Saturday, February 28, 2009

Monthly Wallpaper - March 2009: Biopics

For the month of March, the Movie Dearest Calendar Wallpaper celebrates life on film ... biopics, that is.

From the Queen of England to the Queen of Country Music, this month has it all: a mad millionaire, a schizophrenic math genius, a bisexual artist, a gorilla expert, a couple of gay authors, a feisty legal clerk, a pair or WWII heroes and several icons from the world of music. Oh, and let's not forget Gandhi.

Just click on the picture above to enlarge it to its 1024 x 768 size, then right click your mouse and select "Set as Background", and you're all set. If you want, you can also save it to your computer and set it up from there, or modify the size in your own photo-editing program if needed.

Friday, February 27, 2009

Out in Film: Rupert Everett

Idol worship: Rupert Everett, actor.

- His screen debut was in the Academy Award-winning short film A Shocking Accident, followed by roles in such television productions as Princess Daisy, The Far Pavilions and Arthur the King.

- He burst onto the international scene with his acclaimed performance of Guy Bennett, an openly gay English public school student, in the stage and screen versions of Another Country. A string of smaller films — Dance with a Stranger, Duet for One, Chronicle of a Death Foretold, The Comfort of Strangers, Inside Monkey Zetterland — followed, capped off by the Bob Dylan flop Hearts of Fire.

- After supporting roles in Prêt-à-Porter (a.k.a. Ready to Wear) and The Madness of King George, he received Golden Globe and BAFTA nominations for his witty portrayal of Julia Roberts' gay pal George in My Best Friend's Wedding. He next played Christopher Marlowe in Shakespeare in Love and got another Globe nod for An Ideal Husband.

- Other film roles include Oberon in A Midsummer Night's Dream, the villain in Inspector Gadget, Madonna's baby daddy in The Next Best Thing, Algy Moncrieff in The Importance of Being Earnest and King Charles II in Stage Beauty on film and Valmont in Les Liaisons Dangereuses and the title sleuth in Sherlock Holmes and the Case of the Silk Stocking on television. He has also lent his vocal talents to the animated films The Wild Thornberrys Movie, Shrek 2 and Shrek the Third, as well as voicing the fox in The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.

- Returning to the stage, he makes his Broadway debut this week in the revival of the classic Noël Coward comedy Blithe Spirit. His next film project will be the action comedy Wild Target.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

From Screen to Stage: Spidey, Shrek, Slumdog and More

A certain wall-crawler's Broadway bow leads off the latest round of all things From Screen to Stage:

- Spider-Man, Turn Off the Dark is the official title (really) of the comic page to stage adaptation that will spin its first web on the Great White Way starting February 18, 2010.

- The next month will see the Big Apple premiere of The Addams Family musical as well, with performances starting March 5, 2010.

- Damn Yankees is returning to the silver screen, with Jim Carrey as Applegate (a.k.a. the devil) and Jake Gyllenhaal (!) as Shoeless Joe (from Hannibal, MO). Now who will play Lola? We say Catherine Zeta-Jones.

- The screen adaptation of the Tony Award winning musical Nine (which now features six Academy Award winners following Penélope Cruz's victory on Sunday) now has an official opening date: November 25.

- The original Broadway cast recording of Shrek the Musical, which will be released on March 24, is now available for pre-orderfrom Amazon.com.

- Universal Studios wants Billy Elliot to dance back on the big screen as a movie musical.

- Having won every film award in site, Slumdog Millionaire is now setting its sites on the stage. Another recent Oscar winner, A.R. Rahman, will pen more songs for the potential new tuner.

- And finally: it looks like our idea for a sequel to Mamma Mia! may actually happen.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Reverend's Reviews: Putting on The Ring in LA

Glowing hands and eyeballs, neon sabers, a giant overcoat that would suit a pimp and, oh yeah, the music of Richard Wagner have taken over the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. LA Opera's and Achim Freyer's adventurous staging of Das Rheingold (now playing through March 15), the first chapter of Wagner's famed Der Ring des Nibelungen, may upset purists but truly shouldn't be missed.

Freyer brings a decidedly avant-garde sensibility to the work. One may be tempted to term it futuristic, especially with the incorporation of Star Wars-esque weaponry, but the production can't be classified so easily.

The Ring saga kicks off here with the Nibelung (a race of dwarves) Alberich's theft of a stash of cursed gold from the Rhine River's protective maidens. Alberich (well played and sung by Gordon Hawkins, despite the challenges of an oversized mask and a raked stage) is quickly consumed by a lust for power and gifted with magical abilities courtesy of the Rhinegold.

This puts Alberich and the Nibelungen in opposition to Wotan, king of the gods, and his family. Wotan is having the final touches put on his dream palace, Valhalla, which has been constructed by giants who have been promised Wotan's beautiful sister-in-law, Freia, as payment. Of course, Fricka, Wotan's wife, isn't happy with this arrangement.

Wotan convinces the giants to accept a payment of Rhinegold instead. With the help of the conniving fire god, Loge, and the aforementioned pimp coat (complete with oversized fedora), Wotan sets out to steal the gold from Alberich and the Nibelungen.


Musically and vocally, LA Opera's Das Rheingold is assured and, even with the orchestra concealed by Freyer, a powerful testament to Wagner's classic composition. Vitalij Kowaljow sings the role of Wotan beautifully, with Arnold Bezuyen (as Loge), Michelle DeYoung (as Fricka) and Ellie Dehn (as Freia) also excellent.

But it is the visuals that make this production most noteworthy. Imaginative and often hallucinatory, Freyer's designs (with an assist by his daughter, Amanda) will likely remain in viewers' minds — and perhaps their dreams — long after his Ring cycle for Los Angeles closes in 2010.

Review by Rev. Chris Carpenter, resident film critic of Movie Dearest and the Orange County and Long Beach Blade.

Women We Love: Keri Russell

Object of our affection: Keri Russell, actress.

- She got her start (along with a few other famous names) on the 90's version of The Mickey Mouse Club. Other early works include the Disney movie Honey, I Blew Up the Kid (her big screen debut), the primetime soap Malibu Shores and the TV movie The Babysitter's Seduction.

- It was her angsty performance as the title character in Felicity that shot her to stardom and won her a Golden Globe.

- During the run of Felicity, she also appeared in the films Eight Days a Week, The Curve, Mad About Mambo and We Were Soldiers.

- Post-Felicity, she has starred in the films The Upside of Anger, Mission: Impossible III, Waitress, August Rush, Bedtime Stories and the television mini-series Into the West.

- Next week, she'll be heard as the voice of Wonder Woman in a new DVDmovie. Her future projects include the crime thriller Leaves of Grass and the based-on-a-true story drama Crowley.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Awards Watch: Oscars Post Mortem and the 2008 Yearly Round Up

Now that all the (gold) dust has settled on this year's Oscars, it's time to take one last look at the movie award season just past. But before we get to our yearly round up of what movies won the most prizes overall, there's one more bit of 2008 business to attend to: how about that show the other night?

Having watched every single Academy Award ceremony since at least 1977, I have to say that this year's was by far the best. As expected, Hugh Jackman was as charming and classy a host as we have seen in a long time, and his marathon musical numbers proved to the world that he is not just Wolverine. I especially enjoyed his mega-movie musical salute (staged by Moulin Rouge! director Baz Luhrmann) with Dreamgirl Beyoncé Knowles, High School Musical cuties Zac Efron and Vanessa Hudgens and Mamma Mia! lovebirds Amanda Seyfried and Dominic Cooper.


Further kudos go out to the ceremony's producers, Laurence Marks and Bill Condon, who took some chances with the format and succeeded in shaking things up in a positive way. From the grandiose yet intimate set to the unique presentation of the acting awards, the show finally did what it is supposed to do: celebrate the year in film (and not just those chosen few that were nominated too). Here's my vote that this dream team reunites for next year's Oscars.


All right, onto our annual look at the top award winners. As I stated last year, I have tallied up the total trophies handed out by the top 26 organizations, critics groups and industry guilds so as to get a clearer picture of what is indeed the Best Picture (et al) of the year; the results can sometimes be surprising. (Only categories with at least two wins are included.)

Picture of the Year: Slumdog Millionaire, 7 wins.
Actor of the Year: Sean Penn in Milk, 6 wins.
Actress of the Year: Sally Hawkins in Happy-Go-Lucky, 5 wins.
Supporting Actor of the Year: Heath Ledger in The Dark Knight, 7 wins.
Supporting Actress of the Year: Penélope Cruz in Vicky Cristina Barcelona, 6 wins.
Director of the Year: Danny Boyle for Slumdog Millionaire, 7 wins.
Adapted Screenplay of the Year: Simon Beaufoy for Slumdog Millionaire, 6 wins.
Original Screenplay of the Year: Dustin Lance Black for Milk, 3 wins.
Cinematography of the Year: Slumdog Millionaire, 5 wins.
Art Direction of the Year: The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, 3 wins.
Costume Design of the Year: The Duchess, 4 wins. Original Score of the Year: Slumdog Millionaire, 6 wins.
Original Song of the Year: "The Wrestler" from The Wrestler, 2 wins.
Film Editing of the Year: Slumdog Millionaire, 3 wins.
Sound Mixing & Editing of the Year: The Dark Knight and Slumdog Millionaire, 4 wins each.
Visual Effects of the Year: The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, 6 wins.
Makeup Design of the Year: The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, 2 wins.
Animated Feature of the Year: WALL-E, 9 wins.
Foreign Film of the Year: Waltz with Bashir, 2 wins.
Documentary Feature of the Year: Man on Wire, 10 wins.
New Director of the Year: Courtney Hunt for Frozen River and Steve McQueen for Hunger, 2 wins each.

The top winner was (no big surprise) Slumdog Millionaire, with wins in 7 categories, while the documentary Man on Wire won the most awards in any category, with 10 total. It is also worth noting that Kate Winslet won a total of 5 awards for her performance in The Reader, 2 for Best Actress and 3 for Best Supporting Actress.

See the comments section below for the list of the 26 groups tracked.

Monday, February 23, 2009

Cinematic Crush: Matthew Goode

Crush object: Matthew Goode, actor.

- Following his screen debut in Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister, he appeared in such UK television productions as The Inspector Lynley Mysteries and He Knew He Was Right.

- His breakthrough role was as Mandy Moore's love interest in the romantic comedy Chasing Liberty.

- He has also co-starred in Match Point, Imagine Me & You, Copying Beethoven and The Lookout.

- Last year, he starred as Charles Ryder in the big screen remake of Evelyn Waugh's Brideshead Revisited, and his highest profile role to date will be as the enigmatic Ozymandias in next week's superhero epic Watchmen.

- Future films include A Single Man, directed by Tom Ford from the Christopher Isherwood novel, and Leap Year, opposite Amy Adams.

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Oscars 2008: Best Picture

Slumdog Millionaire

Oscars 2008: Best Actor

Sean Penn in Milk

Oscars 2008: Best Actress

Kate Winslet in The Reader

Oscars 2008: Best Director

Danny Boyle for Slumdog Millionaire

Oscars 2008: Best Foreign Language Film

Departures

Oscars 2008: Best Original Song

"Jai Ho” from Slumdog Millionaire

Oscars 2008: Best Original Score

Slumdog Millionaire

Oscars 2008: Best Film Editing

Slumdog Millionaire

Oscars 2008: Best Sound Mixing

Slumdog Millionaire

Oscars 2008: Best Sound Editing

The Dark Knight

Oscars 2008: Best Visual Effects

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

Oscars 2008: Best Documentary Short

Smile Pinki

Oscars 2008: Best Documentary Feature

Man on Wire

Oscars 2008: Best Supporting Actor

Heath Ledger in The Dark Knight

Oscars 2008: Best Live Action Short

Spielzeugland (Toyland)

Oscars 2008: Best Cinematography

Slumdog Millionaire

Oscars 2008: Best Makeup

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

Oscars 2008: Best Costume Design

The Duchess

Oscars 2008: Best Art Direction

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

Oscars 2008: Best Animated Short

La Maison en Petits Cubes

Oscars 2008: Best Animated Feature

WALL-E

Oscars 2008: Best Adapted Screenplay

Simon Beaufoy for Slumdog Millionaire

Oscars 2008: Best Original Screenplay

Dustin Lance Black for Milk

Oscars 2008: Best Supporting Actress

Penélope Cruz in Vicky Cristina Barcelona

Awards Watch: "Love" Stinks

On the eve of Hollywood's biggest salute to the best in film 2008, the Golden Raspberry Award Foundation singled out the worst of the worst of the year with their 29th Annual Razzie Awards. And it was not a good night for Mike Myers, Paris Hilton or Uwe Boll.

Myers' critically maligned box office bomb The Love Guru was named Worst Picture, while Myers himself was awarded for both his acting and writing on the would-be comedy. Hilton swept the actress "honors", as Worst Actress for The Hottie and the Nottie and Worst Supporting Actress for Repo! The Genetic Opera, plus a third Razzie as part of the Worst Screen Couple for Hottie. And Boll was not only singled out as Worst Director (duh) for his trash trifecta of In the Name of the King: A Dungeon Siege Tale, 1968: Tunnel Rats and Postal, but he was also "honored" with a Worst Career Achievement citation.

But it wasn't just flops that were Razzie'ed. Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull was named Worst Prequel, Remake, Rip-off or Sequel, and poor tone deaf Pierce Brosnan "won" Worst Supporting Actor for Mamma Mia!

Awards Watch: Sound and Fury '08

The last of the pre-Oscar award groups have spoken in two separate ceremonies last night:

The Visual Effects Society showed some love — in the form of four trophies — to The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, while The Dark Knight and WALL-E nabbed three each. Changeling also picked up two prizes, but the big news is that Iron Man, which had the most nominations going in, went home empty-handed.

Elsewhere, the Motion Picture Sound Editors bestowed two of its Golden Reel Awards upon The Dark Knight. Button and WALL-E also won, as well as Mamma Mia! and Slumdog Millionaire.

Saturday, February 21, 2009

Movie Dearest's Fearless Oscar Predictions - 2008

At first, it seemed that this award season was going to be a little more exciting and unpredictable than usual, what with a masked superhero and a cartoon robot unexpectedly in the mix. But, as you know, that didn't happen. Then a feel good sleeper about abject poverty, child prostitution and drug dealers snuck in under the radar and won every award in sight.

And that's not hyperbole, Slumdog Millionaire really has won every award in sight, some dubiously so (again, costume design ... really?). (Don't get me wrong, I enjoyed Slumdog, but I have a feeling once it hits DVD, there is going to be a lot of "is that it?" chatter.) Needless to say, Slumdog is poised to take the lion's share of tomorrow night's trophies, including Best Picture, Director (Danny Boyle), Adapted Screenplay, Cinematography, Film Editing and Original Score. For the rest of Movie Dearest's Fearless Oscar Predictions, see below.


Actor: This race would be a lot closer if Sean Penn (Milk) hadn't won it just five years ago. But he did, so comeback kid Mickey Rourke (The Wrestler) will win.
Actress: Kate Winslet (The Reader) is long overdue.
Supporting Actor: Heath Ledger (The Dark Knight) is the surest bet of the evening, and rightly so.
Supporting Actress: This category is always good for a surprise, and I have a hunch that Viola Davis (Doubt) will upset frontrunner Penélope Cruz (Vicky Cristina Barcelona).
Original Screenplay: Dustin Lance Black's script is Milk's best chance at a win.
Art Direction, Visual Effects and Makeup: With a leading 13 nominations, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button should triumph in these so-called "lesser" categories.
Costume Design: Opulence is the key here, and The Duchess has the prize all but sewn up.
Original Song: Slumdog's "Jai Ho" could dance off with the prize, but I'm sticking with my original prediction for WALL-E's "Down to Earth".
Sound Mixing: Another possibility for a Slumdog sweep, but I expect the bombastic The Dark Knight to be triumphant here, leaving ...
Sound Editing: ... to WALL-E.
Foreign Language Film: This one is between Israel's Waltz with Bashir and France's The Class, with the latter, more traditional film winning.
Documentary Feature: Man on Wire seems unbeatable.
Animated Short and Live Action Short: Will turn to Chris' picks on these two — La Maison en Petits Cubes and Spielzeugland (Toyland), respectively.
Documentary Short: The Witness - From the Balcony of Room 306 (about the MLK assassination) seems to be the consensus.

Well, there they are ... we'll see how well we do tomorrow night. Don't forget, Movie Dearest will be live blogging all the Oscar winners as they happen. See you then!

UPDATE: Movie Dearest scored about what we usually do, with 17 out of 24 correct predictions. The categories we missed: Actor, Supporting Actress, Foreign Language Film, Original Song, Sound Mixing, Sound Editing and Documentary Short.

Indie Spirit Awards '08: Best Feature

The Wrestler

Indie Spirit Awards '08: Best Director

Tom McCarthy for The Visitor

Indie Spirit Awards '08: Best Male Lead

Mickey Rourke in The Wrestler

Indie Spirit Awards '08: Robert Altman Award

Synecdoche, New York

Indie Spirit Awards '08: Best Cinematography

Maryse Alberti for The Wrestler

Indie Spirit Awards '08: Best Foreign Film

The Class

Indie Spirit Awards '08: Best Screenplay

Woody Allen for Vicky Cristina Barcelona

Indie Spirit Awards '08: Best Female Lead

Melissa Leo in Frozen River

Indie Spirit Awards '08: Best Documentary

Man on Wire

Indie Spirit Awards '08: John Cassavetes Award

In Search of a Midnight Kiss

Indie Spirit Awards '08: Best Supporting Female

Penélope Cruz for Vicky Cristina Barcelona

Indie Spirit Awards '08: Best First Feature

Synecdoche, New York

Indie Spirit Awards '08: Best First Screenplay

Dustin Lance Black for Milk

Indie Spirit Awards '08: Best Supporting Male

James Franco in Milk

MD Poll: What Will Be Fine in '09?

As the 2008 movie year officially comes to a close with tomorrow night's Academy Awards, the latest MD Poll takes a look forward to the year ahead to find out what movie you are most excited to see in 2009.

Our short list includes two hold-overs from last year's poll (Star Trek and Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince), as well as some other new takes on old characters (Sherlock Holmes, The Wolf Man), not to mention the requisite superhero epics (X-Men Origins: Wolverine, Watchmen). Two of our favorite actors, Johnny Depp and Viggo Mortensen headline the anticipated Public Enemies and The Road (respectively), and you can never count out Pixar for a good time — their prospects this year are looking Up.

And just in case we left one out, there's a wild card slot so you can vote for any movie not already included, and you can name it in the comments section below if you so choose. As usual, the poll runs for two weeks and can be found in the sidebar to your right.

UPDATE: This poll is now closed; click here for the results.

MD Poll: Gold Rush 2008

After four weeks and over four hundred votes each, the 2008 MD Oscar Polls are now closed. And the winners are ... not that far off from who everyone is predicting will take home the gold tomorrow night at the real Academy Awards.

Slumdog Millionaire, The Wrestler's Mickey Rourke and The Reader's Kate Winslet won Best Picture, Best Actor and Best Actress easily, each with over 40% of the vote. Not surprisingly, The Dark Knight's Heath Ledger had a landside victory for Best Supporting Actor, with close to a whopping 70% of the total votes cast. The closest race was for Best Supporting Actress, with Vicky Cristina Barcelona's Penélope Cruz finally coming out on top. See the comments section below for the complete stats on all five polls.

And be sure to tune in tomorrow night to ABC for the 81st Annual Academy Awards, hosted by Hugh Jackman, who (as you can see here) has been busy preparing for the Big Show. As usual, Movie Dearest will be live blogging all the winners for both the Oscars tomorrow as well as the Independent Spirit Awards later today (hosted by Hamlet 2's Steve Coogan and airing on IFC).

And finally, to get you in the mood for the big night, here's another swell video montage of this year's Academy Award nominees.

Friday, February 20, 2009

Trivial Pursuits: Oscars 2008

With each year's Academy Awards comes a new batch of Oscar trivia, and 2008 is no different:

- The titles of all five Best Picture nominees — The Reader, Slumdog Millionaire, Milk, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button and Frost/Nixon — refer to a main character in the film.

- With his Best Director nomination for The Reader, Stephen Daldry has become the first director ever to receive nods for his first three films (his earlier nominations were for Billy Elliot and The Hours).

- Kate Winslet is currently tied with Deborah Kerr and Thelma Ritter as the most nominated actress (six each) not to have won; she is also the youngest actor to have received that many career nominations.

- Robert Downey Jr.'s nomination for Tropic Thunder is not the first time an actor has been nominated for donning "blackface". Mickey Rooney, who performed an elaborate minstrel show production number in Babes in Arms, was nominated for Best Actor, as was Laurence Olivier for the title role in Othello.

- With Frank Langella's nod for Frost/Nixon, Richard Nixon is the first United States President that more than one actor has been Oscar-nominated for playing (Anthony Hopkins previously scored a nod for Nixon). Also, if Langella wins, he will be only the ninth person to win an Oscar and a Tony Award for the same role.

- Doubt's quartet of acting nominations for its entire principal cast is not unprecedented. The four actors of Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, the two leads of Sleuth and James Whitmore in the one-man movie Give 'Em Hell, Harry! were all nominated. Note that they were all based on plays.

- Speaking of Doubt, Meryl Streep is now the reigning acting nomination champ, with 15 total. 12 of those noms are for Best Actress, tying her with Katharine Hepburn in that category. Ironically, she is also one of the biggest Oscar "losers".


- This year marks only the fifth time in Academy history that the Best Picture and Best Director races exactly matched; it last happened in 2005.

- Speaking of 2005, current Best Supporting Actor nominees Philip Seymour Hoffman (Doubt) and Heath Ledger (The Dark Knight) were both nominated that year for Best Actor, with Hoffman taking home the gold for Capote.

- Speaking of Ledger, if he wins the Oscar on Sunday night, he'll be only the second posthumous acting winner ever, following Network's Peter Finch. Note that they are also both Australian, and they also received their only previous nomination for playing gay characters (Brokeback Mountain and Sunday Bloody Sunday, respectively).

- Ledger is not the only actor to be nominated for playing a comic book character. Previous nominees include Al Pacino (Dick Tracy), Paul Newman (Road to Perdition) and William Hurt (A History of Violence); note that they all also played villains.

- And speaking of Hoffman, he is the only repeat acting nominee from last year (for Charlie Wilson's War, also in the Supporting Actor category).

- Waltz With Bashir is the first animated film ever to be nominated for Best Foreign Language Film.

- Speaking of animation, WALL-E is tied with Beauty and the Beast for the most nominated animated feature, with six nods each. And if WALL-E wins more than two Oscars (which is a strong possibility), it will be the most honored animated film in Academy history.

Did I miss any thing? If so, add to list in the comments section below.

Out in Film: Dustin Lance Black

Idol worship: Dustin Lance Black, writer/director/ producer.

- His debut as a writer and director was the gay rom com The Journey of Jared Price, quickly followed by the coming out short film Something Close to Heaven.

- In addition to directing and producing On the Bus, he appeared in the documentary about six gay men's road trip to Nevada. He also was featured in the television doc Gay Hollywood.

- Being a former Mormon, he provides a unique insight into the polygamist Mormon family at the center of Big Love. He is co-producer and story editor as well as screenwriter of the critically acclaimed drama series.

- He is currently nominated for (and is the favored to win) the Academy Award for his original screenplay for Milk. His script, based on the life of gay icon Harvey Milk, has already won him several awards, including the Writers Guild of America.

- His next film is also a gay biopic, based on the life of Real World alum/AIDS activist Pedro Zamora. Pedro will have its Los Angeles premiere at Outfest's Fusion Festival next month. Other future projects include A Life Like Mine (directed by Paris Barclay), an adaptation of Tom Wolfe's The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test (directed by Milk's Gus Van Sant) and What's Wrong with Virginia, which he will direct himself.

Reverend’s Interview: Don't Call Her "Diva"

Opera lovers throughout southern California are buzzing with anticipation since it was announced late last year that LA Opera will be mounting Richard Wagner’s epic, four-part Der Ring des Nibelungen for the first time in 2010. More commonly referred to as “the Ring Cycle,” these operas weave a monumental tale of good vs. evil drawn from Norse mythology.

Fortunately, fans and neophytes alike don’t have to wait until next year to experience Das Rheingold (The Rhine Gold) and Die Walküre (The Valkyrie), the first two operas in the Cycle. Their first-ever productions by LA Opera are being staged this month and next at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion.

Acclaimed mezzo-soprano and out lesbian Jill Grove assays the role of Erda in Das Rheingold, which will play February 21 through March 15. In a recent interview with Reverend, Grove described her classic part and spoke freely about her background and growing success in opera.


“Erda is the Earth goddess, and the goddess of time,” Grove explained. “It’s a great character with great music. Also, since Erda’s time on stage is seven minutes, the role has a great time-to-pay ratio!”

Of the Ring Cycle in general, Grove said, “It is so spectacular and always great to play.” Since Wagner’s work is lengthy and hasn’t been performed locally until now, Grove iterated, “I really hope people won’t be afraid of the Cycle; it’s very accessible, and Das Rheingold will be a great introduction.”

Many opera and/or Wagner devotees have traveled at one time or another to experience a Ring production somewhere in the world. Grove believes they will also be interested in LA Opera’s take on the classic. “The director (Achim Freyer) is doing a non-traditional production, without the stereotypical pointy breast-cones.” To those who may have pre-conceived notions of Das Rheingold and the Ring Cycle, Grove insists “This won’t be your typical production.”

Also far from typical for a rising star in the opera world is Grove’s upbringing. “I come from a family in Texas that had no opera or music,” she said. “Sports and tennis were part of our family growing up; singing was contained to church.”

Grove sang in her church choir, and began to discover she had talent. It wasn’t until she got to college, though, that she discovered the world of opera. “Once I was in Houston and played a maid in Elektra, that was my first professional thing I’d ever done,” Grove recounts. “It was so impressive and looked like a big movie, which was much more my point of reference. Then I thought, ‘I could do that! That is very cool’!”

Since college, opera has been “the only job I’ve ever had,” according to Grove. “I’ve been very fortunate.” She has been performing essentially non-stop around the world since 1992, and was named as a winner of opera’s coveted ARIA award in 2003.


While Grove counts her roles as Amneris in Verdi’s Aida and the Nurse in Strauss’ Die Frau ohne Schatten as her favorites to date, she also spoke fondly of her 1996 performance as LGBT-rights activist Anne Kronenberg in the San Francisco Opera-Houston Grand Opera world premiere of Harvey Milk (a recordingof which is available on CD).

Grove considers the current, Oscar-nominated movie Milk “Phenomenal; it shows both how far our community has come and how far we still have to go. But things have changed for the better in many ways (since Milk’s time). I don’t feel the danger today that gay men in particular must have felt then.”

In assessing the state of opera today for LGBT artists, Grove similarly feels our community has come a long way. “Behind the scenes, (LGBT involvement in opera) is huge,” she revealed. “It isn’t quite as closeted as it used to be as far as gay and lesbian performers are concerned; I haven’t felt nor had any negative response throughout my career.”


But Grove says there is more progress yet to be made. “The atmosphere, on one hand, is great, but on the other hand it’s hard for lesbian and gay artists due to enduring stereotypes. It’s the same for African-American artists.”

Does Grove consider herself a diva, as some female opera singers are termed? “No, I don’t,” she replied firmly. “The opera world breeds an elitism and it’s easy to become a diva, but I’m not one; I don’t have that expectation that someone should do more for me than they would do for anybody else.”

Grove clarified that while in the opera world “there are those who need to O.D. on attention,” women aren’t the only gender susceptible. She confirms that male “Divos exist, too!”


When she isn’t performing, Grove spends time with her spouse, Keren James, and their ten-month old son Gryffen at their home in San Francisco. She and Karen “got married the first day we could” in San Francisco. Like so many of us, they are hoping Proposition 8 will soon be overturned.

In the meantime, Grove is happy singing Erda in Das Rheingold, confident, like the opera’s heroes, that light and love will triumph in the end over darkness and hate.

For further information about Das Rheingold or the Ring Cycle in Los Angeles, please visit the official website of the LA Opera or call 213-972-8001.

Interview by Rev. Chris Carpenter, resident film critic of Movie Dearest and the Orange County and Long Beach Blade.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

First Look: The Kids from Fame

The newbie cast of the upcoming remake of Fame sing the body electric ... although not to "I Sing the Body Electric". Reportedly, only the Oscar-winning title tune and "Out Here on My Own" are being carried over from the original; sorry, "Hot Lunch Jam" fans.

The new Fame, which hits theaters September 25, will feature the former Doctors Crane, Kelsey Grammer and Bebe Neuwirth, along with Megan Mullally and Charles S. Dutton as the teaching staff of the new New York Academy of Performing Arts, led by principal Debbie Allen (of course). You can meet them, along with the new batch of triple threat wannabes, starting tomorrow on MySpace.

Fortune Cookies 2008

Once again, Eleni's New York is solving your Oscar party menu woes with a fresh batch of Academy Award nominated cookies for your cinematic dining pleasure. Although, I must say, compared to last year (complete as it was with Juno pregnancy tests and Anton Chigurh bolt pistols), this year's selection of Best Picture treats isn't quite as inspired.

Sure, there's books for The Reader, Watergate files for Frost/Nixon and the whole Taj Mahal for Slumdog Millionaire, but couldn't they have thrown in a bald baby Brad Pitt for The Curious Case of Benjamin Button instead of (yawn) buttons? And the Harvey Milk campaign t-shirt for Milk is nice, but the only thing else they could come up with is a bullhorn? Hello, rainbow flag!?!


As you can see, the bakery has supplemented their Oscar nominated actor and actress cookies with a complete set of corresponding cupcakes, graced with the likes of frontrunners Kate Winslet, Meryl Streep, Mickey Rourke and Sean Penn, along with the rest of the nominees in the top two acting categories.

Whichever set of sweets you choose to nosh on while watching the Big Show on Sunday night, one thing is certain: they'll all taste good with a tall glass of (wait for it) milk ...

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Reel Thoughts: Suck It To Me

Not having access to here! TV, I have never seen the sexy gay soap opera, Dante’s Cove or its spin-off, The Lair. After watching part of the second season of The Lair, I’m hooked! How can you not love a town whose sheriff is named Trout and is played by porn star-slash-singer Colton Ford? This is strictly soft-core at most, with plenty of hot men to ogle.

The Lair is like a gay Dark Shadows, set on an island community that seems part tropical, part Pacific Northwest and all campy. Not only do they have a problem with vampires, led by the blond and bitchy Colin (Dylan Vox), but there is also a sexy and deadly werewolf and a strange killer plant.


The two episodes I was sent to review demonstrated that The Lair is definitely addictive. I was dying to see what the weird moonflower was going to do to sexy Eddie Valenti, but alas, it was not to be revealed. I’ll have to wait for the two-disc set(available next Tuesday) with everyone else. It has also made me curious to see director Fred Olen Ray’s other films, namely Bad Girls from Mars and Hollywood Chainsaw Hookers!

Review by Neil Cohen, resident film critic of Movie Dearest and Phoenix's Echo Magazine.

Women We Love: Angelina Jolie

Object of our affection: Angelina Jolie, actress.

- Her film debut was opposite her father, Jon Voight, in Lookin' to Get Out. Other early movies on her résumé include Cyborg 2, Hackers and Playing God.

- She won Golden Globes for the made-for-TV biopics George Wallace (as his wife Cornelia Wallace) and Gia (as supermodel Gia Carangi), which also won her a Screen Actors Guild Award.

- Following her performances in Pushing Tin and The Bone Collector, she won the Academy Award for her role in Girl, Interrupted, as well as another Globe and SAG.

- Since, she has alternated between high octane action flicks (Gone in Sixty Seconds, both Lara Croft: Tomb Raider movies, Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow, Mr. & Mrs. Smith, Wanted) and dramatic showcases (Original Sin, Life or Something Like It, Beyond Borders, Alexander, The Good Shepherd, A Mighty Heart), as well as voicing animated characters in Shark Tale, Beowulf and Kung Fu Panda.

- Currently, she is nominated again for an Oscar for her powerful performance in Changeling, and is scheduled to appear next in The Mercenary: Love and Honor and Atlas Shrugged.

Awards Watch: Costume Dramas Edition

The Costume Designers Guild handed out their awards last night, and the Oscar frontrunner, Michael O'Connor's lush designs for The Duchess, won in the period film category. Lindy Hemming's redesign of the Batman costume (complete with what looked like a giant black olive encasing Christian Bale's head) won for fantasy, while the rags-to-riches threads of Suttirat Larlarb won yet another trophy for Slumdog Millionaire.

This win proves that Slumdog is truly unstoppable, as it beat out Robert Downey Jr. in a tux (not mention battle armor), Meryl Streep in overalls, Mickey Rourke in a unitard and Sarah Jessica Parker, Miss Fashionista Carrie Bradshaw herself, in a wedding dress. Maybe it was Freida Pinto's lemon yellow scarf that cinched the deal ...

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Reverend’s Previews: Quiet Please, There's a Lady on Stage

The early, campy works of playwright and actor Charles Busch are well known in LGBT circles. Vampire Lesbians of Sodom, Psycho Beach Party and Die, Mommie, Die! have been performed frequently, and the latter two were made into hit movies starring Busch.

In recent years, Busch has been writing more mainstream but no less comedic plays, most notably the Tony-nominated The Tale of the Allergist’s Wife. He is currently starring with Kathleen Turner in his latest work, The Third Story, on Off-Broadway.

This month, Southern California theatergoers can enjoy the West Coast premiere of Busch’s 2007 play, Our Leading Lady. It will be performed February 19 to March 8 by the acclaimed Neighborhood Playhouse in Rancho Palos Verdes. Not only will this be the work’s LA-area debut, but it is also the first production of Our Leading Lady anywhere since its New York run. The play was proclaimed “Hilarious, delicious fun” by the New York Times.

This history-inspired comedy takes place during the final week of the Civil War. Legendary stage actress Laura Keene is doing everything she can to ensure President Lincoln attends her final performance at the Ford Theatre. As Laura moves ruthlessly towards her goal, she and her theatrical troupe must face an unfortunate but inevitable collision with history.


Brady Schwind, director of the Neighborhood Playhouse’s production, spoke with me about Our Leading Lady. “It’s a hilarious play by a wonderful playwright,” Schwind said. “It’s so great to discover a new play that is so funny; there really are very few truly funny new plays.”

Since this is the first performance of the play outside New York, Schwind has been collaborating closely with Busch. “It’s neat for an emerging theatre company and a thrill for me as director to have Busch’s seal of approval.”

The cast of Our Leading Lady includes Gillian Doyle (as Laura), Tracy Ahern, Rita Hull, James Jaeger, Michael Prohaska, Michael Tatlock, Kathleen Taylor, Carla Valentine and Robert Youngs. Jaeger says, “The play is intelligent and accessible. The characters, even at their most ridiculous moments, are treated by the playwright with respect and even tenderness.”

Jaeger, who plays the character “Ferguson,” also spoke about the play’s plot. “I think it illustrates, through comedy, how deeply and personally tragic historic events can affect us — to a point that borders on complete self-centeredness. But it does so without preaching or criticizing.”

Even with this serious theme and the play’s build-up to the assassination of President Lincoln, it is first and foremost a comedy. The New York Times critic wrote that Our Leading Lady is “a testament to playwright Charles Busch’s belief that theatre can and should reflect the human comedy at its most ridiculous and its most uplifting.”


The West Coast premiere of Our Leading Lady is part of what is only the Neighborhood Playhouse’s sophomore season. Believing that “art is alive when you embrace it,” the Playhouse’s board of directors and artists strive to provide innovative, quality theatrical productions while donating a portion of each production’s profits to charitable organizations in the LA area. During its first full season last year, the Neighborhood Playhouse staged the LA-area premiere of the controversial musical Parade. It was a tremendous success with critics and audiences alike.

The Playhouse is actually part of the landmark Neighborhood Church in Palos Verdes Estates. Originally a seaside palazzo built in 1927 to serve as the summer residence of business tycoon J. J. Haggarty, it is one of the most beautiful and historic locations in all of Los Angeles county.

“There is a need in this area for more adventurous theatre,” Schwind believes. Situated between the South Bay, Orange County and Los Angeles, the Neighborhood Playhouse appears to have a bright future ahead.

By Rev. Chris Carpenter, resident film critic of Movie Dearest and the Orange County and Long Beach Blade.

Poster Post: Claws for Affect

Hugh Jackman may be all clean and pretty for Sunday night's Oscars, but he'll have his trademark muttonchops and adamantium claws blazing for the debut of X-Men Origins: Wolverine on May 1. Watch the trailer here.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Reverend’s Reviews: Creepy & Cool Coraline

I have always loved movies that utilize the painstaking stop-motion animation technique, dating back to when I saw the original King Kong as a young boy. I even created my own stop-motion animation effects for student films I made. I was therefore looking forward to Coraline, especially since it is directed by Henry Selick, the undisputed modern master of stop-motion animation thanks to his and Tim Burton’s classic The Nightmare Before Christmas.

I wasn’t disappointed. Coraline is the most eye-popping, lovingly crafted film using the technique to date, and it’s even better in 3-D. Adapted by Selick from a book by fantasy writer Neil Gaiman, it follows the exploits of its titular heroine as she first discovers and then tries to escape from a seductive alternate reality.

Just relocated to a small town and neglected by her real-life parents, who are both preoccupied with their writing and gardening projects, Coraline (given wonderful, cynical voice by Dakota Fanning) is lured through a small, plastered-over door to the magical lair of her doting “Other Mother” and “Other Father.” They show Coraline the warmth and affection she’s been missing, but there’s something amiss: everyone in this parallel world has buttons sewn where their eyes should be.


The film’s advertising tagline has been “Be Careful What You Wish For,” which effectively sums up this cautionary tale that isn’t only for children … and make that children ages 6 and over due to some intense sequences and mildly disturbing images. Adults, too, can appreciate the displaced Coraline’s yearning for attention and support. For adult viewers, the slogan “The grass is always greener on the other side” also sums up Coraline’s thesis well.

In addition to Fanning, the remainder of the film’s excellent voice cast is noteworthy. Teri Hatcher, Desperate Housewives’ own Susan Mayer, voices both of Coraline’s mothers with an unpredictable mix of maternal concern, frustration and malevolence. Similarly, John Hodgman (best known as the “Resident Expert” on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart) plays both Coraline’s Father and Other Father.


Fabulous Brit comediennes Dawn French and Jennifer Saunders give hilarious voice to Coraline’s eccentric, faded-star neighbors, Miss Forcible and Miss Spink (respectively). Ian McShane (Deadwood) is the even more eccentric Mr. Bobinsky, ringmaster of a mouse circus. And Keith David, who has given memorable performances in everything from John Carpenter’s The Thing to the Oscar-winning Crash, lends his distinctive voice to the simply named Cat, who, like most characters in this tale, is more than he appears.

Selick’s hyper-detailed designs here are more whimsical and his direction more confident than in Tim Burton’s The Nightmare Before Christmas, as accomplished as that movie is. Special mention must also be made of Bruno Coulais’ score, which is chiefly comprised of a creepy children’s choir whispering barely-understandable lyrics. Whatever they’re singing, the music suits Coraline and her unusual world(s) to a T.

UPDATE: Coraline is now available on DVD and Blu-rayfrom Amazon.com.

Review by Rev. Chris Carpenter, resident film critic of Movie Dearest and the Orange County and Long Beach Blade.

Cinematic Crush: Heath Ledger

Crush object: Heath Ledger, actor.

- Long before Ennis Del Mar, he played a gay cyclist in the Australian television series Sweat. Also in his home country, he appeared on the TV shows Ship to Shore and Home and Away and made his film debut in Blackrock.

- Moving to America, he starred in the TV fantasy series Roar and the Hollywood teen comedy 10 Things I Hate About You. His star continued to rise with both lead roles (A Knight's Tale, The Four Feathers, Ned Kelly) and strong supporting parts (The Patriot, Monster's Ball, Lords of Dogtown).

- 2005 was his big year. In addition to the title roles in The Brothers Grimm and Casanova, he turned in what would become an iconic performance in Brokeback Mountain. The role won him Best Actor honors from the Australian Film Institute, the New York Film Critics Circle and several other critics groups, as well as nominations from the Academy Awards, the Screen Actors Guild, the Golden Globes, the Independent Spirit Awards, the BAFTA Film Awards and many more.

- He followed up Brokeback with acclaimed performances in the indie films Candy and I'm Not There, but his highest profile role to date would come with the blockbuster-in-the making The Dark Knight. His daring, mesmerizing performance of the classic Batman nemesis the Joker earned praise from all who saw it during filming, and went on to earn him universal acclaim and a slew of awards following its record-setting release last summer, including possibly (most likely) the Oscar this Sunday night.

- Tragically, as we all know, he did not live to see the phenomenal response or overwhelming success of The Dark Knight. His final screen performance, in The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus, will be seen this fall.

Awards Watch: Weekend Wrap-Up

With less than a week to go before the Oscars, this past weekend saw four guild award ceremonies ... and wouldn't you know it, Slumdog Millionaire won in every one.

In addition to taking the American Society of Cinematographers and the Cinema Audio Society awards, Slumdog also received trophies from the Art Directors Guild (for contemporary film) and the American Cinema Editors (for drama).

It wasn't all Slumdog though, as The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (period film) and The Dark Knight (fantasy film) also won for their art direction, while WALL-E (comedy, a first for an animated film) and Man on Wire (documentary) took home ACE Eddie Awards as well.

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Reel Thoughts Interview: Dan's New "Castle"

I recently had the opportunity to chat with director Dan Castle about his "gay Aussie surf movie", Newcastle, scheduled to screen at the upcoming Sedona Film Festival:

NC: Newcastle deals with one of the brothers coming to grips with his sexual orientation. What inspired you to include this in the story?
DC: I started surfing when I was 33 and wanted to bring that outsider experience to the screen in terms of capturing surf culture. It is so insular and exclusive a sub-culture and being gay is still pretty much a taboo, especially among the teenagers, that I thought it would be great from a dramatic standpoint to throw a character who is pretty well adjusted to the fact that he is gay into this ultra-straight gang of surfers and see what happens.


Being a gay guy who learned to surf later in life, I encountered a lot of surfers along the California coast and in Hawaii, New Zealand and Australia who were really helpful and friendly toward me and who I forged some of my best friendships with, so I really wanted to dispel the myth that all surfers are homophobes and that if you're gay you can't learn how to surf or integrate into another sub-culture that isn't gay.

At the same time, I didn't want to make a gay film or make the film specifically centered around Fergus, the gay twin in the film. I just wanted his point of view among this group of teens and to also show the softer side of a character like Andy, who befriends Fergus and teaches him how to surf. We've all met some Andys in our lives as gay men but I haven't seen many characters like him on screen — open, unthreatened, and curious without having too much of an agenda sexually. I think the Fergus/Andy dynamic in the film in many ways represents a lot of people's experiences; it just hasn't been explored much on screen yet.

NC: In your opinion, how well are GLBT people accepted in Australia versus America?
DC: Australia has a vibrant gay community in the big cities, a great parade at Mardi Gras time every year and it has a great metrosexual vibe about it, but it is still a very homophobic country when it comes to the establishment and media. It is still pretty accepted in the mainstream papers and tabloids to exploit or call attention to people's sexual orientation in a negative way.


I was a bit surprised by that coming out of the Sydney press when working and living in Sydney the past six years. Because of its size and dominance in the region of the world, you might think Sydney would be more like a San Francisco, Los Angeles or New York City when it comes to being culturally sophisticated, but in reality, it is a small city in a small country that is very conservative, so I felt it was more in tune with a middle American mentality than the cutting edge cities I mentioned in the US or say London or Paris, abroad.

NC: What feedback on the film has made you the happiest?
DC: I knew when I made the film that it would be a splitter ­­— some would hate it and some would love it, and that has been the case. Thankfully, percentage-wise a lot more people love it, along with critics, than not, but there were some hostile critiques of the film that in many ways I felt said more about the reviewers than the film ... so it was great to have people and some highly respected critics embrace the film and actually get exactly what I was going after in terms of capturing what it really feels like when you are a teenager experiencing this onslaught of confusing emotions that hit all of us at some point in our teens. The ones who get on that wavelength totally go with the film and love it, the ones that don't complain that it isn't what they thought it was going to be or should be — but those types are never pleased, so there's no point in even trying to reach them with anything that isn't mainstream.


NC: What fascinated you about the surfing culture in Newcastle?
DC: Its location. It is two hours north of Sydney, but it is really its own town. Newcastle is a town with no through road, so when you go there, you have to turn off the main highway that runs up the coast of Oz and drive about five miles to get into and then back out of it. I loved that sense of isolation. It was different than most of the other coastal towns I have been to in Australia, or anywhere else, for that matter.

And the industrial port and history of the town was great as a backdrop because there haven't been many industrial surf films before. I loved that it has these incredible surf beaches but also this really tough working class identity all in the same place. And all those coal ships on the horizon waiting to load up with coal was also a great image to play with in terms of the lead character's frustration with feeling trapped in a fate he can't escape other than through surfing on the pro circuit, so the stakes are higher for Jesse than would be if that all wasn't there.

The Sedona Film Festival will run from February 24 to March 1. Click here to watch the trailer for Newcastle.

UPDATE: Newcastle is now available on DVDfrom Amazon.com.

Interview by Neil Cohen, resident film critic of Movie Dearest and Phoenix's Echo Magazine.

From Screen to Stage: Broadway Billys United and More

Some great news for our favorite ballet boys leads off the latest round-up of From Screen to Stage news:

- The three young actors who alternate in the title role of Billy ElliotDavid Alvarez, Trent Kowalik and Kiril Kulish — will be considered jointly for the Best Actor Tony Award.

- Elsewhere in Tony Administration Committee decisions, the four main cast members of White Christmas will compete in the lead categories, and the show itself is apparently eligible for the Best Musical prize (due to its previous history in regional theaters, it could have been bumped to revival).

- Ogre, meet harpies: The cast of Shrek the Musical will let their "Freak Flag" fly on this Tuesday's episode of The View.

- Go ahead, make my play: Dirty Harry will sing (?!) in Magnum Force: The Musical.

- La Cage aux Folles, Rain Man and Sunset Boulevard are among the nominees for the 33rd annual Laurence Olivier Awards, to be presented March 8 in London.

- The John Barrowman-hosted, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat-casting reality show Any Dream Will Do will be re-broadcast stateside on BBC America beginning March 29.

- The Academy Award nominated song "Listen" will be added in to the upcoming Dreamgirls national tour.

- Minsky's, recently reviewed by our own Reverend, is headed to Broadway!

- If you missed Arias with a Twist, the "downtown fusion of song and exotic puppetry from Joey Arias and Basil Twist", it will be coming to a screen near you sometime in the future.

- Playbill's Diva Talk chats up Xanadu's newest muse, Elizabeth Stanley.

- If it's good enough for Tommy: The Who's Quadrophenia to land on the West End.

- And finally, two blondes, two unlikely stage productions: a Marilyn Monroe "dance musical" and an Anna Nicole Smith ... opera?

UPDATE: Here's the video clip of the Shrek performance on The View.

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Reel Thoughts Interview: Lights Over Phoenix

Prior to its Arizona premier at the Sedona Film Festival, I had the opportunity to chat with director Daniel Pace about his new film, The Appearance of a Man, which investigates strange happenings over the Valley of the Sun in 1997:

I wonder if it is wise to show The Appearance of a Man in Sedona, given its reputation for having vortexes and energy fields, but Argentine director Daniel Pace is eager to show his film, where he hopes it will garner the same praise its received in Monaco and San Diego (where Michael Tassoni took an acting award).

NC: Lots of people, myself included, saw these lights over Phoenix back in 1997. What inspiration did you take from them to craft the film? Is it based on any theories that circulated after their appearance?
DP: I didn’t see the lights that night but I heard the news, and the controversy generated by the sightings in the following days, and weeks. I was very intrigued because, coming from South America, I’ve heard of similar stories before, except that in some of the stories I’ve heard, not everything happened in the sky but on the ground as well. The whole episode intrigued me to the point that I wanted to do something, at least investigate it, but while everyone was wondering whether it was a UFO or a military exercise, I went into a completely different direction.


I went to Mexico, where similar sightings had been reported along with accounts of “alien” encounters. After several eyewitness interviews, I started to realize that whatever people were seeing and coming into contact with — man or alien — the experiences these people went through had a mystical, or spiritual dimension. These findings coincided with some accounts from Phoenix, and I began to work on the script as it developed. As I had more conversations with witnesses and people who were coming up with stories, I started to recognize a pattern — there was something paranormal to all this, something even spiritual, something that we can’t just explain with our understanding of science, something that transcended our sense of reality. So the film is not based on and doesn’t address any of the circulating theories, but rather it proposes a different way to look at this phenomenon and asks the viewer a few questions — answers that only can be found within ourselves.

NC: Do you like filming in Arizona? What do you think of your cast (that includes a lot of Phoenix talent like Michael Tassoni, Richard Glover and Tom Basham)?
DP: Arizona is a great place to film for many reasons: consistent weather, great locations, it’s not expensive, but mainly this story happens here, in the city, in the desert, even in parts of Mexico. The actors you mention, along the entire cast, were magnificent, top notch. Michael (who also co-produced the film with me) is an incredible talent who gives you what you want and adds his own touch of genius. Richard is probably one of the best actors in Arizona and the US. Tom is a formidable actor with a profound soul. I can put a camera in front of his eyes and just tell a story by looking inside. He has so much to offer. Slade Hall is another talented actor. He’s the kind of actor that has a terrific film presence. The camera adores the guy.


NC: You've shown the film in San Diego, Monaco and now Sedona. What has excited you most about how audiences react to the film?
DP: It’s been a rollercoaster of emotions for the audience and us. People react in many different ways and I guess it has to do with how they perceive it. The film is abstract in many ways because it deals with mysticism, and I wanted by all means not to be preachy or force my views on people, so a lot of the ideas in the film are presented as questions for you to ponder.

I think it also depends on what your expectation is. Since the film is about a UFO episode, some come with a preconceived idea and leave with something completely different. A lady told me that she was so shaken by the film that it helped her resolve a major issue in her life, while a man asked me, very upset, “Where were the aliens!?” Like any film, this one is not for everyone, nor do I expect everyone will love it, but it is thrilling when people come to me and tell me that they were so moved, or as someone said at a festival, “It’s such a profound film”. That makes all the efforts worth it.


NC: What do you want people to take away from The Appearance of a Man?
DP: In one of the scenes, one of the characters says, “Everybody is looking for meaning.” I think we are all looking for meaning, in our lives, in the things we do, in our relationships, in everything around us. Religions have been providing answers for centuries about the meaning of it all, but a lot of us are still looking, trying to comprehend, trying to make sense of everything around us.

For those of us still looking for answers, that is why I made this film. But unlike preachers and gurus and experts, I don’t know it all. I don’t have God (he or she or it) all figured out, or what the hell is a UFO made of, or what is a sin or not. All I know is that I have a few questions and sometimes the answers are not to be looked up in a book, but inside ourselves. That’s all.

The Sedona Film Festival will run from February 24 to March 1. Click here to watch the trailer for The Appearance of a Man.

Interview by Neil Cohen, resident film critic of Movie Dearest and Phoenix's Echo Magazine.

A Special Valentine Wish ...

... from Mommie Joan!

Friday, February 13, 2009

Out in Film: RuPaul

Idol worship: RuPaul, singer/songwriter/actor/model/ TV host.

- The Supermodel of the World burst onto the scene with his hit dance single "Supermodel (You Better Work)" from his debut album, making "sashay, shante" household words. His other chart hits include "Back to My Roots", "A Shade Shady (Now Prance)" and "Don't Go Breaking My Heart", a duet with Elton John. He also released a Christmas album, titled Ho Ho Ho.

- Previously, he was a fixture in the drag clubs and cabarets of his home state, Georgia, as well as New York City. He also appeared in the classic music video for the B-52's "Love Shack" and the "dragumentary" Wigstock: The Movie and, as a "MAC girl", was the first real drag queen supermodel. As well as his autobiography, Lettin' It All Hang Out, he even had his own series of fashion dolls.

- Other film roles include narrating the documentary The Eyes of Tammy Faye and playing Jan Brady's guidance counselor in The Brady Bunch movies, drag diva Rachel Tensions in To Wong Foo Thanks for Everything, Julie Newmar, the title character in Starrbooty (which he also produced) and, most recently, Tyrell Tyrelle in Another Gay Sequel: Gays Gone Wild. Out of drag, he co-starred in But I'm a Cheerleader under his full name, RuPaul Charles.

- In addition to a controversial appearance on the 1993 MTV Video Music with Milton Berle, he had his own VH-1 talk show and has guest starred on such gay-themed programs as Ellen and Rick & Steve the Happiest Gay Couple in All the World, the soap operas All My Children and Passions and the game shows The Weakest Link and Hollywood Squares.

- Borrowing a page from Project Runway (on which he has guest judged), he is now the host of RuPaul's Drag Race, currently airing on Logo. The typically outrageous reality competition pits drag queen against drag queen for the title of the next "Supermodel of the World".

Awards Watch: NAACP Image Award Winners 2008

The Secret Life of Bees won the top prize at last night's NAACP Image Awards, as well as one for director Gina Prince-Bythewood. Acting honors went to Will Smith and Rosario Dawson for Seven Pounds, Columbus Short for Cadillac Records and Oscar nominee Taraji P. Henson for The Curious Case of Benjamin Button.

Other film winners include The Black List, The Class, Rachel Getting Married and something called Slumdog Millionaire. The gay-themed Noah's Arc: Jumping the Broom, which was nominated for three awards, went home empty handed.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

First Look: Your Host, Hugh Jackman

Just ten more days until the big night ...

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Reverend’s Reviews: Meet Me at Minsky’s

It’s taken more than ten years of development to get Minsky’s to the stage, but the timing of its world premiere (now through March 1) at the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles couldn’t be more appropriate, perhaps even providential. Ten years ago, economic conditions in the US and abroad were certainly rosier than they are today. This musical adaptation of the largely forgotten 1968 movie The Night They Raided Minsky’s, set during the Great Depression, likely would have been regarded as outdated both in style and relevance.

Minsky’s now has relevance to spare. As more Americans lose their jobs and businesses close shop, the refrain of the show’s Act One showstopper — “You Gotta Get Up When You’re Down” — comforts as well as inspires. Legendary composer Charles Strouse, successfully teamed with lyricist Susan Birkenhead, is hereby confirmed as the go-to guy for Depression-era optimism. After all, he wrote the music for Annie, similarly set in the early 1930’s and which became a huge hit on Broadway during the recession-bound late 1970’s.


As much as Minsky’s has some serious things to say, one should note that the other key artists behind it are book author Bob Martin and director-choreographer Casey Nicholaw, who previously brought The Drowsy Chaperone to the stage. They ensure that Minsky’s emerges as no less clever or hilarious a valentine to a bygone era in musical-theatre history, only here the object of their affection is burlesque.

It’s hard not to compare Minsky’s to its fellow Broadway-bound work in progress, 9 to 5, which also premiered in LA last fall. While 9 to 5 boasts considerable charms, Minsky’s is at this early stage the superior achievement. Its cast of pros — which includes Christopher Fitzgerald, Tony-winner Beth Leavel, George Wendt, Kevin Cahoon and, in a winning musical debut, comedienne Rachel Dratch — all know their way around the new genre of cinema-inspired musical comedy. And in Minsky’s, no one ever appears in danger of being crushed by an errant piece of scenery!


On opening night, neither Fitzgerald nor Leavel were in the best of voice but still managed to win the audience over. Fitzgerald, after a string of well-received performances in the original companies of Wicked, Amour and Young Frankenstein, ably proves himself a leading man as burlesque impresario Billy Minsky. Katharine Leonard also impresses as the conservative Mary Sumner, with whom Billy falls in love.

But the real stars of Minsky’s are Minsky’s girls. With such names as “Giggles,” “Flossie” and “Bubbles,” they completely evoke the artistic imperfection but dedicated spirits of the many women and men (the latter personified here by the wonderful Gerry Vichi) who made vaudeville and burlesque the entertainment of choice for many during a former, culturally — and economically — challenged time.


Nicholaw stages the girls and other company members wonderfully in opening number “Workin’ Hot,” the bathroom-set “Keep It Clean,” the patriotic “God Bless the USA” (definitely not to be confused with the Lee Greenwood song!), “Tap Happy” and the glorious finale “Nothing Lasts Forever.” In terms of sheer, sexually-suggestive hilarity, though, you can’t beat the opening line of the girls’ “Bananas.” Worshiping a Carmen Miranda-esque figure clad in the titular fruit, they proclaim, “We don’t need men when we’ve got bananas!”

Special mention must be made of Anna Louizos’ scenic designs, especially her spectacular “Bucharest Café” set, and Gregg Barnes’ period-perfect costumes. Their work is the sweet icing on the delectable cake that is Minsky’s.

Review by Rev. Chris Carpenter, resident film critic of Movie Dearest and the Orange County and Long Beach Blade.

Women We Love: Hayley Mills

Object of our affection: Hayley Mills, actress.

- Following her BAFTA-winning film debut in Tiger Bay, she was discovered by Walt Disney and cast as his Pollyanna. Her iconic performance won her a special Academy Award (the last of the "juvenile" Oscars) as well as a Golden Globe as "Most Promising Newcomer".

- Her next big hit for Disney was The Parent Trap, wherein she co-starred with "herself" and received a Golden Globe nomination, as well as a hit record with "Let's Get Together". Subsequent Disney films included In Search of the Castaways, Summer Magic (another Globe nomination), The Moon-Spinners and That Darn Cat! She was named a Disney Legend in 1998.

- Outside of the Mouse House, she starred in Whistle Down the Wind (based on the book by her mother, Mary Hayley Bell) and co-starred with her father, Sir John Mills, in The Truth About Spring. Other films include The Chalk Garden, The Trouble with Angels and The Family Way, which featured a brief but still controversial shot of her bare behind.

- Stage roles have included Peter Pan in London, Anna Leonowens in touring versions of The King and I and an Off-Broadway run of Noël Coward's Suite in Two Keys.

- On television, she has guest starred on the usual series (The Love Boat, Murder, She Wrote) and headlined a trio of Parent Trap made-for-TV sequels. She also starred as the title character in Good Morning, Miss Bliss, the short-lived precursor to Saved by the Bell. More recently, she has appeared on the British drama Wild at Heart.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Reel Thoughts: I Do, I Do

Not to be confused with “jumping the shark,” that indelible moment when a TV show goes horribly and irrevocably wrong, “jumping the broom” refers to a slave ritual that signified marriage at a time when they were forbidden to wed.

The popular Logo series Noah’s Arc has definitely not jumped the shark with their new full-length film version, titled Noah's Arc: Jumping the Broom(now available on DVD). Creator/writer/director/producer Patrik-Ian Polk has reunited the original cast in a timely story of the trials and tribulations of the gay marriage between Noah (Darryl Stephens) and his closeted beau Wade (Jensen Atwood). Set in the frosty off-season in beautiful Martha’s Vineyard, Wade has invited Noah’s friends to witness their marriage, but has neglected to tell his straight-laced mother (the always-wonderful Tonya Pinkins). Wade is also not “feeling the love” from any of Noah’s pals, Alex (Rodney Chester), the mother hen of the “bride,” jealous man-tramp Ricky (Christian Vincent) and the usually calm Chance (Douglas Spearman).


Despite the happy occasion, all of the relationships — serious and casual — are cracking under various pressures. Alex is busy popping caffeine pills to get the festivities done right, while Ricky is ignoring Brandon (Gary LeRoi Gray), the young guy he brought who also turns out to be Chance’s adoring student. This infatuation infuriates Chance’s lover Eddie (Jonathan Julian), while Wade is steamed that Noah is being chased by a closeted rapper, Baby Gat (an indescribably crazy Jason Steed).

The film (recently nominated for a GLAAD Media Award and three NAACP Image Awards) feels like an African-American version of 3-Day Weekend with sometimes-shaky acting, but engrossing takes on monogamy, masculine/feminine stereotypes and sex as a way of avoiding self-discovery. If you’re a fan of the show, you’ll enjoy catching up with the boys, and if you’ve never seen Noah’s Arc before, you’ll enjoy Jumping the Broom’s combination of sweetness and sexiness, as well as its hunky cast. An added bonus is seeing Phoebe Snow sing at the end, although I’m not telling whether or not the knot gets tied!

Review by Neil Cohen, resident film critic of Movie Dearest and Phoenix's Echo Magazine.

Poster Post: Almost Time to Watch

After years of speculation and months of legal woes, it's almost a little hard to believe that it is now a little less than a month away: Watchmen lands in theaters and IMAX March 6.

Monday, February 9, 2009

Cinematic Crush: Richard Gere

Crush object: Richard Gere, actor.

- He first found stage success in the original Broadway productions of Grease and Bent.

- Early films include Looking for Mr. Goodbar, Days of Heaven, Bloodbrothers and Yanks, leading up to his most infamous role as the title character in American Gigolo (including that full frontal shot) and his first blockbuster as the title character(s) in An Officer and a Gentleman.

- The rest of the 80's saw a string of notorious flops for the actor, such as Breathless, The Cotton Club and King David. But the next decade started well in 1990 with a strong dramatic turn in Internal Affairs and another big hit with Pretty Woman.

- His next strong year was 2002, with the marital drama Unfaithful and the splashy musical Chicago. His role as the smooth talking lawyer Billy Flynn in the latter razzle dazzled the critics and won him Golden Globe and Screen Actors Guild Awards.

- Other notable films he has starred in include Sommersby, the TV movie And the Band Played On, Mr. Jones, Primal Fear, Runaway Bride, Shall We Dance, The Hoax, I'm Not There and Nights in Rodanthe, which makes its DVD debuttomorrow.

Awards Watch: Grammy Winners 2008

Last night's Grammy Awards included a few stage and screen winners:

- Best Musical Show Album: In the Heights
- Best Compilation Soundtrack Album for Motion Picture, Television or Other Visual Media: Juno
- Best Score Soundtrack Album for Motion Picture, Television or Other Visual Media: The Dark Knight
- Best Song Written for Motion Picture, Television or Other Visual Media: "Down to Earth" from WALL-E
- Best Instrumental Composition: "The Adventures of Mutt" from Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull
- Best Instrumental Arrangement: "Define Dancing" from WALL-E

Sunday, February 8, 2009

Reel Thoughts: La Vie Boheme

I have seen Jonathan Larson’s rock musical Rent live when the Broadway tour came to town, and on the big screen when the film version was released (starring most of the original cast), but I never really loved it until I watched Rent: Filmed Live on Broadway,the new DVD of the emotional final Broadway performance. The cast, staging and film direction finally reveal the heart and soul that was missing from the touring production and silver screen incarnation. Not only do you feel the immediacy of the live production, you also get a rare chance to see much closer views of the actors, making this the definitive record of the hit show.

Rent re-imagines the opera La Boheme set in New York’s gritty East Village in the early ’90s. Poverty, drug addiction, AIDS and a rejection of the Yuppie lifestyle of the ’80s all play parts in the lives of a group of friends, as they spend a year of love and loss.


Mark (Adam Kantor) and Roger (Will Chase) are roommates in an industrial flat with no heat or electricity. Mimi (One Life to Live’s Renee Elise Goldsberry) is a club dancer who lives downstairs and catches Roger’s eye. Tom Collins (Michael McElroy) is the men’s gay friend who meets and falls in love with street entertainer Angel (Justin Johnston); the two share HIV-positive status, as does Roger, who contracted it from his late girlfriend.

Meanwhile, Mark’s ex-girlfriend Maureen (Eden Espinoza) is a performance artist who left him for Joanne (Tracie Thoms, reprising her role from the film version), a lawyer. The outsider in the bunch is Benny (original cast member Rodney Hicks), who was once Mark and Roger’s friend and roommate, but who is now their unsympathetic landlord. He’s eager to redevelop the neighborhood and displace the homeless and artists who live there.

While the film version had powerful moments and a great cast, this production has all the life and energy that was missing from that earlier attempt. Kantor is a charismatic Mark, the narrator and documenter of his friends’ lives, while Chase gives the downbeat Roger a raw energy that offsets his depression. Goldsberry is a Broadway vet who makes Mimi a wildcat on the prowl in her showstopper “Out Tonight”, but she’s a great actress as well in Mimi’s more-subdued moments.

Espinoza is not quite as good as Idina Menzel, but she rocks Maureen’s performance piece, and Tracie Thoms is excellent again as the frustrated Joanne. McElroy makes Tom a warm and caring lover for Angel, who is played brilliantly by the handsome Johnston. When he performs “Today 4 U”, about his windfall from driving a yapping Akita to take a swan dive, you will finally be able to understand the lyrics and appreciate the black humor (I love dogs! I do! But someone who names an Akita “Evita” has already sentenced the dog to purgatory!).

The show’s standout numbers, like “Seasons of Love”, “Light My Candle” and the title tune, are well staged and sung, and director Michael Warren has a great sense of drama in how he guides his cameras. Most likely, you weren’t there on September 7, 2008 to see this extraordinary performance, capped by most of the original cast members like Adam Pascal and Anthony Rapp joining the current cast in the final “Seasons of Love,” but with this DVD and its behind-the-scenes extras, you’ll feel like you were.

Review by Neil Cohen, resident film critic of Movie Dearest and Phoenix's Echo Magazine.

Awards Watch: BAFTA Winners 2008

Slumdog Millionaire continues its sweep through the pre-Oscar awards, nabbing seven trophies from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts today, including Best Picture and Best Director for Danny Boyle.

Kate Winslet (The Reader) beat herself (Revolutionary Road) for Best Actress, while Mickey Rourke (The Wrestler), Heath Ledger (The Dark Knight) and Penélope Cruz (Vicky Cristina Barcelona) picked up the other acting prizes. (Ironically, the top five awards mirror the current front-runners in the MD Oscar Polls).

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button came in second over-all with three BAFTAs. Other winners include The Duchess, Hunger, In Bruges, I've Loved You So Long, Man on Wire and WALL-E.

Reverend’s Previews: The Night They Opened Minsky's

Friday night's opening in LA of the new, Broadway-bound musical Minsky's (based on the film The Night They Raided Minsky's) was the most star-studded affair I've yet attended. The show itself is superior, even at this work-in-progress stage, and highly enjoyable. I'll get a full review up in the next day or two, but wanted to share my celebrity encounters with y'all.

At various points, I was within earshot of Mr. Sulu himself, George Takei, as well as David Hyde Pierce and Doris Roberts. Standing at the urinal next to mine (classy!) during intermission was John Glover, his Lionel Luthor mane of hair out of control (John, buy some conditioner!). John played "Man in Chair" in the Broadway production of The Drowsy Chaperone, which was created by the Minsky's team, so his inclusion in this opening was natural.

While I haven't called her yet, my mother will scream when I tell her who exited the theater with my partner and I at show's end: Barry Manilow! I had noticed him a few rows ahead of me in the theatre. He is rail-thin and looked tired but seemed to be enjoying himself.

But the unexpected delight of the evening, apart from the show itself, was my being seated next to choreographer-director Jerry Mitchell of The Full Monty, Hairspray, La Cage aux Folles, Legally Blonde and Broadway Bares fame! I'd noticed him entering the theatre a few minutes before the performance, gradually making his way toward the center. I had a single seat next to me, but didn't even think it could be his until he got to the end of our row. It would be an understatement to say I was thrilled.

I introduced myself and he was as nice as could be. He excitedly spoke about how "all his friends" are in Minsky's. Indeed, half the show's featured male cast members seem to have been former Ednas in Hairspray on Broadway: George Wendt, Paul Vogt and Blake Hammond.

As the lights went down and the orchestra started to play, Mitchell whispered "It certainly sounds like burlesque," to which I responded "Just try to keep your clothes on; I've seen a couple of your Broadway Bares!" He laughed. We made a few other side comments to each other during the performance but generally behaved like the professionals we are.

During intermission, he filled me in on his current project: a new burlesque project for Las Vegas entitled Peep Show. He is staging it with assistance from Minsky's co-choreographer Lee Wilkins. The score is being written by the acclaimed Michael John LaChiusa (The Wild Party). It sounds like a trip to Vegas later this year is in order!

Of course, seated on the other side of me during Minsky's was my favorite "featured performer", my partner James Jaeger. He is himself busily prepping the west coast premiere of Charles Busch's Our Leading Lady, in which he plays "Ferguson." It opens February 20 at the Neighborhood Playhouse in Palos Verdes Estates, just south of LA. The stars certainly were out Friday night!

By Rev. Chris Carpenter, resident film critic of Movie Dearest and the Orange County and Long Beach Blade.

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Awards Watch: WGA Winners 2008

Congratulations to Dustin Lance Black, winner of the Writers Guild of America Award for Original Screenplay for Milk. The other feature film winners are Simon Beaufoy (Adapted Screenplay for Slumdog Millionaire) and Ari Folman (Documentary Screenplay for Waltz with Bashir).

James Whitmore: 1921-2009

Respected character actor James Whitmore, who appeared in such classics as Them! and The Shawshank Redemption, passed away yesterday at the age of 87.

Whitmore, who won such awards as the Golden Globe, Tony and Emmy throughout his long career, was nominated twice for the Academy Award, for Battleground and Give 'em Hell, Harry! In the latter, he portrayed Harry S. Truman, recreating his acclaimed stage performance. Whitmore was an expert at one-man shows such as this; he also found success with similar productions based on the lives of Will Rogers and Theodore Roosevelt.

Other notable films he appeared in include The Asphalt Jungle, Kiss Me Kate, Battle Cry, Oklahoma!, Planet of the Apes, Tora! Tora! Tora!, Nuts and The Majestic.

Friday, February 6, 2009

Reverend's Reviews: Good Things Come in Small Packages

With two weeks left before this year's Oscar ceremony, moviegoers in major US cities have the opportunity starting today to see The 81st Academy Award-Nominated Short Films in local theaters. According to press notes, the theatrical release of each year's nominees since 2005 has experienced a 223% increase in attendance.

I had the opportunity to screen these shorts in advance and highly recommend seeing them. Not only will you have a better shot at winning your Oscar pool, but each live-action and animated film nominated this year is a gem. They hail from Russia, Japan, France, the United Kingdom, Switzerland, Germany, Denmark, Ireland and the good ol' US of A.


Each of the animated nominees is wordless, and I'm always impressed by filmmakers' ability to tell a compelling story without dialogue. In addition to the sweet Lavatory Lovestory, there are the hilarious This Way Up (about an undertaker and his son's misadventures as they transport a body) and Disney/Pixar's Presto, which ran before WALL-E in theaters last summer. My personal favorite is Oktapodi, which delightfully shows in a mere three minutes the lengths love will go to between two separated octopi.

The likely Oscar-winner among the animated shorts, though, will likely be La Maison en Petits Cubest (House of Small Cubes). It is a beautifully animated and ultimately poignant tale about an elderly man reviewing his life as floodwaters overtake his home.


The live-action nominees are Auf der Strecke (On the Line), which recounts the tragic consequences of a love-struck security guard's refusal to involve himself in a fight aboard a subway train; Grisen (The Pig), an amusing story about a hospitalized man's infatuation with a unique painting; New Boy, based on Irish writer Roddy Doyle's story of a young immigrant's struggle for acceptance at his new school; and Manon sur le Bitume (Manon on the Asphalt), about the repercussions of a bicycle accident.

I'm partial to the fifth live-action nominee, and I think Oscar voters will be too. Spielzeugland (Toyland) follows a German mother's search for her missing son in the wake of their Jewish neighbors' deportation. It is harrowing but features an unpredictable, moving denouement one cannot — and shouldn't — easily forget.

Review by Rev. Chris Carpenter, resident film critic of Movie Dearest and the Orange County and Long Beach Blade.

Out in Film: Bruce LaBruce

Idol worship: Bruce LaBruce, actor/director/writer/ producer.

- He first gained fame with the queer punk zine J.D.s, which he co-edited.

- Currently, he writes and photographs for such publications as Vice, Nerve.com and BlackBook magazine.

- But he is best known for his controversial films (which "merge the artistic techniques of independent film with gay pornography") with such risqué titles as No Skin Off My Ass and Give Piece of Ass a Chance.

- Other films of his include Super 8½, Hustler White, Skin Gang (a.k.a. Skin Flick) and The Raspberry Reich.

- His latest, the gay zombie flick Otto; or, Up with Dead People, makes its DVD debutnext week.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Reverend’s Reviews: Nothing's Impossible ...

... Yentl is finally on DVD!

Giving in to fan demand that has existed basically since the advent of DVDs, Barbra Streisand has finally released her 1983 directorial debut. Very loosely based on Isaac Bashevis Singer's Yentl, the Yeshiva Boy, Babs' ambitious musical — er, "film with music" — has been given a ravishing transfer and extended director's cut treatment loaded with behind-the-scenes goodies.

Streisand's enormous success as a singer and actress in the 1960's and 70's as well as her perfectionist reputation generated massive press and industry attention during Yentl's production. Much of it was critical and provoked grave concerns on the part of United Artists/MGM, which was funding the film.

The most unusual "extra" in the Yentl DVD is a reproduced letter from 1982 addressed to the British press. Stating that it is "entirely unsolicited" by Streisand or anyone else, it speaks glowingly of the neophyte director's on-set conduct and is signed by the majority of the cast and crew (co-star Mandy Patinkin's signature is conspicuously absent).

Yentl also proved Streisand's naysayers wrong when it opened to largely rave reviews and great box office. Steven Spielberg, then the hottest director in the world thanks to his 1982 smash E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial, called the film "the best directing debut since Citizen Kane!" In addition, Yentl was nominated for several Academy Awards and deservedly won the Oscar for its gorgeous song score by Michel Legrand and Alan & Marilyn Bergman. Upon viewing today, it remains a smartly written, meticulously well-directed and beautifully photographed production.

The storyline, about a Jewish woman in 19th-century eastern Europe who illegally studies the Talmud and disguises herself as a man in order to continue doing so after her father's death, held inherent interest for Jews and women as a "look how far we've come" history lesson. What wasn't quite as expected was the film's appeal to LGBT viewers. We readily identified, however, with Yentl's "closeted" life as a scholar; her yearning for her father's approval of her unconventional, unmarried life; and her love for fellow "Yeshiva boy" Avigdor, which for all intents and purposes appears to be — thanks to her disguise — a homosexual relationship.

That Avigdor has the hots for Anchel (the male name Yentl adopts) and is himself conflicted about them only heightens the homosexual tension. In one of the film's most memorable scenes, a naked Patinkin tries to get Anchel/Yentl to go skinny-dipping with him. Protesting to the point of near-hysteria, Anchel/Yentl runs away from him. On a side note, Yentl is Patinkin's finest and sexiest big-screen hour (though fans of The Princess Bride might beg to differ).


The extended director's cut now on DVD is only two minutes longer than the theatrical version, but it includes a previously cut scene in which Anchel's wife, Hadass (a luminous, Oscar-nominated Amy Irving; whatever happened to her?), cites the biblical story of David and Jonathan. The two men are said in scripture to have shared "a love that surpassed that of men for women." Hadass bluntly asks Anchel, "Who do you love more": her or Avigdor?

Streisand provides separately several other deleted scenes. Most are inconsequential and wisely omitted, although a scene of Yentl and her father (the great Nehemiah Persoff) encountering an aggressive matchmaker is very funny and well-played.


Finally, the DVD includes storyboard sequences of two songs cut before production. One, "The Moon and I," has been previously heard as part of Streisand's Just for the Record...collection. The other, "Several Sins a Day," is a never-before-released, up-tempo piece boasting clever, guilt-wracked lyrics.

Curiously, Yentl's DVD release was barely announced in advance; I only learned about it two days beforehand. But if every gay man, Jewish person and progressive woman in the US were to buy Yentl on DVD, it could well end our economic recession. So get out there now and do it, not only for Babs, but for our country!

Review by Rev. Chris Carpenter, resident film critic of Movie Dearest and the Orange County and Long Beach Blade.

Jude Looks Like a Lady

Here's a first look at Jude Law as Minx, a transgender supermodel, in Sally Potter's Rage, set to premiere at the Berlin Film Festival (which starts today). The indie drama, a murder mystery set in the world of fashion, also stars Judi Dench, Steve Buscemi, Eddie Izzard, John Leguizamo and Dianne Wiest.

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Awards Watch: Best Original Song

This post is part of The LAMB Devours the Oscars, a 24-part series dissecting the 81st Annual Academy Awards hosted by the Large Association of Movie Blogs.

Through the years, the Academy Awards category of "Achievement in Music Written for Motion Pictures, Original Song" has received more than its fair share of derision. Simply put, it is the Oscar that gets no respect, partly due to the sometimes-questionable presentation of the nominated tunes on the night of The Big Show. Perhaps it is these very and varied production numbers, added to my already undying love for anything even remotely show tune-y, that makes Oscar's Best Songs something of a "guilty pleasure" of mine. In fact, I dare say it is my favorite Oscar category, the first one I instinctively scan the list for when the nominations are announced.

So naturally, this year's nominations were a bit of a disappointment for me, as only three songs (from only two films) made the finals. However, it was a mixed blessing, as (unlike in most years), all the nominees are deserving of winning. And those nominees are:
  • “Down to Earth” from WALL-E(Walt Disney), Music by Peter Gabriel and Thomas Newman, Lyric by Peter Gabriel.
  • “Jai Ho” from Slumdog Millionaire(Fox Searchlight), Music by A.R. Rahman, Lyric by Gulzar.
  • “O Saya” from Slumdog Millionaire (Fox Searchlight), Music and Lyric by A.R. Rahman and Maya Arulpragasam.
Anybody who has seen these two movies and/or heard the three songs (you can listen to them in their entirety at the Official Movie Dearest MySpace page) will notice that the Original Song category has gone global this year; all three tunes have distinct World Music influences. It is also notable that both Newman and Rahman are nominated in the other music category, Original Score, this year. This leads me to predict that they both will be taking home the Little Gold Man on Oscar Night, one in each category. But which one? Let's take a closer look/listen to all three nominated songs.


“O Saya” starts off Slumdog Millionaire with a driving, percussive beat as the two young protagonists are chased through the slums of Mumbai. The lyrics comment on the onscreen action ("They can't touch me") while alluding to the characters' futures ("One day I'll be a star"), and this perfectly captures the desperate situation Jamal and Salim are in, and the lengths they'll each go to escape it.


In contrast, the other Slumdog song “Jai Ho” is a high-energy finale heard at the beginning of the end credits and inter-cut with a dance number right out of Bollywood led by lovebirds Jamal and Latika in the middle of a train station. This infectious fantasy sequence serves as the "happily ever after" to this Dickensian tale and (despite some people's misgivings about it) is a large reason why so many audiences around the world have embraced Slumdog Millionaire, as it follows the old show biz maxim to leave them dancing in the aisles.


The third and final nominee, WALL-E's “Down to Earth”, also acts as an epilogue to the film in question. As Gabriel's plaintive yet inspiring vocals tell about "snow up on the mountains ... rivers down below" and sending the "seeds out in the breeze", the expressionistic end titles sequence depicts the rebirth of our planet through the evolution of art. This song too provides a happy ending, as the words and music wrap you in a comforting belief that there is hope for Mother Earth after all.

So whose name will be called on The Big Night? I think Rahman will get the score award for his overall work on Slumdog, while the song trophy will go to Newman and Gabriel. The Academy will want to (finally) honor Newman, and they love giving this particular prize to superstar recording artists like Gabriel (for example, such past winners as Elton John, Bob Dylan and Melissa Etheridge).

In any event, with three excellent compositions to choose from (and their eagerly awaited live performances on February 22), they (and we) are all winners in my Oscar Song-loving book.

Women We Love: Dakota Fanning

Object of our affection: Dakota Fanning, actress.

- Her acting career began at the age of five with television commercials and guest appearances, including playing child versions of both Calista Flockhart and Ellen DeGeneres. She would also play a young Reese Witherspoon in Sweet Home Alabama and voice younger versions of the animated characters Kim Possible and Wonder Woman.

- With her performance as Lucy (as in "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds") in I Am Sam, she became the youngest actress to be nominated for a Screen Actors Guild Award. The role also won her a Critics' Choice Award, and she is also the youngest member ever of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (as well as the youngest Woman We Love to date).

- Other film roles include Trapped, Uptown Girls, Dr. Seuss' The Cat in the Hat, Man on Fire, Hide and Seek, Dreamer: Inspired by a True Story, Charlotte's Web and the Steven Spielberg alien epics War of the Worlds and the Taken mini-series. More recently, she has graduated to more adult roles, such as in The Secret Lives of Bees and the controversial Hounddog.

- It's a busy week for the starlet; in addition to the latter two films' release on DVD, she stars in the super-powered action flick Push and voices the title character in Coraline, both opening Friday.

- Next up for the almost-15-year-old? Possibly playing an evil vamp in the Twilight sequel, New Moon.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Poster Post: Nerd Vader

In a journey fraught with almost as much peril as the beloved sci-fi series its heroes idolize (including some well-publicized skirmishes with the evil Emperor Weinstein), Fanboys is finally opening in theaters this week. Watch the trailer here.

Monday, February 2, 2009