WHATEVER HAPPENED TO
BABY-JANE-GOT-A-GUN?
Did you miss it? The Natalie Portman, Joel Edgerton, Ewan
Macgregor opus that went through Hell to reach the screen came and went in
about two weeks. It’s damned good – you’ll
find out when it makes its way to home video.
And you’ll probably join me in wondering why it was dumped by the Weinstein Company like week-old
fish.
This project was
Natalie Portman’s baby from the start. She
knows from Westerns – see 2003’s COLD MOUNTAIN.
She snapped up the much-talked-about Black List script by Brian Duffield
(Hollywood’s changed so much that The Black List is now where you want to be),
pulled together financing, got director Lynne Ramsay (2011’s WE NEED TO TALK
ABOUT KEVIN), a cast… And on the day
shooting was to commence, Ramsay quit.
When she walked so did a lot of the cast, including Jude Law. That would have killed most small films, but
somehow they held it together, director Gavin O’Connor (2011’s WARRIOR) stepped
in – dove in is more like it – and grabbed the reins. On the eve of the film’s release, its
distributor, RELATIVITY MEDIA, went bankrupt, and almost took JANE with
them. But The Weinstein Company saved
it. Then they released it with no press
screenings, no publicity, and the only TV promotion I saw was Ewan Macgregor’s
appearance on Jimmy Kimmel Live. In
this business, that’s the way you release a film that reviews can only
hurt. A stinker. When I caught the movie at the Sherman Oaks Arclight, it was a kick to see three
Westerns in the marquee – THE REVENANT, THE HATEFUL 8 – another Weinstein
release, and JANE. There were four other
people in the theatre. We all loved
it. I just don’t get it.
L.A./ITALIA FEST HONORS
MAESTRO MORRICONE!
Franco Nero & Joan Collins on the Red Carpet
From Sunday, February 21st
through Saturday, February 27th, the Chinese 6 Theatres in Hollywood
will once again be the home of the 11th edition of the annual L.A./Italia Film Festival. Sponsored by the Italian government and
various Italian businesses, this week-long celebration of Italian films,
fashion and culture features both new and classic Italian films, and films made
by Italian-Americans, and all of the
screenings are free! It’s done on a first-come,
first-seated basis, and in four years of attending, I’ve never been shut out of
a screening.
They’re honoring composer
Ennio Morricone, and several films that he’s scored – the current THE HATEFUL
8, THE UNTOUCHABLES, THE MISSION, BUGSY, and DAYS OF HEAVEN. My only complaint is that HATEFUL 8 is the
only Western they’re showing this year. You
can learn all about the event, and find out when the screenings are, by
checking out the official website HERE.
Just one word of
warning: this event ends the day before the Oscars, which are held right next
door at the Dolby Theatre. In the day before the Oscars, more and
more streets get closed off, so when you come to the L.A./Italia screenings,
give yourself extra time to find parking.
‘WESTERN RELIGION’ ON
DVD MARCH 1ST!
If you’re a Round-up
regular, you’ve been following the progress of WESTERN RELIGION since it first
rolled camera in October of 2013, through their screening at Cannes and their L.A. Premiere a few months ago. You may have read my interview with directorJames O’Brien, or learned about my
adventures as a poker-playing extra in the film.
The story of a sinister
mix of gamblers who descend upon a tent city in Arizona to compete in a
high-stakes poker tournament, it’s just been released on video-on-demand through iTunes,
Amazon, Vudu, Google Play, Youtube, and on March 1st it comes out on DVD from Screen
Media.
GET-TV ADDS ‘CIMARRON
CITY’ TO SATURDAYS FEB. 20TH!
GET-TV is one of the new antenna digital channels, and it’s also available on
some cable and satellite systems. It’s a
SONY channel, with lots of good old movies, and Saturdays they feature their Saturday
Showdown Block (read my interview with Get-TV senior programming veep Jeff Meier
HERE. Instead of playing often too-familiar Western series, they’ve specialized
in quality shows that only ran for a season or two, and have rarely been shown
again. They’re adding CIMARRON CITY,
which ran in 1958, a Gunsmoke-style series starring George Montgomery, John
Smith who’d go on to fame in LARAMIE, and Dan Blocker who didn’t do too badly
on BONANZA. They continue to show MAN
CALLED SHENANDOAH starring Robert Horton, HONDO starring Ralph Taeger, NICHOLS
starring James Garner, WHISPERING SMITH staring Audie Murphy, THE TALL MAN starring
Clu Gulager and Barry Sullivan, and LAREDO starring Neville Brand, Peter Brown,
William Smith and Robert Wolders.
Incidentally, one of my most popular Round-up features is my interview
with Robert Wolders. You can read it
HERE.
‘RANGER IN TIME –
RESCUE ON THE OREGON TRAIL’ – A Book Review
I got some ribbing
after the last Round-up for writing a book-review of a coloring book. I may get more ribbing for reviewing RANGER
IN TIME – RESCUE ON THE OREGON TRAIL, not because it’s a kid’s book, but
because it’s about a time-traveling Golden Retriever. The
novel by prolific and talented kid’s author Kate Messner is the first in as
series of four thus far. Ranger is a 21st
century disappointment, a dog flunked from a search-and-rescue program because
he was too easily distracted by squirrels.
He’s living with a modern family when he digs up an old first-aid kit in
the back yard that somehow zaps him back to 1850 and the Abbotts, a family heading
out on the Oregon Trail. And wouldn’t
you know it, that search-and-rescue training comes in mighty handy.
Don’t get bogged down
in the science of time travel – maybe it’ll make more sense in the next book,
about ancient Rome, but it’s just a MacGuffin to get a modern-day sensibility into
a historical tale. The fact is, it’s hard to get school-kids interested
in reading history, and this story, with its nod to Jack London and his
brilliant dog’s point-of-view novels, CALL OF THE WILD and WHITE FANG, is
exciting, involving, and frank. I was a little
surprised that when other fuel became scarce, the kids had to collect buffalo
turds, or chips, to make a fire. I was
startled that, after several family members die along the trail, their graves were
purposely driven over by the wagons, to compact the earth, and make it harder
for scavenging wolves to dig up. It’s
the kind of creepy but clearly authentic detail that would make a kid want to
learn more.
The book, aimed at 2nd
to 4th grade readers, ends with an extensive chapter on the historical
research behind the story, and suggestions for further reading.
THAT’S A WRAP!
LAST WEEK THE ROUND-UP
PASSED 250,000 HITS!
Thanks to all of my
loyal readers, from more than 100 countries, who keep coming back to the
Round-up! I thought I’d have my
interview with Crispian Belfrage about the making of THE PRICE OF DEATH, but I
ran out of time, so that will be in the next issue. Hope your Valentine’s Day was romantic, and
your Presidents Day was…presidential!
Happy Trails,
Henry
All Original Contents Copyright February 2016 by Henry C. Parke –
All Rights Reserved!
Henry I agree with you. When Slow West was released it was showing at only one theater in OC, Bone Tomahawk none and only one in LA. I decided then that if Jane Got a Gun was released I'd better see it the first week which I did and really enjoyed it. One of the main reasons the Western is dead is that theaters won't show them when they do get made. Sad we have to now view westerns basically on DVD or download them.
ReplyDelete