuine thank you. Thats why he and John tried to load their songs with pronouns. We were aware that that happened when you sang to an audience. So From Me to You, Please Please Me, She Loves You. Personal pronouns. We always used to do that.

What Paul couldnt have imagined nobody could have, nobody did is that all these years later, people all over the world would hear themselves in those songs. Or more to the point: We would hear ourselves in these songs. To me, thats the most beautiful, mysterious and disturbing part of the Beatles story the way they just kept getting bigger and bigger after they broke up, to the point where theyre much more famous and beloved today than they were in the Sixties. The world kept dreaming the Beatles, long after the boys in the band thought the dream was over. The ex-Beatles found this baffling, even infuriating, but they had to live in a world that was madly in love with the Beatles, the way we all do.

Yesterday is set in a world where that love story supposedly never happened yet the songs keep reminding you why the story never ends. As a great man or four once sang, its a love that lasts forever. Its a love that has no past.


Can a Beatles Fan Believe in Yesterday?

Sunday, February 23, 2020

Jack Black, Cate Blanchett Star in Enchanting House With a Clock in Its Walls

Jack Black and Cate Blanchett open the door to a mansion filled with mystery and black magic in the new trailer for The House With a Clock in Its Walls, which opensSeptember 21st.

Adapted from John Bellairs 1973 childrens horror novel of the same name, The House With a Clock in Its Walls, is about a young orphan, Lewis (Owen Vaccaro), who is sent to live with his peculiar uncle, Jonathan (Black). While acclimating to his uncles strange home moving stained-glass windows, tentacled monsters hiding behind doors Lewis also meets Jonathans neighbor and friend, the good witch, Mrs. Zimmerman (Blanchett).

Jonathan and Mrs. Zimmerman introduce Lewis, with some caution, to the mysteries of the house including the titular clock. We dont know what it does, says Jonathan cryptically. Except something horrible.

The House With a Clock in Its Walls also stars Kyle MacLachlan, Colleen Camp and Rene Elise Goldsberry. Eli Roth directed the film.


Jack Black, Cate Blanchett Star in Enchanting House With a Clock in Its Walls

Beatlemania 2.0: The Making of I Wanna Hold Your Hand

In February of 1964, you could see it everywhere you looked in high school hallways, diners and malt shops, your local record store (definitely in your local record store). It started with a cold sweats and clammy palms; later symptoms also included screaming, swooning, heart palpitations, a burning desire to sing about not wanting to dance with another (wooo) and the inability to control your bladder. It was called Beatlemania, and when the boys from Liverpool with their funny haircuts touched down at JFK airport, the epidemic was just about to hit its zenith. They arrived in America with the intention of playing on The Ed Sullivan Show. And four young women from New Jersey were determined to see the band perform on that stage, live and in person, come hell or high water.

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Released in early 1978, I Wanna Hold Your Hand followed a quartet of teens named Pam, Janis, Grace and Rosie who go to extraordinary lengths to get within shrieking distance of Paul, John, George and Ringo. The misadventures of this not-quite-so-fab four would involve others, including a few smitten guys, a kid dodging his authoritarian dad, a Beatles superfan named Ringo Klaus and a Garden State greaser who couldnt see what the big fuss over these Brits was all about. It was the sort of manic, madcap comedy that rarely let you catch your breath, whipping up a combination of burgeoning boomer nostalgia and go-for-broke slapstick. It managed to be both an innocent look back at a gamechanging moment in pop culture and a reminder that raging hormones helped fuel this phenomena. Youll believe a man can fly boasted a different spirit-of-78 movie; I Wanna Hold Your Hand may be the only film of the decade that could make you believe that greasily fondling a Rickenbacker bass can be a risqu sexual act.

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It was the perfect introduction to the filmmaking team of Robert Zemeckis and Bob Gale, whod go on to give the world Used Cars (1980) and the Back to the Future trilogy. (You can see the duo workshopping a few Future elements here, from a character telling a creep to get your damned hands off a young woman to a key plot point involving someone being hit by lightning.) And while it may not the final word on the fever of Beatlemania, the movie does capture that moment in time when four guys in suits who had some jaunty tunes could inspire riots. I want you to be prepared for excessive screaming, hysteria, hyperventilation, fainting, fits, seizures, spasmodic convulsions even attempted suicides, Ed Sullivan tells his ushers before the show. All perfectly normal.

In honor of a new Criterion DVD/Blu-ray being released this week, Zemeckis and Gale reminisced about making their debut feature, the perils of trying to make a movie about the Beatles when you arent allowed to show them and how they pulled off recreating that classic Sullivan show performance.

Howd this movie come about?
Bob Gale: We were sitting in my apartment one night, listening to a Beatles album one of the really early ones. We started reading the liner notes on the back of the album, and it mentioned this thing called Beatlemania.

Robert Zemeckis: It was that moment where people were trying to do things like trying to crash the Plaza Hotel when the band was staying there and buying scraps of bedsheets theyd slept on you can see the sort of fervor they were inspiring in A Hard Days Night. When they first came to America, it was like that times 100.

BG: We started talking about how crazy everybody was in 1964 about the band, and we both sort of simultaneously came up with this idea of making a movie about girls waiting in line to see the Beatles. You could have done it as a play, I guess Waiting for Godot but at a concert! But that was the original idea: Could you make a movie in which the whole thing took place with just people waiting in line?

RZ: Wed been impressed by American Graffiti, which has this really intricate screenplay that cuts between these four characters that are involved in parallel stories happening on the same night. We thought, why couldnt we do this with Beatlemania? Its four girls, four stories, it all takes place in one day. That was the idea.

BG: Were big fans of what Bob has called bottle movies, where you have stories that take place in a very limited amount of time and/or space. Graffiti is sort of like that, although it also has the structure of a Shakespearean comedy: You have all of your characters at the beginning, they all get separated and then they all end up together at the end.

RZ: Our pitch was always, Its American Graffiti meets Ben-Hur.

BG: You never saw Jesuss face in Ben-Hur.

RZ: And you wouldnt see the Beatles faces just the boots, shadows, voices. Everyone sort of got it immediately.

You could have called it Beatle-Hur.
RZ: Except we couldnt use the word Beatle in the title. At all.

BG: Wed planned on calling it Beatlemania, but the Broadway show was just coming out and theyd taken it. It was the show where you had four guys onstage pretending to be the Beatles and playing their songs not imitators but an incredible simulation. The lawyers made then put that on the poster.

RZ: Then when we couldnt use that title because of the stage show, it was going to be Beatles 4-Ever. Then we were told, No, you cant have the word Beatle in any way, shape or form. It got bogged down in the studio legal department.

BG: We pitched it in 76, and honestly, it was one of the easiest pitches ever. When Bob and I came up with this idea, we thought, ok, the way to get this thing off the ground was to pitch to female producers. We talked to Alex [Rose] and Tamara [Asseyev], and they got it instantly. We had a strong female contingent on our side; even then, the idea of making a female-centric movie was considered a really good idea by a lot of folks. It just took a while for the rest of the industry to come around. A long while.

We originally pitched this to Warners, and the studio correctly noted that they wouldnt make a development deal on the script until they could secure the rights to those early Beatles songs. Because they knew that without the music, there was nothing there. That process took about eight or nine months.

RZ: Remember, the songs we use are only from the first two albums. Just up to February 1964 we wanted to be accurate.

BG: And this was long before Michael Jackson bought the rights to the Beatles catalog.

RZ: Eventually, thanks to Steven Spielberg, we were able to the movie going at Universal. We were lucky in that we landed at a place where the songs that we needed were the ones that were controlled by Capitol Records, I think. So the actual Beatles estate didnt have complete control of these songs. For some reason, the label decided to sell the mechanical and publishing to Universal, which was how we got them. I think there was one song from Meet the Beatles that studio wasnt able to get, but yeah, that was how we were able to get this done.

BG: Bob Zemeckis and I went to Mobile, Alabama, where Steven was shooting Close Encounters of the Third Kind. He wanted us to do more rewrites on 1941; that was going to be his next picture. And just as we setting up the changes that Steven wanted us to do, we got the call that wed finally cleared the music rights. Could you guys come back to L.A. and start working on the first draft of Beatlemania ASAP? At that time, the movie was still called Beatlemania.

BG: The way we write, its us sitting around in a room and throwing a lot of ideas around. We knew we needed to open it up from just kids waiting in line for tickets. Ok, so, we have to have the girl whos completely out of her mind: Thats Rosie (Wendie Jo Sperber). We have to have the guy who hates the Beatles, because that was part of the whole thing: Thats Tony (Bobby Di Cicco). We were fixated on the idea that there was this intersection of rock music and folk music and protest music, and we wanted a character that had an epiphany about how revolutionary the band was: That was Janice (Susan Kendall Newman.) In our minds, the Beatles really represented the start of the youth counterculture. Were making a movie about this important cultural event, and we need to note that it wasnt just goofy, loud music. It was a harbinger of something more.

They also took on the tight-ass Sixties establishment, so we came up with a character that was liberated from that because of the Beatles: Pam (Nancy Allen). And we needed to have a motor for the story, so we came up with Grace (Theresa Saldana), who needs to get to the Beatles for her own selfish reasons, and ends up being one who naturally ends up sacrificing everything for the greater good.

RZ: There werent a lot of young actresses at that point who were big names that we could get. I mean, Nancy Allen had done Carrie at that point, but that was it. Wendy Jo Sperber hadnt done Bosom Buddies yet; I think this was the very first thing she did. She might have been 16, which meant we could only film her for four hours or so a day, so Im pretty sure she lied about her age to get the part. And there was nobody that could have measured up to Eddie Deezen. He was perfect for the part of Klaus Ringo. Just look at him.

BG: Even in 1977, there was still a tremendous amount of extreme Beatles fandom happening. There were Beatles memorabilia conventions happening on a fairly regular basis. I remember connecting with folks at a few of these, and I think the Beatles talcum powder we used in the movie was the real thing we borrowed it from one of the fans. And then later, he got pissed off at how much we used in the scene with Eddie. [Laughs] Hey, thats actual Beatles powder! Dont waste it! Sorry, kid. All bets are off when you deal with those weirdos from Hollywood.

RZ: We wanted to start filming at the Plaza Hotel, where the Beatles stayed before their first Ed Sullivan appearance. but then it wasnt going to work with our budget. Remember, this was our first movie.

BG: We actually scouted it as a possible set. And they just went, You want to do what? With how many extras? We already went through this once with the real Beatles, and once was enough! Also it would have been a huge expense to film it in New York anyway

RZ: So we had to make I Wanna Hold Your Hand in L.A. Which is ironic, because it used to be a lot cheaper to make a movie in Los Angeles and now, forget it. Itd be cheaper to film at the Plaza Hotel today than build a set on a studio backlot in Burbank.

BG: To me, there are three scenes that really stand out to me, and that prove that Zemeckis really understood the vocabulary of movies right out of the gate: he scene in the barbershop; the scene with Nancy Allen is in the Beatles hotel room, hiding under the bed; and the climax, where we used the monitors and the actors to make you think you were watching the Beatles on Ed Sullivans stage.

Howd you guys pull that sequence off?
RZ: Thats an interesting story. So we were told by the Universal folks that, apparently, we would have no problem getting the actual Sullivan footage CBS told the studio, Yeah, sure, you can use the footage. It will cost you X amount of money. But you have to get permission from the Beatles and indemnify us from any legal action they might take against us. Well, immediately, Universals legal team is like, No way, you cant use any footage. We are talking about the Beatles. We would get sued by people who have enough money to win.

BG: We actually had lawyers tell us, If you make the movie, you cant show the Beatles at all no likenesses, stock footage, anything. We had to show them storyboards for how we were going to not show the Beatles. Theyre lawyers they dont have imaginations. All they know is theres a girl in the Beatles hotel room, and in the script it says you only see their legs. But they dont know how to read a script. They dont get it.

So we storyboarded the hotel room scene for them. And we storyboarded the scene where Nancy Allen is hiding in the closet and then go down the service elevator, and you can only see the backs of their heads. All good. But when it came to the Sullivan show, they were adamant that we only show the audience.

Bob and I went to go have dinner, and were thinking to ourselves: Were building up to this big, iconic concert for the whole movie, and if we dont show it, the audience is going to burn down the theater! Is it irresponsible for us as filmmakers for us to have all four of these musicians wed hired play and not film any of it? Or are we never going to get the chance to make another movie if we dont do what were being asked? The latter argument won out.

RZ: We actually shot the entire scene with just the audience you saw the crowd going nuts and you could hear the music, but we never cut to the stage. Wed assembled the movie to play that way. So then we showed the movie to [Universal President] Sid Sheinberg, who was this great, old-school studio-system maverick, and he goes [affects old-timer studio executive work], Guys, guys, guys, this just doesnt work!

BG: We reminded them that we had written the script that way in the first place. He turned to us and went, You know, you guys are right. We cant release the movie like this. We need to pay off the Beatles. We gave us his permission and another week to got redo it.

RZ: You gotta see the band! Go back and shoot that. I said, Well, what about the Beatles taking you to court? And he said, Well, at least wed have them in the same room! Thats worth a lawsuit, dont you think?

BG: Ill tell the legal department, fuck em if the Beatles wanna sue us, let them! Ill have the movie rights to having the Beatles together again in a courtroom. A year or so after the movie had come out, Tamara Asseyev had lunch or dinner with Ringo Starrs manager at the time. And he told her, We all watched your movie and decided we would not sue. By we, she interpreted that all of the Beatles had, in fact, seen the movie. I told this to Sid and he said, What could they have sued us for? On what grounds? Its a love letter to the Beatles! All this could do would sell more records for them.

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RZ: We shot all of that performance footage in one day. I dont think we had time to do many takes; we didnt have time to screw around. We had there four guys who were Beatle fanatics they just studied and studied the footage. They knew exactly how the Beatles held the picks for each guitar. We knew they were going to do those three songs, so they rehearsed it to death. By the time we shot, they had every tiny movement from the Sullivan performance down pat.

BG: I dont know if you remember Leave It to Beaver, but in the later seasons, there was this character named Richard who was always getting Beaver into trouble. He was played by an actor named Rich Correll, and this guys was a huge Beatles fan almost as big a fan as Eddie Deezens character. We hired him to choreograph the Ed Sullivan sequence. He was like a drill sergeant with these guys, getting them to mimic everything that happens in that performance.

RZ: The other interesting thing about that sequence is that I Wanna Hold Your Hand is one off the first movies to ever have video footage seamlessly synced up with the shutter of the camera. Every time you shot a video screen prior to 1977, you saw what they call a shutter bar those rolling lines youd see on old TV screens but theyd finally come up with technology to fix that. We were one of the first movies to end up using it. So we made history. Sort of.

BG: About a month ago, they pulled a DCP of this new restored version and were showing at U.C. Santa Barbara, as part of this Beatles-oriented film festival. So Nancy Allen and I went up there to speak it was great to see it with an audience again. They were a handful of people who had not only seen the film but knew it really well. But there were a lot of young people whod never seen the film, and they couldnt believe the hysteria surrounding the band.

RZ: If nothing else, the movie was a testament to Beatlemania. And, yknow, still is.

BG: That scene where the woman says shes going to married to John, and shes reminded that John is already married, then replies, Well, his wife could die everyone thought we were exaggerating stuff like that. That exchange was taken from a real TV or radio interview wed found when we were researching this! People who werent there are amazed when they find out that we did not make that up. That was Beatlemania. That was what it was like!


Beatlemania 2.0: The Making of I Wanna Hold Your Hand

Han Solos Return of the Jedi Blaster Sells for $550,000 at Auction

The blaster Harrison Fords Han Solo wielded in the Star Wars film Return of the Jedi sold for $550,000 at a Las Vegas auction Saturday.

The prop weapon was the top-selling item in a Hollywood-themed lot offered by Julians Auctions. The auction house added that Ripleys Believe It or Not purchased Solos blaster, the Associated Press reports.

The weapon, made mostly of wood, was one of nearly 40 Star Wars-related items from the collection of the films art director James L. Schoppe that hit the auction block. Other items at Saturdays auction included an original Biker Scout Blaster (sold for $90,000) and an Ewok prop axe ($11,000) from Return of the Jedi.

However, Han Solos blaster fell well short of the record for the priciest Star Wars item in the franchises auction history: In June 2017, an R2-D2 unit that was seen in numerous Star Wars films sold at auction for $2.76 million, over its $2 million pre-auction estimate.

In 2015, a 600-item lot dedicated solely to Star Wars toys, collectibles and other ephemera sold for over $505,000.

Saturdays auction also feature an original Superman costume that Christopher Reeve wore in Superman III; that iconic outfit sold for $200,000.


Han Solos Return of the Jedi Blaster Sells for $550,000 at Auction

I Think Were Alone Now Review: Theres No Surviving This Postapocalyptic Drama

The premise: Its the end of the world. Havent we seen that before? We have, most recently in A Quiet Place. But in I Think Were Alone Now, there are only two people left on the entire planet. And theyre played by Peter Dinklage and Elle Fanning. So thats promising. And the filmmaker is Reed Morano, a superb cinematographer turned Emmy-winning director of A Handmaids Tale. Youre hooked, right?

Well, dont get too excited. All that talent is hamstrung by a script from Mike Makowsky that does not go boldly where no screenwriter has gone before. In fact, Makowsky simply connects the dots while the actors do the heavy lifting.

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Thankfully, theyre more than up to the task. Dinklage can make something compelling out of not doing a goddamn thing. The Game of Thrones star plays Del, a bearded grump who navigates around the corpses littering New Yorks Hudson Valley, trying to bring order out of apocalyptic chaos. When hes not collecting batteries or watching movies on abandoned DVD players, Del goes door to door, burying the decaying bodies he finds. Del makes his home base the local library, where he returns books to their shelves for reasons best known to himself. At night, he sits and reads, sips wine and seems content with his own company. For Del, the end of the world might be just what the doctor ordered.

Enter Fanning as Grace, a chatty teen who crashes her car into Dels world and starts asking all kinds of questions. Who can blame her? Del squints with annoyance until he opens up, little by little, as Grace starts to grow on him. But whats that funny scar on the back of her neck? Is she hiding more than shes telling? Morano does her best work with the first part of the movie, when Del and Grace size each other up and try to make sense of what to do next. Fanning brings a charming awkwardness to Grace that contrasts sharply with the way Dinklage slowly reveals the secrets and hurt feelings Del has kept hidden since way before global annihilation struck.

Its then that the script lays on complications meant to shock us, but which instead play like clichs from the ancient Twilight Zone handbook. Worse, the emotional investment we make in Del and Grace comes to nothing, as the plot ties up loose ends without a single surprise or a scintilla of genuine emotion. Tiffanys cover version on the title song (not heard in the movie) made you feel the lyric: The beating of our hearts is the only sound. But even Dinklage and Fanning cant give this failed experiment a heartbeat. You wont wish for the end of world while watching I Think Were Alone Now, just the end of the movie.


I Think Were Alone Now Review: Theres No Surviving This Postapocalyptic Drama

Saturday, February 22, 2020

Wreck-It Ralph 2 Trailer: Watch Ralph Dodge Real-Life Clickbait

In the hilarious first teaser for DisneysWreck-It Ralph 2, the computer-animated films wide-eyed protagonist (John C. Reilly) navigates the Internets insanity alongside his best friend, Vanellope von Schweetz (Sarah Silverman).

The clip opens at Litwaks Arcade, where Mr. Litwak installs a Wi-FI router, allowing the arcade games characters to enter the web. Whiff-y or is that wife-y? Ralph says, eyeballing the device, before he and Vanellope make the plunge into a digital metropolis.

The duo walk around a mall-like space, where similar to a classic Chappelles Show sketch real-life pop-up ads and clickbait vie for attention. Congratulations, youre a winner! one stranger says. These 10 child stars went to prison! another interjects. Number Six will amaze you! Later, Ralph and Vanellope visit eBay, where an auctioneer offers up a black velvet painting of a sorrowful kitten (starting price $49.99), and ruin a childs food-themed mobile game.

Ralph Breaks the Internet: Wreck-It Ralph 2 follows the acclaimed 2012 original, which earned an Oscar nomination for Best Animated Feature. The sequel, out on Thanksgiving, also features voice acting from Jack McBrayer, Jane Lynch and Taraji P. Henson, among others.


Wreck-It Ralph 2 Trailer: Watch Ralph Dodge Real-Life Clickbait

Watch Coen Brothers Quirky Western The Ballad of Buster Scruggs Trailer

The Coen Brothers preview their idiosyncratic Western vision with a new trailer for The Ballad of Buster Scruggs, the duos upcoming Netflix anthology film.

Well, folks, things have a way of escalating our here in the west, says Tim Blake Nelsons titular, quick-witted gunslinger, introducing a stylish montage from the six-part project including gunfights, unusual business transactions, James Francos outlaw staring down a death-by-hanging and Tom Waits Prospector digging a ditch.

The main sequence shows Scruggs squaring off with a rival in a saloon. Id appreciate it if youd deposit your weapon in the receptacle by the swinging doors, he says, leading to a quick shot of him shooting a man over his shoulder using a mirror. Best not to play it too fancy, he cracks to himself.

Joel and Ethan Coen initiallyconceived the project as a six-part television series before consolidating the stories into an anthology feature that premiered at the Venice Film Festival. Exclusive limited theatrical runs begin November 8th before the movies Netflix premiere on November 16th.

Liam Neeson and Zoe Kazan also co-star in The Ballad of Buster Scruggs,one ofRolling Stones most anticipated fall movies.


Watch Coen Brothers Quirky Western The Ballad of Buster Scruggs Trailer

Friday, February 21, 2020

Why The Queen Documentary Is an Essential Queer Time Capsule

With the spotlight on the Stonewall uprisings 50th anniversary this month, several treasured landmark LGBTQ documentaries have been restored and are being re-released for a limited time in theaters, including Jennie Livingstons Paris Is Burning and the era-defining Before Stonewall. But among the gifts to be cherished from this renewed focus is Frank Simons 1968 film The Queen. It remains obscure to most, but now with a 4K restoration produced by Bret Wood of Kino Lorber building on work done by UCLA Film & Television Archive, Outfest UCLA Legacy Project and the Harry Ransom Center the film is being re-released on June 28th, so that it may be embraced by an entirely new generation.

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Chronicling the 1967 Miss All-America Camp Beauty Contest that took place at New York Citys Town Hall, The Queen begins with Jack Doroshow otherwise known as Flawless Sabrina, Mother Flawless, or simply the Queen as the brow-tweezing matron who shaves before putting on his makeup and tries to encourage his parents to attend the big event. Meanwhile, grainy, 16mm fly-on-the-wall footage captures all the awkward angles and intimate details (a close-up of a foot here, a bulge of fat plumped into a faux boob there) as contestants prepare to hit the stage. The doc made a big splash when it premiered at Cannes, the same year that student protests in France shut the fest down. Then on June 18, 1968 nearly one year to the week before the Stonewall rebellion The New York Times published a review ofThe Queenwhile it was playing at the Kips Bay Theater in Manhattan.

The drag queens are, of course, perfectly aware that they are not women, and even their mannerisms the flatted vowels, the relaxed wrist, the gait of the homosexual who wants it known are not female imitations at all, but parodies, the reviewer states, before further editorializing, They may be absolutely miserable (like others) in their private lives, but in their costumed appearances they enrich the landscape enormously.

In an age when RuPauls Drag Race is a mainstream hit and drag queens can launch major careers, it seems impossible to imagine the context in which The Queen hit theaters a few decades ago, when cross-dressing was a felony in most of America and people who operated in these fringes were considered deviants.

You could be arrested, if a cop was in the mood, for just having eyeliner [on], Harvey Fierstein recently told Rolling Stone when describing his years of performing in drag in the early Seventies. And Doroshow, who ran the national pageant circuit in the Sixties, had been arrested for that crime over a 100 times by his count.

I spent a lot of my life being angry. I was furious about getting those felonies. I was hauled off to jail, given fines, Doroshow told Out magazine in 2015. More often than not [in my travels], I was driven to the county line and told never to come back. They blamed me for bringing all those perverts to town.

In addition to watching Sabrina act as a mentoring mother hen, the film follows queens from all corners of America, learning how to cluck and preen as they vie for the crown. We see quick cuts to Andy Warhol in the audience as a judge (you wonder if one of his Superstars might wander into a shot at any moment); authors George Plimpton and Terry Southern drop by for cameos. Then all hell breaks loose when the contestant and future House of LaBeija founder Crystal LaBeija is announced as third runner up (fourth place) and leaves the stage in a huff.

Simons camera descends into the bowels of the theater and tracks down the angry contestant. This is why all the true beauties didnt come, LaBeija says in protest. They told me, Sabrina, that you had it fixed for [fellow contestant] Harlow. Everyone knew that you had it fixed for Harlow for weeks and weeks.

Its that pivotal scene thats inspired many to latch on to The Queen as a cult favorite and caused it to creep into popular consciousness. Frank Ocean sampled LaBeijas voice in Ambience 001, part of his 2016 album/film Endless: Because youre beautiful and youre young; you deserve to have the best in life, we hear her voice ring out. And during the Snatch Game episode of Season 3 of RuPauls Drag Race All Stars, drag queen Aja defied expectations by wearing a luscious black wig, oversized hoop earrings and a white feather boa to transform into LaBeija.

But I keep finding myself drawn to the poignant scenes captured in the crummy Times Square hotel bedroom before the competition. Three of the semi-nude contestants sprawl out on two twin beds as they discuss boyfriends and sex and dodging the draft. Were suddenly reminded of the Vietnam War and how these semi-anonymous individuals fit into this fulcrum of American history.

Wouldnt this be a helluva mess if the draft board were to call us down right now for a physical? says a chubby contestant with a high-pitched Southern accent that sounds like he could be Truman Capotes close cousin.

This is what Im wearing to the draft board, the slender friend replies, twirling in a white nightgown with feather lapels.

Why havent you been drafted? Did you tell them you were homosexual?

No, they told me!

They then turn to talking about gender and whether theyd want to transition through medical means. We hear them fumble with language as they try to grasp at something complex that feels just out of reach.

But really and truly, would you like to be a true girl? To have that sex change if you had the money or could get it for free?

Well, I have enough money to go through the sex change, and I live only 30 miles from John Hopkins, but its the last thing that I would want. I know that Ive been a drag queen, have been a drag queen for a long time, been gay for a long time, but I certainly do not want to be a girl, even if I could have a baby.

During this moment, scenes of other contestants rehearsing out of drag are spliced in, with a sly smirk from Harlow, the Edie Sedgwick doppelgnger that walk away with the crown.

Simons movie is short (just over an hour), but its extraordinary because it captures so much, doubling as a time capsule of a generations innocence and fashion-forward sophistication. You can tell why it functioned as a template for many future gender nonconforming people looking for some sort of pre-internet guide through the confusing maze of sexuality and gender.

And due to the racism endemic to the drag pageant scene, Crystal LaBeija eventually left the culture preserved in the doc behind and became a Legendary Mother in the ballroom scene; she died in 1982 from liver failure. Doroshow continued to persevere and mentor generations of future queens. (He died at age 78 in 2017.) After the films release, Rachel Harlow had gender confirmation surgery and returned to Philadelphia, where she still lives in seclusion.

Without Jack Doroshow, our Flawless Sabrina, my friend and mentor, The Queen would not exist, she tells Rolling Stone via email. Because of his absolute dedication to the art of drag, he championed a whole generation of us who were, until that time, silenced by intolerance and shame, and delivered us from the darkness into the light.

As young queer people continue to discover their identities and evolve new language, Harlow hopes that people continue to appreciate it for creating a framework for others. I cant help but feel that many of the trans and drag stories that are coming to light now, spring in some way from The Queen, she explains. Certainly my life would have been entirely different without it, and the audiences who reach out to me to this day [are] grateful to have felt seen and celebrated.


Why The Queen Documentary Is an Essential Queer Time Capsule

Bohemian Rhapsody Review: Rami Malek Will Rock You

Put Rami Malek high on the list for best film performances of 2018. As Freddie Mercury, the lead singer of the British band Queen, the Mr. Robot star performs miracles, catching the look, strut and soul of Mercury, who died of complications from AIDS in 1991. Sadly, the film itself shows signs of a difficult birth. Sacha Baron Cohen was set to play Mercury before he left over creative differences. And director Bryan Singer (X-Men, The Usual Suspects) was fired for not showing up on set (an uncredited Dexter Fletcher replaced him).

So, yeah, Bohemian Rhapsody moves in fits and starts as we follow Mercury, born Farrokh Bulsara of Parsi descent, from baggage handler at Heathrow Airport to co-founder of Queen with guitarist/astrophysics scholar Brian May (Gwilym Lee) and drummer/dental student Roger Taylor (Ben Hardy). He auditioned for the musicians in a parking lot and, with incautious speed, is soon onstage as their frontman with John Deacon (Joseph Mazzello) joining in on bass. Shy offstage and struggling with his love for Mary Austin (Lucy Boynton) and his growing attraction to men, Mercury was secretive and conflicted. But when the singer plays Love of My Life on the piano to show his love,the feeling comes through as genuine due to the raw emotion Malek and Boynton pour into their roles. Its significant that Mercury left Austin the bulk of his fortune in his will. No similar authenticity seeps into the scenes of Mercurys hedonistic gay lifestyle as a partygiver, participating in orgies that come off here as more mild than wild.

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In struggling to make a salable PG-13 movie out of an R-rated rock life, Bohemian Rhapsody leaves you feeling that something essential and elemental is missing. Thankfully, theres the music that keeps filling the holes in the script by Anthony McCarten (Darkest Hour, The Theory of Everything) with a virtuoso thrum that is never less than thrilling. And there is Malek, who digs so deep into the role that we cant believe were not watching the real thing, starting from singer and actor sharing an immigrant experience (the actors parents are from Egypt, Mercurys from Zanzibar). Mixing his voice with vocals from Queen and Mercury soundalike Marc Martel, the star is pow personified. On set, the actor sang out the throat-straining vocals in his own voice so that, take after take, the lip-synching would match up perfectly and erase any taint of bad karaoke. He also wore fake teeth to capture the four extra incisors in Mercurys upper jaw that the singer insisted gave him more power and range. And he nails the frontmans sexual bravado onstage, with his cropped hair and porn-star mustache, letting loose with We Are the Champions, We Will Rock You, Radio Ga Ga and the title song. The creation of Bohemian Rhapsody, an unprecedented, six-minute mix of rock and opera that delighted Mercury even as critics decried it, allows for a comic bit with Mike Myers as an EMI record exec who claims no one will ever play it. (Feel free to press play on a YouTube clip of him headbanging to the song in Waynes World any time now.)

Many of the major Queen hits are heard in the films most daring conceit, a scrupulous recreation of the bands 20-minute appearance at the 1985 Live Aid concert from Londons Wembley Stadium, which many called the greatest live performance in the history of rock. Hard to argue. Whatever special effects were used to show the band in front of this enormous crowd, the scene captures something crucial about Queens connection to an audience as Mercury leads an elaborate call-and-response with his fans. The rousing life that Malek brings to this extraordinary recreation deserves all the cheers it gets. Screw the films flaws you dont want to miss his performance.


Bohemian Rhapsody Review: Rami Malek Will Rock You

Toronto Film Festival 2018: A Star Is Born Is Damn Near Perfect

You can probably think of a few cover versions of songs off the top of your head that you like as much as, or maybe more, than the originals: There are the obvious ones, and the obscure ones, and the velvet-roped V.I.P. section reserved for Hallelujah and Dylans body of work. The same goes for movies remakes, though it feels more appropriate to refer to actor-director Bradley Coopers A Star Is Born as a cover more than cinematic redo; the showbiz warhorse is one of the closest things Hollywood has to something out of the American Standard Songbook, and its way too intimate and personal to think of it as another third-verse-same-as-the-first retread. (Or in this case, fourth verse fifth if you count What Price Hollywood?, an ASIB rose by any other name that predates the 1937 Star Is Born by five years.) Theres only 12 notes, and the octave repeats, says one character, late into the rise-and-fall arc. All an artist can do is offer the world how he sees those 12 notes. What Cooper does is offer the world his melody in just the right minor key and a refrain that knows where to hold back, when to go full anthemic blast and how to sell a song youve heard a thousand times before as his own. He succeeds, better than even he might have imagined. Whether you think its the definitive Star Is Born is a matter of personal opinion. If you were sitting in the movies first screening at the Toronto Film Festival, Cooper and his costar sure as hell made you feel like its the pitch-perfect one for right now.

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And, at least for its glorious first hour, the movie gifts you with some of the best American filmmaking youre likely to see before this year ends in sprints to the shiny-statuette finish line. [SPOILERS, if one can truly say that this old chestnut has plot elements left to spoil.] We meet the fall half of the equation, Jackson Maine, as hes ambling on to a stage, playing raucous country-rock for a sold-out crowd. (Cooper pitches him as a creature with the borrowed DNA of modern gutbucket rockers like J. Roddy Walston, singer-songwriters like A.A. Bondy, twang mavericks like Sturgill Simpson and Eric Church, and a half dozen other handsome power-chord pickers.) The denim-jacket Bard likes his blues-guitar solos, with the camera crashing into him as he rips through stadium stompers and turning to offer stage-eye views of a sea of fans. He also likes his booze pills are a-OK, too and you practically smell the expensive Bombay Sapphire emanating off of the man. Back in the limo, he cant find a bottle. He does spot a bar, however, which turns out to be in the middle of its weekly drag night. Maine sits down on a stool, slurrily chatting up a giddy young man named Ramon (Hamiltons Anthony Ramos). Wigs and batting lashes pass by. And then he sees and hears her.

She is Ally, our rise heroine and she is also Stefani Germanotta, credited by her nom du stage Lady Gaga, doing the sort of tightrope act here where you simultaneously see the person behind Poker Face and nothing but a character wearing a beautifully plain one. The voice comes early, courtesy of an ethereal shot of her silhouette belting out a show tune as she walks out of a garage, the title credit slowly appearing beneath her. By the time Ally belts out Edith Piafs La Vie en Rose, prone on the bar before her future prince she gets a swoonworthy sideways close-up, viewers seeing her exactly as Jackson does your suspension of disbelief is already starting to kick in. This is a fairy tale, one that sweeps you up in its romantic (capital and lowercase R) wake. Its impossible to think of another recent movie that can turn a late-night jaunt through a fluorescent supermarket into a trip to Shangri-La, or make some impromptu parking-lot belting feel like a party-of-two showstopper, or convince you someones Roman nose is Public Erogenous Zone No. 1.

Everything from the way Jackson caresses Allys boot as she rides on the back of his motorcycle to the way she gets him to open up about a past filled with nuts, Navajo and nowhere to go is weaving a spell, building to some moment of maximum goosebumpery. Finally, we get it: She gets pulled onstage to sing the rough tune she crooned for him the night before hes mysteriously fleshed it out and arranged it practically overnight, but hey, too late, Cooper already has you in the palm of his hand and a you-know-what is born. Performance montages show that the two are forming a bond on and offstage: Shes part of the band, hes part of her life. A slimy kingmaker (Ravi Gavron) promises to make her a pop queen. Meanwhile, Jackson is starting to self-destruct. Keen eyes may have noticed a prominent billboard filling the frame in the first 10 minutes; consider this a sign in more ways than one. You know what comes next. The song remains the same.

If the films back half starts to falter a bit, its partially by bug-not-feature design a colleague pointed out that every iteration of this story seems to suffer from weak second acts and partially thanks to a headscratching choice. So Ally makes her name singing punchy rock tunes and power ballads, but when it comes time for her solo jump, everyone envisions her as a Beyonc-style pop chanteuse? Its not like they needed some sort of workaround for Gagas limitations; shes done everything from Tony Bennett duets to belt out operatic Sound of Music tributes. Ally 2.0, she of the newly dyed red hair and massive Sunset Strip billboard, doesnt feel like an organic transformation even if you take into account the legendarily limited imagination of the music industry. It doesnt track, anymore than the instant ascension to Grammys and SNL appearances level of celebrity does. Yes, we need to get to the plummet, the ugliness, the onstage humiliation (here rendered particularly nasty and unforgiving), the martyrdom and the moment of grace. Still, why sellout pop fame, and not just fame vs. flame-out? The spell doesnt break, but the illusion does waver a bit on the edges.

Which may seem nitpicky when you have pleasures like Cooper affecting a 30-grit soulsick rasp that allows for him and screen sibling Sam Elliott to have a good ol-fashioned masculine croak-off. (Whyd ya steal my voice? Elliott bellows, saying what weve all been deliriously thinking for the past hour.) And the hits keep on coming: Dave Chappelle dropping by for an extended cameo and Andrew Dice Clay talking shit about Sinatra. The cinematography from Matthew Libatique, who does wonders with grain and natural light and a way of getting the camera to capture these folks in their ragged glory. The songs, like the Jason Isbell-penned Maybe Its Time or the soon-to-be-juggernaut that is Lady Gagas Shallow. And best of all, both Cooper and Gaga proving skeptics wrong on such a massive level: We knew he was a proper movie star, but who knew he might be a potential auteur-in-the-making, someone who could filter his vision via an older-than-Vishnu narrative? We knew she was a star, but who knew she was not just an actor but such a first-rate one?

Or, for that matter, to have the film mount a climactic pomp-and-circumstance set piece that feels so achingly wrong, only to switch gears at the last moment, drop in a sublime final shot and then you leave you on such a high note. There may be better movies that play at TIFF before things wind down to a close, but there almost assuredly wont be better landings stuck from such perilous heights. It feels odd to find such freshness circa 2018, especially in such a creaky carcass of a tale. It feels unlike anything else out there right now in terms of this level of studio moviemaking. It feels alive.


Toronto Film Festival 2018: A Star Is Born Is Damn Near Perfect