Showing posts with label JULIANNE MOORE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label JULIANNE MOORE. Show all posts

Monday, February 23, 2015

Academy Award Winners


PICTURE: Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
DIRECTOR: Alejandro González Iñárritu, Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
ACTOR: Eddie Redmayne, The Theory of Everything
ACTRESS: Julianne Moore, Still Alice
SUPPORTING ACTOR: J.K. Simmons, Whiplash
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Patricia Arquette, Boyhood
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: Birdman- Alexander Dinelaris, Nicholás Giacobone, 
Alejandro González Iñárritu, Armando Bo
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: The Imitation Game- Graham Moore
ANIMATED FEATURE: Big Hero 6
DOCUMENTARY: Citizenfour
FOREIGN FILM: Ida
CINEMATOGRAPHY: Birdman- Emmanuel Lubezki
COSTUME DESIGN: The Grand Budapest Hotel- Milena Canonera
PRODUCTION DESIGN: The Grand Budapest Hotel- Adam Stockhausen, Anna Pinnock
FILM EDITING: Whiplash- Tom Cross
MAKE-UP AND HAIRSTYLING: The Grand Budapest Hotel
SCORE: The Grand Budapest Hotel- Alexandre Desplat
ORIGINAL SONG: "Glory," Selma
ANIMATED SHORT FILM: Feast
DOCUMENTARY SHORT FILM: Crisis Hotline: Veterans Press 1
LIVE ACTION SHORT FILM: The Phone Call
SOUND MIXING: Whiplash
SOUND EDITING: American Sniper
VISUAL EFFECTS: Interstellar

Saturday, February 21, 2015

Independent Spirit Award Winners

FEATURE: Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
DIRECTOR: Richard Linklater, Boyhood
MALE LEAD: Michael Keaton, Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
FEMALE LEAD: Julianne Moore, Still Alice
SUPPORTING MALE: J.K. Simmons, Whiplash
SUPPORTING FEMALE: Patricia Arquette, Boyhood 
SCREENPLAY: Nightcrawler- Dan Gilroy
DOCUMENTARY: Citizenfour
INTERNATIONAL FILM: Ida
CINEMATOGRAPHY: Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)- Emmanuel Lubezki
FILM EDITING: Whiplash- Tom Cross
FIRST FEATURE: Nightcrawler
FIRST SCREENPLAY: Dear White People- Justin Simien
JOHN CASSAVETTES AWARD: Land Ho!
PIAGET PRODUCERS AWARD: Chris Ohlson
SOMEONE TO WATCH AWARD: Rania Attieh & Daniel Garcia, H!
TRUER THAN FICTION AWARD: Dan Krauss, The Kill Team
SPECIAL DISTINCTION AWARD: Foxcatcher
ROBERT ALTMAN AWARD: Inherent Vice

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

SAG Winners

ENSEMBLE CAST: Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
ACTOR: Eddie Redmayne, The Theory of Everything
ACTRESS: Julianne Moore, Still Alice
SUPPORTING ACTOR: J.K. Simmons, Whiplash
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Patricia Arquette, Boyhood
STUNT ENSEMBLE: Unbroken
LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT: Debbie Reynolds

Sunday, January 18, 2015

London Film Critics Circle

FILM OF THE YEAR: Boyhood
DIRECTOR OF THE YEAR: Richard Linklater, Boyhood
ACTOR OF THE YEAR: Michael Keaton, Birdman
ACTRESS OF THE YEAR: Julianne Moore, Still Alice
SUPPORTING ACTOR OF THE YEAR: J.K. Simmons, Whiplash
SUPPORTING ACTRESS OF THE YEAR: Patricia Arquette, Boyhood  
SCREENWRITER OF THE YEAR: Wes Anderson, The Grand Budapest Hotel
DOCUMENTARY OF THE YEAR: Citizenfour
FOREIGN FILM OF THE YEAR: Leviathan
TECHNICAL ACHIEVEMENT OF THE YEAR: Mica Levi, Under the Skin (score)

BRITISH FILM OF THE YEAR: Under the Skin 
BRITISH ACTOR OF THE YEAR: Timothy Spall, Mr. Turner 
BRITISH ACTRESS OF THE YEAR: Rosamund Pike, Gone Girl and What We Did on Our Holiday 
YOUNG BRITISH PERFORMER OF THE YEAR: Alex Lawther, The Imitation Game
BREAKTHROUGH BRITISH FILMMAKER: Yann Demange, ' 71

DILYS POWELL AWARD: Miranda Richardson

Monday, January 12, 2015

Alliance of Women Film Journalists

FILM: Boyhood
DIRECTOR: Richard Linklater, Boyhood
ACTOR: Michael Keaton, Birdman
ACTRESS: Julianne Moore, Still Alice
SUPPORTING ACTOR: J.K. Simmons, Whiplash
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Tilda Swinton, Snowpiercer 
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: Birdman- Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, Nicholas Giacobone, Alexander Dinelaris, Armando Bo
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: Gone Girl- Gillian Flynn
ENSEMBLE CAST: (tie) Birdman; The Grand Budapest Hotel
ANIMATED FILM: The LEGO Movie
DOCUMENTARY: Citizenfour
NON-ENGLISH LANGUAGE FILM: Ida
CINEMATOGRAPHY: Birdman- Emmanuel Lubezki
EDITING: Birdman- Douglas Crise, Stephen Mirrione
SCORE: Birdman- Antonio Sanchez

WOMAN DIRECTOR: Ava DuVernay, Selma
WOMAN SCREENWRITER: Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl
FEMALE ACTION STAR: Emily Blunt, Edge of Tomorrow
BREAKTHROUGH PERFORMANCE: Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Belle
FEMALE ICON OF THE YEAR: Ava DuVernay and Laura Poitras

BEST DEPICTION OF NUDITY, SEXUALITY OR SEDUCTION: Under the Skin- Scarlett Johansson
ACTRESS DEFYING AGE AND AGEISM: Tilda Swinton
MOST EGREGIOUS AGE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE LEADING MAN THE LOVE INTEREST: Magic in the Moonlight- Colin Firth (born 1960) and Emma Stone (born 1988)
ACTRESS MOST IN NEED OF A NEW AGENT: Cameron Diaz, Sex Tape
MOVIE YOU WANTED TO LOVE, BUT JUST COULDN'T: Inherent Vice

Houston Film Critics Society

PICTURE: Boyhood
DIRECTOR: Richard Linklater, Boyhood
ACTOR: Jake Gyllenhaal, Nightcrawler
ACTRESS: Julianne Moore, Still Alice
SUPPORTING ACTOR: J.K. Simmons, Whiplash
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Patricia Arquette, Boyhood
SCREENPLAY: Boyhood- Richard Linklater
ANIMATED FILM: The LEGO Movie
DOCUMENTARY: Citizenfour
FOREIGN FILM: Force Majeure
CINEMATOGRAPHY: Birdman- Emmanuel Lubezki
SCORE: The Grand Budapest Hotel- Alexandre Desplate
SONG: "Everything is Awesome," The LEGO Movie
POSTER DESIGN: The Grand Budapest Hotel- Annie Atkins
WORST PICTURE: The Identical
TEXAS INDEPENDENT FILM AWARD: Boyhood
HUMANITARIAN AWARD: Joe Hall, Ghetto Film School
LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD: Larry McMurtry
OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENT: Rick Ferguson and the Houston Film Commission
TECHNICAL ACHIEVEMENT: Boyhood

Sunday, January 11, 2015

Golden Globe Winners

FILM
PICTURE (Drama): Boyhood
PICTURE (Musical or Comedy): The Grand Budapest Hotel
DIRECTOR: Richard Linklater, Boyhood
ACTOR (Drama): Eddie Redmayne, The Theory of Everything
ACTRESS (Drama): Julianne Moore, Still Alice
ACTOR (Musical or Comedy): Michael Keaton, Birdman
ACTRESS (Musical or Comedy): Amy Adams, Big Eyes
SUPPORTING ACTOR: J.K. Simmons, Whiplash
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Patricia Arquette, Boyhood
SCREENPLAY: Birdman Alejandro González Iñárritu, Alexander Dinelaris, Nicolás Giacobone, Armando Bo
ANIMATED FILM: How to Train Your Dragon 2
FOREIGN FILM: Leviathan
SCORE: The Theory of Everything- Jóhann Jóhannson
SONG: "Glory," Selma- Common, John Legend



TELEVISION
 
DRAMA: The Affair
ACTOR (Drama): Kevin Spacey, House of Cards
ACTRESS (Drama): Ruth Wilson, The Affair
COMEDY: Transparent
ACTOR (Comedy): Jeffrey Tambor, Transparent
ACTRESS (Comedy): Gina Rodriguez, Jane the Virgin
MOVIE/LIMITED SERIES: Fargo
ACTOR (Movie/Limited Series): Billy Bob Thornton, Fargo
ACTRESS (Movie/Limited Series): Maggie Gyllenhaal, The Invisible Woman
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Matt Bomer, The Normal Heart
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Joanne Froggatt, Downton Abbey 

Monday, December 22, 2014

Women Film Critics Circle

BEST MOVIE ABOUT WOMEN: Still Alice
BEST MOVIE BY A WOMAN: Selma- directed by Ava DuVernay
BEST ACTRESS: Julianne Moore, Still Alice
BEST ACTOR: Eddie Redmayne, The Theory of Everything 
BEST YOUNG ACTRESS: Mira Grosin, We Are the Best!
BEST COMEDIC ACTRESS: Jenny Slate, Obvious Child 
BEST FOREIGN FILM BY OR ABOUT WOMEN: Two Days, One Night
BEST WOMAN STORYTELLER (Screenwriting): Rebecca Lenkiewicz, Ida
BEST FEMALE IMAGES IN MOVIES: The Hunger Games: Catching Fire
WORST FEMALE IMAGES IN MOVIES: Horrible Bosses 2
BEST MALE IMAGES IN MOVIES: Love Is Strange
WORST MALE IMAGES IN MOVIES: Dumb and Dumber To
BEST THEATRICALLY UNRELEASED MOVIE ABOUT WOMEN: Girlhood
WOMEN'S WORK (Best Ensemble): The Homesman
BEST ANIMATED FEMALE: Winnie, The Boxtrolls
BEST FAMILY FILM: Big Hero 6

SPECIAL AWARDS
COURAGE IN FILMMAKING: Citizenfour
DOCUMENTARY BY OR ABOUT A WOMAN: Citizenfour
COURAGE IN ACTING: Julianne Moore, Still Alice
INVISIBLE WOMAN AWARD: Felicity Jones, The Theory of Everything
JOSEPHINE BAKER AWARD: Anita: Speaking Truth to Power
KAREN MORLEY AWARD: Belle 
MOMMIE DEAREST WORST SCREEN MOM OF THE YEAR AWARD (tie): Charlotte Gainsbourg and Uma Thurman, Nymphomaniac
BEST SCREEN COUPLE: The Skeleton Twins
WOMAN'S RIGHT TO MALE ROLES IN MOVIES: Jessica Chastain, Interstellar
FEMALE ACTION STAR: Oprah Winfrey, Selma
ACTING AND ACTIVISM AWARD: Rosario Dawson
LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD: Orpah Winfrey  

Monday, December 15, 2014

Chicago Film Critics Association

Home court advantage for Oscar-bound documentary Life Itself about late film critic Roger Ebert
PICTURE: Boyhood
DIRECTOR: Richard Linklater, Boyhood
ACTOR: Michael Keaton, Birdman
ACTRESS: Julianne Moore, Still Alice
SUPPORTING ACTOR: J.K. Simmons, Whiplash
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Patricia Arquette, Boyhood
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: The Grand Budapest Hotel- Wes Anderson
ANIMATED FEATURE: The LEGO Movie
DOCUMENTARY: Life Itself
FOREIGN FILM: Force Majeure 
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: Gone Girl- Gillian Flynn
ART DIRECTION: The Grand Budapest Hotel- Adam Stockhausen, Anna Pinnock
CINEMATOGRAPHY: (tie) Birdman- Emmanuel Lubezki; The Grand Budapest Hotel- Robert Yeoman
EDITING: Whiplash- Tom Cross
SCORE: Under the Skin- Mica Levi
MOST PROMISING PERFORMER: Jack O'Connell, Starred Up and Unbroken
MOST PROMISING FILMMAKER: Damien Chazelle, Whiplash

Sunday, December 14, 2014

San Francisco Film Critics Circle

FILM: Boyhood
DIRECTOR: Richard Linklater, Boyhood
ACTOR: Michael Keaton, Birdman
ACTRESS: Julianne Moore, Still Alice
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Edward Norton, Birdman
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Patricia Arquette, Boyhood
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: Birdman
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: Inherent Vice
ANIMATED FEATURE: The LEGO Movie
DOCUMENTARY: Citizenfour
FOREIGN FILM: Ida 
CINEMATOGRAPHY: Ida
PRODUCTION DESIGN: The Grand Budapest Hotel
EDITING: Boyhood
SPECIAL CITATION: The One I Love

Saturday, December 13, 2014

Golden Globe Nominations

Julianne Moore mediates over her two Golden Globes nominations.
BEST PICTURE (Drama)
Boyhood
Foxcatcher
The Imitation Game
Selma
The Theory of Everything

BEST PICTURE (Musical or Comedy)
Birdman
The Grand Budapest Hotel
Into the Woods
Pride
St. Vincent 

BEST DIRECTOR
Wes Anderson, The Grand Budapest Hotel
Ava DuVernay, Selma
David Fincher, Gone Girl
Alejandro González Iñárritu, Birdman
Richard Linklater, Boyhood 

BEST ACTOR (Drama)
Steve Carell, Foxcatcher
Benedict Cumberbatch, The Imitation Game
Jake Gyllenhaal, Nightcrawler
David Oyelowo, Selma
Eddie Redmayne, The Theory of Everything 

BEST ACTRESS (Drama)
Jennifer Aniston, Cake
Felicity Jones, The Theory of Everything
Julianne Moore, Still Alice
Rosamund Pike, Gone Girl
Reese Witherspoon, Wild

BEST ACTOR (Musical or Comedy)
Ralph Fiennes, The Grand Budapest Hotel
Michael Keaton, Birdman
Bill Murray, St. Vincent
Joaquin Phoenix, Internal Vice
Christoph Waltz, Big Eyes 

BEST ACTRESS (Musical or Comedy)
Amy Adams, Big Eyes
Emily Blunt, Into the Woods
Helen Mirren, The Hundred-Foot Journey
Julianne Moore, Maps to the Stars
Quvenzhané Wallis, Annie

Saturday, May 24, 2014

Cannes Film Festival Winners

PALME D'OR: Winter Sleep- directed by Nuri Bilge Ceylan
GRAND PRIX: The Wonders- directed by Alice Rohrwacher
PRIX DU JURY: (tie) Mommy- directed by Xavier Dolan; Goodbye to Language- directed by Jean-Luc Godard
BEST DIRECTOR: Bennett Miller, Foxcatcher
BEST ACTOR: Timothy Spall, Mr. Turner
BEST ACTRESS: Julianne Moore, Maps to the Stars
BEST SCREENPLAY: Leviathan- Andrei Zvyagintsev
CAMERA D'OR: Party Girl- directed by Marie Amachoukili-Barsacq, Claire Burger & Samuel Theis

Cannes 2014 has selected its winners from a jury headed by Jane Campion.  In the end it was longtime Palme D'Or bridesmaid Ceylan that won the big prize, while the rest of the field was an eclectic assortment of newbies (Dolan), legends (Godard) and Oscar hopefuls (Miller, Spall.)  Oh, and wait...the great Julianne Moore won Best Actress for playing a has-been actress in David Croenberg's gonzo Hollywood satire Maps to the Stars!!!!!!!!!!!  As an aside, Moore, while never an Oscar winner despite four nominations and two absolute deserved wins, joins an elite club that  Juliette Binoche (also in Cannes this year with Clouds of Sils Maria), Sean Penn, Isabelle Huppert and Jack Lemmon are the only members of-- the Triple Crown winners of the festival circuit, winning Cannes, Venice and Berlin.  Moore won Venice for Far From Heaven and shared the Berlin actress prize with The Hours co-stars Meryl Streep and Nicole Kidman.
Marie Amachoukeli-Barsacq, Claire Burger and Samuel Theis
Read more at http://www.hitfix.com/in-contention/2014-cannes-film-festival-awards#XcUXuiLQvfliyGWK.99
arie Amachoukeli-Barsacq, Claire Burger and Samuel Theis
Read more at http://www.hitfix.com/in-contention/2014-cannes-film-festival-awards#XcUXuiLQvfliyGWK.99
arie Amachoukeli-Barsacq, Claire Burger and Samuel Theis
Read more at http://www.hitfix.com/in-contention/2014-cannes-film-festival-awards#XcUXuiLQvfliyGWK.99

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

"What Maisie Knew" trailer


First glimpse of What Maisy Knew, the latest from Scott McGehee and David Siegel (The Deep End), a contemporary adaptation of the Henry James novel.  Stars the great Julianne Moore in her latest of bad mother parts-- at least two of them should have won the Oscar for her in the past.

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Julianne Moore as Sarah Palin

The first image of Julianne Moore as Sarah Palin has surfaced.  It's for the HBO TV Movie Game Change, best on the bestselling book, chronicling the 2008 presidential election.  Directed by Jay Roach, who did the HBO TV Movie Recount, about the 2000 presidential election.  Joining Moore will be Ed Harris as John McCain.  As has been documented more than once here, Julianne Moore is one of the few modern screen performers that I so breathlessly admire, even while she wiles away in undeserving crap (sadly, she does that often), however no matter how this one turns out, no doubt she's a ballsy actress.  Too face a character (and by which, excuse my mild political aside: Palin cannot be a real person) of such contention, and utterly clueless sound-bytes, a mere couple of years after Tina Fey masterfully conquered nearly all of them is ballsy indeed.  But so far, looks fairly convincing.  Maybe Moore will rack up another Emmy: she previously won a Daytime Emmy (for Best Ingenue) for her duel role in As the World Turns.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Julianne Moore as Sarah Palin

It has been announced that Julianne Moore, an actress I freely and obsessively admit that I absolutely adore, and have for quite some time will tackle the role of Sarah Palin in the upcoming HBO movie Game Change, based on the bestselling book about the events of 2008 election.  It will be directed by Jay Roach, who recently did the HBO film Recount, about the 2000 election, which is reassuring because that one was actually kind of good, unlike a few of Mr. Roach's feature films.  I love the idea of Moore tackling a baity role for a network prone to quality, and idea of her potentially getting at the very least an Emmy-- really how can an actress so profoundly and otherworldly talented have so few trophies on her shelf, aside from a crap load of critics award citations and a Venice Film Festival win for Far From Heaven.  But again I worry, since the muse-like, incandescence of Moore's depth has mostly come from an original, almost primal place, not the showy art of mimicry, she's untested there.  I also worry that because Ms. Palin is such a character (one that given a certain political taste, I for one wouldn't mind a little less of), and one that was so spot-on mimed before with Tina Fey, will that dampen whatever Moore brings to the character.  I need a moment to pine at some of her best work:

Boogie Nights, Safe, Far From Heaven, The Kids Are All Right
And of the film itself-- political gossip is hard to tackle on screen.  Getting the tone right is important (the quality of Josh Brolin's performance couldn't save the tonally awkward, and damningly schizophrenia of Oliver Stone's W), and Palin is such an easy target.  Urgh, I've ranted myself into a tizzy, and feel the need to close...

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Sundance Film Festival 2010

I typically don't follow film acquisitions from festivals, but since last fall, only one major film got distribution (A Single Man by The Weinstein Company) from screening at film festivals, I think it's interesting how it seems to be the face of American independent filmmaking has changed. I post this on the very day that Miramax Films (the subsidiary of Disney), once prominently and infamously owned by the Weinsteins, officially closes up shop. It would be a mistake to say that without Miramax the last twenty-five years or so would have been a lot bleaker for independent film in the United States, as well as prominence in foreign films.

They exloded on the scene with sex, lies and videotape in 1989 as the brashed, hippest studio around. Of course this studio was owned by the Walt Disney Company which made its controversies even more warped. But the debut of Steven Soderbergh's raw and risky teeny-tiny film somehow catipulted in the zeitgeist of the pop culture and announced the bold new world of American independent film. Thanks to shrewd marketing the Weinsteins, the film was a relative success, and scored Soderbergh an Oscar nomination for original screenplay-- but it was the fact that the film had made an impact on the film industry, for bustling filmmakers and for the Weinsteins that makes the film a starting point of the buyers market that has been around various film festivals like Sundance, Cannes, Venice and Toronto for the past two decades.

Things have changed a lot since then. What Miramax started, was what every major studio did over the next two decades...form a small version of their bigger studios. 20th Century Fox has Fox Searchlight; Universal Pictures has Focus Features; Paramount Pictures has Paramount Vantage; Warner Bros. has Warner Independent Pictures; Sony Pictures has Sony Pictures Classics. The problem is that with the exception of Fox Searchlight, Sony Classics and Focus, most of others aren't very good at maintaining them the way Miramax was. Add to that an economy that sucks, and suddenly everyone's becoming more conservative about spending money on films that aren't guarnateed a big profit. This isn't to say all is gloom, but it's not as joyous and exhuberant as years before.

Last year for example, Lion Gate Films purchased Precious: Based on the Novel "Push" by Sapphire which is now on it's way to becoming an Oscar nominee (the first best picture nominee ever that won the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance, an aside), but it wasn't the selling frenzy as it might have been year ago, when for instance Little Miss Sunshine was sold to Fox Searchlight after an intense bidding war for over $10 million. Or when Focus Features paid even more for Hamlet 2. Or when Miramax back in 1999 went ape shit and spent $10 million on Happy, Texas, a movie that didn't come close to earning that green back.

This year the offerings at Sundance look very interesting, at least on paper, and it seems the buyers are there too, but not as prolifically as years past. So far, Lisa Cholodenko's The Kids Are All Alright is the biggest sale-- almost $5 million to Focus Features. The film stars Annette Bening and Julianne Moore as a lesbian couple with children, and when their children start to wonder who their father is, Mark Ruffalo shows up. Reviews so far have been very positive and the A-list actors insure that Focus will likely earn it's coin back. Other sales are the Iraq-stuck in a coffin film Buried, with Ryan Reynolds, which sold to Lions Gate for $3 million, the Hassidic Jew film Hesher with Joseph Gordon Levitt and Natalie Portman to Newmarket for $1 million, as well as the Davis Guggenheim (An Inconvienent Truth; It Might Get Loud) education documentary Waiting for Superman to Paramount Vantage.

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

A Single Man

"We're invisible," Jim (Matthew Goode) says early on to his lover George (Colin Firth) in fashion designer Tom Ford's debut feature film, A Single Man, as he edges closer to give him a smooch in their private residence. It's a powerful sentiment in an unapologetically gay, unpolitical sad love story set in a lush version of 1960s Los Angeles. The film itself never even utters the word "gay," or "homosexual," but the doomed lovers of the film make a striking pair, and the setting makes a potent case for the people that unfortunately inhabited an era in which they couldn't naturally be themselves. In many ways, there are still places like this today. But more to the point, director Ford deftly and beautifully adapts Christopher Isherwood's haunting and quiet character study with a sturdy hand in technique that rarely falters. The famed fashion designer seems more than adept at establishing period (which probably isn't too much of a surprise), and has a lot of fun with the period detail of production design and costuming, but the faultless and powerful acting of the leading players here prevent A Single Man from being mere window dressing.

The film opens with George in sleepless despair over the loss of his lover of sixteen years, Jim, who died in a tragic car accident. Unaware of how to deal with the pain of the love that still is socially shunned, the film follows George over a very long day in what may becomes (as he plans) the last day of his life. What makes the quiet and reserved George an involving and moving character is all in way Firth portrays him. Above anything else A Single Man is a tribute to his marvelous performance. Early on in the film, he's informed via phone that his late lover's memorial will be a "family only" event, and the quiet desperation on his face, embodied by a long running single tear, almost fetishized by Ford, Firth grounds the film and delivers such a persuasively emotional and tender performance.


A Single Man is not so much bogged by plot, but motivated by mood, and Ford does an expert job of making the film colorful and emphatically breathtaking visually-- it almost feels like a lost film by Almodovar at times, yet he ably steers clear of melodrama through the control of the actors, also including the great Julianne Moore, as George's old friend (and one time female fling who always loved him), a big, ballsy dramatic creature soaked in gin. Moore's brief sequence in the film could in some ways be seen as the comical portion, because of the mad gusto and brio she brings to the role, but it would be wrong, I think, to call it shallow, even if it is over-the-top. Her love for George aches her almost as much as George's love for Jim. She knows (even if she resents him for it) that it will never be returned, and serves a stand-in to all the gals and guys in similar problems-- un-returned affection from gays by the straight that yen for them isn't something seriously explored much in movies, but I think holds true for many. Moore is bold, but it never feels wrong. Other events of George's very long day include a flirtation with a student (Nicholas Hoult-- from About a Boy fame, all grown up) and mundane rituals leading up to his impending suicide.


I feel haunted by this film in a way I haven't felt in a long time, and perhaps I need a second viewing to truly absorb the artifical beauty of the film, and feel the flow. But now, on one viewing, I feel confident in thinking that A Single Man is a puzzling, but mesmerizing piece of cinema, gay or otherwise. And Colin Firth, rid of the Mr. Darcy cloak, gives his most powerful performance to date. A-

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Savage Grace: Or the Resurgence of the Amazing Julianne Moore

Late last night while battling insomnia I stumbled up the free on demand movies and found a disturbing little title from last year. It was the Savage Grace, a bracing film from early last year about the rich and entitled Baekeland family. A family who made millions in the cosmetics world, and set about destroying themselves. It's a small film, one that made barely a blip in box office (it stalled at about $400,000, but thanks to cable companies maybe can recoup slightly. The film isn't great and earth shattering, it works best a travelogue and an amazing star vehicle for the luminous Julianne Moore. She stars as Barbara Baekeland, a woman who married money and lived a life of depraved privilege. It's a great dame role, and easily the strongest performance this esteemed actress has bequeathed to salivating fans since her banner year in 2002 (where Far From Heaven and to a lesser extent The Hours haunted my humble brain.) And for that, I rejoice!

The reason the film works at all is because Moore gets to play such a tragic nut job, reminding me and the half dozen other people who viewed it how miraclous she can be in a role worthy of her singular strenghts. She's a ballsy actress, and Barbara is a jaded women with huge balls. She gets to act dirty and naughty, seemingly reveling it, while silently shading her discpicible women with just enough refined humanity to tease that a real, vulnerable is desperately hiding beneath her designer clothes. It's been a long time since the great Moore has had a character to truly sink her teeth into, and release mad gushes of crazed emotion. The wonderful thing about it, is that in Moore's hands it feels totally authentic, no matter how you view her character, which is a fairly dreadful one.

The film explores the twisted relationships between Barbara, her vacant husband Brooks (The Hours' Stephen Dilliane, always good even in bit parts like here), and her son Tony (Eddie Redmayne), and demonstrates Moore's favorite stock role as the terrible mother (think about: The Forgotten, Far From Heaven, The Hours, The Prize Winner of Defiance Ohio, World Traveler, Freedomland, even Boogie Nights, this woman has a penchant for playing some of the most deplorable mothers in screen history-- caution to any further young actors thwarted to playing Moore's children.) Savage Grace, directed by Tom Kalin, who had a big breathrough with the queer hit Swoon in the mid-90s, shows the episodic evolvement (or devolvement) of these three characters over a 20-year period, which consisting mostly (as from I can gather) moving around to every beautiful part of the world. It's a randy film (easily Moore's mostly sexually charged role since the wee days of Amber Waves) as well as a beautifully photographed one, but mostly a distrubing one-- as the boundaries between mother and son (who has his own warped, bi-curious takes on sexuality), become tighter and tighter, there's even a threesome between mother, son, and mutual boyfriend Sam (Hugh Dancy). Savage Grace as a film is a bit thin, even with it's real-life tale of a the damaged rich, but perhaps that was intentional as none of the characters are ever completely honest for a second.

The revelatory thing for me is the return of Moore, and she is positively electrifying, reminding me of what a gutsy, outsider actress she is. For she is the muse of both Todd Haynes (their union in Safe and Far From Heaven is pure movie heaven) and Paul Thomas Anderson (she was the juiciest in both Boogie Nights and Magnolia in my humble opinion.) She had the hutzpah to deliver a full on monolouge bottomless in Robert Altman's Short Cuts and make it the most awkwardly true part of a riveting film with 50 million great actors. Her brief performance in Alfonso Cuaron's Children of Men bounced to film to a scarily alive, anything will happen place. She made the most of her most successful stab at comedy in The Coen's The Big Lebowski, oh Maude. She's an actress for the ages, best at portraying conflicted women (with various views of morality) living on the fringe, which is where her most incredible performance come from.

Hollywood, in its weird packaging ways, has tried to tame her raven haired rouser to more earth bound genre work like romanctic comedy (Nine Months, Laws of Attraction) and thriller (Freedomland, Next, The Forgotten), but she can't be tamed, and shouldn't be tamed. And it's been a sad couple of years for restless Moore fans, ready for another indelible performance from one the best screen actors of all time. For instance, there's a airport scene in Savage Grace where Barbara scolds her husbands with such reckless abandon, screaming the word "cunt" to the top of her lungs, reminscient of that great go-for-broke scene in Magnolia at the drug store...she can't be tamed, the cinema would be far to boring for that.

Savage Grace B
Julianne Moore A- (welcome back)
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