FEATURE: Silver Linings Playbook
DIRECTOR: David O. Russell, Silver Linings Playbook
ACTOR: John Hawkes, The Sessions
ACTRESS: Jennifer Lawrence, Silver Linings Playbook
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Matthew McConaughey, Magic Mike
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Helen Hunt, The Sessions
JOHN CASSAVETTES AWARD (Best Film Under $500,000): Middle of Nowhere
FIRST FEATURE: Perks of Being a Wallflower
SCREENPLAY: Safety Not Guaranteed- Derek Connolly
FOREIGN FILM: Amour
DOCUMENTARY: The Invisible War
CINEMATOGRAPHY: Beasts of the Southern Wild- Ben Richardson
"Win on Saturday, lose on Sunday," the expression must remain from the Independent Spirit Awards which has had a stubborn and sometimes spotty history as the Oscar's also ran eternal bridesmaid. And while many can quibble the mere idea that Silver Linings Playbook, a film fully distributed by a mini-major motion picture studio came about to the major winner at a budget reportedly higher than the $20 million cap, there goes the dirt apart of this society....all of which has a bit of blood upon them. Whatever the summation, not a bad line-up.
Showing posts with label MAGIC MIKE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MAGIC MIKE. Show all posts
Sunday, February 24, 2013
Thursday, July 5, 2012
Magic Mike
Steven Soderbergh, the raw and experimental auteur, who helped spark the late 1980s\early 1990s American independent film boom, has always been a serious-minded filmmaker, whose provocations sometimes get overlooked by the his mastery with actors and penchant for 70s-era visual verve. Even at his most seemingly crowd pleasing, he finds ways to undercut with either a transgressive stance (Erin Brockovich) or off beat stylization (the Ocean's films.) Point in case, he's never exactly been a light filmmaker. Counter that with Channing Tatum, a young, Teen Beat-hearthrob whose made a nice little niche career for himself making young ladies swoon puppy love sappy far like Dear John and The Vow. In Magic Mike, a partial semi-taken from life story based on Tatum's early days as a male exotic dancer, there's a clear and opposing disconnect between auteur and leading actor, and in a strange sort of scenarios, it may appear that Magic Mike, an over-stylized piece romp of abs and camp, needed more of Tatum's puppy dog flair than Soderbergh's over-reaching intensity.
Tatum, an actor of uber-ubiquitiy this year and champion in his own right for his surprisingly nimble dumb-dumb act in this spring's 21 Jump Street, does his own story a certain degree of justice. He strips, and dances, and gyrates with panache, selling himself in role and spirit with every off-kilter line delivery or half naked kick step. There's an instant likeability, if not quite nearly enough creditability, to his take on Mike, the headliner at a sleazy Tampa male strip joint. He's also a construction worker, womanizer and aspiring furniture maker, but it's when his on stage that Tatum, the actor showcases a never-before-seen sense of showmanship, and nicely modulated command for an admittedly nondescript character and slight movie star ease at execution, even with a treacly, uneven, and at times terribly awkward script, written by Reid Carolin. Mike takes on a project, a young, nearly waif-like subject named Adam (Alex Pettyfer), and takes him under his wing and into the circus of the male exotic world. The story starts out as a nearly social piece of young day-laborers and quickly turns into the male equivalent of Showgirls, while maintaining a riff on All About Eve, all with Soderbergh's favored 70s style yellow filters. The unfortunate thing is there's more over-bloating to come. Soderbergh can't seem to settle on a light romp, and infuses unnecessary darkness, while also piling on a second rate romantic story to the mix.
A shame, and bummer for those who turn to Magic Mike for a rarefied chance to see unapologetic male beefcake on the big screen. Or those looking for a raucous small piece of cheese in a summer movie season dominated by aliens and superheroes. There's but small, but nearly divinely package to the stuffed Magic Mike that nearly compensates some of the more unnecessary distractions, and it comes in the form of something most may never expect. Matthew McConaughey plays Dallas, the owner and master of ceremonies. Like a potent and glossily greasy mix of the Emcee in Cabaret and Burt Reynolds' porn entrepreneur in Boogie Nights, McConaughey is expertly on point, delivering a performance of such potent cheese and nearly feckless charm, one just wishes the movie were riding on his wave instead of the many discordant ones it does. In a near perfect union of character and actor, Dallas plays to McConaughey's strengths-- a glossily vain charmer whose actions are undone by narcissism, and a penchant for not wearing shirts. Dallas is a true believer sorts, one who by regaling false hopes, can rabble rouse his hunky troupes, even while his duping them in the process. Had Carolin's script or Soderbergh's direction been more on the nose in consistency of tone, McConaughey would have been a rightful choice for cheese or saga.
There's a buoyancy and lightness of touch during some of the funnier, sexier bits of male strippers dancing their hearts and clothes away, but there's way too many draggier bits. The film can't settle for bouncy, unadulterated fun, for Mike's story needs redemption, as his methods for income need a sense of judgement. All of which comes courtesy of Brooke (Cody Horn), Adam's overprotective older sister who latches on to something in Mike. As Adam spirals all over the map as his stripping improves (he goes by the moniker "The Kid."), Brooke becomes more and more of a pain, relegating the unneeded sense of judgements that appear not be just taken out on Mike, but perhaps, the audience, who mostly came for the ogling of half naked men. Their subsequent, somewhat "meet-cute" courtship is draining and boring, mostly because Horn, all sneers and stink eyes, plays her disagreeable and snarky character with finicky discomfort. Strangely, this ugly romance was staged by the same director who presented the courtship of George Clooney and Jennifer Lopez with such aplomb so gracefully in 1998's Out of Sight.
In the end, it's really difficult to see what was supposed to be made of Magic Mike. While the moments of campy pleasures of flesh on display are delivered with silly goofiness, the romantic subplot is wan and uninteresting. While there's a underworld of sin corroding the exteriors of Mike's life, one involving drugs and deals gone bad and business ethics, there's little actual deft to Mike's interior life, or anyone else. While Tatum is cruising on star-in-the-making overdrive, Pettyfer is nearly catatonic as his protege. And finally, while Soderbergh might think he has something to say about sex and unabashed desires as potent as Boogie Nights before it, he's really just made a pretentious romp dressed up as art. It's almost a literal case of the Emperor having no clothes. C+
Tatum, an actor of uber-ubiquitiy this year and champion in his own right for his surprisingly nimble dumb-dumb act in this spring's 21 Jump Street, does his own story a certain degree of justice. He strips, and dances, and gyrates with panache, selling himself in role and spirit with every off-kilter line delivery or half naked kick step. There's an instant likeability, if not quite nearly enough creditability, to his take on Mike, the headliner at a sleazy Tampa male strip joint. He's also a construction worker, womanizer and aspiring furniture maker, but it's when his on stage that Tatum, the actor showcases a never-before-seen sense of showmanship, and nicely modulated command for an admittedly nondescript character and slight movie star ease at execution, even with a treacly, uneven, and at times terribly awkward script, written by Reid Carolin. Mike takes on a project, a young, nearly waif-like subject named Adam (Alex Pettyfer), and takes him under his wing and into the circus of the male exotic world. The story starts out as a nearly social piece of young day-laborers and quickly turns into the male equivalent of Showgirls, while maintaining a riff on All About Eve, all with Soderbergh's favored 70s style yellow filters. The unfortunate thing is there's more over-bloating to come. Soderbergh can't seem to settle on a light romp, and infuses unnecessary darkness, while also piling on a second rate romantic story to the mix.
A shame, and bummer for those who turn to Magic Mike for a rarefied chance to see unapologetic male beefcake on the big screen. Or those looking for a raucous small piece of cheese in a summer movie season dominated by aliens and superheroes. There's but small, but nearly divinely package to the stuffed Magic Mike that nearly compensates some of the more unnecessary distractions, and it comes in the form of something most may never expect. Matthew McConaughey plays Dallas, the owner and master of ceremonies. Like a potent and glossily greasy mix of the Emcee in Cabaret and Burt Reynolds' porn entrepreneur in Boogie Nights, McConaughey is expertly on point, delivering a performance of such potent cheese and nearly feckless charm, one just wishes the movie were riding on his wave instead of the many discordant ones it does. In a near perfect union of character and actor, Dallas plays to McConaughey's strengths-- a glossily vain charmer whose actions are undone by narcissism, and a penchant for not wearing shirts. Dallas is a true believer sorts, one who by regaling false hopes, can rabble rouse his hunky troupes, even while his duping them in the process. Had Carolin's script or Soderbergh's direction been more on the nose in consistency of tone, McConaughey would have been a rightful choice for cheese or saga.
There's a buoyancy and lightness of touch during some of the funnier, sexier bits of male strippers dancing their hearts and clothes away, but there's way too many draggier bits. The film can't settle for bouncy, unadulterated fun, for Mike's story needs redemption, as his methods for income need a sense of judgement. All of which comes courtesy of Brooke (Cody Horn), Adam's overprotective older sister who latches on to something in Mike. As Adam spirals all over the map as his stripping improves (he goes by the moniker "The Kid."), Brooke becomes more and more of a pain, relegating the unneeded sense of judgements that appear not be just taken out on Mike, but perhaps, the audience, who mostly came for the ogling of half naked men. Their subsequent, somewhat "meet-cute" courtship is draining and boring, mostly because Horn, all sneers and stink eyes, plays her disagreeable and snarky character with finicky discomfort. Strangely, this ugly romance was staged by the same director who presented the courtship of George Clooney and Jennifer Lopez with such aplomb so gracefully in 1998's Out of Sight.
In the end, it's really difficult to see what was supposed to be made of Magic Mike. While the moments of campy pleasures of flesh on display are delivered with silly goofiness, the romantic subplot is wan and uninteresting. While there's a underworld of sin corroding the exteriors of Mike's life, one involving drugs and deals gone bad and business ethics, there's little actual deft to Mike's interior life, or anyone else. While Tatum is cruising on star-in-the-making overdrive, Pettyfer is nearly catatonic as his protege. And finally, while Soderbergh might think he has something to say about sex and unabashed desires as potent as Boogie Nights before it, he's really just made a pretentious romp dressed up as art. It's almost a literal case of the Emperor having no clothes. C+
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
Magic Mike teaser
Or the Channing Tatum stripper movie directed by...ur...Steven Soderbergh. Surprisingly, especially given its R-rating for "pervasive sexual content, brief graphic nudity, language, and some drug use." Magic Mike starring Tatum and a bunch of hot, young, presumably topless actors (including Alex Pettyfer, Matt Bomer, Joe Mangianello, and perhaps for the first time an appropriately shirtless Matthew McConaughey) the film appears to be a, gulp, romantic comedy!!! I've been asking this question since its inception, but is this a joke?
Sunday, August 21, 2011
The Soderbergh Experience
Perhaps there's not a more prolific contemporary auteur with a more varied resume than Steven Soderbergh, and that's just looking at what he has in store in the next year: three, maybe even four films that have absolutely no connective tissue, other than a huge, starry (and extremely varied) ensemble players. Perhaps there's nothing surprising about that at all for a filmmaker that made waves, first in 1989 for exploring modern relationships and sexual insecurities and rightfully earned its place as a defining indie for a new generation (the film was sex, lies and videotapes, and won the filmmaker the Palme D'Or at that years Cannes Film Festival and went on to earn an Original Screenplay Oscar nomination and cultivate a fascinating reputation from actors), then eleven years later for earning two Best Director Oscar nominations for two highly different films, Erin Brockovich and Traffic. One a highly respectable and rousing (if conventional, by his standards only) vehicle that earned a certain Pretty Woman an Academy Award, the other a gritty, intensely challenging ensemble epic on the drug war seen from the prism of the dealers, the bureaucrats, the addicts, and everyone else. In the interim between his breakthrough and his second and third breakthrough, Soderbergh ran the gambit of nutty, sometimes surreal, tiny indies-- Kafka (1991), King of the Hill (1993), Gray's Anatomy (1996), Schizopolis (1996)-- anyone?-- to the critically appraised noirs Out of Sight (1998) and The Limey (1999.) After the Academy acceptance, he seemed to be both iconoclast and company man at the same time with the enterprising (and lucrative) Ocean's Eleven franchise, playing alongside headier stuff like Solaris (2002), Full Frontal (2002), Bubble (2005), The Good German (2006) and Che (2008.) Some of them worked, some did not, but the "keep going" aesthetic that's always been the foundation of Soderbergh's work is what's awe-inspiring and the ultra experimental vibe that's expressed nearly every time out is what keeps his films moving and interesting. That rumors have surfaced that the famed, black-spectacle framed writer\director\cinematography (under the alias Peter Andrews) might be retiring soon seems like a shame and a loss. If that's true, I suppose his making up for it by making a billion movies now, starring nearly everyone with a Screen Actors Guild card.
I normally reserve comment for upcoming movies because, really why be like everyone else and fan the flame of hype for something that's not going to reach cinema screens for months, or years, or ever. But Soderbergh has always been a filmmaker on the move, it seems, so projects lined up soon, likely will have their day.
This September, he opens Contagion starring (gasp)- Matt Damon, Gwyneth Paltrow, Kate Winslet, Laurence Fishburne, Marion Cotillard and Jude Law in a Outbreak-style virus gone berserk film. The kick, at the very least from the trailer and the marketing is that it looks like a sure hoot. Quite possibly a state of Soderbergh doing on for them (the evil corporate bluebloods), or a pure popcorn, It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World-style ensemble disaster film, or perhaps both, or neither-- one never knows with Soderbergh.
Whatever the case, and we already can surmise the outlook does not look good for Paltrow, this is likely the next must see film of 2011.
Wasting no time, Soderbergh's follow-up is slated for release next January-- an action\revenge thriller entitled Haywire. With another super starry cast-- Ewan McGregor, Michael Fassbender, Channing Tatum, Antonio Banderas and Bill Paxton join the Soderbergh experience, along with Traffic alum Michael Douglas. On first glimpse, the trailer seemed a bit too generic and a bit on the nose for a Soderbergh film, but again, this is an auteur whose films traditionally don't exactly have traditionally-backed marketing designs. And who knows, it might all be a lark anyway. Awesome poster art however-- surely not the final design...
I normally reserve comment for upcoming movies because, really why be like everyone else and fan the flame of hype for something that's not going to reach cinema screens for months, or years, or ever. But Soderbergh has always been a filmmaker on the move, it seems, so projects lined up soon, likely will have their day.
This September, he opens Contagion starring (gasp)- Matt Damon, Gwyneth Paltrow, Kate Winslet, Laurence Fishburne, Marion Cotillard and Jude Law in a Outbreak-style virus gone berserk film. The kick, at the very least from the trailer and the marketing is that it looks like a sure hoot. Quite possibly a state of Soderbergh doing on for them (the evil corporate bluebloods), or a pure popcorn, It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World-style ensemble disaster film, or perhaps both, or neither-- one never knows with Soderbergh.
Whatever the case, and we already can surmise the outlook does not look good for Paltrow, this is likely the next must see film of 2011.
Wasting no time, Soderbergh's follow-up is slated for release next January-- an action\revenge thriller entitled Haywire. With another super starry cast-- Ewan McGregor, Michael Fassbender, Channing Tatum, Antonio Banderas and Bill Paxton join the Soderbergh experience, along with Traffic alum Michael Douglas. On first glimpse, the trailer seemed a bit too generic and a bit on the nose for a Soderbergh film, but again, this is an auteur whose films traditionally don't exactly have traditionally-backed marketing designs. And who knows, it might all be a lark anyway. Awesome poster art however-- surely not the final design...
It gets nuttier, as the follow-up to Haywire is potentially a comedy set in the world of male strippers entitled Magic Mike, with a cast of many a gay male's wet dreams-- Channing Tatum, Alex Pettyfer (model-turned-actor of I Am Number Four), Matt Bomer, Matthew McConaughey, and True Blood's Joe Manganiello. That coupled with the rumored casting of Demi Moore (the kitsch factor of the Striptease debacle might be worth the price of admission alone), and this would single-handedly the strangest, most potentially embarrassing (or awesome) film to come out in some time. Perhaps Soderbergh's main objective isn't to work with every actor living, but to work with as many Sexiest Men Alive as possible, surely he's set a world record for an Oscar-winning, respected filmmaker (Clooney, Damon, Pitt, now McConaughey)-- possibly he's secretly commissioned by People Magazine. Then again, who knows, this could be his Boogie Nights...
That he's rumored to follow Magic Mike up with his long-awaited Liberace biopic (with currently attached actors Michael Douglas and Matt Damon), one may have to suspect that Soderbergh might just secretly be the most gay-friendly filmmaker currently working.
Whatever the angle, the most versatile auteur currently on good terms with mainstream Hollywood has, at the very least, my attention.
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