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‘Anna Nicole’ DVD Interview: Filmmaker Mary Harron

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Anna Nicole Smith (Photo: Bob Mahoney/ Sony Pictures Television)Clocking in at 89 minutes, Anna Nicole gives viewers a capsulized look at the turbulent and tabloid infused life of Anna Nicole Smith. What elevates this Lifetime Television project is Agnes Bruckner’s charismatic and inspired work in the titular role, and landing celebrated filmmaker Mary Harron (American Psycho, I Shot Andy Warhol) was also a creative coup. Along with solid work from co-stars Martin Landau, Cary Elwes, and Adam Goldberg, Anna Nicole is an engaging biopic, and I recently talked to Harron about the film (which was just released this week on DVD).

Anna Nicole is beautifully lit. Why is lighting, in general, an important aspect in your filmmaking?

Lighting is mood and atmosphere and the tone of the film. With American Psycho it’s very hard light but also instant shadows. There’s other films that has a soft look. Nothing makes something look cheaper than bad TV with bad lighting.

When we were doing Anna Nicole, I got a really great DP, Michael Simmonds, who actually came from independent film and was used to working with minimal light and getting a great look. I knew we’d have to move very fast with Anna Nicole, and I didn’t want it to look like a TV movie. I wanted an interesting look. Even if you don’t really need to have a lot of money for sets or whatever, you can do so much with the light.

How much creative control did you have working in the TV medium?

Before I took it on, both the producers, Craig Zadan and Neil Meron, and the executives at Lifetime said, “We want you to do your look.” I was not trying to fit in with their look of past Lifetime movies. That’s why I was very keen on bringing in my own cinematographer.

Anna Nicole Smith(Photo: Bob Mahoney/ Sony Pictures Television)What challenges did you face with shooting the project in just 20 days?

It was difficult because we didn’t have long days.  Poor Agnes Bruckner was in every scene virtually so you had to give her turnaround. So you couldn’t give her long hours since she would have to be up in hair and makeup in the morning. We had to work very fast. On that budget we had to do Greece, so instead of a Greek hotel we were doing it at a Hyatt in Atlanta, but Mike did a lot of beautiful things like letting the light flare out to make it look like it’s hot in the Mediterranean. (laughs) He made it work.

A lot of actors seem to do their best work in your films. What is the key, in general, with collaborating with your actors?

First of all (part of) directing movies is basically casting them right. If you don’t cast them right, you can’t get a good performance out of somebody who isn’t right for it. But (for example) Martin Landau, who is such a privilege to work with, who has been in everything, an Academy Award and all the rest, but he was so humble.

Several things that I’ve done, including I Shot Andy Warhol and The Notorious Bettie Page, they’re based on real people and actors love that. Actors love research and exploring the biography of their character. That also helps as well I think.

So essentially you let the actors do most of the leg work in crafting their characters?

Yes. They have to. You can’t absorb it for them. With Anna Nicole, there’s the reality show but I remember there was one interview that Agnes found that she was excited about because it was an earlier one. She wanted to see Anna before she became famous and before she became sort of so scandalous. Just to get a bit more of feel for the real person. I think that’s important too.

Anna NicoleWhat was the key for you in telling Anna Nicole’s story?

If you’re taking the biopic format, then what is most compelling in that story, the most important relationship was her relationship with Danny. That was the real tragedy. This is someone who had a terrible childhood herself and although she wasn’t the greatest mother, she truly loved her son. The person she loved most she, in a way, kind of destroyed. That’s what, I thought, made it so tragic.

When filmmakers come to you for advice, what’s your general response?

I was talking to some younger, women filmmakers a couple of nights ago. Making a film is so hard. You have to find a story that carries you. That you care about so much that it carries you over all the rejection or the financial difficulties. You have to attach yourself to a story that you just can’t let go off.

Anna Nicole (Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, Not Rated) is on now out on DVD.

 

Ender’s Game Blu-Ray Press Day Gives Journos A Lollipop Ride

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Ender's Game (Lionsgate)

I really, really loved Ender’s Game, and if you want to check out my review of the Blu-ray release, you can check it out on Hollywood Outbreak. One of the great aspects of covering the title, which was released this week, was covering the press day that was held at Digital Domain.

For a couple of hours, journalists and bloggers checked out how the Zero-G special effects were created by Digital Domain, and although the process is captured on one of the Blu-ray featurettes, actually checking things out at Digital Domain was a pretty memorable experience.

Although Ender’s Game director Gavin Hood was on hand to talk about how he and his team visualized the mouse and monster tablet game that’s featured in the film, my favorite part of the day came when stunt coordinators Garrett Warren and Kurt Lott explaining how a lollipop arm was used to maneuver the actors around the film’s battle room. Actor Moises Arias, who plays Ender’s (Asa Butterfield) ego driven nemesis in the film, was on hand to demonstrate how to move around the arm.

Ender's GameI gave the contraption a bit of a spin, and although Lott told me to use my core and to make subtle movements during my trial run, I ended up flopping around like a dying, bloated fish. During my couple of minutes on the arm, I inadvertently flipped several times and failed to heed Lott’s careful instructions. So I really won’t be putting that embarrassing video for public consumption. All you need to know is that navigating on the lollipop takes a healthy amount of balance, coordination, and strength, so much credit goes to the actors who appeared to float through the air with the greatest of ease during the battle room scenes.

If you want to see how to properly do a stunt, here’s a video of Warren (he’s the one explaining how the rig works), Lott, and Arias showing how to kick some Ender’s Game a** on the lollipop arm.

Ender’s Game is now out on Blu-ray and DVD.

Oscar ‘Budd’ Boetticher & Chinook Feature Gets Warner Archive Treatment

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Kirby Grant and Chinook (Warner Archive)

Kirby Grant and Chinook Adventure Triple Feature Volume 2 was recently released by Warner Archive, and it contains three movies on one DVD.

Although I’d never seen a film starring Kirby Grant (TV’s Sky King) or Chinook the wonder dog, my interests were peaked due to the feature The Wolf Hunters, which was directed by Oscar “Budd” Boetticher (he didn’t use the moniker Budd until 1951’s Bullfighter and the Lady).

Although he was one of the more talented visualists in his day, Boetticher never graduated beyond B-movie Westerns, and it’s only years later when his films, which include the Randolph Scott classics Ride Lonesome and Seven Men from Nowwould receive their rightful due.

The Wolf Hunters, clocking in at a lean 70 minutes, has Mountie Cpl. Rod Webb (Grant) and Chinook tracking down a fur thief whose motivations may go beyond pure, material greed. Like much of of Boetticher’s work, it’s a low budget affair that he shot while working with Monogram pictures, but it’s still a beautifully shot feature filled with indelible imagery.

There’s also some unexpected touches that I didn’t expect from the project, which includes light comedic work between co-stars Edwin Norris and Jan Clayton (they play a loving couple whose lives are threatened by the criminal and his henchman). Since Grant has a musical background, one lovely sequences features a duet between him and Clayton, and it’s a number that Boetticher seamlessly fits into the story.

Chinook the wonder dog also gets his time to shine as he goes a couple of rounds with a knife wielding thug. The ending, which has the mountie and Chinook chasing the criminal down a shadowed forest, is also a sight to behold. It’s a solid outing all around for Boetticher, and the other two Chinook films in the collection are Snow Dog and Call of the Klondike.

Unfortunately, Warner Archive didn’t upload a clip from The Wolf Hunters on their YouTube Channel, but here’s a clip of Snow Dog.

Kirby Grant and Chinook Adventure Triple Feature Volume 2 is an MOD (Manufactured on Demand) title, to order this DVD go to The Warner Archive Collection.

‘Parenthood’s’ Joy Bryant Works Out Acting Muscles With ‘About Last Night’

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In About Last Night, Joy Bryant stars as Debbie, a single woman who’s all but given up on love. An electric Los Angeles evening with a charming guy named Danny (Michael Ealy) changes her entire outlook – that is, until reality sets in for the pair. Kevin Hart and Regina Hall co-star as Bernie and Joan, the other couple who take their passions into an entirely different (and emotionally unbalanced) level.

Based on David Mamet’s work Sexual Perversity in Chicago, the 1986 original starred Rob Lowe and Demi Moore. The Windy City has now been replaced with downtown Los Angeles with this iteration, and for Bryant she was more than prepared to flex her chops with this comedy. It’s a discipline and versatility she’s acquired thanks to her work on the acclaimed NBC series Parenthood.

“It’s still all the same, overall big muscle of just working and being comfortable and being relaxed,” said Bryant. “I don’t think I would have approached playing Debbie the way that I did if it weren’t for ParenthoodI get to work every day on a show with really talented people, great material, and they give us a lot of freedom to do what we want to do. I observe and learn from people who are really amazing at improv and who seem very effortless in their delivery.”

To hear Bryant talk about the joys of Parenthood and interacting with its loyal fan base, click on the audio below:

About Last Nightdirected by High Fidelity scribe Steve Pink, opens Friday. New episodes of Parenthood starts on February 27 (NBC, 10 pm et/pt).

If you’re into jazz, check out Bryant’s thoughts on Miles Davis, a post that’s featured on her blog.

Animation Block Valentine’s Day Showcase Heads To The Troubadour

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Animation BlockValentine’s Day is usually an animated time for lovers who really need to express themselves. Although restaurant reservations are probably part of the experience, a bit of creativity may also do the trick.

The Animation Block Valentine’s Day Showcase, which will be held at the Troubadour in West Hollywood on February 13, will feature “love” themed cartoon shorts mtv(other), Six Point Harness, Loopedeloop, and Nickelodeon.

A cartoon bumper from famed artist and Oscar nominee Bill Plympton will kick off the proceedings (the doors open at 8 pm). Live music from Blackbird Blackbird and Colleen Green will also be part of the event.

As the beautiful standard goes, I “don’t get much around anymore,” but that doesn’t mean an evening of animation, music, and a little bit of love shouldn’t be shared by the more extroverted set.

For tickets to the show, which will be hosted by Animation Block Casey Safron, click here.

As for Blackbird Blackbird, check out the clip for “It’s A War.”

New App ‘Flirt Planet Meet’ Aims To Revolutionize Digital Dating

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Flirt Planet (Truly Social)I’m an app addict due to my freelance gig as a reviewer for Arcade Sushi, but as far as apps adding any extra social dimension to my life, that experience remains at ground zero. TrulySocial founder and creative director Sebastian Coman is attempting to turn our universal app love into a socially interactive experience.

Flirt Planet Meet went live this month and is a free download at the App Store, and even if you don’t find “the one” from this free to play experience, hopefully you’ll develop a few flirting skills in the process.

With Valentine’s Day just around the corner, I talked to Sebastian Coman about what Flirt Planet Meet has to offer the more inquisitive and adventurous soul.

How do you see apps aiding in the digital dating process?

Well, you carry your apps on your mobile phones and your tablets, which have now become your main devices with connecting to people and to the web. We have to have a presence on these platforms. Imagine you found someone on an online dating site and you didn’t exchange phone numbers and you arranged to meet somewhere and someone’s running late and you’re not able to connect to one another to do the logistics properly on the day or on the minute.We need mobile phones and tablets when we want to engage in proper, true digital dating.

The other point is everybody now has a smart phone, everybody in quotation marks (that is). People use tablets specifically during the evenings, at home, on their sofa or in bed. And they browse. They kill time. They want to get tremendous value from free apps. So when it comes to digital dating, when you’re at home you browse through files, or talk to people on your phone or on your tablet. That’s what you need to be doing instead of sitting down at your desk, opening up your browser and having a mediocre experience.

Flirt Planet (Truly Social)Can you talk about Flirt Juice in relation to Flirt Planet Meet?

In Flirt Planet Meet, you get 100 free Flirt Juice per day. Every 24 hours that balance is fully replenished and you use that flirt juice to send connection requests. So instead of, as it has been the case with traditional dating apps, when you just message someone freely (it) causes a lot of spam and unsolicited suitors filling up your inbox with sometimes rude messages.

Flirt Juice allows you to send friend requests in a Facebook style. But you can only send (a certain amount) per day. If you like to connect to a high quality user, we charge you more flirt juice. We’re creating a marketplace that makes it fair for the user.

What occurs when some of the Flirt Planet Meet participants use the app to irritate fellow users?

So if somebody tends to be quite forward or rude to people or hasn’t bothered filling out his profile properly, or has a profile of his cat as his profile photo, that would be a low quality profile user. We as the intermediary, we’re not going to charge as much for you to connect to that user. If somebody has been on there for months and engages with users nicely and all her peers have reviewed her in a Yelp style review system, which is one to five stars, and you review their interactions, then that user should be more costly to connect to that user. And I, as the intermediary, want to protect that user.  If somebody’s just out to connect with tons of users and sending rude messages, well you can’t really do that since each connection request costs you lots more flirt juice.

One big avenue that Flirt Planet Meet is going down is the full gamification of digital dating. I very much disagree with the subscription model as a whole, as a revenue model, no matter industry. There are still so many existing online dating sites that are stuck with the subscription model. We’re giving the users a fully free experience, but if you’re a power user, then you can choose from various preview features that you can buy.

To check out the promo video for Flirt Planet Meet, click on the video below:

Some of the features coming soon for the app will be the ability to hide your Flirt Planet Meet activities from your Facebook friends as well as the ability to know when your various messages have been sent to your fellow flirt mates. “What Flirt Planet Meet is about is proving that bringing video game design into a different industry works. LinkedIn did it, Facebook did it, Twitter did it, and no one in digital dating has attempted to do this properly yet.”

‘Under The Skin’ Trailer Features A Transformative Scarlett Johansson

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UNDER THE SKIN (A24)Scarlett Johansson has starred in such visually arresting films as The Man Who Wasn’t There, The Black Dahliaand Girl With A Pearl Earring, but it’ll be tough to beat the images that spring forth from Under The Skin. Opening April 4 in New York and Los Angeles, the picture is described, at least as the boilerplate summary suggests, as a “masterpiece of existential science fiction that journeys to the heart of what it means to be human, extraterrestrial – or something in between.”

I personally prefer Indiewire’s more direct approach in describing Johansson’s character as a “man eating alien.”

Since it’s directed by Jonathan Glazer (Sexy Beast), a revered filmmaker who hasn’t released a film feature since 2004’s highly underrated Birth (one of Nicole Kidman’s finest hours on film), Under The Skin comes with high expectations. Check out the trailer below and tell us if it utterly blows you away or, pardon the pun, gets under your skin.

DVD Review: ‘Plus One’ Weaves Spellbinding Tale of Identity

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Plus One (IFC Films)Plus One, directed by Last House on the Left filmmaker Dennis Iliadis, succeeds as a hybrid of different genres. If you’re looking for a teenage party romp, Plus One has enough party rowdiness and fresh faced leads (Rhys Wakefield, Logan Miller, Ashley Hinshaw, Natalie Hall) to keep you entertained.

But Plus One isn’t about a set of nubile youths waiting to have their night of hedonistic bliss, as an asteroid crashes on a neighborhood which leads to a supernatural occurrence. Although the narrative initially centers David’s (Wakefield) attempts to win back his girlfriend (Hinshaw) at the party, finding his true love takes a distant second to self-preservation. With the presence of the asteroid’s energy, the revelers discover an exact double of themselves has been created, leading to an all out battle for survival.

Plus One has plenty of wonderful touches, including a beautiful repartee between an eager to get laid Teddy (Logan Miller) and a beautiful woman (Natalie Hall) who might actually be an alien. Ilidias and cinematographer Mihai Malaimare Jr. craft a visually mesmerizing tale that’s punctuated with expert lighting and framing. The picture’s final moments, wherein one major character makes a fateful decision, is also a pleasant and unexpected storyline surprise. The use of twin actresses (Colleen Dengel and Suzanne Dengel) to play the role of the angsty college student Allison and her asteroid creating double was also an inspired creative choice by Ilidias.

For fans, looking for a bit more trimmings to their film, the DVD special features are top notch:

  • Audio commentary from director Dennis Ilidias and cinematographer Mihai Malaimare Jr.
  • An interview with Iliadis and the cast at SXSW.
  • Cast auditions which has the actors talking about their dreams. Miller’s dream of encountering a deformed woman hidden in the bed of a trunk is particularly creepy.
  • Visual effects behind the scenes segments are also featured, one sequences shows how actors had their faces digitally replaced. The other scene, titled “Sushi Girl Revenge,” shows the preparation it took for for a naked actress to karate kick a partygoer into a cabinet.
  • There’s also a storyboard to scene sequence which shows how the director and storyboard artist composed the terrifying pool fight sequence featured in the film’s final act.
  • My favorite special feature is the three minute outtake, titled “Teddy’s Pick-Up School.” This three minute segment features Logan Miller and Nathalie Hall improvising their way through a scene, and their chemistry is just as palpable than the two leads. It’s a scene that isn’t completely pivotal to the overall film’s structure, but it’s quite fantastic.

Plus One (IFC Midnight, R, 94 Minutes) is now out on DVD.

Skylar Astin On Acting Career: “I Don’t Want To Be A Flash In The Pan”

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Well Go USA EntertainmentNow out on VOD & playing in select theaters, Cavemen centers on a struggling Los Angeles writer named Dean (Skylar Astin) who, even though he’s still quite the bachelor, wants to find his true love. Dean’s best buddy is Tess, an understanding and loyal confidante who is played by Camilla Belle. Since Astin and Belle have a natural chemistry, one pretty much assumes Dean will get the proverbial happy, Hollywood ending.

The movie, shot in Downtown Los Angeles, is a low budget affair but thankfully director Herschel Faber finds a solid visual tone for the picture. Shooting Angelenos cavorting and socializing at night is a tricky thing, and even though technology has profoundly improved since the Swingers day, shooting in near dark is still a challenge.

During the Cavemen interviews, Skylar Astin, who is best known for his roles in Pitch Perfect and 21 & Over, talked about his career goals as an actor. In a celebrity driven age, coupled with the overwhelming deluge known as social media, simply just doing the work really won’t cut it. It’s a Faustian bargain Astin understands, as he alludes to in the following quote:

“I want to work, I don’t want to be famous,” said the actor, who’s also the lead in the TV series Ground Floor. “It’s cool if that comes along with it. If people know who I am for my work, then hopefully I’ll be able to continue to work.”We live in real celebrity and status obsessed culture, and Twitter and Instagram haven’t helped that. I have accounts. I’m not saying I’m perfect. I feed into it only slightly. I don’t take anything too seriously.”

Acting is Astin’s main focus and priority. “I want to do this until I’m old,” he added. “I don’t want to be a flash in the pan and I don’t want to be the most famous person in the planet, because I don’t want people to get sick of me. I really want longevity, and I really want to do a multitude of different characters throughout my career.”

To hear Mr. Astin talk about the difference between social interaction in New York and Los Angeles, especially when it comes to finding a prospective date, listen to the clip below:

Rosario Dawson Finds Personal Connection With ‘Gimme Shelter’

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ROSARIO DAWSON " JUNE" :  ROSARIO DAWSON  (Roadside Attractions)If you’re in search for a drama filled with heartrending (and inspired) work from its actors, it’ll be hard to beat Gimme Shelter. Vanessa Hudgens is Apple, a pregnant teen who struggles to find a home after leaving her crack addicted mother June (Rosario Dawson). Both actresses give standout performances in the feature, which also stars Brendan Fraser as Apple’s Wall Street exec dad.

“I felt a lot of compassion for her,” said Dawson. “There’s going to be a lot of people who will be walking by Junes on their way into this movie, and I really hope when they walk out they see Apple and have a different experience, and maybe see people who they didn’t see before.”

The film’s theme of finding one’s family, whether it stems from one’s DNA or a group of former strangers, is sure to pull on our heart strings, but thankfully director Ron Krauss avoids painting the story with heavy handed or maudlin brushstrokes.

For Dawson, accepting the role of June Bailey came from a very personal place. Click on the clip below to hear her talk about how she connected with Gimme Shelter.

The actress, who is set to travel to Haiti for 100K World Water Day, also. “I hope I get to push myself and grow and be a better actor,” added Dawson. “I have one of the best jobs in the world. As long as I stay lucid, and I can remember a few lines here and there, I can act until the day I die. And that’s an awesome thing.”

Gimme Shelter is now playing in select theaters.