Sunday, October 6, 2024
Home Blog Page 1413

Exclusive: John Legend Will Act, Sing in “Whiplash” Director’s Musical

0

John Legend already has an Oscar for Best Song– he won it with Common for “Glory” this year from the movie “Selma.” He also some Grammy Awards. So now what?

Well, I’m told that John (real name John Stephens) will act and sing in Damien Chazelle’s new musical film “La La Land.” Chazelle just last year gave us the much loved indie hit “Whiplash,” which also had a musical theme.

Legend is writing songs now for his character to perform in the film alongside stars J.K. Simmons, Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone. This won’t be his actual acting debut– he appeared in the egregious “Soul Men” a few years ago. But let’s say this is his REAL debut in a good film. My guess is we’ll get a nice soundtrack from “La La Land” and John will be up for another Best Song Oscar.

I don’t say enough good things about John Legend in this space. He’s one of the few real talents to emerge from pop music in the last generation. This year he had two major, major hits with “Glory” and his song “All of Me.” Ten years from now, he, Rob Thomas, and Alicia Keys will be the survivors of their era because they are actual composers and singers.

One more thing: John, as you know, is married to the hippest hot model out there, Chrissy Teigen. Chrissy is about to debut in a new syndicated talk show a la The View with Tyra Banks called “The Fab.” Chrissy is going to be a breakout star on “The Fab”– she’s funny smart and obviously bee-yout–eeful.

Meryl Streep is Sort of Amazing in “Ricki and the Flash,” But Will People Get It?

0

I hope that “Ricki and the Flash” isn’t the most misunderstood movie of the year. On the web, I’ve seen comments ranging all over the place largely because of the TV ads and the billboards. Jonathan Demme’s companion piece to “Rachel Getting Married” is not a broad comedy, or a musical comedy, or a mother-daughter weeper. It’s a really original dramedy about a woman stuck in time who didn’t want to be somewhere, so she left.

Ricki– her real name is Linda– had three kids with Pete (Kevin Kline) in Indianapolis. But she didn’t dig the domestic scene, and exited to do what she wanted– to be in a rock and roll band. We don’t get the whole back story but we pick up enough of it. She abandoned her family, has missed all birthdays and holidays, and was replaced by Pete’s second wife (Audra McDonald).

Ricki is not a rock star. She made one album and it kind of flopped. She lives in L.A. where she’s a cashier by day at a place like Whole Foods. At night she and her band, the Flash– featuring her sort of boyfriend played by Rick Springfield– play in a bar in Tarzana. They cover Tom Petty, Neil Young, and Bruce Springsteen. Sometimes they play a current hit, or a recent hit, if there are young people lurking about.

In “Rachel Getting Married,” directed by Demme and written by Jenny Lumet, Debra Winger played the mother who’d left the family and is now estranged. We never really get her story. Now Diablo Cody sort of picks up that thread and explores the idea of a runaway mom who wanted her own life.

What makes Ricki interesting: she is stuck in the 70s music wise, which makes sense. Also, fashion wise and she never changes her look– the braid, the blue eye make up, etc. She wears a bad leather motorcycle jacket. You do wonder how she and Kevin Kline ever came together in the first place but what’s nice is, he’s not judgmental after summoning her back to help their daughter (played by Streep’s real life kid, Mamie Gummer, with disarming sharpness).

This is a world class cast, with Kline, McDonald, Springfield and a neat turn by 89 year old Charlotte Rae, of “Different Strokes” TV fame and Broadway musical comedies of the 50s and 60s. Some of the story is formulaic by nature, but Demme doesn’t let that affect anyone. He keeps this superior group away from cliches.

Of course, in the end, it’s all about Meryl Streep. She’s sort of channeling Bonnie Raitt. All the music was recorded live, there’s no fakery. She’s a killer rock singer, and even plays some guitar. The tracks are eminently listenable. Ricki and the Flash are a great bar band, and that’s how they come off– unpolished, honest and fun. After all they’re led by Rick Springfield, famous for “Jessie’s Girl” and “General Hospital.” He’s the real deal.

It’s hard to write about Meryl anymore regarding awards– yes, she’ll get an Oscar nomination, who cares? It’s not about that. Think about more than that. She inhabits this character in a way that’s almost eery. Ricki is a loser mother, a feminist (who’s also a Republican, by the way), a bad wife, a competent musician who wants a life for herself while trying to explain her absence from the life she signed on to. Streep blows my mind because she finds this person and wears her like a motorcycle jacket. She knows every pocket, which zipper is broken, and where the cigarette burn happened. Extraordinary.

Just divest yourself of anything you thought about the ads or whatever, and go see “Ricki and the Flash” this weekend. It’s incredibly enjoyable.

Happy Birthday Tony Bennett! The Legendary Crooner Turns 89 Today

0

It don’t mean a thing if it ain’t got that swing: Tony Bennett turns 89 today. He’s just finishing his long our with Lady Gaga after their hit album “Cheek to Cheek” set records. If you caught the tour– I saw them at Radio City in June– you know that Tony starts his 90th year like a pro. His voice is intact, a Wonder of the World. But also, Tony gets high marks for his unwavering commitment to social causes. He was there with Martin Luther King, and he’s still there today with his Frank Sinatra School in Queens and his foundation Exploring the Arts (exploringthearts.org).

All hail the timeless and legendary Tony Bennett!

Aretha Franklin Conquers Hollywood with Knockout Show, A List Audience

0

It’s been a few years since Aretha Franklin’s come west for a big Los Angeles show. The audience at the Microsoft (formerly Nokia) Theater downtown at LA Live was sold out to the rafters and ready for the Queen of Soul. They got their money’s worth and more in a two hour show that featured a rare sequence of numbers with Aretha playing virtuoso piano and taking everyone to church.

The audience included Berry Gordy, Angela Bassett, Halle Berry, Shonda Rhimes, famed lyricists Alan and Marilyn Bergman, as well as Tika Sumpter and the cast of Tyler Perry’s show “The Have and Have Nots,” plus “Band of Gold” singer Freda Payne, her sister Sherrie (once a member of the Supremes) and Glodean White, widow of Barry White and once a member of his group Love Unlimited.

Ms. Franklin, looking svelte and moving on stage like it was 1968, kept the show swinging from Jackie Wilson’s “Higher and Higher” right through her closing numbers, “Freeway of Love” and “Respect.” During the two plus hours, Aretha — channeling her late father Rev. C.L. Franklin– creates a church like gospel segment based on her “Amazing Grace” album. This part of the show features the great Melvin Williams, who recently performed with her at the White House. It’s part and parcel of an Aretha Franklin show, that the religious and secular meet with such ebullience.

The synthesis of this comes with her take on Paul Simon’s “Bridge Over Troubled Water,” the show’s centerpiece. Aretha had a hit with “Bridge” after Simon & Garfunkel around 1973, and then Simon started using her gospelized arrangement. With Ms. Franklin as captain of the band, “Bridge” elevates to all new highs, a monumental and stunning effort.

She also treated the L.A. audience to more piano than usual, and it was about as wonderful as you can imagine. Aretha takes classical piano lessons but she is a natural musician, gifted in almost a genius like way when she hits the keyboards. She offered her lovely take on Ed Ames’s classic “My Cup Runneth Over,” a recent concert staple, which in the old days of vital radio would be released as a live single and hit number 1. She also played and sang on the Bergmans’ “How You Keep the Music Playing” and Lerner and Lowe’s’ “If Ever I Would Leave You” from “Camelot.” The range of composers is sort of staggering when you realize it’s Aretha leading the band. No other legendary vocalist does such a thing.

Her own hits? “Think,” “Chain of Fools,” “Natural Woman,” “Don’t Play that Song for Me,” “Giving Him Something He Can Feel,” and most seriously, “Ain’t No Way,” the other great anchor of the show, I think, an unheralded classic written by Aretha’s late sister Carolyn Franklin.

Musicians: HB Barnum conducted the orchestra as he has for over 40 years. Richard Gibbs played piano. Fonzie Thornton, Vaneese Thomas, Brenda White-King — all extraordinary.

Aretha et al move on to Santa Barbara, Oakland, and Las Vegas before returning to Detroit. She noted at the end of this magnificent night that she vowed never to come west again unless she flew in a plane. Well, she didn’t– she came in her custom tour bus. You never know if this is the last time. This is history in the making.

Hillary Clinton Movie Director: “I’m not interested in making a propaganda film to help someone win a presidency or not win a presidency”

0

Judd Apatow recently said during a conversation with Lena Dunham at a Film Society of Lincoln Center event that James Ponsoldt’s film “The End of the Tour,” was his “favorite movie of the year.” The movie opened today with rave reviews that echoed Apatow’s assessment.

“The End of the Tour” chronicles the five days David Lipsky (Jesse Eisenberg) spent interviewing famed “Infinite Jeste” novelist David Foster Wallace (Jason Segel) in 1996 at his ramshackle home in Bloomington, Ill. for a (never published) Rolling Stone magazine article. Twelve years later when Wallace, who suffered from chronic depression and bipolar-disorder, committed suicide, Lipsky dug out his tapes and wrote “Although of Course You End Up Becoming Yourself: A Road Trip With David Foster Wallace,” based on transcripts from their interviews.

These interviews took place in an analog age before digital recorders when reporters kept tapes. This made me reconsider my relationship with my digital recorder when I interviewed Ponsoldt at the Bowery Hotel recently. (I nearly collided with members of the Red Hot Chili Peppers who were conducting interviews at the same time in the hotel’s lobby.)

Ponsoldt told he was a David Foster Wallace obsessive and “Infinite Jest” came out around the time he started college. When Pulitzer-Prize winning screenwriter Donald Margulies called him up to ask him to look at the script, the director told me he was fearful. “You know there’s a weight and gravity of telling stories about people that you love and in my era a real fear, at least for myself, and the script was amazing.” The director added, “I sort of felt like I have a million neurotic reasons why I shouldn’t make this film that are based out of fear but if I see someone else make this film badly I’ll never forgive myself because I think I know how this story should be told and if someone else makes it well I’ll probably be insanely jealous,” he laughed.

Ponsoldt said he related to the journey Lipsky and Wallace took. “Everyone’s had probably had a meaningful road trip when they were young, across country through the Midwest, along the West Coast, whatever it is, where’s you’re eating bad food and staying up all night, drinking lots of coffee, smoking cigarettes the whole time, it’s a very universal thing. The quality of David Foster Wallace and David Lipsky doing it is that they’re just a bit more articulate than most of us. It’s not that they’re pretentious asses, it’s actually that they’re very universal and human, very relatable, very unpretentious, and engaging with all the things that we do. You know, movies, and how to be decent and how to have relationships and all those things but they’re doing it in a way that’s so thoughtful, so specific,” said Ponsoldt. “It’s the conversation that we all wish we could have.”

Explaining casting Jason Segel as the bandana wearing, brainy Wallace, the director told me Freaks and Geeks, starring Segel, along with Seth Rogen and James Franco, was one of the most meaningful shows on television to him growing up.

“When I saw Jason in that and he was only 18 at the time but what I felt was he was so relatable, there’s a real level of surrogacy for me as an audience member. I empathized with him.”

When I told him Eisenberg was perfect as Lipsky but most people would never envision Segel as Wallace, the director said, “The thing about Jason is he’s not in a bubble, he’s completely self aware and he knows people have the questions and reservations maybe you do, ‘Oh this is a guy that’s known for comedy,’ so he’s the one that had to shoulder the weight of taking on this role and the scrutiny of it and so it took a lot of bravery and fearlessness to play the role.”

I asked Ponsoldt about some of Wallace’s family members who wrote a letter slamming the film.

“It’s complicated,” he said. “ The statement that was released was about a month after we wrapped shooting. Nobody had seen the film,” he said. “Subsequent to all that, several members of David Foster Wallace’s family have seen the film now and really like it a lot.”

Next up for the director is “The Circle,” that will star Tom Hanks and Emma Watson. Adapted from another book, this one by novelist Dave Eggers about the Internet’s encroaching on every aspect of our lives. He will begin shooting will begin this year. “It’s

about something that I obsess over and that terrifies me. I have a young child, a son who’s 14 months old and I wonder about the world that he’s going to be raised in and how he’ll relate to technology and what privacy he will be able to choose for himself, how he’ll relate to screens, whether he’ll have a choice in the matter and, you know, I myself have a total addiction to the screens in my life, to technology, a fierce addiction, and so this film is me engaging with a lot of those issues.”

“The Spectacular Now” and “Smashed” feature strong female leads. There’s another strong female character in another film he’s planning, “Rodham,” about the early years of Hillary Rodham Clinton. The script is in slow development he said.

“I would never make a movie until I felt the script was ready. I just made a movie about real people and you know you shoulder the scrutiny of people who have opinions about them or knew them. Making a story about Hillary Clinton,” he laughed, “ the level of awareness and scrutiny is tenfold, hundredfold,” he said. “She’s one of the most written about and recognizable women, alive, so it really has to be riveting and have to get all the details right.”

Ponsoldt wouldn’t confirm or deny that “The Spectacular Now” star Brie Larson will play Hillary. “Who knows? It really begins with the script, so we’ve just been trying to make the script right. And also for me I wouldn’t want to make a movie – I mean she’s running for president – I’m not interested in making a propaganda film to help someone win a presidency or not win a presidency. The film that I want to make is a much more quiet character study about a young woman, you know, balancing her personal life and her career and that’s a relevant story before or after an election.”

The movie won’t tie in with the election. He didn’t want to make it propaganda, adding, “You know, that really terrifies me actually. I don’t’ want to make something – this sounds like a lot of hubris on my part for suggesting that a film that a film that I would make would have any effect whatsoever on an election – but I wouldn’t even want to enter that dialogue. I would rather, let the election do its thing and then make the film,” he said. “The film that we hopefully will make when Richard Nixon steps down the movie essentially is over and Hillary moves to Arkansas to be with Bill, the movie ends. It’s not choosing to be in dialogue with current events.”

But back to the “The End of the Tour” and the book that inspired it, which Ponsoldt described as “a psychic ghost story” where 12 years after his death, Wallace’s voice comes back in these tapes.

“It’s being framed by someone who’s 12 years later, able to analyze the way that they carried themselves in the presence of that person and maybe regretting how they did that, regretting and having a deep level of grief over the loss of someone who they only knew for a short amount of time. They were strangers. They’d never met and didn’t stay in touch. But it’s a real sense of grief and melancholy that runs through that and regret and I can relate to, especially to David Lipsky, of being really nervous in the presence of somebody I really admired and trying too hard to sound smart. I think that’s a very human thing.”

Mission Was Impossible: Rogue Nation Only 2nd Biggest Opening in Franchise History

0

The mission was impossible, to be the biggest opening in the Mission Impossible series. Rogue Nation comes in second, with $56 million. In 2000, Mission Impossible 2 earned almost $58 million on its opening weekend.

Also factor in ticket prices are higher now, substantially, or were lower in 2000. Then you see the real difference at the box office. Rogue Nation by comparison is inflated. But it’s nothing to sneeze at either. An opening of $56 million is better than anyone expected. So thank Xenu. Hanging from that damn plane was worth it!

The good news for Paramount is that even if Tom’s popularity has slowed in the U.S., abroad he’s still huge. Cruise movies always do really well in South Korea, which prompted a visit there this week. After “The Interview,” South Korea was probably thrilled to see a big star in a movie with no reference to their menacing neighbor.

In other box office news, “Amy”– the documentary about Amy Winehouse, not Amy Schumer’s movie– is up to $6.4 million. “Amy” is from A24, the little studio favored by the National Board of Review this past year with a Best Picture and shared Best Actor for “A Most Violent Year.” The NBR most certainly will give “Amy” Best Documentary and maybe Best Picture, and if Annie Schulhof is really out there this year in her desire to help friends (see my coverage of her interest in A24), Amy Winehouse will get some new award like Best Actress in a Non Fiction Film.

Box Office: Mission Impossible 5 About the Same as the Others

0

The big news this morning is that roughly the same people who went to the last couple of “Mission Impossible” movies saw “Rogue Nation” Thursday and Friday.

“Rogue Nation” did $4.4 mil on Thursday and another $16 million or so last night. This is pretty much on par for “Ghost Protocol” and number 3, the one with Michelle Monagahan. “Rogue Nation” will do $52 mil or so for the weekend. Not a record anything. But Tom Cruise is still in the game despite his nuttiness.

Is it a good thing? Yes. That’s a lot of money. Is it a bad thing? No, but ticket prices are higher now and the movie was in iMax too, so maybe it’s not quite as many people.

In other news, “Vacation,” which got terrible reviews, is a dud. But it will probably break even down the line.

Keep refreshing…

Valerie Harper Posts, with Sense of Humor Intact: “I am not in a coma”

0

The amazing Valerie Harper is out of the hospital and recuperating after a much publicized health episode. She’s been appearing on stage in Ogunquit, Maine in a production of the musical “Nice Work If You Can Get It.” But a few days ago she passed out and was raced to the hospital. Harper suffers from lung and brain cancer. But she’s beaten the odds so far with great courage, fortitude, and a good sense of humor. Tabloids reported she’d been in a coma and was on her way out. Not Valerie!
Here’s what she posted to Facebook:

My dear friends and fans!
As always, thank you for your amazing support. I am happy to report I am not, nor have I been, in a coma.
As anyone who has taken strong medication knows, it doesn’t always agree with you, even with me as this experience proves.
I am confronting these hurdles with my usual enthusiasm and love of life.
Much love, Valerie
p.s.
But I must confess that the highlight of this ordeal came when I was escorted by two handsome young men and a pilot, in a medivac helicopter, as the full moon lit the sky. Talk about movie magic!!!

Lynn Anderson, the Great Singer of “Rose Garden,” Dies at 67

0

There was a time when Top 40 radio played everything including pop, R&B, and country. In 1970, Lynn Anderson scored a huge country hit that “crossed over” with “I Never Promised You a Rose Garden.” I was sorry to hear that she has passed away from a heart attack at age 67. She was a young star.

Later she had another cross over with the Carpenters song “Top of the World.” Listen to that original hit. It sounds as fresh today as it did then. Before radio fractured into the mess it is today, Lynn, Charlie Rich, Loretta Lynn, Crystal Gale, BJ Thomas, and so many others were a welcome presence on the “dial.”

“Rose Garden” was written by the late great Joe South, who gave Anderson many other country hits. He also had hit one smash hit singing “Games People Play.”

One Direction Debuts at Number 1 on iTunes with Surprise Single–First Without Zayn

0

One Direction counters former member Zayn Malik’s announcement that he’s going solo: their new single dropped this morning. It’s called “Drag Me Down.” It’s already number 1 on iTunes.

No one can drag them down, not even Zayn! Those guys must be pissed at Zayn’s news. Anyway, it’s time for a new One Direction album, maybe their last. Their cycle is running to an end. We’ll see. This isn’t much of a song, more of a statement. But it’s their statement.