Saturday, October 29, 2011

Two Great Snaps from Santa Cruz

Back from my trip a few days ago and playing catch up, as the credit card bills start rolling in.  If anyone is interested I am posting some of the photographs and highlights of our trip on the other blog as I get them sorted out.

I need to catch up with what is happening in Gerry land, but I did  see several great  photos from the Mavericks' shoot in Santa Cruz and although they are already probably all over the internet, will post them here.

Smile for the Camera!
Meanwhile, hope all is well with the Muse and that filming is going smoothly.  It can't be too warm in Santa Cruz this time of year, especially in the early mornings.   University of California Santa Cruz was one of the universities D was accepted at eons ago and we made the trip up to check it out.  We stayed at a small hotel on the beach and heard the waves pounding all night.   The campus was beautiful as the smell of cannabis floated through the trees.

I have friends that live in Santa Cruz, but they live in the hills overlooking the city and have great memories of a lobster and crab fest at their home where they welcomed some of D's friends too.  Her friends thought my friends were the greatest.  All their kids surfed, of course.

D ended up going to another famous party school, UCSB and even though she partied as hard as the rest of them, she managed to make the Dean's List most of her time there.   I'm not sure how she did it, but I do remember those late night calls when she would pull all nighters before exams to go over some of her Spanish notes.  If those walls could speak!

Anyhow, I am going to the AFI Filmfest next week and have bought a special screening pass.  Am looking forward to seeing Coriolanus.  Also hope to catch Shame and Carnage (both Galas) if I can make it to stand in line.

Looking Good, Baby!


Am sending wishes for good weather to G. and company in Santa Cruz.

Songs out of tune, the words always a little wrong...Canzoni Stonate

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Confidentially Speaking...

...the cover of Los Angeles Confidential is lovely.  Gerard Butler wearing a stylish suit, slouching in a chair and smiling from ear to ear?   That's one I'll be picking up at the airport tomorrow on my way to NYC for a week and a second in Paris.  What the heck.  It's my birthday this week and I'll treat myself to a look at the muse on the plane.



Last time I saw him (at the Machine Gun Preacher Q&A) he was looking very fine, tall and slim.   At that venue I caught an apologetic little smile as he sat down and  looked around after the welcoming applause.

Those little glimpses of G are the ones that humanize him for me.  Don't know if they last long or anyone else catches them in the midst of so many changes in that very expressive face, but for me that is the guy that still somehow can't believe all the fuss over him, and has enough grace to be embarrassed by all the commotion.  I am sure there were many familiar faces in the audience, but perhaps that is his way of apologizing to the other part of the audience who is there for the movie and are not necessarily fans.   I kind of like that.  People's body language says so much.  However the magazine cover speaks for itself and is worth the space in the blog.

Gerard the Great?  Not really.  Gerard the enigma?  Well considering his following, fans as well as detractors who still hang in there to talk about him, there is something about him that still manages to interest people. For me it's something besides the way he looks.  I think it is a little about his duality....what he seems to be and what he isn't.   One moment he's serious and thoughtful and the next perfectly at home with a bunch of 10 year olds and being the biggest kid of all.  And then he gets in front of the camera and he is the urbane looking, sexy idol that raises women's blood pressures all over the globe.

But don't be fooled because the little kid is never too far from the surface!   He lurks in the corners of that very smile that says to me "Like me at your own peril because I'm only going to be me, ultimately."  And that "me" is one wicked little kid who loves to play and to entertain and likes to be loved for it.

Unless you are the paparazzi, of course.

Scowl for he camera, Gerry!

Songs out of tune, the words always a little wrong...Canzoni Stonate

Saturday, October 1, 2011

On Second Viewing - Machine Gun Preacher- Missed Opportunity

SOME SPOILERS BELOW

After a hair raising drive to get there in time for the 5:30 showing of Machine Gun Preacher at the Arclight Hollywood last Saturday (Murphy's law being what it is, traffic lights were down in an area just before the freeway and traffic backed up for 20 minutes),  I ran through the theater, preprinted ticket in hand at 5:30 exactly and sure they would not let me in.  Finding out what theater it was in, I headed for the stairs down, when I spotted Sam Childers, the preacher man himself,  in the lobby all by his lonesome.  On impulse, I put my hand on his shoulder in passing and said to him "Hey Reverand Sam, I'm on my way to see your movie!"   He gave me surprised smile and a "hey" back as I continued at breakneck speed down the stairs.

Suddenly realizing I had left my water in the car, I debated whether I had time enough to buy a bottle.  Deciding not, I scurried into the darkened theater where the previews were in progress, showed the usher my ticket and he directed me to the second row, second section.   I had thought I bought one in the first row, but the last preview was winding down, so I didn't bother to argue.    Oh, how I wish I had.

I am a nice person and I try not to judge others, but I found myself annoyed to be sitting next to what appeared to be a contingent of middle age and older Gerry fans who talked, moaned and tittered through many parts of the movie. Every time G appeared in one scene or another, it made me cringe when a deep sigh escaped several of the women.   Not only did I feel a little embarrassed for them, but annoyed that their carrying on took a little away from the seriousness of the topic and the focus on the performances.   It seems that it doesn't matter how hard this actor is trying to give a good performance, for some people it is still only about his looks...that he is a sexy dude. Thinking about that, never mind being embarrassed for them, I felt bad for him.  Being seen primarily as a hunky piece of meat over an actor trying to be something more must seem like a futile endeavor sometimes.

Now it's okay to be an avid fan, but I honestly have to think that this kind of thing is such a turn off to regular movie goers that are there to see a serious movie and don't care about who the actor is.   It was certainly a turn off to me, and I am fond of this guy.

Now to the movie.  I still found the first part of it dark and some of it colorless and the truth of it is, that the only real technicolor part of it was Gerry's intense look, peering out from Sam's eyes.

While a couple of the preaching scenes were good...it was hard for me to buy Gerry as a preacher but I think the problem here lies with me, not with him.   When I was very young I went to enough churches with my grandfather to see the born again, fundamentalist type preachers and even then, as a young child, felt the preaching was more about showmanship then anything to do with God.  That kind of preaching never connected or touched me as much as a quiet sermon from a kind face...where you could look at it and know that God was IN that person, not some exterior thing or diety that you beat people over the head with.  I'm the type of person who likes sitting quietly in old Cathedrals and feeling the weight of history, the quietness of prayer, the real personal nature of communing with something greater than yourself, but still knowing that that essence is still a very part of  YOU and that you are worthy of that piece of divinity because you can feel it's grace touch you.  When you are out in nature, particularly the mountain forests or watching the ocean at sunset, it sometimes takes the place of the Cathedral...it is that same communing with the vastness that represents God.  So while he may have been very effective in these scenes, my old tapes were playing loud and clear.  My fault...not the performance.

In other parts of the movie, I can almost go down a list of scenes and grade them from A-C, according to how convincing his performance was to me. Funnily enough, the bathroom drug scene was brilliant.  The scenes in the car with his pal when they are shooting up was spot on.    The Bank scene.   The nervousness in the church before baptism.  The quiet moments in his bunk in Sudan.     Watching the footage on the TV of news of Garang's death and his anger towards the normality in his home, when he is still so full of Africa.  The chilling Africa scenes where he sees the horrors of an attack on the village.   Several scenes with the little boy William and most of the scenes with Deng.  He was so on and really with it.  I loved his performance in these moments.

I also thought Michelle's performance was very good.  She got the grit, but infused it with her own brand of sweet that came through and that was very effective.  Michael Shannon's moments on the screen were also excellent.

The not so great moments:  The grenade launcher scene at the bridge was not real.  It felt like it belonged in another movie.  There were several other moments like that one where it felt like they belonged in a different movie.  It was a case where cinematic license somehow didn't fit, where jazzing it up for general audiences, didn't work.

Some of my favorite things....the little boy William and the other children in almost every scene they were in.   The quiet face of Souleymane Sy Savane...saying so much with such little effort.  The hard to look at moments when Sam sees the women whose lips have been cut off, the little boy who is blown up by the land mine or grenade.

I thought that there were a lot more A moments then C moments in G's acting, but no matter how many double negatives he used, there is a certain brute force that comes in lieu of grey matter, that he couldn't quite capture.  I'm not saying Sam isn't smart, but when you've seen a lot of the world (like Gerry has) and experienced it, it comes through your eyes and it's hard to shove it back down and show a more narrowed focus of existence.  Yet Sam has probably seen a lot more than G in the suffering of children, the cruelty of man (including his own) so his is more a street smarts that you get only from being where he's been.

I still really liked G's performance in this and to be really honest, if I didn't know who he was and came in fresh off the street,  I may not have liked the movie as a piece of entertainment, but I would have remembered the impression the story and the actor made on me.   The catch 22 (yes there is usually one)  being that I probably would not have gone to see it had G not been starring in the first place.  But having seen it, I would have come away with a hunger to see more of this actor's work.

Like a lot of other people, the movie only took on a real life for me in Africa.   The parts in Pennsylvania, aside from the acting, were drab and colorless. And I got to thinking that perhaps that is the truth of Sam's life.  Perhaps he also finds it dull and grey at home and he only feels alive tackling something beyond that insular simplicity of church, work,  home and bar.  Perhaps none of that is a challenge for him and he has to find his meaning elsewhere.   Here it just happened to be Africa and the children who needed a savior....a hero.  Perhaps Sam needs being the hero to someone and his past tainted him at home.  And part of being a hero in the kind of world he grew up in... means carrying a gun and using force to achieve what you want.  In Africa it was okay for him to do so.  At home it was not.

After having that thought, all I could think of was how I wished I hadn't run through that lobby.  Sam was alone and I'm pretty sure had I engaged him in conversation while he was waiting for whomever he was waiting for,  he would have talked to me.  I would have liked to look into his eyes and ask him if he he had really been that bad a dude and decided for myself.  I've known men like Sam.  They need something from you and if you know what it is and give it, they will let you in a little.   It was a missed opportunity to ask the right questions and perhaps see and hear for myself if that passion for the kids was really there and what really lit it.



I thought maybe I would get another chance after the movie, but when I saw how the women next to me scampered off after Gerry and the rest of the Q&A panel walked out towards the lower lobby, I figured they knew just where to go to see their idol.  I've a feeling it is routine for them.

Being who I am, I always stay for most of the credits, feeling that a certain respect is due the work all the other souls put into the making of a movie, so when I finally walked out, Gerry and company were mobbed (backed against a wall), with people taking photographs and cell phone flashes going off all over the place.
 
I looked on from afar for a few moments, wondering if I should try to say something, decided it wasn't my scene and after a quick stop at the restroom, headed upstairs to the main lobby.

Really thirsty by now, I sat at the bar and ordered a short Campari and soda and a bottle of water and checked the e-mails on my Blackberry.   There was something wrong and they were not coming through, so I had to go in and reprogram the e-mail portion.  About 10 minutes later, while I was doing that, I happened to look up and saw the women who had been sitting next to me come up the steps into the main lobby.  I'm sure they got their photographs and their hugs.  Good for them.   It probably made their day.  I don't do photographs.  Don't take them, don't want to be in them.  A quiet moment of conversation would have been nice, but the frenzy surrounding certain people is not my style.  I am not a gushing type.  I want a little substance.  I give something and I want something of equal value back.  I usually get it, but not in this kind of scene.

I returned to my programming and the next time I happened to look up, I caught a quick glimpse of Gerry and his group, who had just come up the stairs, and one more fan asking for a photo before I lost sight of them as they made their way out of the theater.

I sat and finished my drink and 10 minutes later, headed for home and a some soup and warm washcloths on my now green tinged bruise and swollen lower cheek, still thinking of the missed opportunity before the screening....when I would have had Sam Childers all to myself.

When I got home I pulled out my ticket and checked it...and sure enough, the dummy had directed me to the wrong seat.  Except then I realized it was me that was the dummy for not checking it before I went in
and kicked myself for more than one missed opportunity.

Songs out of tune, the words always a little wrong...Canzoni Stonate


P.S.

Did anyone else catch the line spoken by Sam in the movie where he said "with our last breath" in exactly the same intonation Gerry used in 300?  It made me wonder if it was a "nod" to his famous  role and made me want to laugh at a moment when it was supposed to be serious.

Ahhh Gerry....the ever present jokester is never far away.



Friday, September 23, 2011

Monday, Monday....Can't Trust That Day - MGP

Interesting day Monday.  I had plans to see Machine Gun Preacher at the L.A. Film School.  I particularly wanted to see it at this venue because it featured a Q and A with screenwriter Jason Keller and I wanted to hear what he had to say about writing this script without fans asking about Gerry.  When the making of this movie was announced I questioned how and whether  they were going to make Sam a sympathetic character or whether they would portray him with all his warts and the dark side that was still very apparent after reading the book Another Man's War.

Anyway,  the ticket was for two people so I called my friend T, who had just returned from an exhausting trip to Shanghai, to see if she would like to go.   Knowing it wasn't her kind of movie, I promised her a nice dinner afterwards where she could fill me in on all her recent adventures.   Though she has never heard of Gerard Butler,  I told her that the actor in the movie was the type of guy I had had in mind when I wrote my first script, which new revision she had read the week before and that the real Sam looked a little like her recent ex boyfriend.  Don't know if these two asides whetted her curiosity, but I told her a little about the story and even though the title was ominous, she agreed to go.  I should have listened to my better judgment and gone alone, but what the heck...it turned out to be an interesting evening.

I left my house at 5:45 and picked her up an hour later.   We headed directly over to the film school to get in line and assure ourselves a seat.  There was already a line, but I figured they would start letting people in around eight.

My friend was kind of bored, so she decided to go buy a bottle of water  and a candy bar across the street.  On her way back she met an attorney she knew, who was in line for the movie,  and who was the ex of one of the people that owns a condo in her building.  She brought him back and introduced me as a "screenwriter." I learned, in short order,  that, in addition to his being an lawyer, he had the acting bug, was doing improv, was a closet conservative who had just come from Tea Party headquarters....and his wife had kicked him out after a second stab at saving their marriage.  At the Tea Party comment my friend poked me in the rib, while I tried to keep a straight face.

Like a lot of people in this town and in line for this movie, he had been networking with others and had spoken to the girl behind him who had told him about a few organizations, including Women in Film, who mentored screenwriters.  Hearing this, my friend, a shameless networker in her own field, promptly asks him if he would introduce me to the girl.  Reluctantly I headed to the front of the line to meet the girl in question and exchange information so she could forward me some material about said organizations.  T is a very dramatic, forward person.  I am not.

After returning to my place in line, T starts giggling, telling me she can't believe she actually knows a "tea partier" (her first) and then starts wondering aloud about the political persuasion of his ex.  A few moments  later she starts looking at her watch and wondering how long before they were going to let us in.  She discovered she could see the CNN clock and every few minutes would tick off the time.  Miss Patience she isn't.

Thankfully, the two girls who were standing in line behind us had been watching us.  I knew they were actresses from hearing them talk and realized they were giving me covert glances when one of them spoke up and asked if I was a dancer.  She then proceeded to tell me that I reminded her so much of her ballet teacher when she was a little girl, a lady she had loved dearly.  She said I was very pretty, just like her teacher.  I thanked her for the compliment and then she went on to tell me I had such a nice way about me and a warm face that attracted strangers.  Seeing me blush, her friend, a stuntwoman/driver,  tells me that I looked very familiar to her too.  I told her that it happens a lot and that I have a double walking around somewhere in Hollywood.  T suddenly pipes up with her "She looks like a younger Elizabeth Taylor, doesn't she?"...  to which I choked on my spit, gave her a dirty look and told the girls my friend was blindly fond of me.  I resemble Taylor in absolutely NO way.

We joked for a while with them and were joined by the people behind them but soon all turned to wondering when they were going to let us in, as it was already 8:30 and the doors were still closed.  After ticking off the time again, I told T to go use her charm and see if she can find out what was going on.    She promptly goes to get the attorney and between them they got to the bottom of the situation.   It seems the digital projector had broken down and they were borrowing a regular projector from somewhere else and were waiting for that and also had had to send a messenger to the Writer's Guild to pick up the only copy of the film available.  They anticipated a new start time of maybe 9:15.

T had started clock watching again and hinting that we should forget about the movie and go directly to dinner.  I didn't say a word (although I was starving) and just stuck in line.  After waiting this long, what was a few minutes more?

Well to make an already long story short, 20 minutes later they let us in and I think the film started close to 10:00 p.m., with the guy running the show announcing that Jason Keller had agreed to stay and do the Q & A, even though it was going to be late.

They threaded the projector and started the movie.  Five minutes after watching Gerry (Sam) walk out of prison, I look over to see my friend covering her face and her ears.  This continued throughout a big part of the movie and the guy on my other side of me kept looking over at her.  Whenever there was shooting or some kind of violence or gory scene she would not look.   I tried to ignore the whole situation and concentrate on the movie, but if you know the story, you'll know how hard that was.

Sam and Gerry
When the movie was finally over, after getting a nice ovation, a bunch of people left.  Jason Keller took a seat and the guy doing the interview did likewise.  Settling in, the Q & A was very interesting.  Keller turned out to be a very hip guy, not anything like the guy who had appeared with Sam and the Evangelical preacher in the Church service that Gerry was supposed to, but luckily did not attend.  He was asked some great questions by the interviewer and what I found very interesting was when he finally admitted that he "personally" did not like Sam, but greatly admired the end result of his conversion, which was the heroic and dogged fight to save the kids and found the Angeles of East Africa. Although it was a cause he himself was now involved with,  he said that he, Marc and Gerry had all agreed they would not whitewash him...and though Lynn Childers had told him he had got it right, Sam was having a hard time with it....seeing himself up there and accepting the bad with the good.

He also stated that the three of them had all agreed they were not going to make a political movie and after seeing Mr. Tea P. in the lobby afterwards and asking how he liked it, he told me he didn't like the movie because they skirted the issue of the Muslim north being the real ones responsible for all the violence.  Of course I couldn't help myself and asked him if he hadn't heard Keller say they were not trying to make a political statement with this movie, but were just trying to tell Sam's story and that was perhaps a story for another movie.  He thought it was a cop out and, of course,  I was rolling my eyes. by that time.

The Q & A didn't wind down until around 1 a.m. and we left there at l:15 a.m. and headed for The Standard (the only place I could think of that was still serving food) where I hungrily attacked a plate of crispy fish tacos, a green salad and a glass of Pinot Noir because, by that time, my stomach was sure my throat had been cut.

After dropping my friend off at 2:30 a.m., I drove home, having the road all to my self and made it in almost half an hour.  Although I didn't fall asleep until 5:00 a.m. after checking out my e-mails and showering and washing my hair, I went to bed thinking about the movie.

In all fairness I think my viewing of this movie was impaired by two things, the constant repulsion of the violence by my friend and the fact that I was too busy watching Gerry's performance that I missed seeing other things along the way.  This is something I will remedy with a "paying " ticket to the 5:30 show at the Arclight on Saturday, when I hope to see it with fresh eyes and give it a more honest critique.    I know everyone involved with this movie is promoting it like I've not seen a movie promoted in a long time.  The cause itself deserves it.  They want so to see it succeed and the critics, for the most part, are not helping it.  The message of the movie is a good one, but it is put together in such a way that it is not an easy movie to love...and not just because they show Sam with all his faults, but perhaps maybe because they couldn't quite connect with the man who would do such a heroic thing in saving these beautiful kids by what is portrayed on the screen. Is something missing in the telling of the story?

I have to say this is the best performance Gerry has given since The Jury. He was very good as was Michelle Monaghan.  I also think even though most people think Gerry is at his best doing action and being violent with his manly image....those that loved The Jury or Dear Frankie (and even in parts of 300) loved him for what he could say with his eyes, his silence, his tears...not just his brawn or his swagger.  I did love his performance in Machine Gun Preacher, but I wanted to love the movie itself a little more.  Perhaps it will seem a little less disjointed upon second viewing.

Oh, and what did my friend say about it?   "Boy that Gerry actor is one lovely hunk of manliness, isn't he?"

I just nodded and wanted to say...I think he's more than that.   But I didn't.


Songs out of tune, the words always a little wrong...Canzoni Stonate

Monday, September 19, 2011

Serendipity

This morning I opened my newspaper to the entertainment section and found a photograph of Warren Beatty under "Classic Hollywood" where he was being cited for having starred, produced, directed and co-written the script for the charming movie, Heaven Can Wait.

I love these little moments of serendipity.  

Songs out of tune, the words always a little wrong...Canzoni Stonate

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Don't know why...

...but when I glanced at this photo of Mr. B. and his manager and producing partner, Alan Siegel,  arriving at LAX, all I could think of was the mental snapshot I was getting from one of my dad's favorite movies,  Heaven Can Wait.

Joe Pendleton and Mr. Jordan?
While G prepares for his guest appearances on several talk shows in the area to promote Machine Gun Preacher, let's hope his odyssey leads him to an Oscar nomination and not to a walk in those particular kinds of clouds.

Songs out of tune, the words always a little wrong...Canzoni Stonate

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

The Guy in this Photograph...whoever he is...

is a handsome devil... and pretty much how I envisioned the protagonist (hair and all) in my very first stab at screenwriting too many years ago.   I am posting the photo without further comment because it needs none.

Coriolanus Press Conference - TIFF

Songs out of tune, the words always a little wrong...Canzoni Stonate