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Week of March 13, 2006

You can take "The Peacemaker," "Deep Impact," and "The Tuxedo." We'll take "Gladiator," "American Beauty" and anything else that didn't suck.

Emilio's 17

Yeah, like he needed all that overpriced crap anyway...

This lawsuit's going to make 'House Party' look like 'House Party Two!'

I told you... don't call me SENIOR!!

Maybe this is all a bad dream too?

Thanks Sharon, but I think I'll wait until this one comes out on DVD (so I can freeze frame of course)

There is absolutely, positively no nepotism in Hollywood. None.

You're good, baby, I'll give you that... but me? I'm magic.

This band will go down like a lead balloon

Well, Goodbye there Children...

They can't sell the Capitol Records building! What will be left to destroy in the next crappy 'end of the world' movie?

Same old Courtney - still sponging off Kurt

Panic on the streets of Austin

You're a fat, Botox faced, wig-wearing ninny! Oh yeah? Well your band has a dirty H addict as a lead singer!

Black Sabbath, Blondie, Miles Davis, The Sex Pistols, Lynyrd Skynyrd Enter Rock Hall



01 THE BREAK-UP $39.17
$12759/av

02 X-MEN: THE LAST STAND $34.02
$9159/av

03 OVER THE HEDGE $20.65
$5170/avg

04 THE DAVINCI CODE $18.61
$4953/avg

05 MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE III $4.68
$1756/avg

06 POSEIDON $3.49
$1283/avg

07 RV $3.20
$1469/avg

08 SEE NO EVIL $2.04
$1607/avg

09 AN INCONVENIENT TRUTH $1.36
$17615/avg

10 JUST MY LUCK $855K
$892/avg









 


 
Down Under

 

Jim Cameron's big IMAX 3-D movie, GHOSTS OF THE ABYSS, is about more than just some very cool 3-D footage of the rotting remains of the Titanic, although that's the basic subject. 18 months ago Cameron and his crew went out to the spot above where the Titanic has lain for the previous 91 years and took some 3-D cameras with them on a series of two-and-a-half-mile dives. The film is basically an unscripted (though not, I suspect, unplanned or unchoreographed) account of what happened.

At first, the 3-D footage is fun no matter what the cameras are peering at. Just staring at the slightly chunky features and thinning hair of Bill Paxton, a friend of Cameron's who acts as a narrator and tour guide, and saying to yourself, "Hmmm... Paxton could maybe think about spending a little more time on the treadmill," is a trip in itself because everything looks so amazing. Likewise, staring at all that rotting, brownish-orange metal at the bottom of the ocean is really something at first, but it isn't long before you're used to the 3-D and are starting to wonder if this is all there is.

It's not. Cameron is ready for the settle-down factor, and he starts throwing in extra flavorings and humor and little extras and whatever else he can think of. And he pretty much pulls it off. You leave the huge IMAX theatre going, "Yeah...pretty good...not bad."

Cameron got lucky with his decision to use a couple of newly-designed "bots" -- cute little R2D2-like underwater probe droids with cameras, nicknamed Jake and Elwood -- to capture some extra-special footage of stuff no one's ever seen. Lucky because Elwood's battery died and he got stuck inside the wreckage and had to be rescued by Jake, which makes for a nifty third-act suspense sequence.

To make the movie a little spooky and to justify the use of the word "ghosts" in the title, Cameron throws in a lot of digital overlays of shots of the Titanic when she was brand-new, and making them correspond to the rotted real-life vessel, along with digital overlays and flashbacks of various characters (not from TITANIC out-takes but newly shot material, with new actors) walking the decks in costume.

Paxton lends a fallible human touch to the expedition, "playing" (in a sense) a quietly terrified everyman as he goes on his first plunge. In fact, there's an amiable folksiness among all the crew members, including the bear-like Lewis Abernathy, a writer-director (HOUSE IV) who played Paxton's sidekick in TITANIC, and their various Russian hosts (including an extremely friendly chef who seems straight out of central casting).

And the film has a moment of odd historical resonance when one of Cameron's dives ends on the morning of September 11, 2001. This leads to some soul-searching and reflection about the same stuff we all went through that day, except it's happening in relative isolation.

The one thing that doesn't visually kick in is the sense of enormous size that Paxton and one other team-member (I forget who) got from seeing the Titanic for the first time. Cameron used a small-scale model of the wreckage for most of the footage he used in the opening underwater portion of TITANIC, and the real thing doesn't look that much different. And you can't tell if it's big, small, medium-sized, or massive.

What I'm about to mention now doesn't have anything to do with this film, but I've always wanted to bring this up about the Titanic disaster. Maybe some buff or historian out there will give me some answers, since I have two observations to make.

(1) If I were Cpt. Smith and I'd just been told the ship was doomed, I would have turned it around immediately, before she took on too much water, and headed back to the iceberg I'd just collided with. Then I would initiate some kind of makeshift lifeboat shuttle service between the ship and the iceberg and instruct those male passengers not likely to be permitted into the regular lifeboats to climb up onto the iceberg and wait for rescue. This might be cold and/or difficult, but it would be preferable to going into the water to drown or die of hypothermia.

(2) The Titanic was the most lavish and luxurious ship ever built during its time, and this meant there must have been dozens and dozens of large banquet tables and other bulky wooden objects that could have been thrown into the water and used as lifebuoys (like the large chest that Kate Winslet lies on at the end of the 1997 film). Why weren't these objects carried up to the decks by the crew and thrown into the drink in order to save lives?

Cinema Epicuria

I'll be doing jury duty today through Sunday at the Sonoma Valley Film Festival, which is being billed as one of those organic, people-sized affairs and a very cool thing to visit. FILM THREAT editor Chris Gore invited me and arranged for the perks, so I owe him a word of thanks. I've been asked to look at eight films, one of which will be selected as the first-prize winner (or some such distinction), and I'll say right now there's one that unimistakably stands out as the most vivid and provocative. My lips are sealed until the the announcement on Saturday.

The films are Bob Odenkirk's MELVIN GOES TO DINNER (w/ Michael Bleiden, Matt Price, Maura Tierney, Jack Black); Alan Jacobs' AMERICAN GUN (w/ James Coburn, Virginia Madsen, Barbara Bain); Kasia Adamik's BARK (w/ Lisa Kudrow, Hank Azaria, Vincent D'Onofrio); Mike Bencivenga's HAPPY HOUR (w/ Anthony LaPaglia, Caroleen Feeney); Peter Masterson's WEST OF HERE (w/ Josh Hamilton, Mary Stuart Masterson); Agnieska Holland's JULIE WALKING HOME (w/ Mirando Otto, Lothaire Bluteau, William Fichtner); Mark Munden's MIRANDA (w/ Christina Ricci, John Simms, John Hurt and Kyle MacLachlan); and Bob Taichner's SHUT YER DIRTY LITTLE MOUTH.

Lady of the Canyon

ANGER MANAGEMENT, the year's first big presumptive hit, arrives Friday. It's somewhere between funny and very funny, it has at least one classic scene (Nicholson and Sandler singing "I Feel Pretty" from WEST SIDE STORY), and it'll definitely make a pile.

An intriguing-sounding tip about a big wheel at Lucasfilm resigning over the sluggish or cavalier pace of development on EPISODE 3 has shriveled like a grape and is probably bogus. But it sure was fun to kick around in my head before a Lucasfilm publicist shot it down.

The most absurd-sounding rumor about a film director I've heard in several years (in the vein of that Michael Cimino story that popped up in '97 or thereabouts) has been making the rounds but I won't repeat it, even to make fun of it.

Ben and Jen (a.k.a., "B.Lo") have been taking hits in the press (in NEWSWEEK, most prominently) over advance reactions to Martin Brest's GIGLI...but not, despite what you think you may have read or heard, about their teaming in JERSEY GIRL, which I've heard is just fine. I've also been told that while GIGLI does fall apart at the end, the second act "kills...I mean KILLS," according to a guy who caught a preview.

And yet the only thing I really feel like writing about now (Monday going on 6 pm...is Saddam Hussein dead?) is a wonderful new Warner Home Video DVD of Francois Truffaut's DAY FOR NIGHT ('73), and its star Jacqueline Bisset, who still captivates with those emerald eyes, and has never stopped ripening as an actress. Her performance in Chris Munch's THE SLEEPY TIME GAL, which I only just saw, is ample proof of this. I found myself thinking after seeing it, if only she'd been cast as that aging-hippie music producer in Lisa Cholodenko's LAUREL CANYON. I'm not saying Bisset would have been necessarily better than Frances McDormand, but that swimming-pool scene would have been a tad more enticing.

My interest in Bisset has been fanned by having visited her Benedict Canyon home last week. The initial idea was to sit down and watch the DAY FOR NIGHT disc together and do one of those Rick Lyman-type encounters (i.e., an actor/filmmaker commenting on a film as he/she watches it with a journalist), especially since the NEW YORK TIMES stopped running those pieces last year. (I asked Lyman if I could rip it off, and he said fine.)

But when I got there Jackie said she wasn't in the mood to watch DAY FOR NIGHT, having seen it recently in a theatre. So she made me a chicken-and-lettuce sandwich on sourdough and we walked around her home, and she noted with quiet alarm how so many of the beaming actors and filmmakers in a cluster of photos along the wall near her kitchen had passed on. We then decided we'd at least watch some of the special features on the DAY FOR NIGHT DVD, so we retired to a combination DVD-watching and workout room in the rear of her home, and popped it in.

The first thing we saw, naturally, was "A Conversation with Jacqueline Bisset," which had been taped by Laurent Bouzereau, the producer of the disc's special features section.

Jackie was mystified at first because she didn't remember giving an interview to Bouzereau, but then the evidence appeared and she began to smile circumspectly and say things like, "Yes...well ...it was obviously shot here...it must have been done recently because that necklace I'm wearing [in the interview footage] I only bought a few months ago...I do so many of these things they all start to blend together," and so on.

"Is this disc going to get any promotion?" she asked. "Well, yeah ...as far as it goes," I replied.

DAY FOR NIGHT was Bisset's big breakthrough in terms of being seen as something more than the sum of her beautiful parts. She says on the DVD, "I had all these sort of girlfriend roles with big stars" -- a stand-out was BULLITT ('68) with Steve McQueen -- "and they were great. I was thrilled because I met wonderful people, but it wasn't really the cinema I was hoping to do...so when I got DAY FOR NIGHT I was very grateful and amazed."

Like any actress who's been up and down, Bisset probably wouldn't mind being grateful and amazed once again. And yet she works a lot, or seems to. She just saw a cut of a film she recently made called SWING, directed by Martin Guiguy, and has also acted in an upcomer called LATTER DAYS, directed by C.J. Cox. But she's also pining to be cast, she says, "in something really good and radiant, like THE HOURS."

An alarming number of younger journalists, she says, not only haven't seen DAY FOR NIGHT but have to be told about it. Truffaut's most popular and accessible film (winner of the New York Film Critics award for Best Picture) is mainly about his love of movies and especially the making of them, with all the uncertainties, unruliness and chaos that are always part of the game.

Filmed at Nice's Victorine Studios, it's about the shooting of a romantic melodrama called "Meet Pamela," which follows that basic bones of Louis Malle's DAMAGED. The main actors, behind and in front of the cameras (which in DAY FOR NIGHT amounts to the same thing), are Bisset, Jean Pierre Leaud, Jean Pierre Aumont and Valentina Cortese.

Truffaut himself is actually the lead character, playing the director of the film-within-the-film who becomes intimately involved with every tiny problem and personal drama that erupts during filming. Truffaut plays himself, of course, although his more intimate and impassioned feelings come out through Leaud's character.

Starting with THE 400 BLOWS and lasting over two decades, Leaud was in every sense Truffaut's stand-in and alter ego (autobiographical, emotional, philosophical). When Leaud says in DAY FOR NIGHT, for example, that he abhors the idea of going out for a romantic dinner and would much rather catch a film at a local cinema, that's Truffaut in spades.

Bisset believes that "movies were more important than life" for Truffaut, "and he put his life aside a lot for his work. His greatest happiness...perhaps his only real happiness...came from making a film."

We watched another of the DVD's featurettes, this one called "Truffaut in the U.S.A." The four talking heads are Truffaut biographer and Columbia film professor Annette Insdorf, VARIETY critic Todd McCarthy (who is lit more attractively than Bisset is in her sequence), director Brian dePalma and actor Bob Balaban, who played Truffaut's interpreter in Steven Spielberg's CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND ('77).

McCarthy voices a quintessential thought about DAY FOR NIGHT on the DVD. "It continues to be tremendously inspirational and popular for moviegoers today," he says. "It's about the love of cinema, regardless of the complications and frustration and raging egos involved...it's about the unconditional love of cinema."

At one point or another Bisset and I forgot about the interview and just started talking. I told her I once visited Truffaut's grave in Montmartre (he died in '84, at only 54 or thereabouts) and had found it immensely sad. We turned to more life-affirming topics. I mentioned at one point that many of my journalist friends have the hots for her, and she didn't seem displeased. She said I resemble, somewhat, her first boyfriend, Michael Sarrazin, whom she says has recently left Los Angeles and "moved back to Montreal."

She still doesn't like the addictive effect that computers seem to have on her friends, she said, but said she's thinking about actually getting one and becoming another cyber junkie like the rest of us.

We'd discussed computers and other technologies the last time we spoke at length, during an interview session for THE SLEEPY TIME GAL at the '01 Sundance Film Festival. (She hadn't yet bought a DVD player back then.) The thrust of many of her Park City comments were that life offers far too many superficial distractions these days, and we should guard against them.

"I'm in my head," she said. "I live in my head."

But when I asked if I could snap her photo, she became totally focused on getting the image exactly right -- the emotional mood, the lighting ("I hate sunlight"), her hair. She knows exactly what works for her, and what doesn't. I asked again last week if I could do the same, and she turned to the mirror and fluffed her hair and said with a certain playfulness, "A photo? Now?...no ... no. Use the ones you took before."

"I'm Still Standin'!"

The GUARDIAN in London is reporting Saddam Hussein survived Monday's four-bomb attack on that restaurant in western Baghdad. "He was probably not in the building when it was bombed," a well-placed British intelligence source told the paper, adding that "it was believed [Hussein] had been in the building earlier." No information was offered on whether his sons Qusay and Uday had escaped also, but let's hope not.

I was slightly crestfallen when I read this story Tuesday night, but I started to chuckle a little bit also. For me, life is cinema and vice versa, and Hussein's last stand in Baghdad is starting to seem flamboyantly melodramatic in a way that resembles the death of Al Pacino's Tony Montana. The Baghdad situation right now is like those final minutes in Tony's Miami McMansion with all those South American gunmen swarming all over and killing his bodyguards, one after another. And perhaps somewhere an enraged, bloodied, adrenalized Saddam Hussein will be standing on a balcony as he looks out at American jets swarming overhead.... "Come and get me! Say hello to my leetle friend....that all you got? That all you got? Aaaayyyy!"

Or maybe he's already fallen forward from that balcony, shattered the railing, and landed face first in the pool below. When this inevitable thing happens for sure and there are no more doubters being anonymously quoted in the GUARDIAN, I want to hear Giorgio Moroder's SCARFACE music playing on the soundtrack, and I want the camera to pull back slowly.

Role Playing

Today's cast: Matt Dillon, John Turturro, Ileana Douglas, Bridget Fonda, Bruce Davison, Eric Stoltz, Partsy Kensit, Jennifer Leigh Warren, Chris Isaak.

What's That Line?

I flaked all last week on What's That Line? because it suddenly felt to me like some whiny little pain-in-the-ass kid in fifth grade... poking me, poking me...where's your homework?...you're late with it. So I told him to blow. Now he's back, poking me again. All right, I'll get through this and find my way back to enjoying the writing this portion of the column. And to kick things off I'll make it extra-easy this time. An older guy, peeved, has just risen to his feet in a hotel room. A younger guy is standing on the other side of the room.

Older Guy: "There was this kid I grew up with. He was younger than me, sorta looked up to me... you know. We did our first work together, worked our way out of the street. Things were good. We made the most of it. During Prohibition we ran molasses into Canada, made a fortune. Your father, too. As much as anyone, I loved him and trusted him. Later on he had an idea -- to build a city out of a desert stop-over for GI's on the way to the West Coast. That kid's name was [name] and the city he invented was [name]. This was a great man -- a man of vision and guts. And there isn't even a plaque, or a signpost, or a statue of him in that town! Someone....put a bullet through his eye. No one knows who gave the order. When I heard it, I wasn't angry; I knew [name] -- I knew he was headstrong, talking loud, saying stupid things. So when he turned up dead, I let it go. And I said to myself, this is the business we've chosen. I didn't ask who gave the order, because it had nothing to do with business!

Name the film, the year of release, the director, the screenwriter(s), and the actors in the scene.



 

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Want more Hollywood Elsewhere, and access to all the old Hollywood Confidential's? Check out our archive.
Speculation that the New York Film Festival "snubbed" Wes Anderson's The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou is untrue, according to a spokesperson. The festival committee saw Aquatic last June, in tandem with plans to open the sea-faring comedy-drama in October or thereabouts. And while "they liked it and wanted it," a decision was later made for Touchstone to open Aquatic in December, and the notion of a NYFF debut didn't seem quite as desirable.
Aquatic's opening is set for 12.10 in New York and Los Angeles, and 12.24 wide. I would normally be scratching my head over the title expansion (i.e., adding with Steve Zissou), as this sort of thing usually indicates indecision and therefore trouble on some level. But here the addition sounds droll and all of a piece, as with all things Anderson. I also imagine that Anderson, like any director from Spielberg on down, welcomed the extra time to tweak and fine-tune.
A suggestion that may not save the James Bond franchise, but will at least halt its downhill slide: arrange for producers Michael Wilson and Barbara Broccoli to be gently but firmly kidnapped and then taken to an undislcosed location (somewhere in Southeast Asia would be best), where they will be kept in two lavish homes under house arrest, with allowances for family visitations. Once this is done, all serious interest in Eric Bana playing the new 007 will cease and Wilson and Broccoli's successors can look at other options.
One of these options should, of course, be to shut the series down. Just because the Bond movies continue to make money doesn't mean they're dead inside, and that one of most compassionate acts anyone could do would be to fire a bullet into the skull of this outdated, cliche-ridden franchise and walk away proud....like Pierce Brosnan has done. Bana is said to be unsure about stepping into the 007 series, according to London's Evening Standard. The tabloid says an offer has gone out to him but that Bana is "currently deciding whether it's something he really wants to sign up [for]." Translation: he's heard the Wilson-Broccoli stories. Eric Bana would be to the 007 tradition as Lex Barker was to the Tarzan series in the 1950s.
A suggestion that may not save the James Bond franchise, but will at least halt its downhill slide: arrange for producers Michael Wilson and Barbara Broccoli to be gently but firmly kidnapped and then taken to an undislcosed location (somewhere in Southeast Asia would be best), where they will be kept in two lavish homes under house arrest, with allowances for family visitations. Once this is done, all serious interest in Eric Bana playing the new 007 will cease and Wilson and Broccoli's successors can look at other options.
One of these options should, of course, be to shut the series down. Just because the Bond movies continue to make money doesn't mean they're dead inside, and that one of most compassionate acts anyone could do would be to fire a bullet into the skull of this outdated, cliche-ridden franchise and walk away proud....like Pierce Brosnan has done. Bana is said to be unsure about stepping into the 007 series, according to London's Evening Standard. The tabloid says an offer has gone out to him but that Bana is "currently deciding whether it's something he really wants to sign up [for]." Translation: he's heard the Wilson-Broccoli stories. Eric Bana would be to the 007 tradition as Lex Barker was to the Tarzan series in the 1950s.
Hold up on that rumble about the conniving heavyweight behind Ted Griffin's firing off the Graduate-sequel flick not being Jennifer Aniston, but costar Kevin Costner. The Fly on theWall guy claimed in an 8.16 posting, using quotes from an anonymous crew member, that Griffin's dismissal "was totally Kevin's fault, not Jennifer's."
But now another guy who was right in the thick of the situation says this account is "completely false," due to the fact that "Costner hadn't started working" on the film at the time Griffin's dismissal went down. Hey, I'm just passing this along.
The Entertainment Weekly cover (#779-780) asks if Johnny Depp's performance as J.M. Barrie in Finding Neverland (Miramax, 10.22) will deliver a Best Actor Oscar...and in so doing indicates an obvious rooting interest on the part of EW staffers (film critics Owen Gleiberman and/or Liza Schwarzbaum, it's safe to presume) in at least helping Depp land a nomination. In the face of such a boldly-put suggestion, I think it's fair to offer a counter-opinion, which is that Depp's acting in this tenderly composed biopic may be too exacting for its own good.
In other words, Depp seems to really "get" the eccentric Scottish playwright who wrote Peter Pan , who, according to the press notes, was said to have a quiet, puckish personality and always spoke in a low burr. And that's Depp in the film. The problem is that his Barrie seems so internal, so into his own quiet determinations and oddball kindnesses, that you feel a strange urge to strangle him after a while. Plus there's something too actorly about his Scottish accent; it sounds at once uncertain and overly studied. In short, Depp did everything right...and in so doing created a character and a vibe that feels curiously wrong.
You like a filmmaker, you find him/her intriguing, you try to show interest and support and....test pattern. I became curious about Abel Ferrara's supposed next film, Mary, in which Vincent Gallo will play an actor playing Jesus Christ in a film-within-the-film. (This, at least, is what the Brown Bunny star-director-producer told me last week.) The focus of Mary, says Gallo, is the actress who plays the mother of Christ, and who experiences a kind of spiritual satori as a result of immersing herself in the part. The film, Gallo adds, is supposed to shoot in Rome in late September or early October.
But of course, there can be no contact whatsoever with Ferrara. The guy almost never calls back anyone, I've heard. It's always, "I'll call you." An e-mail to Ferrara's Rome-based producer resulted in zip. Ferrara's New York attorney, Jay Julien, professed a general ignorance about Mary, and couldn't direct me to anyone with a history of replying to phone calls who might. I've learned that whenever it's this much trouble to get hold of someone, it's usually not worth the effort in the first place.
Sofia Coppola is set to direct a period costume drama about Marie Antoinette and husband King Louis XVI for Columbia. Wigs and hoop gowns, the French revolution, let 'em eat cake, the guillotine...all that good stuff. This is a joke, right? The reasonably talented Sofia hasn't shown a glimmer of the kind of commanding, exacting vision that the lensing of any historical drama of this sort would require. I mean, presuming Columbia wants something at least half as good, say, as Barry Lyndon, which they probably couldn't care less about.
But I am looking forward to watching Kirsten Dunst, who will play Antoinette, get her head cut off. And you have to admire the sense of humor that Coppola and her casting director have shown in choosing Jason Schwartzman ("Max" in Rushmore) to play her husband Louis. If they stick to history, he'll also lose his head. Valor, Max...valor! You won't feel a thing. A tickling sensation, your head falls in the basket, everything turns numb, and then blackness. You can do that standing on your head. Oops..sorry.
Regarding the recent death of King Kong star Fay Wray, Move City News' David Poland wrote that Peter Jackson, director of an all-new King Kong flick, "wanted Ms. Wray to close his film with the 'Twas Beauty That Killed The Beast' line, but, ever the lady, Ms. Wray was unwilling (though attempts at persuasion continued) because she felt it would be arrogant to call the character she played -- and thus, herself -- a beauty."
Apart from the utterly nonsensical thinking conveyed in Wray's alleged view, the item is another worrisome indicator that Jackson's King Kong is going to be way too Jackson-y. (Which is to say movie-mucky to the point of suffocation.) Can you imagine a line as important as that one -- the big closer! -- given to a 96 year-old woman as an affectionate gesture, however heartfelt on Jackson's part? Art is art and emotions are emotions, and never the twain shall meet. If Jackson is handing out cameo kicker lines as tokens of respect to grand old ladies, forget it....it's over. John Ford once told Nunnally Johnson that to be a good director you have to be a bit of a bastard. This, conversely speaking, may be Jackson's problem. He's too mushy, too much of a sweetheart.
This is old news now, but those people who described Collateral's box-office performance last weekend as "so-so" or " middling" or whatever were being a tad dismissive. Unfair, really. A movie as dark as this one, with a gray-haired Tom Cruise playing a cold-hearted assassin, is doing great by taking in $24 million during its first weekend. Only three other Cruise films -- Minority Report and the two Mission Impossible's -- have had better openers.
And Exhibitor Relations' Paul Dergarabedian must have been smokin' some strong stuff before telling the New York Times' Sharon Waxman that Collateral "is not a movie that can be supported by teenagers." He's saying...what? That teenagers can't deal with urban thrillers about cops and hit men and what-all? That beautifully rendered mood and ace dialogue don't impress them? I should add there was a different reaction to the film when I saw it with a paying crowd last weekend. They didn't applaud, but the two industry crowds I saw it with earlier did. Hmmmm.
Ben Affleck was his usual glib self during his hanging-out-in-Boston segment with Katie Couric a couple of days ago...same-old, same-old...but something different happened when he did a chat thing with Hardball's Chris Matthews on Tuesday afternoon. He was focused, sharp, and quick, and had some very cogent things to say about Kerry-vs.-Bush, voter sentiments and the general lay of the land.
In other words, he did himself a huge favor. For the first time in a very long time Affleck was suddenly about something besides Bennifer, chasing girls, iffy movies and gambling sprees. He said he might want to jump into politics down the road, since the movie career thing has its limits in terms of feeling fulfilled or spiritually nourished. He also told Matthews he'd like to have his job, and Matthews said in response, "I do fear you."












Addicted to Bad
by Patrick Keller

International Intrigue
by Alison Veneto

Nocturnal Admissions
by D.K. Holm

Strange Impersonation
by Kim Morgan

Trailer Park
by Christopher Stipp




New DVD Releases
for April 11, 2006

DVD Diatribe
by D.K. Holm

DVD Late Show
by Christopher Mills




Preachin' from the Longbox
by Britt Schramm

Should It Be a Movie?
by Marc Mason

New Comic Book Releases
for April 12, 2006, 2006




New CD Releases
for April 11, 2006

Music for the Masses
by M.C. Bell




TV Recommendations
Boob toob picks of the week by Chris Ryall

Kentucky Fried Rasslin'
by Scott Bowden

TV Pilot Review Archives
by Chris Ryall



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