Our Biggest Awards Season Preview Ever! The films and players you need to watch this year
PRESENTS NOVEMBER 15, 2017 AWARDS SEASON PREVIEW
Call Me by Your Name Inside the year’s most deliriously romantic tale, with director Luca Guadagnino and his cast, Armie Hammer, Michael Stuhlbarg and Timothée Chalamet
Plus: Bryan C RANSTON Greta GERWIG Darren ARONOF SKY Octavia SPENC ER Jake GYLLENHAAL George C L OONEY and many more...
DEADLINE.COM/AWARDSLINE
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“JUDI DENCH GIVES A TOUCHING, MAJESTIC PERFORMANCE.” R E X
R E E D ,
N E W
Y O R K
O B S E R V E R
“JUDI DENCH IS IRRESIST IBLE.” D A V I D
R O O N E Y ,
T H E
H O L L Y W O O D
R E P O R T E R
“A CAREER HIGH T URN.” K E V I N
M A H E R ,
T H E
T I M E S
“JUDI DENCH IS A ROYAL P LEASURE.” P E T E R
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T R A V E R S ,
R O L L I N G
S T O N E
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Best Picture Best Director S T E P H E N
F R E A R S
Best Actress J U D I
D E N C H
Best Actor A L I
F A Z A L
Best Supp orting Actor E D D I E
I Z Z A R D
•
A D E E L
A K H T A R
B e s t A d a p t e d S c r e e n p l ay L E E B A S E D
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O N
T H E
B O O K
B Y
H A L L S H R A B A N I
B A S U
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PRESENTS
G EN ERA L MA N AG ER & C H IEF REV EN UE OFFIC ER
Stacey Farish ED ITOR
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FIRST TAKE Lois Smith’s decades on the big screen Fall festival winners and losers
Joe Utichi C REATIV E D IRECTOR
Craig Edwards
ASSISTA N T ED ITOR
Matt Grobar
D EA D L IN E CO- ED ITORS- IN - C H IEF
Nellie Andreeva Mike Fleming Jr.
Rounding up the documentary field
AWA RD S ED ITOR & COLUMN IST
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D EA D L IN E CON TRIBUTORS
COVER STORY Joe Utichi meets Luca Guadagnino and his Call Me by Your Name stars Timothée Chalamet, Armie Hammer & Michael Stuhlbarg
26-51
AWARDS SEASON PREVIEW These are the films and players you need to pay attention to this year 26 28 29 30 32 34 35 36 38 39 40 42 44 45 45 46 48 49 50 50
Jordan Peele Dunkirk The Florida Project Bryan Cranston Octavia Spencer Darren Aronofsky Dan Gilroy Noah Baumbach Suburbicon Andy Serkis Loveless Lady Bird Darkest Hour The Greatest Showman Stronger Animated Feature Phantom Thread James Franco Taylor Sheridan Three Billboards
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FLASH MOB The Contenders presented by Deadline in LA and London, AwardsLine Screening Series
Pete Hammond
Peter Bart Anita Busch Dawn Chmielewski Anthony D’Alessandro Greg Evans Lisa de Moraes Patrick Hipes Amanda N’Duka Dominic Patten Erik Pedersen Denise Petski Dino-Ray Ramos David Robb Nancy Tartaglione Peter White V ID EO P ROD UC ERS
David Janove Andrew Merrill
SOC IA L MED IA MA N AG ER
Scott Shilstone
C H A IRMA N & C EO
Jay Penske
V IC E C H A IRMA N
Gerry Byrne
C H IEF OP ERATIN G OFFIC ER
George Grobar
EX EC UTIV E V IC E P RESID EN T, BUSIN ESS A FFA IRS A N D G EN ERA L COUN SEL
Todd Greene
EX EC UTIV E V IC E P RESID EN T, BUSIN ESS D EV ELOP MEN T
Craig Perreault
SEN IOR V IC E P RESID EN T, FIN A N C E
Ken DelAlcazar
V IC E P RESID EN T, C REATIV E
Nelson Anderson
V IC E P RESID EN T, FIL M
Carra Fenton
V IC E P RESID EN T, TV
Laura Lubrano
SEN IOR ACCOUN T EX EC UTIV ES, TEL EV ISION
Brianna Hamburger Tiffany Windju ACCOUN T MA N AG ER
London Sanders
A D SA L ES COORD IN ATORS
Kristina Mazzeo Malik Simmons
P ROD UCTION MA N AG ER
Andrea Wynnyk
D ISTRIBUTION D IRECTOR
Michael Petre
A DV ERTISIN G IN QUIRIES
Stacey Farish ON THE COVER Armie Hammer, Timothée Chalamet and Michael Stuhlbarg photographed for Deadline by Michael Buckner ON THIS PAGE Brian Cranston photographed for Deadline by David Vintiner
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Building Beauty & The Beast p. 8 | Fall Festivals: Winners & Losers p. 10 | The Doc Race p. 14
Prime
POSITION
Lois Smith started on screen in East of Eden. Now, aged 87, she leads the powerful Marjorie Prime, writes Amy Nicholson THERE WAS A TIME WHEN ACTRESS LOIS SMITH FUZZED HER AGE. Not out of vanity. After all, when the top of her dark hair turned shocking white, she kept it. “Nature just decided to gray me that way,” says Smith. “I really liked the way it happened.” Until then, the problem was she looked younger than her driver’s license. At 22, Smith made her Broadway debut playing a 16-year-old drama queen. A few years later, while working out a skit on The Loretta Young Show, the director complained that Smith didn’t look old enough for one of her character’s lines. Smith quipped, “Why don’t we say I’m between 15 and 100?” She liked the ad lib so much she used it on-air in the bit, and again in interviews. Today, Smith is 87 years old and proud to say it. If the Academy recognizes her incredible dual role performances in Michael Almereyda’s Marjorie Prime, based on Jordan Harrison’s 2015 Pulitzer Prize-finalist play, she’ll tie Gloria Stuart as the oldest person ever nominated for an Oscar. And if she wins, she’ll set the record. There’s an irony in making
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PHOTOGRAPH BY
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®
F O R
Y O U R
C O N S I D E R A T I O N
BEST PICTURE BEST ACTOR SAM ELLIOTT
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
NICK OFFERMAN
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
LAURA PREPON, KRYSTEN RITTER
BEST DIRECTOR
BRETT HALEY
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
BRETT HALEY AND MARC BASCH
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY ROB C. GIVENS
BEST EDITING BRETT HALEY
“SAM ELLIOTT IS PERFECT.
‘The Hero’ is true cinematic zen.” Sara Stewart, NEW YORK POST
“SAM ELLIOTT TRULY SHINES.
A career-defining performance.” Michael Dunaway, PASTE
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REMEMBER Lois Smith in Marjorie Prime.
New York. Between auditions, Smith
Studio students circle each other
sliced salami at a deli and checked
like infatuated kids, has spawned a
hats at the Russian Tea Room. She
flurry of YouTube fan videos.) Still,
got her first job and hastily wondered
the bulk of her work has existed for a
if she should change her moniker
few months, and then vanished. “Its
to something more glamorous than
time is its time,” says Smith. “It’s over
“Lois Smith”—”Oh wait a minute, am
when it’s over.” Unlike Marjorie, she
I supposed to be doing something
doesn’t cling to the past. Before she
about this name business?” she
filmed Marjorie Prime, she originated
laughs—but decided it wasn’t worth
the role onstage, first in Los Angeles
the fuss. Besides, it was the perfect
at the Mark Taper Forum, and then
name for her kind of actress: simple,
in New York at Playwrights Horizons.
straightforward, honest. The focus
Yet, she’d never even seen herself as
was on her work, not fame.
Marjorie until Almereyda fell in love
In 1955, Smith posed for LIFE
with the idea of adapting the play.
history with Marjorie Prime. Almerey-
her posture is straighter. But really,
Magazine with four other young
da’s science fiction drama skips
it’s in the eyes—this synthetic Mar-
female Broadway stars, including
ture,” says Smith. “It’s more medita-
through the life, and afterlife, of a
jorie is so curious, her eyes almost
Jayne Mansfield, who’d just landed
tive. I think it’s sadder, definitely less
widow who purchases a hologram
seem to be lit from within. Tess says
her break-out role in Will Success
funny.” Almereyda knew Smith could
of her dead husband, Walter (John
Marjorie was vain and temperamen-
Spoil Rock Hunter? “Somebody must
straddle humor and pathos—he
Hamm), and then becomes a holo-
tal. “Smile less,” she commands, and
have gotten the idea to put us all on
directed her in Twister, where she
gram herself when her estranged
Smith obediently drops the corners
the cover,” shrugs Lois. She wore her
played Helen Hunt’s steak-slinging,
daughter (Geena Davis) has trouble
of her mouth. Is this an accurate
stage costume, an off-the-shoulder
tornado-hounded Aunt Meg. Still,
saying goodbye. Marjorie Prime is
Marjorie replica? Smith seems to
red dress, and stared directly at the
Harrison and Almereyda have “a dif-
obsessed with memory: why we
be assembling something trickier: a
camera. (The magazine lauded her
ferent sounder”, says Smith, using a
cling to moments, and how they slip
complicated woman flattened by her
“pale-faced intensity”.) Behind her,
nautical term befitting the seaside-
through our fingers anyway.
daughter’s decades of resentment.
Mansfield seems about to shiver out
set script, “which is interesting
of her strapless sequin dress.
because this material is very alive in
In the first section of the film,
“A prime is designed to be a good
“The film is a very different crea-
Smith’s human Marjorie, a former
listener, to be empathic, and to be
At 25, Smith was the oldest
violinist, is playful, but prickly, urging
learning all the time,” says Smith.
starlet in the photo and still play-
Walter to rewrite their story about
She’s describing her hologram, but
ing teenagers. Today, she’s the only
channeling Marjorie twice before,
the night he proposed. Her daugh-
she could be describing an actor.
one alive. Her longevity seems less
the lines became new all over again
ter Tess and son-in-law Jon (Tim
Marjorie’s first words would make
like a calculated career arc, than
once she started saying them to
Robbins) are glad she has Walter to
a great opening line for Smith’s
an actor who can’t resist learning
Hamm, Davis and Robbins. “A dif-
remind her to eat, and anchor her
autobiography, if she’d ever had
another role. “I don’t think I was ever
ferent actor changes it,” says Smith.
when a wave of dementia rolls in.
time to write one: “I feel like I have to
particularly a planner,” Smith admits.
“It’s like you’re playing the same
Marjorie is smart enough to know
perform around you.”
Around the time of the LIFE Maga-
piece of music, the same notes, but
zine cover, Smith told a journalist
it will be interpreted differently. The
she’s being minded, but she likes
Smith has spent most of her life
both of them.” It’s alive in her, too. Even after
Walter’s company anyway. We see
on the stage. She’s acted so long
that she hadn’t “realized all my stage
stimuli, what’s going on moment-
Smith’s face flicker through differ-
that when she refers to developing
ambitions.” She wasn’t talking about
to-moment—that’s one of the
ent emotions—delight, defiance,
her new line-learning technique in
awards or glory. She just wanted to
great joys.” Hearing Smith describe
suspicion, petulance, and finally, the
“recent years”, she means, “the last
be Nina in The Seagull. On Broadway,
acting with such intelligence and
judgement that his programmers
25 or so.” She was born Lois Arlene
she did Harold Pinter and Bertolt
zest recalls a phrase she says in her
haven’t gotten Walter’s nose exactly
Humbert in Topeka, Kansas in 1930.
Brecht and Tennessee Williams and
cameo as an empathetic nun in
right. She’s chosen a younger version
Her father worked for the telephone
Eugene O’Neill and John Steinbeck
Greta Gerwig’s Lady Bird: “Don’t you
of her husband “because he was
company, but at night he directed
and Sam Shepard and Tony Kushner,
think maybe they’re the same thing,
handsome”, says Smith. Tess thinks
biblical plays for the Protestant
and yes, three different plays by
love and attention?”
it’s because her mom was happier
church. “They weren’t for entertain-
Anton Chekhov. But by the time she
before she was born.
ment,” stresses Smith, but they
got around to The Seagull, she had
I think,” says Smith. Marjorie would
After Marjorie’s death, Davis
“One wants to be well thought of,
were entertaining to her. She loved
aged out of Nina and played the
agree. And hopefully, the Academy
and Smith have a long, wonderfully
sitting in on rehearsals, and when
viperous Madame Arkadina instead.
will finally demand people pay atten-
uncomfortable scene where the
he needed a fill-in, she knew all the
angry daughter confronts a digital
lines. Finally, he gave his youngest
stage have trained her in the art of
content just to quietly concentrate
ghost. “I’m the Marjorie you still have
daughter an Old Testament costume
letting go. Film audiences remember
on her work. For now, she’s busily
things to say to,” chirps Smith as
and her own parts. Smith remem-
her as Jack Nicholson’s dour, conser-
learning sign language for her next
her character’s replacement. She’s
bers the pleasure she felt perform-
vative sister in Five Easy Pieces, or as
challenging role in Craig Lucas’ new
so close to the person we first met
ing. “That was the beginning.”
the wide-eyed and waifish barmaid
play, I Was Most Alive With You. “It’s a
who fascinates James Dean in East
very ambitious piece,” Smith beams.
that initially, we’re not supposed to
When she was 18, she married a
In a way, Smith’s decades on the
tion to an actress who’s long been
know the difference. Yet Smith gives
teacher named Wesley Smith, and
of Eden. (Smith and Dean’s cam-
“It’ll be interesting to see how it
us small hints. Her words are crisper,
the young couple soon moved to
era test, in which the two Actors’
works.” ★
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D E A D L I N E .C O M / AWA R D S L I N E
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CHARTED TERRITORY
Gold Derby’s Oscar Odds
The Nature of the Beast
Beauty and the Beast production designer Sarah Greenwood on the challenges posed by Disney’s live-action adaptation of the classic fairy tale. BY MATT GROBAR
A FOUR-TIME OSCAR NOMINEE, production designer Sarah Greenwood had a lot to live up to, taking on a live-action adaptation of Beauty and the Beast—“a tale as old as time” previously spun into a Disney animated classic. Unlike costume designer Jacqueline Durran though, who took more direct inspiration from the fabric of that film, Greenwood and set decorator Katie Spencer relied on the reality of 1740s France as their starting point. “We’re not in fairy tale land—we’re somewhere very specific. There’s an homage paid and a DNA running through it, but it was building on my memory,” Greenwood says. “I didn’t actually specifically go back to the animation—it’s kind of my memory and my sense of the songs.” In preparation for an enormous new endeavor—working on their first-ever musical production—Greenwood and company took a tour through France, “looking at beautiful villages, and chateaus and things,” with the notion of shooting on location in a real French village. “I really quite liked the textural context of that,” the production designer
says. Ultimately, Greenwood and the art department created their own village on a UK soundstage, cherry-picking design elements from international sources of inspiration. Building on stages allowed Greenwood greater control over the sets, which could be designed to work in concert with camera and dance choreography. “Having never done a musical and big dancing numbers, there was a steep learning curve to make it work completely,” Greenwood recalls. “But it was great fun.”
At press time, here is how Gold Derby’s experts ranked the Oscar chances in the race for Best Picture. Get up-to-date rankings and make your own predictions at GoldDerby.com BEST PICTURE
ODDS
1
Dunkirk
11/2
2
The Shape of Water
8/1
3
Darkest Hour
9/1
4
The Post
9/1
5
Call Me By Your Name
9/1
6
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
10/1
7
Get Out
12/1
8
Lady Bird
16/1
9
The Florida Project
16/1
10
Phantom Thread
25/1
11
Mudbound
33/1
12
The Big Sick
40/1
13
Battle of the Sexes
100/1
14
The Greatest Showman
100/1
15
Downsizing
100/1
WONDER SCORED
Wonderstruck composer Carter Burwell discusses the craft of composing whimsy AN EXPERT AT ELEVATING IMAGES through music, composer Carter Burwell found his greatest challenge of late in Todd Haynes’ Wonderstruck—a film featuring a “vast amount of music” and almost wall-to-wall, whimsical score. “A lot of people these days use the minimalist idiom of people like Philip Glass in film
8
because music’s there, it’s doing something, but it’s just not doing too much,” Burwell says. “This film, I’m not working in that idiom, so figuring out how to solve that challenge was a real educational experience.” With Wonderstruck, Burwell also took on the difficult task of crafting percussion-driven themes for the two children
the film follows, both of whom happen to be deaf. Appropriately, the score is an experience of childlike wonder at the world, which employs non-instruments like combs, pieces of jewelry, and keys, and instruments not typically heard in a conventional, classical score (harp and organ), to sublime, textured effect. –Matt Grobar
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“A RIVETING THRILLER DRIVEN BY A QUARTET OF
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BILLBOARDED Martin McDonagh took a screenplay prize for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri in Venice, and the audience award at Toronto.
No Clues
the fall fests. Warner Bros.’ July
the aforementioned Venice, Telluride
release, Dunkirk, is hanging strong as
and Toronto, also include the New
Why the fall festivals may not predict 2017 Oscar contenders
a near-certain Best Picture con-
York and London fests, as well as
BY P E T E H A M M O N D
tender; Universal’s February release
November’s AFI Fest.
of the smash hit horror film Get Out
LAST YEAR AT THIS TIME, strong and obvious Best Picture Oscar contenders had emerged from the so-called Fall trifecta of film festivals at Venice, Telluride and Toronto. Movies like La La Land and Moonlight, Hidden Figures, Hacksaw Ridge and Arrival all staked their claim to a spot with their debuts and key fest exposure. This has been the norm, actually, for the past several seasons, as the eventual Best Picture Oscar winner, at the very least, was generally first seen at one of those festivals; that list includes Slumdog Millionaire, The King’s Speech, The Artist, Argo, 12 Years a Slave, Birdman, Spotlight,and of course, Moonlight, after first hearing the winner was La La Land in that now infamous envelope snafu. Only 2009’s Best Picture champ, The Hurt Locker, broke that streak in the past nine years, and that was because it had opened in late June, an anomaly.
also seems to be gaining momen-
FOX SEARCHLIGHT: Battle of the
tum, as later releases fall by the
Sexes won lots of notice at its Tel-
wayside or crash at the box office;
luride debut, as well as at Toronto,
the critically acclaimed summertime
and has fueled that into respect-
romance, Call Me By Your Name was
able box office grosses to remain a
actually first seen way back at the
contender, particularly for reigning
Sundance Film Festival, even though
Best Actress champ Emma Stone as
it doesn’t open until late November,
Billie Jean King. Guillermo del Toro’s
but it also appears to be gaining
magical The Shape of Water won
momentum. The major studios are
hearts and minds at all three fests,
in the game with several so-called
from its world premiere at Venice,
blockbuster-type films they are very
and could have some added mojo
seriously pushing in many key Oscar
when it opens in December. Perhaps
categories, none of which came from
Searchlight’s best bet, though, is
the fall fests, in a list that includes
Martin McDonagh’s acclaimed Three
Logan, War for the Planet of the Apes,
Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri,
Blade Runner 2049, Wonder Woman
which, after Venice, drew strong
and so on. Universal, Warner and
talk for its cast, including Frances
Disney all shied away from playing
McDormand and Sam Rockwell, and
voters are added into the mix,
the Oscar-friendly fall festival game
became the surprise winner of TIFF’s
ferent. After the debuts of numerous
thus making the traditional way of
this year. Fox had only The Mountain
People’s Choice audience award,
hopefuls at Venice, Telluride and
predicting the results a fool’s game.
Between Us at Toronto, but that is
often an indicator of eventual Oscar
Toronto, the Oscar picture is murkier
Who would have thought Moonlight
considered more of a commercial
success.
than ever. It appears the Best Picture
could pull off that kind of upset
play for them. In fact, of the majors,
race is about as wide open at this
against the juggernaut that La La
only Paramount and Sony are using
A24: Following up a Best Picture
point as it has ever been, and the
Land turned out to be (still winning
the fall fest circuit to drive some
win for Moonlight, not to mention a
possibilities for a wild upset seem
six Oscars, including Best Director)?
This season, however, feels dif-
contenders. Breaking it down by
Best Actress and Best Picture nomi-
more likely than unlikely, especially
Among the films most often
distributor, here is how their awards
nation the previous year for Room,
when the wild card factor of nearly
mentioned as frontrunners in this
season fortunes may be enhanced—
this little indie company that could
1,500 new (in the last two years)
year’s race so far, not many of the
or broken—by their participation at
is on a roll, and like it did with those
and very internationalized Academy
sure bets seem to be coming from
the fall festivals, which, in addition to
two films, used Telluride and TIFF to
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F O R Y O U R C O N S I D E R AT I O N B E S T D O C U M E N TA R Y F E AT U R E
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PET E HAMMOND Telluride to successfully launch Gary
White House and The Leisure Seeker,
Oldman as the current Best Actor
featuring lovely turns from veterans
front runner for his Winston Churchill
Helen Mirren and Donald Suther-
in Joe Wright’s Darkest Hour, and
land, didn’t light the house on fire
Venice to launch Dame Judi Dench’s
with awards buzz after their debuts.
latest round with the Queen in Stephen Frear’s Victoria & Abdul. Both
BLEECKER STREET: Breathe won
also played TIFF to nice response
plaudits for stars Andrew Garfield
and could be dark horse Best Picture
and Claire Foy at both TIFF and Lon-
contenders as well.
don, but went nowhere at the box office, which might hurt any subse-
ANNAPURNA: Another new
quent momentum awards-wise.
distributor, Annapurna used TIFF
STRONGEST Jake Gyllenhaal (right) with Boston bombing survivor Jeff Bauman at the Toronto Film Festival in September.
to launch Brad’s Status, as well as
AMAZON: The streamer’s new
Professor Marston and the Wonder
Richard Linkater film, Last Flag Fly-
Women, but any awards hopes for
ing, drew a mixed response after its
either were dashed by disappoint-
opening night world premiere at the
ing theatrical runs. The company is
New York Film Festival, and the same
hoping an upcoming awards-timed
fate met Woody Allen’s NYFF closer,
re-release of their maiden August
Wonder Wheel, which neverthe-
release Detroit will be able to land
less has Kate Winslet back in Best
springboard Lady Bird, the charming
comedy, I Love You Daddy will cause
them some forward momentum into
Actress contention. Neither film was
Greta Gerwig directorial debut star-
talk, as it did after its TIFF debut,
the Oscar race instead.
the slam dunk, critically, that Ama-
ring an award-worthy Saoirse Ronan,
where the upstart indie acquired it
into strong contention, to give them
and quickly put it into awards play
NEON: Yet another relatively new
a three-peat on the Oscar stage.
for a November opening. In the light
player to the Oscar game got a lot
SONY PICTURES: A gutsy deci-
It could be the first teen-oriented
of new headlines, it may struggle to
of traction with the Tonya Harding
sion to take the unfinished Denzel
film since Juno to crack the Best
stay alive with the heat on allega-
flick, I, Tonya, which they picked up
Washington-starring Roman J. Israel,
Pic code. Their other best bet, The
tions against Louis CK. A big loser
at TIFF, and which surprisingly came
Esq. into a much anticipated one-
Florida Project, debuted in Cannes,
for them was the abysmal Halle
in second for TIFF’s audience award.
night TIFF screening drew mixed
but won over Toronto—and, coupled
Berry/Daniel Craig LA Riots movie,
Strong talk here for Margot Robbie
reviews from pundits and lowered
with strong results since its opening,
Kings, which was not well received
and Allison Janney.
its chances, awards-wise, despite a
is also a possibility, if not a sure thing
after a TIFF World Premiere.
in the Best Picture race. A midnight
zon must have been hoping for.
typically fine turn from Washington. PARAMOUNT: The studio followed
Since TIFF, the film went back in to
TIFF debut for James Franco’s quirky
ENTERTAINMENT STUDIOS:
the successful pattern established
the cutting room and had 12 minutes
and amusing The Disaster Artist went
Byron Allen’s new distribution com-
last year with Arrival, by taking
excised, among other changes in
well enough to position it possibly for
pany made a splash purchasing both
Alexander Payne’s comedy Down-
advance of its November opening.
Best Adapted Screenplay and pos-
the Scott Cooper–directed West-
sizing to Venice/Telluride/Toronto,
Oscar fate TBD. All the Money in the
sibly in the Golden Globes Comedy
ern Hostiles and the controversial
but after smash reviews in Italy, saw
World, meanwhile, will hold its late-
categories—it premiered at SXSW
Chappaquiddick, detailing the Ted
the buzz simmer a bit when it hit
December date despite allegations
in March. On the down side, there is
Kennedy scandal, following the 1969
North America. Darren Aronofsky’s
against star Kevin Spacey. The film
mixed reaction for the challenging
fatal auto accident he was involved
mother! predictably drew polarizing
will hastily reshoot his scenes with
Cannes debut, The Killing of a Sacred
in. Both were pickups after TIFF
responses at Venice and TIFF, while
Christopher Plummer.
Deer, which attempted to use TIFF
reaction and announced for Oscar
George Clooney’s uneven Suburbi-
as a new launch into the race, but
qualifying runs. Chappaquiddick has
con pretty much fizzled at the same
NETFLIX: Their respective Sun-
didn’t gain much traction there.
since been moved out of the season,
two fests.
dance and Cannes debuts, Mud-
but there is hope for a Christian Bale ROADSIDE ATTRACTIONS: Their
Best Actor nod for Hostiles.
stirring Boston bombing survivor
bound and The Meyerowitz Stories SONY PICTURES CLASSICS: SPC
(New and Selected), drew strong
had a gaggle of movies as usual on
support at various fall fests to
story Stronger, starring Jake Gyl-
STX: Aaron Sorkin’s directorial
the fall festival calendar this year,
continue their awards season
lenhaal in the true and inspiring story
debut, telling the true life story of
but got their strongest response
hopes, and both are primed to test
of Jeff Bauman, did well with a TIFF
poker madam Molly Bloom, Molly’s
after the TIFF North American
resistance to Netflix’s day and date
World Premiere, but fizzled shortly
Game had a successful run at TIFF
debut of Sundance find, Call Me By
release strategy that killed the Oscar
afterwards when it opened in the-
and is positioned to strike at Oscar
Your Name. There were also encour-
chances for Beasts of No Nation two
aters. Still, Gyllenhaal could pull off a
for Jessica Chastain in particular, in
aging words for Annette Bening and
years ago.
much-deserved lead actor nomina-
the crowded Best Actress race, fol-
Jamie Bell in Film Stars Don’t Die in
tion once screeners arrive.
lowing a Christmas opening.
Liverpool, which, if there is any jus-
THE WEINSTEIN COMPANY:
tice, could put them both into Oscar
Don’t ask. Even if their big TIFF hope
THE ORCHARD: Louis CK’s sharply
FOCUS FEATURES: Always an
contention. On the down side, Mark
The Current War hadn’t flopped in its
funny and daring black-and-white
Oscar season stalwart, Focus used
Felt: The Man Who Brought Down the
Toronto world premiere, don’t ask. ★
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REAL TO REEL Wide-ranging doc topics this year include The Syrian War (Hell on Earth), an unorthodox scientist (Jane), and Turkish cats (Kedi).
On the Docket
The Best Documentary Feature race will be as competitive as ever in 2018. BY A N T O N I A B LY T H
IN TYPICAL FASHION, this year’s Oscar race for Best Documentary Feature began at Sundance, with the festival yielding several standouts. Winner of the U.S. documentary Grand Jury Award was Antonio Santini and Dan Sickles’ Dina (The Orchard)–which follows autistic couple Dina Bruno and Scott Levin’s wedding preparations. STEP (Fox Searchlight) received rave reviews for its uplifting story of a transformative dance troupe at a Baltimore girls’ school, while Damon Davis and Sabaah Folayan’s Whose Streets? (Magnolia Pictures) tackled Ferguson and Black Lives Matter. Then, there was Jon Shenk and Bonni Cohen’s follow-up to Davis Guggenheim’s Oscar-winning climate change documentary An Inconvenient Truth—An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power (Paramount/Participant Media). Outside of these topical outings, a leading theme among this year’s Sundance offerings was the crisis in Syria, with three films covering the subject. From 2015 nominee Matthew Heineman, City of Ghosts (A&E/Amazon) follows a renegade group of journalists documenting ISIS at great personal risk; HBO’s Cries from Syria, from Oscar-nominated Winter on Fire helmer Evgeny Afineevsky, depicts the Syrian civil war using raw footage shot by local people, and Firas Fayyad and Steen Johannessen’s Last Men in Aleppo (Grasshopper Film), won the Sundance World Cinema Documentary Grand Jury prize for its depiction. And the Syrian subject didn’t end at Sundance: In fact, the Tribecadebuting Hell on Earth: The Fall of Syria and the Rise of Isis (National Geographic) from former Oscar nominee Sebastian Junger and Emmy winner Nick Quested (Restrepo) looks to be a frontrunner. While over one hundred docs will be running the Academy race, only 15 of those will make the December shortlist. Here’s the lowdown on who might make that first cut.
14
City of Ghosts (A&E/Amazon)
Cannes, this film from French New
Oscar nominated for Cartel Land in
Wave legend Agnès Varda and street
2015, Emmy winner Matthew Heine-
artist JR explores the friendship
man is back with this in-depth look
between the two creators despite
at Syrian activist group ‘Raqqa is
their 55-year age difference as they
Being Slaughtered Silently’—a band
work on their ‘Inside Outside Project,’
of local anonymous journalists who
traveling France and producing
got together to report on ISIS after
giant portrait photographs of locals
it conquered their home in 2014.
that they then paste onto walls and
Heineman follows them through
buildings, while conducting inter-
their terrifying and awe-inspiring
views with their subjects.
stand in the face of death threats and murder. The film was nominated
Jane (National Geographic)
for Sundance’s Grand Jury Prize and
Brett Morgen’s Jane explores the life
the Critics Choice Documentary
and legacy of Jane Goodall, follow-
Award.
ing her determined mission to study chimpanzee behavior, despite being
Hell on Earth: The Fall of Syria
untrained and largely ridiculed by the
and the Rise of Isis (National
male-dominated scientific commu-
Geographic)
nity. The film is taken from over 100
From Restrepo collaborators Sebas-
hours of previously unseen footage,
tian Junger and Nick Quested, Hell on
shot by photographer Hugo Van
Earth gives a broad view of the Syrian
Lawick. National Geographic sent
crisis, offering multiple viewpoints
Van Lawick to document Goodall’s
and expert interviews. It includes
work back in the ‘60s, and he would
footage of a local family driven to
eventually become her husband. The
desperation, Shia militias in Iraq, and
film covers the couple’s romance,
Al-Qaeda fighters in Aleppo, with
Goodall’s extraordinary life in the
an inevitably horrifying look at the
jungle and her revolutionary findings.
violence and brutality of ISIS. Overall, the film provides a terrifying and
Kedi (Oscilloscope)
insightful explanation of how these
Capable of turning even the least
extremists came to power.
likely cat lover, Ceyda Torun’s charming portrait of seven stray Turkish
Faces Places (Cohen Media Group)
felines is also a unique and mov-
Winner of the L’Œil d’or award at
ing look at Istanbul and its human
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F O R Y O U R C O N S I D E R AT I O N
BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE A “MASTERPIECE...“ - Sonia Saraiya, “LET IT FALL is a single comprehensive history of how Los Angeles tore itself apart from 1982 to 1992, and also of a dozen or more personal tragedies. It’s like looking into the heart of all those single flames that made the conflagration.” - Stuart Klawans,
“LET IT FALL understands the value of allowing its interview subjects to talk at greater, more involving length than is usual for documentaries, a technique that illuminates the complexities of reality and gives listeners a sense of the emotional textures of these people’s lives.” - Kenneth Turan, “This is history from the inside, told by people who don’t always look like they’ve gotten past it, and it’s what makes LET IT FALL so memorable.”- Robert Abele,
LetItFallMovie.com
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D OCUMENTARY SPOTLI G HT their stoicism coming over as heartbreaking and unremitting pain. Let It Fall: Los Angeles 1982-1992 (ABC) 12 Years a Slave screenwriter John Ridley’s exploration of the decadelong lead-up to the LA riots takes an unflinching look at the city’s gang culture, drug use and the shocking police tactics that built to a disastrous and tragic crescendo. Although there are several offerings this year marking the 25-year anniversary of the riots, Let It Fall is a unique historical take on the elements that preceded the crisis. Long Strange Trip (Amazon) Amir Bar-Lev takes us on the populace. Full of astute observations
ultimate Grateful Dead journey
and metaphorical musings, this
with this intensive exploration of
stealth hit packs an emotional punch
the band’s archives. Since ESPN’s
as the cats receive surprisingly
seven-hour documentary O.J.: Made
heartwarming gestures of generosity
in America won the Oscar, Long
and love.
Strange Trip—which initially screened as a four-hour movie at Sundance
Cries from Syria (HBO) Beginning with the murder and torture of young boys who wrote
before streaming as six episodes on MAKING HISTORY Last Men in Aleppo’s ‘white helmets’ perform a rescue; Jim Carrey as Andy Kaufman in Jim & Andy; a scene from STEP.
Amazon—should also qualify in the doc feature category.
anti-Bashar-al-Assad graffiti, Evgeny Afineevsky’s film draws a six-year
make a film exploring how easy it
Contractually Obligated Mention
STEP (Fox Searchlight)
timeline of the war in Syria. The doc
is for professional athletes to get
of Tony Clifton (Netflix)
Winner of the U.S. Documentary
covers Assad’s brutal assault on his
away with doping. But during his
Chris Smith’s exploration of Jim
Special Jury Award for Inspira-
own people with the help of Russia,
research, Fogel happened upon
Carrey’s four-month transformation
tional Filmmaking at Sundance,
ISIS’ infiltration, and ultimately, the
evidence of a massive Russian
into comic Andy Kaufman for the
Amanda Lipitz’s debut film was
day-to-day horror of life in Syria,
doping cover-up. The resulting film
1999 biopic Man on the Moon cen-
then snapped up in a bidding war—a
employing revelatory footage taken
covers the mysterious death of
ters on behind-the-scenes footage
rare situation for a documentary.
by activists, journalists, parents,
anti-doping officials, the possible
of the shoot, taken by Kaufman’s
STEP follows the Baltimore Leader-
young children and a defected gen-
ban of all Russian athletes from the
former girlfriend, Lynne Margulies,
ship School for Young Women’s
eral. Shocking, unbearable scenes
2016 Olympics, and the unraveling
and his writing partner, Bob Zmuda.
step team―known as the ‘Lethal
make for a vital exposé of the truth
of a deeply corrupt system.
The Spike Jonze-produced doc from
Ladies’–through their senior year,
Vice Documentary Films follows
giving us a heartwarming look at the
of Syria’s situation. An Inconvenient Sequel:
Carrey as he reviews this footage
power of creative dance and team-
Dina (The Orchard)
Truth to Power
years later, reflecting on his and
work to overcome daily hardship.
Antonio Santini and Dan Sickles’
(Paramount/ Participant Media)
Kaufman’s lives.
sweet and enthralling love story fol-
Davis Guggenheim’s An Inconvenient
lows Dina Bruno as she prepares to
Truth snagged the Best Documen-
Last Men in Aleppo
(Magnolia Pictures)
marry Walmart greeter Scott Levin.
tary Feature Oscar in 2007, and this
(Grasshopper Film)
Sabaah Folayan and Damon Davis’
Winner of the U.S. documentary
follow-up film from Bonni Cohen
While Orlando von Einsiedel and
film tells the story of the 2014 killing
Grand Jury Award at Sundance, the
and Jon Shenk was well-received
Joanna Natasegara’s The White
of 18 year-old Michael Brown and the
film explores the autistic couple’s
at Sundance. Exploring Al Gore’s
Helmets won the 2017 Oscar for Best
subsequent outcry from the point of
tentative steps toward the altar,
continuing fight for the environment
Documentary Short, Feras Fayyad’s
view of those who were there at the
while sensitively revealing the pain-
in the face of an unsympathetic
Last Men in Aleppo proves there’s still
time. From the Ferguson uprising, to
ful and unexpected hurdles in the
Trump, the film offers some hope
much more to say about the Syrian
the global reach of the Black Lives
pair’s history.
when viewers might be expecting
rescue volunteers named for their
Matter movement, this film gives an
only doom and despair.
white protective headgear. We see
authoritative storytelling voice to the
the repetition of their nightmare task
black Ferguson community, focusing
Icarus (Netflix)
Whose Streets?
Writer, director and marathon biker
Jim & Andy: The Great Beyond
as they dig over and over again into
on letting activists and local citizens
Bryan Fogel originally intended to
– Featuring a Very Special,
the rubble to pull out dead children,
speak. ★
16
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Luca Guadagnino’s Call Me by Your Name captures the fevered pangs of confusing desire and first romance like nothing else. With help from his two leads, Timothée Chalamet and Armie Hammer, Guadagnino tells Joe Utichi about bringing André Aciman’s touching novel to the screen.
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On location in Crema and at Lake Garda, Armie Hammer and Timothée Chalamet soak up the Italian summer sun in Luca Guadagnino's Call Me by Your Name.
L
uca Guadagnino doesn’t fall in love easily. “It was not about falling in love,” he says of the ultimate decision he made to direct his new film, Call Me by Your Name. “I fell in love once in my life, and I have been with the same person since. So I give a great level of importance to the concept of falling in love.” Instead, perhaps, it was resignation that made
him take the helm. Guadagnino had been attached
went to another and another, and the dance of
to the adaptation of André Aciman’s delirious sum-
seduction lasted varying lengths of time with each,
mer romance for nearly a decade—first as a con-
until all of those suitors fell away. It was Spears who
sultant, then an executive producer, then a writer—
suggested perhaps his friend James Ivory should
when he finally took the plunge into directing it.
direct, with a script that Ivory and Guadagnino
Producers Peter Spears and Howard Rosenman had
could work on together.
optioned the book before it was published in 2007,
Guadagnino couldn’t deny the pleasure of
and were working with another director to mount
elevating his level of involvement with each new
the project. They had reached out to Guadagnino
turn in the road, and working with Ivory on the
because the book is set in Italy and he knew the
script was a joy. “He showed up at my place in
filmmaking landscape of his home country.
Crema, and we started working together. It took us
Over the years, he took his producers on scouts
a year of back-and-forth between Crema and New
all over Italy. “The book is about this specific place
York, and we started from scratch. It was a very
called Bordighera,” Guadagnino explains. “We
interesting script, because it was filled with the
went all through Liguria. We showed them the
typical imagery of Ivory.”
Bordighera village and a possible house that could
20
When the original director dropped out, they
But still, there was no luck for the production.
meet the storyline.” Later on, he says, “we imag-
Guadagnino put together a budget, but financiers
ined a different setting; Sicily.”
wouldn’t bite with a director nearing his 90th
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birthday. Ivory finally suggested Guadagnino join
“comfortable” with this story. “Because maybe I
him as a co-director. “But nobody believed in this
knew the people that I was talking about,” he says.
concept,” Guadagnino sighs. “It was important to
“I knew the emotional journey they were going
me to make this happen for James. I would have
through. Butterflies in the stomach is the most
loved to see his version of the film. We worked a lot.
beautiful feeling you can feel, no?”
But nobody believed two filmmakers could make a
But he is not alone in finding this kind of connec-
movie together—unless they were brothers, or a pair
tion with the story. The book's fans are diehard, and
to begin with.”
you don't have to be gay, or Jewish, or to have sum-
Guadagnino could be fast and nimble in a way
mered in Italy, to remember the stomach-churning
Ivory wasn’t practiced in. He was used to tight
joys of first desire. For those who fall for it, Call Me
shoots and compressed schedules, and that would
by Your Name makes them fall hard. So much so
be attractive to financiers. It soon became undeni-
that when their friends share those feelings, their
able: if this movie was going to go ahead, Luca Gua-
reactions make it feel like the novel is somehow
dagnino would have to step up. “I believed in this
being adulterous. Guadagnino's film had to hit that
project and I didn’t want to see it go,” he says. “That
same balance of the personal and the universal.
was the reason I did it. Everybody got paid nothing.
He made it his own when he became its director.
We did it because we wanted to do it.” So what was it about this story that inspired such fevered devotion, and yet such hesitation to take the reins? Call Me by Your Name is a love story, in its most unadulterated form. Elio is the 17-yearold boy whose narration guides us in Aciman’s novel, as he meets Oliver, a 24-year-old graduate student come to stay for the summer at Elio’s father’s Italian villa. Certainly, there is a cross-generational controversy ready to ruffle some feathers, but that feels almost incidental. As Elio and Oliver’s attraction deepens, moralistic arguments seem weightless. And, by his own admission, Guadagnino felt
“MAYBE I KNEW THE PEOPLE THAT I WAS TALKING ABOUT. I KNEW THE EMOTIONAL JOURNEY THEY WERE GOING THROUGH. BUTTERFLIES IN THE STOMACH IS THE MOST BEAUTIFUL FEELING YOU CAN FEEL, NO?” —LUCA GUADAGNINO DEADLINE.COM
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Desire burns as Elio plays
“For me to believe in something means to be
this movie,” the actor says. “I read the script, and
the piano for Oliver inside
completely invested in it,” he says. “To be absolutely
then immediately went and read the book, and
the house Guadagnino
honest in my approach, for better and for worse.”
came to the conclusion that these were two of the
once coveted.
It’s a necessary step for any project, but especially
most beautiful and amazing pieces of source mate-
so when the subject is this achingly emotional.
rial I’d ever seen for something that could hopefully
He started where he usually does; he leaned into his cinephilia. The films that sprang to mind: Jean
There were fewer references for Guadagnino to
Renoir’s A Day in the Country, Bertolucci’s La Luna,
tap when it came to casting Timothée Chalamet as
Rohmer’s 80s films like The Green Ray and Pauline
Elio. At 21, Chalamet had already made a mark with
à la Plage (Call Me is set in 1982). Also Pialat’s À
a run on Homeland and in Christopher Nolan’s Inter-
Nos Amours, and Téchiné’s Wild Reeds. “There was
stellar. But Guadagnino found him through Peter
something about the countryside in all these films,”
Spears’ husband, agent Brian Swardstrom, who
he enthuses. “I try to make sure that I have the
had just signed the young actor. “We met and it was
pores of my imagination very open to soak in real-
instant recognition,” Guadagnino recalls. “The guy I
ity, but on the other hand, I rely very much on the
was talking with had this brooding, unbiased deter-
imagery of my cinephile upbringing, so it’s a battle
mination and ambition to be a great actor, and yet
between those two—or it’s making love between
he had this kind of soft, ingénue naiveté of a young
those two elements.”
boy. Those two things together were incredible.”
Guadagnino is heavily versed in movies—he rivals
The film rests on Chalamet’s shoulders. We
Tarantino for the ease with which he can relate
rarely break his perspective, and yet Guadagnino’s
subjects to cinema. And he’s no snob, either. When
version of the story omits the internal monologue of
he says he sought Armie Hammer for the part of
the book. Everything relies on Chalamet selling the
Oliver, he waxes lyrical about how good he is in Gore
this-way-and-that confusion of first love in glances
Verbinski’s The Lone Ranger, in spite of its challeng-
and private moments. It was the biggest change
ing critical reception. “It’s a beautiful movie,” he
the director made. “I personally don’t like the first
insists, and he means it. Hammer had the movie
person account of a story in a movie,” Guadagnino
star quality that he knew the Oliver of Elio’s wistful
says, keen to stress that it suits the novelistic form
glance needed to encapsulate. “But also, there is a
better. “Sometimes I like the omniscient narrator,
sensitivity to him that is so deep.”
as in Barry Lyndon or The Age of Innocence. I tried
For Hammer, “there was no way I couldn’t do
22
become a movie.”
to think about what would happen if we had an
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omniscient narrator, and I discarded that, too.” Instead, he turned to indie musician Sufjan Stevens to ask for a song that could channel Elio's thoughts for the audience. Stevens surprised him by contributing two, “Mystery of Love” and “Visions of Gideon”, which chart the extremes of Elio’s experiences with Oliver. And he remixed a third of his own, “Futile Devices”, for the film, with lyrics that couldn’t have been more apt if they’d also been written for Call Me by Your Name. “And I would say I love you/but saying it out loud is hard/so I won’t say it at all,” he sings. “But you are the life I needed all along.” “We envelop the movie in the voice of Sufjan Stevens,” Guadagnino says. “I asked him to create songs that were, in a way, some sort of narrative for the film.” Guadagino doesn't fall in love easy, but “it’s not hard to imagine being in love with
why we connect Call Me by Your Name to our own
Sufjan, because he’s such a pure artist with such
comings-of-age. And we empathize all too easily
an incredible imagination, and an emotional world
with the crazy degrees to which his emotional per-
that is so deep.”
spective shunts him. We’ve all known the pleasure
A film script is not a play, the director insists. There is no need to burden it with unnecessary dia-
and the pain of an Oliver. “There is a universally human quality to Elio,”
logue. Film, after all, has the close-up, and the cam-
Chalamet says. “There’s a tension on the surface
era’s eye can draw the perspective of its audience.
of his existence, and he’s in a transitionary period in
If theater shouts to the gods, film whispers to the
his life, becoming a man and dealing with feelings of
front row. So there’s a quiet to Call Me by Your Name;
sexual impulse for the first time. It felt rare to read a
it says just what it needs to and no more. “I want
story about a young person who’s this complex. It’s
to empower the moment of uncertainty,” he says.
no surface representation of what young people are.
“There’s a Tim Burton movie, Batman Returns, which,
And as an actor, you seize that kind of opportunity.”
for being a movie about comic book hero, has that
There’s also a life to Elio’s relationship with
same kind of attitude; it makes that movie a master-
Oliver in the film that relies on these two leads
piece. And you have the greatest of all, Mr. Spielberg,
bringing every tool in their arsenal. It depended on
who from his height of communicating with every
their ability to find one another as friends, not just
person in the world still devotes himself to a very, very
colleagues, before cameras rolled. Guadagnino got
precise behavioral presentation of people.”
them out to the location weeks before shooting. He
As Chalamet navigated bringing the audience
adopted hometown, in a house he had once fallen
cinematography of Sayombhu Mukdeeprom, who
for and wanted to buy. “But I couldn’t afford it. I
paints the frame like a gilded memory of times
sublimated by putting it into the movie. Now I have
past—the book became his bible. “It was a tremen-
that house forever in me.” When the actors arrived they found “para-
freedom you want to give yourself when you act,
dise”, Hammer says. “I was sucked into this idyllic,
and the ability to jump off a cliff, but the greatest
perfect world there. It seems as close to perfect
responsibility in making this movie felt primarily to
as anywhere I’ve been. It’s just that much more
the people that had been fans of the book. And
relaxed and laid back. Waking up in the morning and
André Aciman even more so, because this was his
squeezing apricot juice to drink. It was about slow-
child. But I found myself going to the book in scenes
ing down and enjoying all of those little things.”
that were harder to play, and moments that didn’t make as much sense to me.” Hammer had less help from Aciman’s text than
Uniting the two actors in advance was essential to making them feel comfortable. “It was a genuine proximity our souls felt to one another in those early
his co-star. “The perspective of the book is almost
weeks,” Chalamet recalls. “The friendship sprouted
entirely Elio’s interlocution,” he says. “His feelings
very easily, very naturally, very organically. It was
towards Oliver are very subjective and capricious.
really the random luck of the universe.”
It’s the confusion of his infatuation. So for me, going
Of course actors say this kind of thing to jour-
off the book, I had to filter everything through that
nalists all the time. And they’re actors—it’s their job
understanding.”
to make it sound convincing. But as they reunite for
“It was almost like he was reading the enemy’s manifesto,” Chalamet jokes. Elio, after all, is us. He’s
—ARMIE HAMMER
had finally settled on making the film in Crema, his
into Elio’s inner world—aided by the sumptuous
dous gift,” Chalamet explains. “There’s this certain
“THERE WAS NO WAY I COULDN’T DO THIS MOVIE. I READ THE SCRIPT, AND THEN IMMEDIATELY WENT AND READ THE BOOK, AND CAME TO THE CONCLUSION THAT THESE WERE TWO OF THE MOST BEAUTIFUL AND AMAZING PIECES OF SOURCE MATERIAL I’D EVER SEEN FOR SOMETHING."
the film’s promotional trail, there isn’t much effort or artifice between them. “Actually I was video DEADLINE.COM
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FATHER TIME
Michael Stuhlbarg plays Elio’s father in Call Me by Your Name. His advice-giving speech in the film’s final act is a showstopper. By Joe Utichi
MICHAEL STUHLBARG IS FINELY CAST in Call Me by Your Name. The quiet, unshowy determination that Stuhlbarg has brought to all of his roles, in the likes of A Serious Man, Blue Jasmine and Miss Sloane, seems to marry expertly with the world of André Aciman’s novel. Elio’s father is a presence in the story, but as Elio’s perspective remains obsessed with Oliver, we don’t get to know the man too well. Until, that is, he sits an emotionally wrecked Elio down to comfort his son on the journey he’s just taken. “Right now you may not want to feel anything … but feel something you did,” he says. “To feel nothing so as not to feel anything—what a waste!” What led to this role? I received a phone call from my agent saying that Luca was interested in the possibility of working on this together, and so I read it and I loved everything about it. I loved the idea of working with Luca because I had seen his film, I Am Love, which really knocked me out. The idea of working on a piece that James Ivory had written was a thrill, and something that rarely comes along. Did you go to the book? I did, but I didn’t start reading the book until I had already jumped on board. I didn’t know it was a novel, but I found out rather quickly that there was a great cult following to the novel as well. So, I read it and it kind of became a bible for me, as
Michael Stuhlbarg's professor father is Elio's rock, who helps his son
much as the script is during the shooting of the film.
navigate the treacherous waters of obsession.
I think a lot of what was captured had to do with Luca’s take on the film in
Yes. I had been warned by my agent there was a really beautiful speech towards
general, which was he wanted us to think upon these events that we were going
the end of the story, and so when it came along I was very taken with it. I loved the
to be dramatizing as one of those idyllic summers that one could have had in
sentiment of most, if not all of the things that he got to say. The sadness that is
their youth if they were fortunate enough. I think there was a lightness that he
referenced to the kind of life that perhaps he lived himself, or perhaps he envied his
wanted us to bring to things, and lots of laughter. I found him encouraging lots of
son, that his son had this kind of event in his life that he loved so deeply and pro-
fun throughout the entire thing; whereas, it could have in other hands been quite
foundly. I loved what he had to say, primarily about how, as we get older, we often, as
a leaden practise or come off in a different way. And, I think that spirit is captured
adults, tend to wear ourselves out somewhat with each new relationship that we get
beautifully in a lot of places in the film. That gave me a great jumping off point in
ourselves into. Offering up to his son the idea that he shouldn’t push away what he’s
terms of a father watching his son go through these kinds of things. Keeping his
feeling because we can often close ourselves off to the world, that was beautiful.
thoughts perhaps to himself but also getting to witness them at the same time.
Was it helpful to you to imagine what this man’s life might have been like in
You’re also in The Shape of Water this year, in a very different role. And The
the past?
Post, too. Has it felt like a banner year for you?
Absolutely. I think dialogue like that is a gift to an actor, or at least certainly a jumping
I feel very fortunate that these films came into my life in the ways that they did.
off place where you can allow it to work on your imagination as to what this person
I love that the work is different. That all are in separate, unique worlds. If I have
may have gone through. The choices he made. The roads he didn’t follow. Yeah, I
a choice in the matter I love to shake things up and make things as different as
think the text does most of the work for you in those instances, which is wonderful
possible, and to lose myself in whichever the world happens to be. Whether it be
when it vibrates with a past.
Northern Italy in 1983, or the kind of make-believe magical realism that Guillermo created in Baltimore, 1962 or the world of The Post too. I love challenges, and all
Not a lot is said by him until that speech, but we get a sense—mostly in looks—
of these were filled with wonderful artists to work with. It’s been a terrific group
that he is aware of what his son’s going through. And he keeps his family joyful.
of projects in the last year.
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T I M OT H É E CH A LA M ET: M I CH A E L BUC K N ER
fall in love with him right away?
M I C HA E L ST UH L BA RG : M I C HA E L BUCK N E R
Your character, Elio’s father, is the parent we all dream of having. Did you
Love blossoms as Elio and
can listen to a great symphony of Mahler and have
days sometimes,” says Chalamet. “All that volume
Oliver get close. "It feels like
a bad experience, because the conductor and the
over a short course of time can actually be less
I got a new best friend and
orchestra are not aligned to make that symphony
conducive to telling a story accurately. Luca’s films
brother out of the process,"
resonate in the ears of the listener. Or, you can be
are as sensual as they are intellectually stimulating.
says Hammer of Chalamet.
lifted to the heavens.”
And he has a confidence as a director that meant I
Filmmakers, he insists, are “charlatans. We’re imposters. So we all have to put on the best dress and make people pretend we’re not imposters. It’s
“This is just a movie that deals with pure, almost
alchemy. We make smoke and mirrors out of ele-
archetypal human emotions,” continues Hammer.
Skyping with Timmy last night,” Hammer says. “It
ments of identification for an audience to a story and
“There are no special effects and no big set pieces.
feels like I got a new best friend and brother out
characters.” He treats every movie as his first. “And
To get to experience that, and live in that, and
of the process. There was a huge amount of trust
what I learn about the experience as I grow up is not
breathe that for two months, was one of the great-
we put in one another to do this. It required a level
to panic if something is half good if not fully good.
est gifts I’ve been given in my entire life.”
of vulnerability in both of us that would only have
Cinema has the power to use only the very best pos-
been possible if we felt safe around each other,
sible of takes. Sometimes you find a glance and you
Festival in January. Guadagnino, meanwhile, has
and we did.”
know that’ll be the take and you won’t need the rest.”
been finishing Suspiria, his reimagining of Dario
The film made its debut at the Sundance Film
“Any actor who plays a role should give him
His laidback approach worked on his cast,
or herself the benefit of a window of time before
who talk of their time in Crema like they, too, had
shooting two movies in close proximity, because
shooting in which they can soak into the character,”
a whirlwind summer romance. “The process of
he’d lingered for six years between his previous
Guadagnino says. “For these specific characters,
shooting this film felt as languorous and relaxed
two works, I Am Love and A Bigger Splash. Still, he
and this story, one part was the environment, and
and laissez-faire as the movie itself,” Hammer says.
admits, “The downside of these kinds of ambitions
they had to become part of that environment.”
“Effort does not necessarily equal talent, right?
for film is that you don't have time for yourself.”
Guadagnino is no dictator. He describes film-
I’ve been on movies where it feels like everyone is
Argento’s legendary horror. He liked the idea of
Call Me by Your Name belongs to audiences now.
making as a “symbiotic work”. “It’s all about the
working really hard, but it doesn’t necessarily make
“It’s like having a child, and then the child grows up,”
point of view. How do you coordinate the efforts
anything better.”
Guadangino says. “This movie is a child out in the
T I M OT H É E CH A LA M ET: M I CH A E L BUC K N ER
of all the people to create this point of view? You
M I C HA E L ST UH L BA RG : M I C HA E L BUCK N E R
never felt any anxiety or pressure that we were running out of time.”
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“On American sets you work 12-, 14-, 16-hour
world now.” ★
“IT FELT RARE TO READ A STORY ABOUT A YOUNG PERSON WHO’S THIS COMPLEX. IT’S NO SURFACE REPRESENTATION OF WHAT YOUNG PEOPLE ARE. AND AS AN ACTOR, YOU SEIZE THAT KIND OF OPPORTUNITY.”—TIMOTHÉE CHALAMET
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jORDAN PEELE The Get Out creator on the genre hit that sparked much conversation—and Oscar buzz. By Mike Fleming Jr.
WHILE HE BUILT AN EMMY-WINNING career
made a film that was universally relatable for
are all taken care of, the audience will drop any
in socially aware comedy, those who knew
audiences. “The idea that I was able to sell this
preconceived notions, and just feel the emotions
Jordan Peele weren’t surprised when he mar-
movie to everybody, regardless of skin color and
of the protagonist and see through the eyes of
ried a polemical theme to the horror genre for his
where you’re coming from,” he says, “the fact that
that protagonist.”
feature directorial debut Get Out. Peele grew up
white and black people could walk into this movie,
a self-described movie nerd, with an encyclope-
seeing things from different perspectives, but by
original scripted ending–the one that showed
dic knowledge of horror films, and after Get Out
the middle of the movie, everybody is reacting like
the protagonist being carted off to jail. It can be
became one of the most wildly profitable films in
they’re Chris? It was more of a unifying experi-
viewed on the DVD, but the filmmaker decided
memory, with a $253 million global gross on a $4.5
ence.” But Peele hadn’t always been confident the
it was wrong to invoke his own politics at the
million budget, the film’s clever play on race rela-
outcome would be thus. “I had these nightmares
expense of the satisfying ending he felt the genre
tions in this country makes Peele the rare genre
of fights [in the theater], and creating more ani-
audience would want. “Thank goodness,” he says,
filmmaker figuring in awards season. Even though
mosity than unity,” he says. “It just speaks to the
“but it was pretty clear by the time that the cut
the last horror movie to clean up at the Oscars
power of story. If the performance and the script
with that original ending was made, that we were
There was also Peele’s decision to scrap his
was The Silence of the Lambs, Get Out is emerging as a viable contender. “Several things caught me off-guard, as to how well they worked,” Peele says. “One was the amount of conversation it started. I always hear of people leaving Get Out, and then having a two-hour long conversation with the person they saw it with.” Another aspect that pleased Peele is the tone of the project. He set out to protect it, he says, from the fact that, “On paper, what you have is something inherently unpleasant–the victimization of black people, the villains being white people. You basically have an uncomfortable racial conversation, and a reality we deal with in a very uncomfortable way, a horrific reality.” Peele
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“SEVERAL THINGS CAUGHT ME OFF-GUARD, AS TO HOW WELL THEY WORKED. ONE WAS THE AMOUNT OF CONVERSATION IT STARTED. I ALWAYS HEAR OF PEOPLE LEAVING GET OUT, AND THEN HAVING A TWOHOUR LONG CONVERSATION.” JORDAN PEELE PHOTOGRAPHED BY
Michael Buckner
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Above, left to right: Peele on set with Betty Gabriel; Allison Williams and Daniel Kaluuya in character. in a different America than I wrote the movie in.
conversation. People are emboldened to be more
resisted the usual genre-hit move to sequelize, say-
It was pretty clear the new America was ready to
outwardly racist, but really, there has been a system
ing he hasn’t figured out a part two that would feel
engage in this conversation. Instead of being in
of racial oppression forever. That we’re engaged in a
as fresh as Get Out.
denial about racism, we have been addressing it
conversation about it, I’m optimistic it's pushing us
more. With the Black Lives Matter movement and
in a right direction.”
attention to police brutality, it was clear people had
“I haven’t decided anything yet and I am allowing the creative part to bubble up, and not force it,” he
While focused on his next film–another
says. “I know if a follow-up is meant to happen, it will.
a certain fatigue from those horrors, and needed a
politically aware thriller through the company he
I’m open to figuring out what it is. But I also don’t
hero, an escape, as well as a way to confront it. It
launched with a big Universal deal–due to start
want to let down the original and its fans. I simply
feels like things have gotten worse with the racial
production early next year, Peele at this point has
would not do something like that for the cash.”
APPROACHING CHRISTOPHER NOLAN’S epic Dunkirk, chronicling the evacuation of 400,000 soldiers trapped on a French beach during a pivotal World War II moment, the director’s regular below-the-line collaborators were met with a clear brief. “The challenge was making everything as real and visceral as possible without making it sound ‘Hollywood,’” sound editor Richard King explains of Nolan’s approach. “We tried to break every rule that we could think of, in order to make the experience fresh for people.” Avoiding other war films altogether in preparation, King, editor Lee Smith and production designer Nathan Crowley instead immersed themselves in research to recreate the physical experience of the war from land, sea and air. Recreating Dunkirk’s breakwater ‘the mole’ on location in France—a “white pier that went to nowhere” extending “a kilometer out to sea,” on which thousands of soldiers stood, packed in like sardines before enemy fire—Crowley braved extreme weather. He also acquired period planes and boats from around the world (some of which participated in the real-life evacuation), so
Christopher Nolan’s epic relied on a talented team of below-the-line wizards. By Matt Grobar 28
S E AN BA KE R : M I CH A E L BUCK N E R
DUNkIRK
the crew could get “as much in-camera as possible,” which lends a sense of reality to the image, and is Nolan’s preferred way of working. In post-production, King conjured sound to further elevate Nolan’s epic images—recording enormous waves, shifting sands, spitfires and bombers—while Smith merged the three components of the story, all taking place on separate timelines, ratcheting up the tension all the way through for a true “theatrical experience.” “You’re always trying to get an emotional resonance to what you’re looking at in the story. There’s nothing worse than mindless action,” Smith says. “And people will always go with you if it looks real.”
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IN THE GOLDEN AGE OF HOLLYWOOD, hot new stars could be found hanging out at the drug store. In the internet era, things are different—for the leading lady in his indie hit The
How director Sean Baker found his fresh‑faced lead. By Damon Wise
S E AN BA KE R : M I CH A E L BUCK N E R
THE FLORIDA PRO JECT
Florida Project, director Sean Baker turned to “a little app called Instagram”, where he discovered self-styled ‘weed entrepreneur’ Bria Vinaite. “I don’t know how I came across Bria’s page,” Baker recalls, “but I did, and she made me laugh. She wasn’t just the normal Instagram girl taking selfies. She had something to say. She made jokes, and she had the proper vibe I was looking for.” Vinaite, 24, admits that the offer to play the lead in Baker’s film, as a single mother struggling to stay above the poverty line, came out of nowhere. “I thought someone was playing like a weird joke on me,” she laughs, “because I looked at his Instagram page and I was like, ‘It doesn’t even say Sean Baker on it.’” Luckily, Baker had no qualms about casting Vinaite against the vastly more experienced Willem Dafoe, who plays the manager of a motel where Vinaite’s character, Halley, rents a room. “At first we were going after Hollywood actresses, but then we thought, ‘Why not? Let’s give Bria a chance.’ I like to mix it up in my casting. I like to mix seasoned actors with first-timers.”
Clockwise from top: Sean Baker; Bria Vinaite with Brooklynn Prince; Aiden Malik, Prince and Valeria Cotto. DEADLINE.COM
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Bryan Cranston: "I go into projects and I don't know if I'm going to fail or succeed."
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BRYAN CRANSTON B RYA N C R A N S T O N P H O T O G R A P H E D B Y
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The Breaking Bad star discusses his powerful new collaboration with Richard Linklater in Last Flag Flying. By Joe Utichi You play Sal Nealon in Last Flag Flying, a story
I’m going too far.” Dalton Trumbo was like that.
about a trio of Vietnam vets who reunite after
Lyndon Johnson too. I gave Rick the same speech.
years apart. What appealed to you about it?
Sometimes you overshoot, and on a character like
For me it was about knowing what we know now,
this you can overshoot. That’s why he can’t be the
and accepting what we don’t know, and what we
lead in the story. Doc is the main focus, and he’s
might never know. It explores the power of friend-
the foundation. If Steve hadn’t done the incred-
ship, and the responsibility we have to our history.
ible job he did with Doc, my character would just
What we shared in Vietnam as characters 30 years
fly off the handle. He’s anchored, so he allows my
ago, do we have a responsibility to bring that up?
character and Fish’s character to just kind of circle
Also, what was interesting, too, from my perspec-
around him.
tive—and my character’s perspective—is the value of truth. Is it so virtuous if it doesn’t help someone? It came as a direct offer, and when they sent
Richard Linklater seems to share your passion for changing things up from project
me the script they said, “They want you to play
to project.
Sal, they’re thinking of Steve Carell for Doc and
We gravitate towards the same thing. I want to try
Laurence Fishburne for the Reverend.” It was like,
something new. When, after seven years, Malcolm
“Let’s just say yes right now.” And, of course, the
in the Middle was coming to an end, I had two
agent’s going, “Now, hang on, let’s negotiate first…”
straight offers to do fun, goofy dads on TV shows. I turned them both down. I want to test myself and
What drew you to Sal?
try new things. Quite honestly, I go into projects
I love the challenge of doing something differ-
and I don’t know if I’m going to fail or succeed.
ent, and if something scares me a little—if I’m a
There’s something very exciting in that.
little nervous about it—there’s a titillation to that.
What I love about what we do is that it’s so
Richard Linklater and Darryl Ponicsan did such
inclusive to our audience. I truly believe that. It’s a
great work on this, where it so clearly defines not
community and an environment we need in these
just the characters but their points of view, and
trying times. We need a unifier as opposed to
what each is bringing to the story. It’s so clear that
something that’s divisive.
you go, “I get it. I know this guy.” I knew Sal. He’s a consumer; he wants it all. He doesn’t say no to
You’re about to star in an adaptation of
anything. “Want to go on a trip?” “Yeah.” “Want to
Network on the London stage. What’s exciting
have sex with her?” “Yeah.”
you about that?
He’s the person that when you say, “Oh, Sal’s
I was shooting a movie in London and I’d heard
coming,” everyone goes, “Ugh.” You have an exhale,
that Ivo van Hove was interested in doing Net-
because he sucks the energy out of the room
work. I got very excited immediately. I thought,
and he takes up so much room with his personal-
Ooh, Howard Beale. “I’m mad as hell, and I’m not
ity that it’s exhausting. But he’s a hell of a friend.
going to take it anymore.” But I thought the timing
He’s the first one who’ll back you up. You’ve got a
wouldn’t work out. Luckily, the National Theatre
problem? Sal’s there.
pushed the play to a different time and it became possible. What excited me was the power of the
Is there a danger in going too big with him?
script itself, and the message of it in this day and
A lot of characters I do are big, and I usually tell
age. Working with Ivo, and being able to be in a
the director, “I’ve really got to go to the extreme to
play of his that you know is going to be challenging
find this guy. Please pull me back if you sense that
and compelling and thoughtful.
David Vintiner
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OCTAVIA SpENCER OCTAVI A S P EN C ER : WA L LPAP E R BAC KG ROU N D COU RT ESY FAR ROW & BAL L
The Oscar winner was a longtime fan of Guillermo del Toro before she signed up for The Shape of Water. By Anthony D’Alessandro
Tell us how The Shape of Water came to you.
be their mouthpiece.
My agent set up a meeting with Guillermo, a
Guillermo isn’t the type of director to yell out
breakfast/lunch-type thing, and what was sup-
direction in a room full of people. He pulls you
posed to be 30 minutes turned into a three-hour
aside, which is the mark of a great director. In real
conversation. We never spoke about the project
life we don’t divulge ourselves. So not know-
during that time, then during the last five minutes
ing what Sally’s motivations are with Elisa, what
he told me he wrote this part that he’d love for me
Guillermo is instructing her to do, evokes a sincere
to read. Of course, sight-unseen—I’ve been a fan
emotional response from me.
of his for decades—I was in. That’s a defining moment toward the end for How does Guillermo prep his actors? Does he
your character when you tell your husband
have you watch movies he’s inspired by?
that you won’t remain silent anymore.
He preps us each differently. There were lots of
Zelda is in a relationship with a guy who doesn’t
rehearsals over three weeks. He rehearses us as
appreciate her. He isn’t romantic and she’s
a group and then individually. I was never given
basically coddling him. Zelda would have gone
any movies to watch. He wanted me to come
to the death and never told where the creature
from a place of empowerment. If Sally Hawkins’
was. Being around Elisa, she’s madly in love and
Elisa and the creature are the voiceless, in
Zelda wouldn’t betray her in that way. He couldn’t
responding for the disenfranchised, Zelda would
understand, he didn’t have the capacity.
O C TAV I A S P E N C E R P H O T O G R A P H E D B Y
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Chris Chapman
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What was the most challenging part of
actor and was fortunate to support myself. TV is
the shoot?
your bread and butter. It used to be recurring roles
Learning my lines was challenging as I’m dys-
went to character actors, but now they’re offered
lexic, and I’m auditorily inclined. I learn my cues
to name actors. If I’m offered arcs like that I feel
by knowing other people’s lines. It was great
horrible for taking them. I seek stuff out on TV if I
working with Michael Shannon because I could
want to do a couple of episodes, but I don’t want
play off his cues to me. If I was going off more of
to take those roles that have been bread and but-
a monologue, it was difficult to learn.
ter roles for journeyman actors. The Help was a turning point after the
How did your career change after the
Oscars. Nobody knew what to expect before
Oscars?
the movie opened, so after filming there was a
People knew my name and started offering me
lull. I booked Snowpiercer before there was any
roles. Prior to that though, I made a living as an
awards conversation. Then I was getting offered every maid role. None of them were as significant or interesting or had integrity to the story.
Guillermo del Toro at work on set with Hawkins and Spencer.
Now along comes a cleaning lady role that is different from all others. This is the third time I played a woman from this era: Minny Jackson (The Help), Dorothy Vaughan (Hidden Figures),
DARREN ARONOFSKY
The one-of-a-kind director on why his latest, mother!, is just like kindergarten. By Pete Hammond
and Zelda. She feels contemporary of that time. She’s a second class citizen without civil rights,
DARREN ARONOFSKY’S mother!
but at the same time, it’s part of her personal
is that rare movie that comes along
narrative. What’s occurring on screen felt con-
every once in a while, a completely
temporary and organic and I wanted to play the
polarizing event that you have to
part for those reasons.
experience, even if you ultimately think it is a train wreck. Count me among the
In the wake of #OscarsSoWhite,
admirers of a movie that is 69% Fresh
what’s your take on the Academy’s
on Rotten Tomatoes but drew an ‘F’
strides toward diversity?
on CinemaScore. The director of such
Here’s the thing with diversity: It doesn’t just
films as The Wrestler, Black Swan, The
mean brown skin; it means African American,
Fountain, Requiem for a Dream, Noah and
Latino, Asian, overweight actors, actors with
others doesn’t care about either group,
disabilities. It means actors of different age
but wears the disparate opinions they
groups. We have to turn to other people who
tout as a badge of honor.
are underrepresented. People might say again
No less than Martin Scorsese
this year that it’s #OscarsSoWhite. While I
wrote a guest column praising mother!,
understand the outrage, I think it’s misplaced.
while condemning services like Rotten
As an actor, it’s hard to get an Oscar nomina-
Tomatoes and CinemaScore, which
tion. Awards are the end of the line. Just say,
help put movies in a neat box, noting
“Movies so white.” Just start with how mov-
that this kind of judgmentalism has
ies are being funded. If you’re lucky to be part
made opening weekend grosses into
of a group that’s award-worthy at the end of
a “bloodthirsty spectator sport” that
the year, you’re lucky. The reward is having
sets a tone hostile toward serious
the movie made, and if you get to the point of
filmmakers. “After I had a chance to see
awards, that’s great.
mother!, I was even more disturbed by this rush to judgement … People seemed
34
to be out for blood, simply because the film couldn’t be easily defined or interpreted, or reduced to a two-word description … Only a true, passionate filmmaker could have made this picture, which I’m still experiencing weeks after I saw it,” he wrote. mother! is a movie you can’t get out of your head. It stars Jennifer Lawrence in the title role as a married woman who soon finds her home and personal space invaded in ways that might only be described as surreal.
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DA N G I LROY: CH RI S C H A P M AN
“IN REAL LIFE WE DON’T DIVULGE OURSELVES. SO NOT KNOWING WHAT SALLY’S MOTIVATIONS ARE WITH ELISA, WHAT GUILLERMO IS INSTRUCTING HER TO DO, EVOKES A SINCERE EMOTIONAL RESPONSE FROM ME."
differently to the film. “It is so intense that when you walk out of it, it takes a minute to process. It is the hardest movie in the world to do Q&As for afterwards because people don’t want to make eye contact with you,” he laughs, adding that it is because it is a reflection, as well as cautionary tale. “We see ourselves in the film. We’re the people. As much as we’re identifying with [Jennifer Lawrence’s character], we’re seeing reflections of everything that’s sort of going on with ourselves. So it’s a hard thing to sort of then go say, ‘I’m definitely going to recommend this to a friend.’” Aronofsky says he doesn’t make pure
DAN GILROY
Aronofsky does, however, seem to understand why people might react
How the director crafted a new kind of role for Denzel Washington in Roman J. Israel, Esq. By Mike Fleming Jr.
genre films, although critics want to label this and films like Black Swan horror movies of a
FOR HIS SECOND FILM as a director, Roman J. Israel, Esq. helmer Dan Gilroy has written
certain sort. “The thing I loved about mother!,
another drama that hinges on a star coming out of his comfort zone. Just as Jake Gyllenhaal
for me, was that an audience can think it’s
inhabited a sociopath in Nightcrawler, so Denzel Washington is ’70s activist throwback Israel–
one type of movie, and then it becomes
an attorney whose strong morals are threatened when he takes charge following his
another type of movie, and then it becomes
law partner’s heart attack.
another type of movie, and for me I can’t
his films of being hard-nosed,” Gilroy says. “He really wanted to play
have always followed that.”
a different part, a part that allowed those sides to come out.”
Certainly, viewers and critics have been
DA N G I LROY: CH RI S C H A P M AN
“Denzel is a deeply empathetic guy in person, but he has this shell in
think of a more exciting thing in cinema, and I
Gilroy wrote the role for Washington, but didn’t know he
debating just exactly what mother! is about.
would do it. “I’ve always been interested in what happened
Is it a biblical parable, an environmental
to the mass movement protests of the ’60s and what
warning, a chamber drama, a horror film in
would that guy be like now,” the director explains. “I
the vein of Rosemary’s Baby? To listen to
spent nine months writing the script, alone, on spec,
Aronofsky, it is a little bit of it all, even if he
and had [Denzel] said no, I would have put it away
doesn't agree with my comparison to Edward
and not done the film.”
Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (at
Washington saw a lot of himself in a lawyer ill-
least for the first half, before it all literally
fitted to the materialistic billable hours-obsessed
goes to hell). “I was really playing out the
legal profession. The actor stays hidden until
allegory with these real characters, and I
he has a movie to promote, always taking to
was saying first man, first woman come
heart Sidney Poitier’s advice that if they see
into this Eden, and they show disregard,
you all week, they won’t pay to see you on the
and everyone shows a certain type of
weekend.
assumption that they’re welcome, which is
Says Gilroy: “Denzel told me from the
the assumption that we as humans feel,” he
beginning, ‘I understand working in the back
explains about his inspiration. “We’re told
room, because that’s what I do. I don’t get out or
we have dominion over nature, and often we
put any emphasis on my personal appearance. I
don’t think about Genesis 2:15, where we’re
eat junk food, I’m out of shape.’ His transformation
supposed to actually respect and tend and
into the character was organic and took a year, down
care for the garden as well. And that’s where
to the music he listened to and the suits he wore when
the problems start. The two big lessons in
Roman leaves the back room and is so out of step that his
kindergarten—share and clean up your mess—
clothes and everything else are anachronistic.”
are the two things we just never learned.” There you have it. Figuring out the meaning of Darren Aronofsky’s mother! is as
Denzel Washington in the title role
simple as a kindergarten lesson.
of Roman J. Israel, Esq. DEADLINE.COM
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NOAH BAUMBACH
The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected) writer/director on his deeply personal penchant for New York tales. By Matt Grobar
What inspired The Meyerowitz Stories?
What informed your choice to shoot this
One thing that I’d been thinking about for a
project on Super 16mm film?
while was what it was like, in my experience, to
I had shot The Squid and the Whale on Super 16
be in a hospital. There were certain aspects of
and I’d had a good experience on that. On this
that which I felt I hadn’t quite seen in a movie
one, what I really wanted to do was bring a kind
before—this place where the personal and the
of earthiness out in the world. I think sometimes
institutional intersect. That dovetailed with
it’s the way I see New York. I’d done three mov-
an idea that I broached with Ben Stiller first,
ies before it and shot digitally, and in returning
that maybe he and Adam [Sandler] could play
to film, I wanted to go deep into Brooklyn, and
brothers. As happens a lot of times with these
have the filminess of it be in evidence.
things, it’s seemingly disparate things that find As a filmmaker who works in the indepen-
themselves clicking into a script.
dent space and aims for theatrical distriMeyerowitz is your latest of many New
bution, how do you feel about distributing
York stories. What compels your ongoing
films through Netflix?
exploration of this place?
To be clear, I made the movie independently,
It’s where I was born and where I grew up—I
as I’ve made all my movies. Netflix acquired it
think part of it is this familiarity and emotional
from my producer in post, and we all end up
connection I have to the city. I like working on
there anyway—all movies are going to end up
streets that I walked on as a kid that I have
on these servers, and that’s great.
memories associated with, and bringing that into the stories I’m telling.
It’s great that people can find things that they’ve missed, or they wouldn’t find otherwise. I think it’s a great thing. But I think it’s a singular
The film strikes a unique tone, mining
experience, seeing a movie in the theater. I
humor and tragedy simultaneously. How
think audiences should be given the opportu-
did you strike such a balance?
nity to see things for the first time that way.
It’s sort of this thing where humor and pathos
It’s important for me to stress [about] mov-
live side by side. I guess it’s how I view the
ies like mine, and what would be considered
Top to bottom: Dustin Hoffman and Emma
world, in some way. It’s both deliberate and not.
more intimate stories than a movie like Dunkirk,
Thompson as husband and wife Harold and
Often, I think I’m writing a comedy, but I also
that it’s equally important to see movies like
Maureen; Ben Stiller, Adam Sandler and
know that it generally turns out sadder or more
mine in the theater, because you’re more emo-
Elizabeth Marvel as the Meyerowitz siblings.
serious than I intended to. But I like it that way.
tional in that way. It’s just a different thing.
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NOAH BAUMBACH PHOTOGRAPHED BY
David Vintiner
11/10/17 3:53 PM
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SUBURBICON
George Clooney & Julianne Moore discuss a prejudiced American tradition. By Joe Utichi 38
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JULIANNE MOORE & GEORGE CLOONEY PHOTOGRAPHED BY
Chris Chapman
11/10/17 3:53 PM
M OO R E & C LOON E Y: WAL L PA P E R BAC KG ROU N D COU RT ESY FAR ROW & BAL L; C H AI R COU RTESY KL AUS BY N IE N KAM P E R /TO RON TO
AWARDS SEASON PREVI EW
ANDY SERkIS
The War for the Planet of the Apes actor says performance capture is far from a “drug-assisted sport”. By Joe Utichi ANDY SERKIS SAYS HE’S “hanging by
day-out on set for the entire duration of
a thread” in the run-up to the release of
the shoot, living and breathing every single
his directorial debut Breathe. Starring
moment, making acting choices that you
Claire Foy and Andrew Garfield in the
would do in the conventional sense. The
true story of a couple fighting polio, it’s
performance is not augmented or changed
a departure for Serkis, who’s won much
by a committee of animators. It is honored,
critical acclaim acting in motion capture
and the fidelity is sought to translate that
roles in such gems as Star Wars: Episode
performance. In the past, it’s almost felt
VII - The Force Awakens and War for the
like performance capture is kind of like
Matt Damon and Julianne Moore as
Planet of the Apes. Serkis will follow
drug-assisted sport. Now that’s just not
fraught couple Gardner and Margaret
Breathe by helming next year’s Jungle
true. The performance is the performance.”
Lodge (and her twin sister Rose).
Book–a performance capture extravaganza in which he plays the role of Baloo.
M OO R E & C LOON E Y: WAL L PA P E R BAC KG ROU N D COU RT ESY FAR ROW & BAL L; C H AI R COU RTESY KL AUS BY N IE N KAM P E R /TO RON TO
But this Oscar season, Serkis’s reprised
Serkis also found that playing Caesar allowed a unique take on the human condition. “If that character was a
role as the ape Caesar in War really has
human being,” he says, “it would be an
voters buzzing. Having done much to
extraordinary journey. But as an ape and
ORIGINALLY PENNED BY THE COEN brothers
legitimize performance capture as Gollum
having that kind of filter, it’s that times 10
in 1986, the George Clooney-directed Suburbicon
in The Lord of the Rings when the form was
really; because we’re able to look at the
explores 1950s suburbia, when, as Clooney says,
new, Serkis has now spent six years with
human condition through the eyes of apes,
“we actually thought everything was simple, and
Caesar over three Planet of the Apes films.
it just elevates it into something else.”
if you were a straight, white man, it was. But other
Performance capture follows every
Now, letting go of Caesar with this final
than that, it probably wasn’t. Just beneath that
tiny subtle movement made by an actor,
movie in the series has been a wrench.
veneer there was a lot of other things going on.”
which are then expertly applied to digital
“I really feel the loss of not being able to
The film depicts the dark spiraling of a family
imagery–a process Serkis describes as
play that character anymore,” Serkis says.
(Matt Damon and Julianne Moore) in the wake of a
“enabling the actor to offer the role on
“It’s been thrilling at every turn, and a
home invasion, amid prejudice against their African
set in exactly the same way if you were
real challenge; a massive challenge with
American neighbors. For Clooney, the “scapegoat-
wearing a costume and makeup”.
each movie. There are key points along
ing of Mexicans and Muslims” on the 2016 election
He’s keen to point out that this
the way where he shifts and they’ve all
campaign trail is in line with the film’s topic, since
description should not detract from
it’s about “looking in the wrong direction and
the excellence of the technical work
been incredibly fascinating to chart.”
blaming the wrong people for your woes, which
itself, but for him, he says, “There is no
capture will feature more in future
seems to be an American tradition.”
difference from an acting point of view.
filmmaking. “It’s absolutely about
For Moore, playing both Damon’s wife Rose
The approach is no different to a live-
performance,” he says. “It’s opening
and her twin sister Margaret, the film is intriguing.
action role. It’s not standing in a voice
up great avenues for next generation
“It’s kind of wonderful how it leads you in with the
booth for two hours every six months,
storytelling. So, I think the acting
sense of being clearly very entertained by these
it’s living with that character day-in and
community really needs to embrace it.”
Serkis is hopeful that performance
slightly comedic, everyday people,” she says. “As it proceeds, the tone changes and becomes darker and darker and darker until it’s really, really, really truly noir. It’s bad people doing bad things. It leaves you in a very thoughtful place.” Clooney says that telling this story is more important than ever in the current political climate. “I suppose you don’t have to be a soothsayer to realize that we’re constantly going to have to deal with these issues,” he says. “It’s too bad that we’re going to constantly have these same battles. I didn’t think we would, growing up in the ’60s in the South. I felt like after segregation was gone, we were going to move forward, and we didn’t, really. We stalled. We’ve got a lot of work to do.” DEADLINE.COM
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Director Andrey Zvyagintsev on continuing to make films his way, with or without state support. By Nancy Tartaglione
LOVELESS
ANDREY ZVYAGINTSEV’S CANNES Jury Prize
militarization of society, and the feeling that they
that this idea should be realized. In a way, my last
winner Loveless is the Foreign Language entry
are surrounded by enemies.
three films are still metaphors; at least for me,
from Russia this year, and one of the frontrun-
they are attempts to comprehend the universal
ners to take a nomination. Sony Pictures Classics
How do you prefer to work with actors?
reality. Universal, but not social—or God forbid,
acquired all North and Latin American rights to
Zvyagintsev: When an actor comes to you and
political—environment.
Loveless in Cannes. This is the director’s third time
starts working with the script, the image of his
repping his country after 2003’s The Return and
character that you had in your mind gets sub-
What is it like working in Russia right now?
2014’s Oscar nominee Leviathan. The film revolves
stituted with an image of that particular actor.
Zvyagintsev: If you are talking about art and not
around Zhenya and Boris, who are going through
And this is the right way to go. An actor has to be
the political environment, then there is no specific
a vicious divorce marked by resentment, frustra-
absolutely truthful—this is the only thing required
way that you can feel any changes in the past few
tion and recriminations. Already embarking on new
of him, apart from talent of course. It’s very easy
years. Russia is a huge country with many people
lives, each with a new partner, they are impatient
to understand: you need to absolutely believe in
and many stories, and we tell them as we see
to start again. But when their 12-year-old son Alyo-
what you see.
them. The one thing that changed with Loveless is
sha disappears after witnessing one of their fights, the pair must come together. Zvyagintsev’s films have been seen as criticiz-
Some actors come to casting and ask me,
we didn’t have any state financing. Our experience
“Didn’t you see my previous roles?” We do not
with Leviathan was too troublesome. But that was
work with actors like this. Their previous roles do
our decision—we never even applied for any state
ing the Russian government and yet he continues
not matter; I need the actual work with an actor in
grants this time. I just continue to do what I always
to find support from the local Oscar committee.
this particular character that has been written in
do. Continue to move forward without looking
His producer Alexander Rodnyansky explains
our script. What matters is flexibility, believability
back, without any kind of self-censorship.
why, but not before Zvyagintsev talks about the
and efficiency of an actor. Only once during my
film and the current climate of making movies in
career as a director was there an instance where
It was surprising that Leviathan was sub-
Russia.
we knew the actor even when we were writing the
mitted as Russia's Oscar entry given its
script: We knew for sure that Roman Madyanov
criticism of the state—and now you're back
Why did you need to tell the story of
would be the mayor in Leviathan. We still did audi-
with Loveless. How do you explain that?
Loveless now?
tions for this role, though.
Alexander Rodnyansky: The Russian Oscar
Andrey Zvyagintsev: Loveless is a story of
Committee, which chooses the national entry
a painful divorce of an ordinary middle-class
What ties all of your work together?
into the Oscar race, consists of film profession-
Moscow family. Their ordinariness was partly a
Zvyagintsev: What I know is that I am honest
als who, even though they might have widely
reason to choose them and not people from low
about my films, and my films are honest about
different political beliefs, still recognize Andrey
social strata, who more often treat their children
reality. The stories themselves dictate the way
for what he is: One of the best film directors
horribly. And suddenly among these seemingly
that they should be told. In The Return, we had
in contemporary Russia. With Leviathan, the
prosperous people who know life, we see that
the task of blurring the borders of space and time,
process was more challenging, but I have man-
their child became a burden for both of them.
creating a special ethereal place where the events
aged to secure in advance the support of a large
These events take place against a very specific
of the film take place. It didn’t matter where or
group of filmmakers, and that helped us trick
historical background. The film begins in October
when that story took place because the story
the system. There was an opposition campaign
of 2012, when people were full of hope and were
itself was eternal. It was completely different
against Loveless this year. People who objected
waiting for changes in the political climate, when
with Elena, where the eternal story is made very
to the film on political grounds tried to divide
they thought that the state would listen to them.
contemporary with a specific time and place;
the voters, but with the Cannes prize—with
But 2015 is the climax of their disappointment:
the story was facing the viewer. And the same
great US and UK press and fantastic screenings
The feeling that there is no hope for positive
was true for Leviathan. This was not a question of
at Toronto and Telluride—Loveless was by far the
changes, the atmosphere of aggression and the
strategy. You get the idea and it defines the way
strongest candidate.
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Aleksey Rozin (top), and Maryana Spivak with Matvey Novikov (bottom), are a family shattered by divorce in Loveless.
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AWARDS SEASON PREVI EW
LADY BIRD
Greta Gerwig strikes out on her own with her very personal directorial breakthrough. By Matt Grobar AFTER A POWERFUL DEBUT on the festival circuit, at Telluride and Toronto, Greta Gerwig's first solo directorial outing, Lady Bird, has become one of the year's likeliest contenders. Best known as an actress in films like Frances Ha, Gerwig walked a 10-year road to her solo debut, working up the courage and learning from each of the high profile directors she’s worked with, including Joe Swanberg, with whom she co-directed Nights and Weekends, and Noah Baumbach, with whom she co-wrote Mistress America and Frances Ha. “I wanted to direct for a long time, but I felt like I needed a lot of experience on film sets,” Gerwig says, reflecting on her long love affair with the notion of “making things”. “I didn’t go to film school, so the way I got that was through acting and co-writing and producing.” Loosely based on Gerwig’s experiences coming of age in Sacramento, the film follows the strong-minded Christine ‘Lady Bird’ McPherson (Saoirse Ronan), and her rocky relationship with her mother (Laurie Metcalf) during her senior year at high school, while she moves in and out of relationships, and hatches plans for her future. “It really came out of a desire of wanting to make project about home—what the meaning of home is, and place,” she says. “I felt like the right way to tell the story of a place was through a person who was about to leave it.” And Gerwig is thrilled her movie landed at A24, which is generating indie hit after indie hit. “I really admire what they’re doing,” she says, of their straightforward approach to championing quality cinema. “I actually can’t imagine
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Saoirse Ronan (top) and Laurie Metcalf are a perfectly-
the American landscape of independent cinema right now
pitched mother-daughter duo in Lady Bird.
without them.” G R E TA G E RW I G P H O T O G RA P H E D BY
Chris Chapman
11/10/17 3:54 PM
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AWARDS SEASON PREVI EW
Gary Oldman became Churchill with the help of remarkable make-up by Kazuhiro Tsuji.
DARkEST HOUR
Director Joe Wright on casting Churchill. By Damon Wise PRIME MINISTER OF THE UK for the most crucial period of its 20th Century history, Winston Churchill remains a formidable figure to many Britons. Indeed, for London-born director Joe Wright, his primary image of the politician is a brooding statue that glowers outside the Houses of Parliament in Westminster. It was this monolithic structure that inspired Wright to begin work on Darkest Hour, a study of Churchill’s first six months in office in 1941, as World War II reached a crisis point. Recalls Wright, “I guess I was interested in bringing the icon down from the plinth, and meeting
transformed into the wartime premier. Oldman threw himself into his research, reading book after book and visiting key places in Churchill’s life, notably the War Rooms in London’s Whitehall. “When you really start to look,” Oldman notes, “There’s more footage on him than one imagines. You only see the same images over and over again, but there’s tons of footage on him, so that was a great help.” “The more I watched and read, I realized that my idea of Churchill was through various actors’ interpretations of him, and I started seeing him in a different light. I saw this dynamo. He was 65 at the time, but he was leaping around like a 30-year-old, alive,” the actor continues. “He was just plugged in. In rehearsal, that’s what we focused on. And of course, there was humor as well in there. He had a real sparkle in the eye."
44
J OE W RI G H T: M I CH AE L B UC K NE R
To play the part, Wright knew that he needed “a transformative actor, shape shifter,” and so he reached out to a most unexpected ally—fellow Londoner Gary Oldman, who, with help from prosthetic artist Kazuhiro Tsuji,
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JAK E GY LLE N HA A L: CH RI S C HA P M A N
him face to face—trying to understand the man behind the myth, and what he might be able to teach us.”
Songwriters Benj Pasek & Justin Paul on the resurgence of the original musical. By Matt Grobar NOTCHING THEIR FIRST OSCAR win last year with La La Land, songwriters Benj Pasek and Justin Paul have been in the awards conversation ever since, winning a Tony for their Broadway hit, Dear Evan Hansen. While Damien Chazelle’s original musical put Pasek and Paul on the map, the pair had been working on a separate project a number of years prior, in one of their first attempts at cracking Hollywood—Michael Gracey’s The Greatest Showman. The story of ringmaster P.T. Barnum (Hugh Jackman), founder of the famed Barnum & Bailey circus, The Greatest Showman, shares with La La Land a certain appreciation of showbiz glamour, though the comparisons end there. “They’re different kinds of movies, for different audiences,” Paul explains. “[Gracey] wanted the music to be contemporary.
STRONGER Jake Gyllenhaal’s triumph of humor and joy over tragedy. By Joe Utichi
We thought that was really bizarre and really intriguing, and that was one of the reasons that we really perked up.” The challenge was to create contemporary-sounding music that could jibe with a period
both his legs in the 2013 Boston marathon
Wide-ranging in style—incorporating
bombing, but ultimately reclaimed his life
numbers—the music of The Greatest Showman benefits from a healthy balance of Hollywood A-listers and
through positivity and the love of his family. “I think we made a very small, intimate story about a very big subject,” Gyllenhaal says, “which is really ultimately love, and how
Broadway belters. “Someone like Hugh
love gets you through those extraordinarily
is a bona fide Broadway star and a
narrow passages.” Gyllenhaal says the story
Hollywood star. Then, we were really
fortunate to have folks like Keala Settle, who we’ve known for a really long time in the Broadway community,” Paul JAK E GY LLE N HA A L: CH RI S C HA P M A N
story.” Gyllenhaal plays Jeff Bauman, who lost
something that was just for the radio.” gospel and spectacular ensemble
J OE W RI G H T: M I CH AE L B UC K NE R
Jake Gyllenhaal says of his latest film Stronger. “The humor and the sense of joy in the
THE GREATEST SHOWMAN
production, without “trying to create
“I JUST FELL IN LOVE WITH THE HUMOR,”
for Stronger, which is based on Bauman’s memoir, “had me from the minute I read it.” For Bauman, seeing it reenacted was “really tough. To see these wonderful great
notes. “We felt incredibly lucky that we
people, actors and actresses, and how tal-
had so many folks who are perceived
ented they are, it made me cry. It was just so
to be film stars who actually have tremendous talents in the musical theater world.” “A lot of people might not know Hugh being the showman that he is;
hard for me.” Bauman’s family were similarly affected, he says. “I didn’t think it was going to make me cry. I was like, 'Yeah, it’s probably just going to be funny and not that serious,' and
Gyllenhaal (pictured with
they only know the Wolverine movies,”
it really got me. It got me to a point to where I
co-star Tatiana Maslany)
the songwriter continues. “Getting to
couldn’t even do stuff for a week. It was really,
is Boston marathon
blend all those talents together was a
really hard but it turned out well and I’m really
bombing survivor Jeff
real joy for us.”
proud to say it’s my story.”
Bauman in Stronger. DEADLINE.COM
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46
Animal Crackers
Boss Baby
Birdboy: The Forgotten Children
The Breadwinner
Coco
Despicable Me 3
The Lego Batman Movie
Mary and the Witch's Flower
DEADLINE.COM
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BEST ANIMATED FEATURE
ss Baby
winner
le Me 3
Drawing down the top contenders for Oscar’s animated race. By Matt Grobar
WITH ONLY A HANDFUL of Oscar-nominated directors in the running for Best Animated
a magical box of animal crackers. As ever, international distributor GKIDS
Feature this year, the race feels wide open,
poses strong competition with a number of early
with no obvious frontrunners and the potential
frontrunners, including Mary and the Witch’s
for any number of up-and-coming helmers to
Flower, a Japanese anime directed by Oscar
break through.
nominee and former Studio Ghibli stalwart
Winning for Zootopia last year, Walt Disney
Hiromasa Yonebayashi (When Marnie was There)
Studios should be in the mix with Lee Unkrich’s
about a young English girl who stumbles upon a
anticipated Pixar entry Coco—a Day of the Dead-
world of witches.
themed musical feature centering on a young boy’s journey through the Land of the Dead. Another potential leader this season is 20th
Other contenders from the studio include Birdboy: The Forgotten Children, a nightmarish look at lonely animals living in a post-apocalyptic
Century Fox's Boss Baby—which sees Alec
society, and The Breadwinner, executive
Baldwin playing an egomaniacal toddler, while
produced by Angelina Jolie. A tale in the tradition
there's also their December release Ferdinand,
of Disney’s Mulan, the latter film follows a young
a tale of a fighting bull (voiced by wrestler
woman growing up in Kabul who poses as a
John Cena) who does not want to fight at all.
young man to provide for her family after her
Loving Vincent tells the Van Gogh story in
Based on a popular children’s book, previously
father is thrown in prison.
the artist's own painterly style.
adapted into an Oscar-winning 1938 Disney short, can Ferdinand take Fox as far? Warner Bros. came out this year with The
Coming off a strong year with Sing and The Secret Life of Pets, Illumination Entertainment returns with the third installment of the
Lego Batman Movie, a spin-off of the Oscar-
Despicable Me franchise, and more original music
nominated Lego Movie. The film drew strong
by Pharrell Williams, as supervillain Gru (Steve
critical praise as Will Arnett reprised the role
Carrell) meets his long-lost twin brother Dru,
of the Dark Knight, facing off against Zach
teaming up in a criminal heist for the ages.
Galifianakis’ Joker to hilarious effect in Chris McKay’s first theatrically released feature. Gorgeously adapted from a graphic novel that
With so many strong features to consider, perhaps the most striking and unique contender this year is Good Deed Entertainment’s Loving
co-director Scott Christian Sava wrote for his
Vincent, which tells the story of troubled Dutch
children, Entertainment One’s Animal Crackers
painter Vincent Van Gogh—in the painter’s own
features John Krasinski, Emily Blunt, Danny
style. Hundreds of professional oil painters were
DeVito and Ian McKellen, and tells the story of a
commissioned to create a film where each frame
family whose lives are thrown into chaos upon
is—quite literally—a painting, amounting to the
the inheritance of a rundown circus, and with it,
first fully-painted animated feature in history. DEADLINE.COM
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Flower
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AWARDS SEASON PREVI EW
PHANTOM THREAD
Mystery surrounds Paul Thomas Anderson’s latest feature. By Damon Wise IN TRUE PAUL THOMAS ANDERSON FASHION—pun intended—very little is known about the director’s eighth feature film, except that it could possibly be said to form a loose trilogy with 2007’s There Will Be Blood and 2012’s The Master. Again drawing on a specific historical context, and inspired by a real-life figure—this time, pioneering clothing designer Cristóbal Balenciaga, who led a "very monanistic life, completely consumed with his work"—Phantom Thread marks a step outside the indie auteur’s usual stomping ground: America, or more specifically, California. If reports are to be believed, the film will also be the last for its leading man—after a career spanning over 30 years, winning him three Oscars and five nominations in total, Daniel Day-Lewis quietly announced his retirement from acting in June of this year. Set in London and the chilly north of England during the mid-1950s, the film stars Day-Lewis as dressmaker Reynolds Woodcock, who, together with his sister Cyril (Lesley Manville), is a superstar of society fashion. A natural perfectionist, Woodcock finds his control on life slipping when he meets a waitress, Alma (Vicky Krieps), who becomes his model, muse and lover. Clearly, all awards eyes will be on the magnetic Day-Lewis, although co-star Krieps is an unknown quantity, and technical nods may possibly await costume designer Mark Bridges as well as PTA’s longtime musical partner Jonny Greenwood, fresh from scoring Lynne Ramsay’s Cannes hit, You Were Never Really Here.
Vicky Krieps plays Alma, lover and muse to Daniel Day-Lewis's star dressmaker Reynolds Woodcock, in Phantom Thread.
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Franco has ambitiously directed and starred in movies based on tomes by William Faulkner and Cormac McCarthy. But then four years ago, the 127 Hours Oscar nominee found Greg Sestero and Tom Bissell’s New York Times bestseller, The Disaster Artist: My Life Inside The Room, the Greatest Bad Movie Ever Made, and became bewitched by The Room filmmaker Tommy Wiseau, an idiosyncratic character who seemed ripped out of the pages of American literature. No, Wiseau wasn’t a tragic hero like F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Gatsby, rather more “the idiot savant” per Franco, “with a
blaborem estrumquis
little of [Ignatius J. Reilly from] Confederacy of Dunces.” He
Tae doluptat. Fugit
also describes Wiseau as, “like Norma Desmond in Sunset
ratissimet et deles etur?
Boulevard–someone who thinks that the movies will save them, who is very out of touch with who he is, and whose onscreen and off-screen life meld into each other.” A down-on-his-luck actor who took his directing and acting career into his own hands by making the $6M feature The Room at the start of the millennium, Wiseau wasn’t renowned for his creative talent. What was intended to be a romantic drama about a rich banker, Johnny (Wiseau), whose fiancé Lisa seduces his best friend Mark (Sestero), was riotously received as a comedy for its over-the-top acting and outrageous melodrama. Smitten with the material, and having taken in a screening of The Room in Toronto, Franco approached his The Interview colleagues Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg to produce under their Point Grey Pictures. Franco tapped (500) Days of Summer scribes Scott Neustadter and Michael H. Weber with funding from Good Universe, then took the project over to New Line, a studio whose executives were rabid fans of The Room. In between, Franco had to get Sestero and Wiseau’s life rights, with the contingency that the latter appear in the movie. Wiseau insisted that Johnny Depp star, though Franco yearned to play the part himself. But the ink wasn’t dry on the contract yet, and he didn’t want to say this and have the deal go sideways. Independently, Sestero made the wise casting suggestion of Franco to Wiseau. “I think he was okay with me because I played James Dean early in my career,” says Franco. “Tommy thinks he’s James Dean. And Tommy, if you’ve seen him, looks nothing like James Dean. I mean, he looks like a vampire that dyes his hair with a magic marker.” Then in an artistic stroke that only Marlon Brando would relish, Franco tipped the scales of his own absurdist theater: Franco would literally direct his actors in character as Wiseau throughout the production of The Disaster Artist. But there was a method to his madness, especially after sitting in the chair daily for two hours of facial prosthetics. “I’m directing a movie and acting in it, and playing a character who is directing a movie and acting in it. At no other time in my career am I going to do this again. Being Tommy off-camera made everything flow easier in hindsight. It helped create an atmosphere on set. That being said, I didn’t go so far overboard as Tommy: I didn’t give bad direction, I gave what I hoped was good direction.”
JAMES FRANCO PHOTOGRAPHED BY
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Chris Chapman
jAMES FRANCO
EVER THE DIE-HARD FAN OF CLASSIC NOVELS, James
The 127 Hours star explains his behind-the-madness method in The Disaster Artist. By Anthony D’Alessandro
DEADLINE.COM
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FOR TAYLOR SHERIDAN, his feature directorial debut Wind River completes a theme running through two previous films he wrote–Sicario and Hell or High Water. That is, the meaning of the Western frontier and outlaw culture. More specifically, the director says, Wind River centers around, “The landscape of fracking and endemic rape and drug abuse on the reservation. It’s about fatherhood and protection; it’s about the rule of law giving way to the laws of nature.” In the wake of its success at Sundance, then Cannes, where Sheridan won best director in the Un Certain Regard category, and the specialty box office, where it grossed more than $33 million, the film has come to mean so much more in a Trump era that’s spurred an inflammatory rhetoric toward women. Wind River follows a game tracker (Jeremy Renner) and FBI agent (Elizabeth Olsen) who are on the hunt for the murderer-rapist of a Native American teenage girl on Wyoming’s Wind River Indian Reservation. Given how the film shines a light on rape and the exploitation of Native American women on reservations, it was crucial for Wind River’s creators, stars and producers to separate themselves from the Weinstein Co., the pic’s distributor, in the wake of the Harvey Weinstein sexual harassment scandal. They not only excised the distributor’s name from Wind River’s streaming and home entertainment releases, but from the film’s awards campaign as well. The campaign will be fully funded by Wind River’s principal financier Acacia Entertainment– an entity that is backed by the Tunica-Biloxi tribes. The Sheridan-scripted Hell or High Water received four noms at the 2017 Oscars, including Screenplay and Best Picture, while Sicario earned three Oscar nods the year prior. This time around, Best Picture, Sheridan’s direction, Renner and Olsen’s acting, as well as DP Ben Richardson’s vibrant exteriors Jeremy Renner and Elizabeth Olsen hunt the rapist-
could be potential categories for
murderer of a young Wyoming woman in Wind River.
Wind River.
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M A RT I N M C D ON AG H: CH RI S C H A P M AN
The director’s debut Wind River looks at the exploitation of women in an era of Trump (and Weinstein). By Anthony D’Alessandro
THREE BILLBOARDS OUTSIDE EBBING, MISSOURI
TAYLOR SHERIDAN
TAY LO R S H ER I DAN : M I CH A E L BUCK N E R
AWARDS SEASON PREVI EW
Frances McDormand on set in the fictional town of Ebbing, Missouri, shot in North Carolina.
Production designer Inbal Weinberg on casting the role of the fictional town at the heart of Martin McDonagh’s latest. By Matt Grobar COMING ONTO MARTIN MCDONAGH’S Three
photographic references, noting how
Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, production
the quintessential, small American
designer Inbal Weinberg was used to employing
town of yesteryear has all but
the “magic of filmmaking,” whereby shots can be
disappeared.
M A RT I N M C D ON AG H: CH RI S C H A P M AN
TAY LO R S H ER I DAN : M I CH A E L BUCK N E R
cheated to suggest a certain geography that does
of their heritage, they have photos of how the town used to be in the 1930s on the wall. Past the perimeter of the small town
“A lot of what we
is where a Walmart would
not truly exist. Having worked with the very best
would imagine as
contemporary writer/directors, like Cary Fukunaga
small town America
in the main street and
and Derek Cianfrance, Weinberg was challenged by
has vanished, or has
right around it, it is a
writer/director Martin McDonagh to return to a more
deteriorated to a point
functioning small town.”
literal-minded point of view, where spaces exist in
where Main Street
the real world just as they are seen on screen.
is not as active,” she
“It was pretty specific that the places actually
explains. “We were really
had to exist in that way, and we’re not ever going
going for a quintessential
to cheat,” Weinberg says. “We kept it very true in
Main Street that is not
terms of space, which is how you get scenes like
rundown and is not gentrified,
Mildred at the swing set, and you literally see the
and probably a bit dated. We didn’t
billboards in the background. We had scouted for
want it to be extremely contemporary,
that exact relationship. That was something that
but we also didn’t want to be too nostalgic.”
was interesting in the process.” On Billboards, the designer was tasked with
After a long scouting process across the United States, the team settled on the small town of Sylva,
be, or all the chains, but
“I think that’s what attracted us to Sylva, and once we were there and we liked the main street, it has some very prominent elements, like a big courthouse at the end of the street on a hill,” the designer continues. “You don’t see any modern buildings for miles. That kind of stuff was important to us.” When the right town was found to build a world
conceptualizing the look of a fictional, all-American
North Carolina as their home base. “What was
upon, Weinberg turned to the signage, and the little
town, conjured up in the mind of an Irish filmmaker,
interesting about it is that it’s like a functioning,
details that really dazzle. “We had to take over Main
one that was a central character in the story, with
small town. It had a healthy Main Street with mom-
Street to deal with the two main sets,” she says, “but
the appearance of being “stuck in some decade.”
and-pop businesses. Some have been there for
also, we did change a lot of storefronts to be even
In her preparations, Weinberg pulled ample
generations,” Weinberg recalls. “They’re very proud
more timeless.” ★ DEADLINE.COM
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THE CONTENDERS PRESENTED BY DEADLINE NOVEMBER 4 / LOS ANGELES Top line, from left: Jessica Chastain; Dee Rees; Michael Stuhlbarg, Timothée Chalamet, Luca Guadagnino, Armie Hammer; Jamie Bell; Michael Barker & Ethan Hawke. This block, clockwise from right: Taika Waititi; Jennifer Lawrence; Joe Wright & Gary Oldman; Loung Ung & Angelina Jolie; Andrew Garfield; James Franco; Denzel Washington; Kathryn Bigelow, Mike Fleming Jr., John Boyega, Will Poulter, Algee Smith and Questlove.
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