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Review: What Can We Do About Hugh Jackman and Laura Dern in “The Son”? They’re Just “Ordinary People”

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Florian Zeller’s The Father with Anthony Hopkins and Olivia Colman was so clever and well constructed, full of surprises, you had to admire it. Sir Anthony won the Oscar, which was exactly right. The whole movie was a gem.

So what does Zeller follow it up with but “The Son.” All the originality is gone. It’s “Ordinary People” without a purpose or hope. The acting is professional tidy, with Laura Dern stealing whatever there is to be taken. Hugh Jackman is somber (although he shines during an inspired dance moment). But yikes, want to feel bad? “The Son” is for you.

So Hugh is a high powered Manhattan lawyer who left his wife (Dern) and their teen son for a younger woman. The new couple has a new a baby. But back in Brooklyn, Dern is dealing with the morose, severely depressed son (Zen McGrath) who is clearly going to kill either himself or someone else before this thing comes to an end.

Zeller depicts the parents as clueless, as if they’ve never seen “Ordinary People” or read about all the incels who’ve shot up schools, etc. Jackman and Dern’s divorced parents don’t seem to have any connection to the real world and make all the wrong choices despite their education, wealth, and living in the most sophisticated city in the world. Only Kirby as the second wife senses the danger they’re all in, but no one will listen to her.

This movie season is just full of good acting in well made films that don’t make sense. I don’t know why. I’ve said this before: no one seems to think them through. “The Son” has no arc. It’s just a set up for disaster than ends in disaster. They should have followed the arc of the bombing raid in “Top Gun Maverick.” You fly into the steep valley, get close to the ground, release your bombs, and the climb out quickly. In this case, they just fly in, drop the bombs, and then crash into the mountain.

Dern just knows how to play a conflicted mother in pain with subtlety and grace. If you follow her, the film is torture. Jackman brings the gravity but he can’t find his way out of this mess. Newcomer Zen McGrath, who’s Australian, makes an appealing debut despite struggling with an American accent, and Kirby is a fresh addition to an old formula.

But “The Son” is not “The Father,” even with a cameo from Hopkins as Jackman’s cold-hearted father (a much different character from the first movie). Let’s hope there is no third chapter.

People’s Choice Awards LOL Hilariously Awful Winners Start with “Don’t Worry Darling” and The Kardashians

The People’s Choice Awards are literally something from the multiverse, the Donald Trump of awards shows. They’re not voted on by anyone. They’re constructed, like the American Music Awards, from whole cloth, publicists, and marketing campaigns.

Winner of Best Drama Movie was the much derided “Don’t Worry Darling.” The Movie of 2022 was “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness.” Othe winners included the Kardashians, Chris Hemsworth. Elizabeth Olsen, “Grey’s Anatomy,” “Stranger Things,” and so on.

Basically the whole thing is kind of a sad pathetic scam, but it’s like Lucy, Charlie Brown, and the football. The public — maybe 2 million viewers– still fall for it every time. If a celebrity will agree to show up, or show an interest, they’ll win.

So congratulations to everyone involved. A People’s Choice Award is worth less than a bowling trophy.

THE MOVIE OF 2022
Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness

THE COMEDY MOVIE OF 2022
The Adam Project

THE ACTION MOVIE OF 2022
Top Gun: Maverick

THE DRAMA MOVIE OF 2022
Don’t Worry Darling

THE MALE MOVIE STAR OF 2022
Chris Hemsworth

THE FEMALE MOVIE STAR OF 2022
Elizabeth Olsen

THE DRAMA MOVIE STAR OF 2022
Austin Butler

THE COMEDY MOVIE STAR OF 2022
Adam Sandler

THE ACTION MOVIE STAR OF 2022
Elizabeth Olsen

THE SHOW OF 2022
Stranger Things

THE DRAMA SHOW OF 2022
Grey’s Anatomy

THE COMEDY SHOW OF 2022
Never Have I Ever

THE REALITY SHOW OF 2022
The Kardashians

THE COMPETITION SHOW OF 2022
The Voice

THE MALE TV STAR OF 2022
Noah Schnapp

THE FEMALE TV STAR OF 2022
Ellen Pompeo

THE DRAMA TV STAR OF 2022
Mariska Hargitay

THE COMEDY TV STAR OF 2022
Selena Gomez

THE DAYTIME TALK SHOW OF 2022
The Kelly Clarkson Show

THE NIGHTTIME TALK SHOW OF 2022
The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon

THE COMPETITION CONTESTANT OF 2022
Selma Blair

THE REALITY TV STAR OF 2022
Khloé Kardashian

THE BINGEWORTHY SHOW OF 2022
Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story

THE SCI-FI/FANTASY SHOW OF 2022
Stranger Things

THE MALE ARTIST OF 2022
Harry Styles

THE FEMALE ARTIST OF 2022
Taylor Swift

THE GROUP OF 2022
BTS

THE SONG OF 2022
About Damn Time – Lizzo

THE ALBUM OF 2022
Midnights – Taylor Swift

THE COUNTRY ARTIST OF 2022
Carrie Underwood

THE LATIN ARTIST OF 2022
Becky G

THE NEW ARTIST OF 2022
Latto

THE MUSIC VIDEO OF 2022
Anti-Hero – Taylor Swift

THE CONCERT TOUR OF 2022
BTS

THE COLLABORATION SONG OF 2022
Left and Right – Charlie Puth and BTS

THE SOCIAL CELEBRITY OF 2022
Selena Gomez

THE SOCIAL STAR OF 2022
MrBeast

THE COMEDY ACT OF 2022
Kevin Hart: Reality Check

THE GAME CHANGER OF 2022
Serena Williams

THE POP PODCAST OF 2022
Archetypes: Meghan Markle

James Cameron May Have Titanic Hit on His Hands as “Avatar 2” Gets Terrific Early Reviews

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“Avatar 2” just finished its first press screenings today and the verdict is in. People like it!

James Cameron may have a “titanic” hit on his hands. Most everyone who’s checked in on social media says the sequel, some 13 years after the original, is better than the first one.

The movie is entirely animated and in stunning 3D. There’s a lot of blue and a lot of water, Sigourney Weaver plays a 14 year old. (In real life, she’s 21.)

Actual reviews won’t come out til next week, but social media “impressions” are allowed now. The consensus is that the movie is “visually stunning” if so far the story itself is not getting the same glowing reactions. The movie is three hours long.

Many Twitter observations run along the lines of “Never bet against James Cameron.” Indeed. He knows how to make a spectacle!

Critic and blogger Ed Douglas writes: “Like the OG Avatar, #AvatarTheWayOfWater takes some time to really get rolling, and though it hits a few lulls, it looks glorious with next level visual FX, and ultimately, I will see it again without hesitation. Lots of new younger characters in this one.”

Oscar debate now commences. Certainly Best Animated Film and all the below the line categories will be flooded with names from this film.

NY Times May See Thursday Walk Out Over Fair Contract: Strike Authorization Looming

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The New York Times is having the same labor issues as railroad workers and everyone else these days. They can’t get a fair contract. Now a strike authorization looms. On Thursday there could be a major walk out. Let’s hope it’s a slow news day.

Stay tuned…

Trip Gabriel of the NY Times posts to Twitter:

“1100 New York Times Guild members have pledged to walk out on Thursday for one day to push a foot-dragging management to negotiate a fair contract. That’s 75% of the newsroom, an extraordinary statement of unity.

“It’s been 20 months of bargaining. Today management backed away from killing news employees’ pension – ‘them giving us what we already have,’ in the words of Guild bargaining leader.

“Next step may be a strike authorization vote, a major escalation of pressure if it passes.”

Ex-Super Model Paulina Porizkova Finds No Sales for Book Called “No Filter,” Filled with “Alternative Facts”

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Former model Paulina Porizkova thought she’d cash in with a memoir. The book is called “No Filter,” and was published back on November 15th.

Now NPD Book Scan reports that “No Filter” had no sales. In its first two weeks, the book– full of “alternative facts” — sold just 3,300 copies.

On Amazon.com, “No Filter” is sitting around number 6,126.

“No Filter” was promoted by Porizkova at the expense of her dead ex husband. Ric Ocasek of the Cars. Paulina threw him under a fleet of buses. Not only that, she continually told half truths about their break up, her dating life before Ocasek’s death, and so on. Ocasek wrote in his will that she’d abandoned him.

And Ocasek wasn’t the only person she wasn’t telling the truth about. In the book, Porizkova completely erased her relationship with screenwriter Ed Solomon, with whom she was living when Ocasek died. Recently she actually wrote on her Instagram page that she wasn’t used to dating, even though after Solomon she briefly was associated with “Social Network” writer Aaron Sorkin.

When the public senses things aren’t quite true, they react by ignoring a memoir.

Trump Companies Found Guilty of Tax Evasion by Jury in Manhattan DA Trial: The End is Near

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Here’s the press release. Hallelujah!

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin L. Bragg, Jr., today announced the trial convictions of THE TRUMP CORPORATION and THE TRUMP PAYROLL CORP, for engaging in a 13-year scheme to defraud, as well as for conspiracy, criminal tax fraud and falsifying business records. These all-count convictions mark the first-ever criminal convictions of former President Trump’s companies.  

The evidence presented to the jury showed these two companies perpetrated a sophisticated tax fraud scheme that was carried out for more than a decade at the Trump Tower offices by the companies’ high managerial agents Chief Financial Officer ALLEN WEISSELBERG and Controller Jeffrey McConney, acting within the scope of their employment and in behalf of the corporations.  WEISSELBERG, who previously pleaded guilty to 15 criminal charges, testified at trial implicating both THE TRUMP CORPORATION and THE TRUMP PAYROLL CORP., and will be sentenced separately to jail for his role in the tax fraud scheme in the coming weeks.

THE TRUMP CORPORATION and THE TRUMP PAYROLL CORP. were each convicted by a New York State Supreme Court jury of:

  • Scheme to Defraud in the First Degree, a class E felony, one count
  • Conspiracy in the Fourth Degree, a class E felony, one count
  • Criminal Tax Fraud in Third Degree, a class D felony, two counts
  • Criminal Tax Fraud in the Fourth Degree, a class E felony, one count
  • Falsifying Business Records in the First Degree, a class E felony, three counts

THE TRUMP CORPORATION was also convicted of an additional count of:

  • Falsifying Business Records in the First Degree, a class E felony

Sentencing is expected to occur on January 13, 2023.

“This was a case about greed and cheating. In Manhattan, no corporation is above the law,” said District Attorney Bragg. “For 13 years the Trump Corporation and the Trump Payroll Corporation got away with a scheme that awarded high-level executives with lavish perks and compensation while intentionally concealing the benefits from the taxing authorities to avoid paying taxes. Today’s verdict holds these Trump companies accountable for their long-running criminal scheme, in addition to Chief Financial Officer Allen Weisselberg, who has pled guilty, testified at trial and will now be sentenced to serve time in jail. Thank you to the skilled prosecutors at the Manhattan DA’s office for their hard work on this case, as well as our talented colleagues at the Office of the Attorney General.

Over the course of the multi-year scheme, THE TRUMP CORPORATION and THE TRUMP PAYROLL CORP. defrauded federal, state and local tax authorities by paying a number of their trusted executives and managers – including Chief Financial Officer WEISSELBERG, his son, Chief Operating Officer Matthew Calamari, Sr. and his son — substantial amounts of their compensation in the form of “off the books” personal expenses which the companies purposefully did not report in company tax reporting forms, so that those executives and managers could evade paying taxes on the income. WEISSELBERG, a prime beneficiary of the scheme, received a total of approximately $1.76 million in unreported compensation, including payment of rent on a luxury apartment in Manhattan, utilities, parking garage expenses, Mercedes Benz cars for himself and his wife, home furnishings, cash for personal holiday tips and payment of his grandchildren’s private school tuition. The companies failed to report that income to the tax authorities, failed to withhold taxes and failed to pay Medicare taxes on that income.

The case was handled at trial by Chief of the Investigation Division Susan Hoffinger, Senior Trial Counsel Joshua Steinglass, Special ADA Gary T. Fishman, who was cross designated for this case, Senior Investigative Counsel Imran Ahmed, Special ADA Elyssa Abuhoff and Special ADA Caroline Williamson.  

District Attorney Bragg thanked New York Attorney General Letitia James and her senior staff, particularly Gary T. Fishman, the Attorney General’s Director of the Crime Proceeds Strike Force and Special Advisor to the Criminal Justice Division, for their continued partnership and collaboration on this matter.

D.A. Bragg also thanked the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance and the New York City Department of Finance for their assistance.

D.A. Bragg also thanked the following individuals for their assistance in investigating and trying the case: Assistant AG Gregory Morril, who was cross designated as Special ADA for this case;  Investigative Analysts Gabrielle Hoessly and Serena Lu, and Trial Preparation Assistant Ethan Katz, of the Major Economic Crimes Bureau; Forensic Accountant Investigator Francine Wexler, and Supervising Financial Investigator Wei Man Tang, both under the supervision of Robert Demarest and Irene Serrapica, Chief and Principal Deputy Chief of the Forensic Accounting and Financial Investigations Bureau; and Rackets Investigator Ethan Zubkoff and Senior Rackets Investigator Anthony DiCaprio, both under the supervision of Walter Alexander and Michael Wigdor, Chief and Assistant Chief Investigator.

Unofficial “Page Six Festival” Set for Tonight in NYC with Kennedys, Royals, Alec Baldwin

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Tonight marks a one of a kind “Page Six Festival.”

The Robert F. Kennedy Foundation will present its Ripple of Hope Award here in New York to Prince Harry and Meghan Markle in person.

A lot of Kennedys will be present, including a lot of the newer generations. Kerry Kennedy (ex-Cuomo) is the organizer. But presumably anti vaxxer RFK Jr will be there, maybe his wife actress Cheryl Hines, maybe Conor Kennedy (ex of Taylor Swift) or even Maria Shriver.

Alec Baldwin, still embroiled in the death of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins, is hosting. In the past he’s done Tony Bennett impressions. Alas, Tony will not be there.

Page Six is already ginned up for this one, connecting dots in every direction. I look forward to their breathless reports tonight. And, of course, speculation about Harry and Meghan’s various projects and whether they’re talking to anyone in the Palace back in London.

PS Elsewhere tonight press has been seeing James Cameron’s “Avatar 2” all day– because that’s the length. And Guillermo del Toro is in town for a big screening of his Oscar buzzed “Pinocchio.”

HBO, Netflix, FX Lead Critics Choice Awards with 15 Nominations Apiece

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The Critics Choice Awards for Television, along with the Movie Awards, will be seen live on January 15th on the CW Network. Chelsea Handler is host. All the nominees are excellent, but this season I really liked “The Bear” and its actors. Also, I loved Milly Alcock in “House of the Dragon.” Congrats to all!

TELEVISION NOMINATIONS FOR THE 28TH ANNUAL CRITICS CHOICE AWARDS

BEST DRAMA SERIES

Andor (Disney+)
Bad Sisters (Apple TV+)
Better Call Saul (AMC)
The Crown (Netflix)
Euphoria (HBO)
The Good Fight (Paramount+)
House of the Dragon (HBO)
Severance (Apple TV+)
Yellowstone (Paramount Network)

BEST ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES
Jeff Bridges – The Old Man (FX)
Sterling K. Brown – This Is Us (NBC)
Diego Luna – Andor (Disney+)
Bob Odenkirk – Better Call Saul (AMC)
Adam Scott – Severance (Apple TV+)
Antony Starr – The Boys (Prime Video)

BEST ACTRESS IN A DRAMA SERIES
Christine Baranski – The Good Fight (Paramount+)
Sharon Horgan – Bad Sisters (Apple TV+)
Laura Linney – Ozark (Netflix)
Mandy Moore – This Is Us (NBC)
Kelly Reilly – Yellowstone (Paramount Network)
Zendaya – Euphoria (HBO)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES
Andre Braugher – The Good Fight (Paramount+)
Ismael Cruz Córdova – The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power (Prime Video)
Michael Emerson – Evil (Paramount+)
Giancarlo Esposito – Better Call Saul (AMC)
John Lithgow – The Old Man (FX)
Matt Smith – House of the Dragon (HBO)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A DRAMA SERIES
Milly Alcock – House of the Dragon (HBO)
Carol Burnett – Better Call Saul (AMC)
Jennifer Coolidge – The White Lotus (HBO)
Julia Garner – Ozark (Netflix)
Audra McDonald – The Good Fight (Paramount+)
Rhea Seehorn – Better Call Saul (AMC)

BEST COMEDY SERIES
Abbott Elementary (ABC)
Barry (HBO)
The Bear (FX)
Better Things (FX)
Ghosts (CBS)
Hacks (HBO Max)
Reboot (Hulu)
Reservation Dogs (FX)

BEST ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES
Matt Berry – What We Do in the Shadows (FX)
Bill Hader – Barry (HBO)
Keegan-Michael Key – Reboot (Hulu)
Steve Martin – Only Murders in the Building (Hulu)
Jeremy Allen White – The Bear (FX)
D’Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai – Reservation Dogs (FX)

BEST ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES
Christina Applegate – Dead to Me (Netflix)
Quinta Brunson – Abbott Elementary (ABC)
Kaley Cuoco – The Flight Attendant (HBO Max)
Renée Elise Goldsberry – Girls5eva (Peacock)
Devery Jacobs – Reservation Dogs (FX)
Jean Smart – Hacks (HBO Max)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES
Brandon Scott Jones – Ghosts (CBS)
Leslie Jordan – Call Me Kat (Fox)
James Marsden – Dead to Me (Netflix)
Chris Perfetti – Abbott Elementary (ABC)
Tyler James Williams – Abbott Elementary (ABC)
Henry Winkler – Barry (HBO)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES
Paulina Alexis – Reservation Dogs (FX)
Ayo Edebiri – The Bear (FX)
Marcia Gay Harden – Uncoupled (Netflix)
Janelle James – Abbott Elementary (ABC)
Annie Potts – Young Sheldon (CBS)
Sheryl Lee Ralph – Abbott Elementary (ABC)

BEST LIMITED SERIES
The Dropout (Hulu)
Gaslit (Starz)
The Girl from Plainville (Hulu)
The Offer (Paramount+)
Pam & Tommy (Hulu)
Station Eleven (HBO Max)
This Is Going to Hurt (AMC+)
Under the Banner of Heaven (FX)

BEST MOVIE MADE FOR TELEVISION
Fresh (Hulu)
Prey (Hulu)
Ray Donovan: The Movie (Showtime)
The Survivor (HBO)
Three Months (Paramount+)
Weird: The Al Yankovic Story (The Roku Channel)

BEST ACTOR IN A LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE MADE FOR TELEVISION
Ben Foster – The Survivor (HBO)
Andrew Garfield – Under the Banner of Heaven (FX)
Samuel L. Jackson – The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey (Apple TV+)
Daniel Radcliffe – Weird: The Al Yankovic Story (The Roku Channel)
Sebastian Stan – Pam & Tommy (Hulu)
Ben Whishaw – This is Going to Hurt (AMC+)

BEST ACTRESS IN A LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE MADE FOR TELEVISION
Julia Garner – Inventing Anna (Netflix)
Lily James – Pam & Tommy (Hulu)
Amber Midthunder – Prey (Hulu)
Julia Roberts – Gaslit (Starz)
Michelle Pfeiffer – The First Lady (Showtime)
Amanda Seyfried – The Dropout (Hulu)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE MADE FOR TELEVISION
Murray Bartlett – Welcome to Chippendales (Hulu)
Domhnall Gleeson – The Patient (FX)
Matthew Goode – The Offer (Paramount+)
Paul Walter Hauser – Black Bird (Apple TV+)
Ray Liotta – Black Bird (Apple TV+)
Shea Whigham – Gaslit (Starz)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE MADE FOR TELEVISION
Claire Danes – Fleishman Is in Trouble (FX)
Dominique Fishback – The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey (Apple TV+)
Betty Gilpin – Gaslit (Starz)
Melanie Lynskey – Candy (Hulu)
Niecy Nash-Betts – Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story (Netflix)
Juno Temple – The Offer (Paramount+)

BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE SERIES
1899 (Netflix)
Borgen (Netflix)
Extraordinary Attorney Woo (Netflix)
Garcia! (HBO Max)
The Kingdom Exodus (MUBI)
Kleo (Netflix)
My Brilliant Friend (HBO)
Pachinko (Apple TV+)
Tehran (Apple TV+)

BEST ANIMATED SERIES
Bluey (Disney+)
Bob’s Burgers (Fox)
Genndy Tartakovsky’s Primal (Adult Swim)
Harley Quinn (HBO Max)
Star Trek: Lower Decks (Paramount+)
Undone (Prime Video)

BEST TALK SHOW
The Amber Ruffin Show (Peacock)
Full Frontal with Samantha Bee (TBS)
The Kelly Clarkson Show (NBC)
Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)
Late Night with Seth Meyers (NBC)
Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen (Bravo)

BEST COMEDY SPECIAL
Fortune Feimster: Good Fortune (Netflix)
Jerrod Carmichael: Rothaniel (HBO)
Joel Kim Booster: Psychosexual (Netflix)
Nikki Glaser: Good Clean Filth (HBO)
Norm Macdonald: Nothing Special (Netflix)
Would It Kill You to Laugh? Starring Kate Berlant & John Early (Peacock)

Kirstie Alley May Have Hesitated Getting Cancer Treatment Because of Wacky, Tragic Scientology Beliefs

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Kirstie Alley died yesterday from what her family described as a “recently discovered” cancer. She died in Florida, where she had a home near the headquarters of her cult like “religion,” Scientology. Alley was devoted to Scientology and its wacky beliefs, and some people are concerned that’s what kiled her.

L. Ron Hubbard, the nutty science fiction writer who founded Scientology, insisted the cult philosophies could cure cancer. Of course, it was a lie. But all of Scientology is based on lies and weird off-your-rocker stuff that has been proven wildly dangerous.

Mike Rinder, a famous Scientology refugee, wrote on his blog today (I added the bold face type):

Though Hubbard claimed to have the cure for cancer — especially on NOTs (New Era Dianetics for OTs) — two of the more prominent Scientologists to have died (Kirstie and Kelly Preston) both succumbed to the disease, yet both had done all there was to do on NOTs. (See blog post L. Ron Hubbard on Cancer) Like the other cures promised by Hubbard in Dianetics and thereafter, the real tragedy is that people believe that Scientology auditing and/or PTS handling will resolve their physical conditions. Often, seeking solutions through auditing, chiropractors or the latest fad cures only available in Mexico, they delay resorting to medical treatment until it is too late. I fear this may have been the case with Kirstie given the wording of the announcement that her cancer was “only recently discovered.” These days it is not common for cancer to be rapidly terminal if it is diagnosed early.

It’s perhaps the saddest aspect of the whole scientology bag of worms — that people die sooner than they should because of their faith in the promises of Hubbard. He certainly didn’t live up to his own claims — he was a physical and mental mess when he died.

Kirstie Alley was very funny on “Cheers” and in some of her movies. She wrecked her career with her fealty to Scientology, to Donald Trump, and to becoming obsessed with weight. She had a good career but could have had a better one if she hadn’t turned into a caricature of herself. This is a sad end, sadder all the more if she could have been treated.

Brendan Fraser, Starring in “The Whale,” Wittily Quotes “Moby Dick” About His Oscar Chances This Year

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It’s all in the eyes. Brendan Fraser plays Charlie, a morbidly obese gay man desperate to reconnect with his teenage daughter (Sadie Sink), in “The Whale,” Darren Aronofsky’s new moody film, written and adapted by Samuel D. Hunter from his 2014 Off Broadway play. All the action takes place in a dark, decrepit apartment full of clutter like candy wrappers and pizza boxes. This is not a movie that screams Merry Christmas.


Fraser wears a gelatinous body suit to play a 600 lb man, with legs so bloated even a short trip to the bathroom is a Herculean-like effort. Encased in the fat man suit, only Fraser’s face is left unadorned of prosthetics, so it’s left to his round and expressive eyes to convey emotion and do all the dramatic work.


It’s a face audiences have come to love for 30-some years, in comedies like “Airheads” and “The Mummy” franchise. Because of familiarity to his films and the sweetness of his characters there’s a natural connection with audiences; we recognize Charlie in some subliminal way, and the empathy for him is strong.

Last week Fraser, along with Aronofsky and Hunter and co-stars Sink and Ty Simpkins, turned up at the AMC Lincoln Square last week for a screening and Q&A to promote the film. It was a relief to see Fraser was normal size. A little older, but the sweetness in his face was still there.

During the Q&A Fraser was asked if he knew right away when Aronofsky approached him that despite some prosthetics, this was going to be incredibly soul bearing for him as an actor.

 He said, “I knew that really from just reading the script. I felt a great deal of empathy and connection to the story in a way that I wasn’t anticipating. I was moved by it. I was moved about how a man who’s made life choices, the life choices that Charlie has, have led him to a place where he lives alone, has been having certain regrets, harming himself by overeating, and comes to the realization that in what little amount of time he has left, and, we the audience, know it’s five days, that unless he can reconnect with his daughter, his very salvation is at risk. So he makes that decision.

He continued: “Look, I’m a dad, I’ve got three kids and that’s the engine that moves me no matter what I’m doing. And to think that it fueled me in this performance in so many ways, to think that how heartbroken, crestfallen, anyone would feel to come to that realization, that late-stage and their life. That having had left a child under the circumstances, whatever circumstances, if you had a chance to turn it around or make it right somehow, you would.


“And I felt that only after having read the script, which I have to admit, right now, wasn’t before I met Darren. I knew that he wanted to make a film, as I was told, and I knew very little about it, but I knew that I wanted to be a part of it very much, as would any actor worth his weight in salt.”

Asked about the Oscar buzz he’s received since the film premiered in Venice and received a standing ovation, Fraser said: “I feel both bashful and happy and staying in the here and now. And I think of our friend Herman Melville, who in his novel ‘Moby Dick’ once wrote that. “I know not all that may be coming, but come what will, I will go to it laughing.”