Loading....
Recent Article links:

Category 'interview with the lambpire'

Interview with a LAMBpire: Anna of Defiant Success

Andrew here to shine a light on another one of our LAMBs, this time Anna of Defiant Success who won the last episode of LAMB Casting. On with the questions…
                 
Andrew: You casted Carey in the Audrey Hepburn role and back when she did An Education there was much hubbub to her being the next Audrey. Do you think publicity like this boxes a contemporary in, or do you think it’s fair game to see actors compared to their predecessors?


Anna: Well, I have no problem with that. I compare contemporary actors with classic actors all the time. (It’s kind of evident from the Counterfeit Casting posts on my blog.)

Andrew: Who is your favourite director? Why?


Anna: Oh hell. I got too many to name. Gun to my head, I would say Billy Wilder simply because his movies have stood the test of time. Some Like It Hot is still funny, The Apartment is still sweet and Sunset Boulevard is still wonderfully cynical.

Andrew: So, you’re a fan of Billy Wilder and even though he’s remembered for his comedies most often he’s tackled a great deal of genres. Can you think of any significant contemporary directors who have that ability to shift genres successfully?

Anna: Steven Spielberg. I mean, really. He had Jurassic Park and Schindler’s List in 1993, Minority Report and Catch Me If You Can in 2002, and War of the Worlds and Munich in 2005. If that ain’t versatility, I don’t know what is.

Andrew: Do you agree with the auteur theory (which posits that the director is the biggest creative force behind a film)?

Anna: Well, obviously. You don’t normally have people seeing a movie because a certain screenwriter was a part of it (Aaron Sorkin aside).

Andrew: In your opinion, which director best embodies this theory?

Anna: Stanley Kubrick comes to mind, even if by all accounts he was tyrannical on the set. But there’s no denying the impact his movies had on the world of cinema.

Andrew:How important you think casting is in film? Does the actor make the role or vice versa?

Anna: Well, sometimes the casting relies on what the actor’s personality is like. But other times it’s fun to see an actor switch things up. After all, you did comment on my choices by saying that you “like that Gosling, usually so silent, is playing the more active character here and it’s nice to see the usually brash Bale as the more silent Linus.”

Andrew: Do you see films predominantly as art or entertainment?

Anna: Depends on the movie. If it’s a foreign film full of imagery (*cough* Fellini *cough*), then it’s solely art. If it’s a mindless action movie full of over-the-top explosions and buxom women (side-eyes Michael Bay), then it’s solely entertainment. (Or at least tries to be.)

Andrew: Name a film, not necessarily your favourite, but one which you’d like to take credit for (writing or directing, or both).

Anna: Writing the cliff scene dialogue in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.
                 
What do you think of Anna’s responses?
       
(If you have any questions you’d like to ask the LAMBs, email me at dangerous.liaison231(@)yahoo.com -remove parentheses)

Interview with a LAMBpire: Robert of His Eyes Were Watching Movies

Andrew here with another episode of Interview with a LAMBpire where the winners of LAMB Casting get interviewed by moi. Robert of His Eyes Were Watching Movies is this month’s winner.
Andrew: How important you think casting is in film? Does the actor make the role or vice versa?
                
Robert: I don’t know if casting is the most important aspect of a film - I think the best actors can usually make any role work for them. Then again, it works both ways - sometimes casting can go so wrong, and other times seemingly bizarre choices end up working perfectly. 
                
Andrew: You’re young, who – if anyone – influenced your interest in film?
             
Robert: Well, my dad was always into classic/foreign cinema so our house was full of movies and thus I was exposed to cinema at a young age. However, it was actually my best friend who turned me into a cinephile - she is so well versed in classic cinema and when we were in middle school she recommended Rear Window to me. Shortly after I watched it, I discovered IMDb - and I’ve never gone back. 
       
Andrew: Is it difficult to keep blogging with school and other teenage commitments?
            
Robert: Admittedly, it can be! Sometimes after an exhausting day of piano practicing and schoolwork, watching and writing about a movie can seem like a lot of work. Blogging is a lot tougher than people give it credit for, and I really admire people like you who post so frequently even with so many other commitments. Unfortunately I’m not quite that good, but I do my best. ;) 
            
Andrew: Ha, my posting has been flagging lately. Life abounds. Speaking of other bloggers, though, to what extent do you allow critics to influence your enjoyment of film.
             
Robert: As much as I’d like to say that they don’t influence my reaction to a film at all, that is simply not the case. Some kind of prejudice (be it positive or negative) due to critics is unavoidable, I think, and for that reason I always try to avoid reviews before I watch a movie. Sometimes though, I can’t escape it. One example of a movie that I was completely confused about due to expectations was “I Am Love” from last year. The blogosphere was praising the movie incessantly and when I watched it I automatically disliked it at first. After a second viewing and some time to think about it though, I realized that it was actually a pretty incredible film. 
                
Andrew: What role do you feel film plays in this day and age – with specific reference to teenagers like you?
           
Robert: I feel like film has become such a great medium for artistic expression - these days, there are really no limits to what kinds of themes and ideals can be explored through the medium, and for that reason I think modern cinema is so exhilarating due to the variety of talent making films. For teenagers, I think film has become an indirect form of self-expression and community with others. In other words, the kinds of films that you watch/like become a way that you are able to identify what type of person you are, and this search for a way to “express oneself” is such a trademark of teenage life.
              
Andrew: Cillian Murphy and Toni Collette are two of the actors in your cast. Both are actors who have vociferous – if small fan bases. What do you think of them individually, and of their chances of becoming more sought after performers.
           
Robert: I simply adore Toni Collette. I fell in love with her at age 13 when I saw “The Sixth Sense” and she constantly amazes me. Thanks to “United States of Tara”, I never suffer a Toni shortage and I think she has spread her talents around enough (music, theater, film, television) that she’ll always have someone seeking after her. Cillian Murphy is much newer to me, though in the small roles of his I’ve seen, he always seems like such an intriguing actor. You mentioned that he hasn’t quite gotten that breakout role and I think that’s so true - I’ve never been disappointed by his work, he just needs a role with some critical or commercial weight that will break that glass ceiling for him. 
             
Andrew: You have a longstanding affinity for Catherine O’Hara. Do you think that O’Hara’s excellence as a comedienne was responsible for her not turning into a leading lady?
           
Robert: Ah, Catherine! Yes, I do think that her comedic skills have prevented her from becoming a leading lady. However, though I constantly bitch and moan about Catherine never gets big roles, I think her abilities as a hilarious character actress are what make her great and what have given her such longevity (she has been working for such a long time and she’s got plenty of years ahead of her!). Then again, watching her brilliance in big leading roles such as Marilyn Hack in “For Your Consideration” make me wish she would get more chances to do larger roles.
                  
Andrew: Name a film, not necessarily your favourite, but one which you’d like to take credit for (writing or directing, or both). 
            
Robert: Hm, great question. Well, I wish I could take credit for writing All About Eve or The Social Network. Totally different movies, but both are such brilliantly written. When it comes to directing, Magnolia is a movie I think of immediately, actually - P.T. Anderson is brilliant, in my opinion. Oh, and Rear Window. I don’t think anything could match up to being able to say that I directed a film as brilliant as “Rear Window”.
    
Andrew: Hitchcock, Fincher, Anderson, Mankiewicz - now that’s an eclectic mix.
           
Robert has dynamic tastes, doesn’t he?
        
(If you have any questions you’d like me to ask in the next interview email me at dangerous.liaison231(at)yahoo.com

Interview with a LAMBpire: CS of Big Thoughts From A Small Mind

Andrew here with another entry of Interview with a LAMBpire, and as per normal I’m egregiously late about it. Apparently, I can’t change my ways. The last time I featured an interview with Marshall (here) after he won an entry of LAMB Casting, and our most recent winner is CS of Big Thoughts From A Small Mind who won for recasting Forrest Gump.  Here’s some of his intelligent thoughts on aspects of cinema.
                
Andrew: Michael Shannon is one of the actors you chose for your cast. He’s been around for a while, was Oscar nominated in 2008 – what do you think of him as an actor? What do you think he has to do to make into the “big leagues”?
CS: Shannon has been doing solid work for many years (e.g. Jesus’ Son, The Woodsman, 8 Mile, Tigerland, etc.) but he really hit his stride of late. He was the best thing in both Revolutionary Road and The Runaways. I also really appreciated his work on the show HBO Boardwalk Empire. There are some actors and actresses that, for some reason or another, do not get there big break until later in life. I think Boardwalk Empire gave him great mainstream exposure which should help him further his career. Shannon will never be a big name like Tom Hanks or George Clooney, yet I can see him following the career paths of Philip Seymour Hoffman and Paul Giamatti. 
                
Andrew: I love the PSH comparison. He was sort of just floating along, sometimes in prestige flicks (The Talented Mr. Ripley or Cold Mountain, for example - oddly, both Minghella films and I loved him in both) or not-so prestigious ones like Along Came Polly. I can definitely see Shannon “breaking out” as he gets older. Do you see films as predominantly art of entertainment?
               
CS: I watch films for entertainment and often find the art in them. At the end of the day a film needs to evoke some emotion out of me. I always say that the worst type of film is one that I am indifferent to. I always smirk when I hear people state “I only watch good films!” Usually they say this in regards to watching only artistic films. How does one measure this exactly? Does a film from the 1950’s automatically have more artistic merit than a John Woo action film? I think a true lover of cinema can find the art in every genre of film. 
         
Andrew: Sort of a genre bias, no? I suppose we all have inherent biases but some film enthusiasts do seem to take it a bit too far. Do you agree with the principles of the auteur theory, which states the director is the major creative force behind a film, and is the person who leaves the biggest mark? Which director best embodies the theory?
CS: I constantly struggle with this theory as I think we tend to give directors too much praise at times. Sometimes a film can be poorly directed but have wonderful cinematography or exceptional writing. The director is responsible for overseeing the whole project, but sometimes it is the team that they work with that makes the director look good. When I think of directors who best embody the auteur theory names like Paul Thomas Anderson, Hal Hartley, Martin Scorsese, Christopher Nolan, and Wong-Kar-Wei, all come to mind. These are directors know how to get others to believe in their vision. They each have a unique voice that comes across clearly in their films. 
Andrew: Smart answer, and I don’t think the commanility that often ensues between the director and picture prize at awards’ shows helps. It suggests that the two entities are synonymous. Do you think there’s more merit in being an auteur-director? i.e. Would you say that the directors above (Scorsese, Anderson, Nolan) who embody this theory are superior to their peers?
         
CS: I think a director’s merit really boils down to personal preference. Lars Von Tier and Michael Haneke are perfect examples of this. Some herald them as master auteur-directors while others just think they are dreadful. I find that I tend to be drawn more to auteur-directors mainly because they take the most risk. They normally do not have to worry about the weight of a studio riding on their films success (Christopher Nolan’s Batman franchise would be the exception to this). Would any other director beside Paul Thomas Anderson have the stones to include biblical allegory to their film the way he did in Magnolia? The “frogs scene” is truly a make or break moment for most viewers. Yet this does not mean that I will view other directors with a scornful eye. Some of my favourite films (e.g. Zero Effect, Flirting, Chasing Amy, Donnie Darko, Six Degrees of Separation, etc.) were made by directors who would not fall under the auteur label in most film circles. At the end of the day, the difference between an average director and an auteur, like everything in the film industry, can often come down to one or two films. Neil LaBute was considered an auteur after his first three films then he went on to make The Wicker Man and Lakeview Terrace. Suddenly all the auteur talk stopped. I know I am simplifying things but you get the point.
             
Andrew: Ah, Lakeview Terrace is often such a problematic film. What do you think of it?
       
CS: The film actually starts off well but completely loses its way by the end. Similar to the film White Man’s Burden, Lakeview Terrace never really wants to commit to the racial themes it brings up. Instead of being a tense thriller about racism in the suburbs, the film snowballs into a lame story about adultery. The racial aspect becomes more of a “random coincidence” kind of thing rather than the main focal point.
        
Andrew: Gun to your head – you’re only allowed to watch old-cinema (70s and earlier) or contemporary cinema (80s and later). Which would you pick?
                     
CS: Contemporary cinema. Partly because it played such a large part of my childhood. I enjoy old-cinema, especially the 70’s era, but it was contemporary cinema that first fostered my love of cinema. Plus, I am always interested in seeing where the film medium goes next. 
               
Andrew: Decades ago, the films that topped the box-office used to be the ones that were winning the top awards. Today, the divide has grown and the box-office favourite isn’t always the critical favourite. Care to comment on that?
               
CS: Years ago the studios made films with good stories that people wanted to see over and over on the big screen. Thanks to home entertainment systems, and now the internet, people are not as excited to see films in the theatres multiple times. As a result, most studios look to make as much money as they can on the opening weekends. The majority of the top grossing films today have more to do with their marketing than the actual quality of the picture. This is why all three Alvin and the Chipmunks movies can play in over 3000 theatres (A/N: The third Alvin & the Chipmunk movie is due in theatres this fall: which is new information to me) while a film like Winter’s Bone might only open up in 100 theatres. I think things are slowly swinging back around though. Studios did not rake in as much money this year as they did in previous years. The average cinema goer is a lot more sophisticated now then ten years ago. The box-office success of Inception, Toy Story 3, Black Swan, The Social Network, The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo are examples of this. Plus critics are slowly starting to acknowledge well made “big studio” films again. Films like Avatar, Toy Story 3 and Inception received strong critical praise when they were released. It will be a while before we see a major studio film dominate the award circuit as critics still tend to support smaller films but the time will come again.
                
Andrew: If there was one film you could claim you made – not necessarily your favourite, but the one you’d be proud to have produced, written or directed, which would it be? Why?
       
CS: There Will Be Blood. I found it to be an extremely ambitious film that succeeded on every level. I have always been a fan of Paul Thomas Anderson’s films but I thought he really showed growth as a director with this film. There Will Be Blood divided a lot of movie lovers but there is a dark beauty to the film that I found simply mesmerizing.
           
Andrew: Which one person – actor, director, producer, composer, writer, other – has had the biggest influence on you in the film industry?
                 
CS: Hal Hartley would be my choice. He is not a director that comes to mind for most people as he tends to make smaller films. Yet he was one of the people who really had an impact on my film going experience. There is something about his deadpan dialogue that I absolutely love.
               
Andrew:: I feel like a right idiot, I had to google Hal Hartley. Thanks for the chat, CS. Any final words?
           
CS: Ha Ha don’t feel bad, Hal Hartley is an acquired taste even for those who know who he is. As for my final words, I will just say that I am looking forward to defending my title in the next edition of LAMB Casting. Also, I want to let the readers know that new editions of both the LAMB Acting School 101 and Pitch the LAMB will be up after the Oscars. 
                  
So, apparently CS is a brainiac.
          
(If you have any questions you’d like to see featured on Interview with a LAMBpire, email them to me at dangerous.liaison231(@)yahoo.com - remove parentheses) 

Interview with a LAMBpire: Marshall and the Movies

This is Andrew from Encore’s World of Film & TV. You may have noticed that I’ve been unusually late with the results for the last LAMB Casting episode, but that just seems you can cast votes if you haven’t already (HERE). I’ve been thinking of ways to make the series more interesting, and decided that resuscitating an old favourite feature of mine to exist in accordance with LAMB Casting: Interview with the LAMBpire. Winners of each LAMB Casting gets an interview, and I’ve started with the most recent winner, Marshall of Marshall and the Movies who won for his recasting of Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf
     
Andrew: Who is your favourite director? Why?
         
Marshall: That is tough. I love all of Martin Scorsese’s movies, and The Departed may be my favorite movie ever, but I’m going to have to say that my favorite director is Jason Reitman. After only three movies, he has proven himself capable of making incredible resonant movies, and I can’t wait to see what’s coming.
Andrew: Which Reiteman film are you most fond of?
           
Marshall: Up in the Air, that’s easy. It is so deep on so many different levels. There’s the whole technology and alienation theme, which is powerful. Yet at its core, the movie is about finding purpose and meaning in life - something anyone can relate to.
            
Andrew: Do you agree with the auteur theory (which posits that the director is the biggest creative force behind a film)?
                  
Marshall: I do agree to a certain extent; I definitely refer to the director as if the movie belongs to them when I review of a movie. If a director is truly passionate about his film, then they are going to involve themselves in all parts of the production. Most of the directors who find awards recognition in the winter are people who do just that.
                       
Andrew: Which directors best embody this theory for you?
         
Marshall: Probably Quentin Tarantino, if only because he jumps up and down wildly with enthusiasm for his movies as if he were nine years old.
                   
Andrew: Annette Bening was one of the actors you chose for your winning LAMB Casting Entry. Is there any type of role you’d like to Annette tackle that she hasn’t so far?
                    
Marshall: Really raunchy comedy – The Kids Are All Right doesn’t count because she in essence played Carolyn Burnham from American Beauty. It should be something tasteful (I’m not telling her to star in the latest spoof from two of the six writers of Scary Movie), but something that is going to shock us. We should still think that she’s giving a great performance; however, I’d also love us to think, “THAT is the woman from American Beauty? Wow.”
Andrew: What would you say about Annette in The Grifters or perhaps Running with Scissors? Warren Beatty considers the latter hest best performance.
           
Marshall: I’m a bad fan … I haven’t seen her in either.
Andrew: How important you think casting is in film? Does the actor make the role or vice versa?
                            
Marshall: I think casting is extremely important. They have to be capable of taking the character from the page and breathing life into those words. We’ve all seen many great characters ruined by bad actors (cough, Diego Luna in Milk), and we’ve seen many great actors ruined by bad characters. But the latter is the actor’s fault, not the casting director’s.
                     
Andrew: Do you think there should be an Oscar category for casting directors?
           
Marshall: It would be sweet if the Oscars added an ensemble category and maybe gave the casting directors the Oscar for that. But there would be a massive outcry if the actors didn’t get them as well. I don’t know if simply being in a well-acted movie qualifies anyone in that movie to receive an Oscar.
                    
Andrew: Gun to your head: you can only pick films from 1978 and earlier or 1979 onto now. Which would you pick? Why?
                
Marshall: I’d have to take the movies from the post-1979 world if only because I have the nostalgia factor of those that I saw in theaters. Although most of the movies I’ve seen have been from 1979 on, so being stuck with the 1978 and earlier wouldn’t be too bad because of all the new movies I could watch.
              
Andrew: You’re a seventeen year old student; how difficult is it keeping up the blog?
                                
Marshall: It’s very tough, especially during the school year. I try to work on writing pieces whenever I have free time, but I have a lot of homework and activities that have to come first. I have started to learn the beauty of having a big archive of posts that I can just publish whenever I don’t have much time for the blog, and that has really helped relieve the pressure. But even with all the stress, I still wouldn’t give up blogging for some extra sleep.
                     
Andrew: Do your schoolmates or family members read your blog?
                     
Marshall: My dad is one of my four email subscribers, which is both good and bad; various other family members read as well. As for friends at school, there are some of them that read. I have a few die-hard readers, and then I’ll get the occasional Facebook message from someone who read a review or a post and had something to comment.
                  
Andrew: Do you see films predominantly as art or entertainment?
            
Marshall: I’d say entertainment. At the very basic level, a good movie needs to engage us, either through pleasing our eyes or giving our brain something to chew on. “Entertainment” has come to be associated with mindless spectacle in the blockbuster era, but I definitely find myself entertained by movies that don’t fit that bill.
         
Andrew: Put together a film of your own – director, actors, writers (cinematographer, editor, set designer, costume designer, scorer) and a short plot if you wish.
                
Marshall: The Dark Knight Returns – the dream team from the last movie, Nolan, Pfister, Zimmer, etc. plus Bale, Caine, Freeman, and Oldman. New characters include Michael Emerson (Ben from Lost) as The Riddler, Philip Seymour Hoffman as The Penguin, and Marion Cotillard as Vicki Vale.
Andrew: I’ve noticed more than a few people going crazy for Marion Cotillard lately. What is it about her that makes you a fan?
            
Marshall: She’s stunningly beautiful AND she can act. Her performance in La Vie en Rose is easily one of the greatest of all-time, a hyperbole I have no reservations about using. Public Enemies and Nine would have been great mainstream breakout roles for her had either of those movies been any good, but it looks like Inception is finally going to do it for her.
     
What are your thoughts on Reitman, Cotillard, casting and movies?

Interview With A LAMBpire

No cool logos for this feature, but some very cool insight, if you’re into that sort of thing. The LAMB Interview Feature was born out of an idea and we’ve taken that idea and hopefully, made something readable out of it.

Our first interview was with the blogger behind Daily Film Dose, Alan. Alan was a terrific interviewee and provided interesting answers to all the questions he was asked. Such as the following.

The name of your blog says it all, Daily Film Dose. How do you do it every day?

How do I do it everyday? Basically, I do it the day before and post it. I’ll do it in the evening, I’ll do a first past, it will take me maybe half an hour, forty five minutes, depending on whether I’m feeling it, whether the words are flowing. And the day of in the morning, I have a regular full time job, I work for the Canadian Film Centre, so in the morning, before I go to work, I’ll polish it off and post it. Usually, I watch some movies during the week, but most of them are on the weekends and just keep it in my brain throughout the week and then when it comes to writing the review, it will still be relatively fresh. But I also have a few guest reviewers every couple of weeks or so, I’ll give myself a break and have a guest reviewer write something for me. But, for the most part, it’s just keeping it going and so far, I haven’t had too much writer’s block. Every once in awhile I will and then I might rely on one of my guest reviewers to write something for me. People have asked me, do you write a bunch on the weekend and post during the week? Nope, for the most part, it’s one a day. I’m literally writing one a day.

Click on this link to read the entire Interview With A LAMBpire. Thanks again to Alan for participating and for everyone who has contacted me about this, I will get in touch with you soon so we can all do this again. Thanks!

New poll…and some other stuff

The results from the last poll are in, though they’re largely inconclusive. The question was “What is your preferred movie news site?” It finished a tie between IMDb and Other, each with 13 votes. Coming in third was Cinematical with 4 votes. 40 votes were cast overall.

The new poll is up, and centers on traffic to your site.

Also, I wanted to give a push to anyone that may be interested in one of our two new upcoming events. The first is our latest “Sirens”-style feature, this time with the question of “What action hero would you most like as your roommate?” The structure has changed slightly, and it sounds like a lot of fun (and ought to go smoother this time around). More details from our host Nick can be seen here.

Second up in the queue is a “LAMB Interview” feature being orchestrated by one of our newer LAMBs, Big Mike from, appropriately, Big Mike’s Movie Blog. If there’s a LAMB you’d like to interview, or if you’d like to be interviewed, or if you think happy thoughts when you hear the word “interview,” contact Big Mike. More details here.

We’ve got a lot of talented people represented her, so let’s show some support to these events and let’s get some involvement from some of our recent LAMBs.

Finally, I don’t know what did it (sometimes I feel like Jerry Seinfeld in the episode where everything evens out for him), but my complaining about a lack of new LAMBs obviously worked, as I’ve been on a tear posting the latest sites, and I’ve already got 4 more in the hopper, which you ought to see next week. Thanks again to you all for posting your LAMB buttons and generally giving great publicity to the LAMB. I/we’re always trying to do the same right back at ya.

Categories