Showing posts with label James Toback. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James Toback. Show all posts

20 December 2009

The Decade List: When Will I Be Loved (2004)

When Will I Be Loved – dir. James Toback

If I were to guess which film on The Decade List would be scorned the most, it’d have to be James Toback’s When Will I Be Loved. I’ve never heard or read anyone casually dismiss the film; vicious abhorrence colored the (many) pans it received from what few critics and audiences actually watched the thing. Like Abel Ferrara, a fellow NYC filmmaker with the uncanny ability to sharply divide his audience, Toback has a strange and distinctive idea of what America is and what values it holds. When Will I Be Loved is a very unofficial continuation of the director’s Black & White, set in a world filled with generally unlikable souls with overactive libidos who have run-ins with an unlikely lot of celebrities.

Toback even repeats Black & White’s Central Park orgy, which shocked the MPAA in 1999 but, even with the addition of another body, was left in tact here.

While situated in a homogeneous world, When Will I Be Loved feels more like an overhead tale that might have happened to someone one of the characters in Black & White knows. It’s Toback’s fucked-up version of fairy tale, in which a petty conman (Fred Weller) arranges for a reenactment of Indecent Proposal, prostituting his girlfriend, a sexually adventurous heiress of some sort (Neve Campbell), to an aging Italian media giant (Dominic Chianese) for a six-figure sum. Toback and Campbell’s Vera are wiser than anyone involved with Indecent Proposal, so instead of blasé marital guilt, we’re treated with a premeditated act of revenge.

Though I can see what turned so many people off When Will I Be Loved (the sleaziness, the meandering, chatty walks through the city, the absence of a single “likeable” character), something about the film just pops for me. Maybe it’s the oversaturated color scheme, Neve Campbell’s surprising transformation into an interesting actor, or possibly my liking of it is for the very reasons most people don’t.

One of Toback’s greatest charms in his fantasy film worlds is the wonderfully oddball cast he acquires. Take Exposed (where you get Nastassja Kinski, Harvey Keitel, Bibi Andersson, Pierre Clémenti and Rudolf Nureyev) or Black & White (where Claudia Schiffer, Robert Downey Jr., Mike Tyson, Marla Maples, Method Man, Brooke Shields, Ben Stiller, Bijou Phillips and Joe Pantoliano cohabitate), both of which provide messy delights in their casting alone. When Will I Be Loved isn’t as expansive as those two, but we still get to see Neve Campbell stop to flirt with Lori Singer, playing herself, while in the park, just after running into Mike Tyson, claiming to be a man named Buck who “doesn’t give a fuck,” yelling at someone on the street. Karen Allen is also pretty memorable in her small appearance as Vera’s mother. Proceed with caution, but thank me later if you happen to be among the happy few.

With: Neve Campbell, Dominic Chianese, Fred Weller, Karen Allen, James Toback, Joelle Carter, Barry Primus, Alex Feldman, Ashley Shelton, Damon Dash, Lori Singer, Mike Tyson, Jason Pendergraft
Screenplay: James Toback
Cinematography: Larry McConkey
Music: Oli ‘Power’ Grant
Country of Origin: USA
US Distributor: IFC Films

Premiere: 4 June 2004 (Lake Placid Film Festival)

02 August 2009

DVD Release Update - 2 August

More titles for October from IFC (including one of their theatrical releases!: Fear(s) of the Dark), Il divo on DVD and Blu-ray from Music Box Films, some Blu-ray releases and date changes all below. Note: I have a pretty strong feeling that Fox's Blu-ray release of James Toback's Two Girls and a Guy will be the R-rated edit, not the NC-17 version with Robert Downey Jr. giving more explicit oral sex to Heather Graham. If I'm wrong, I'll be sure to let you know.

DVDs

- Away We Go, 2009, d. Sam Mendes, Focus Features, also on Blu-ray, 29 September
- Blood: The Last Vampire, 2009, d. Chris Nahon, Sony Pictures, also on Blu-ray, 20 October
- Il divo, 2008, d. Paolo Sorrentino, Music Box Films, also on Blu-ray, 27 October
- Fear(s) of the Dark [Peur(s) du noir], 2007, d. Blutch, Marie Caillou, Jerry Kramski, Lorenzo Mattotti, Richard McGuire, Michel Pirus, Romain Slocombe, IFC Films, 27 October
- Medicine for Melancholy, 2008, d. Barry Jenkins, IFC Films, 27 October
- Sauna, 2008, d. Antti-Jussi Annila, IFC Films, 27 October
- Taylor Chain 1 & 2, 1980, 1984, d. Jerry Blumenthal, Gordon Quinn, Kartemquin Films/Facets, 27 October
- The United States of Tara, Season 1, 2008, Showtime/Paramount, 27 October, w. Toni Collette
- Harmony and Me, 2009, d. Bob Byington, Liberation Entertainment, 24 November, w. Justin Rice, Kevin Corrigan, Pat Healy
- Island Etude, 2006, d. Chen Huai-en, Vanguard, 24 November

Blu-ray Releases

- Amadeus, 1984, d. Milos Forman, Warner, Director's Cut, 15 September
- An American Werewolf in London, 1981, d. John Landis, Universal, 15 September
- Wolf, 1994, d. Mike Nichols, Sony Pictures, 13 October
- National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation, 1989, d. Jeremiah S. Chechik, Warner, Ultimate Edition, 27 October
- Two Girls and a Guy, 1997, d. James Toback, 20th Century Fox, 3 November
- My Brilliant Career, 1979, d. Gillian Armstrong, Blue Underground, 24 November

Date Changes

- Drag Me to Hell, 20 October
- Moonlight Serenade, 8 December
- Not Forgotten, 3 November
- Outrage, 19 January

07 June 2009

Ryko Gets a New Name + Some Other DVD Releases

I suppose this isn't official, as I couldn't find any further information, but it looks like Ryko Distribution is now Alternative Distribution Alliance... similar to Koch's switch to E1 earlier this year. I uncovered a couple of ADA titles for 29 September.

- Attraction [Nerosubianco], 1969, d. Tinto Brass, Cult Epics
- Burke & Hare, 1972, d. Vernon Sewell, Redemption
- Daughter of Darkness, 1948, d. Lance Comfort, Redemption
- Hardware, 1990, d. Richard Stanley, Severin, also on Blu-ray, w. Dylan McDermott, Iggy Pop
- Lucifera - Demonlover [L'amante del demonio], 1972, d. Paolo Lombardo, MYA
- Naked and Violent [America così nuda, così violenta], 1970, d. Sergio Martino, MYA
- New York Ripper [Lo squartatore di New York], 1982, d. Lucio Fulci, Blue Undergound, Special Edition, also on Blu-ray
- Sex and Zen, 1991, d. Michael Mak Tong-Kit, Eastern Star
- The Storm Riders, 1998, d. Lau Wai-keing, Discotek Media, Special Edition
- Until Death [Fino allo morte], 1987, d. Lamberto Bava, MYA
- Uzumaki, 2000, d. Higuchinsky, Eastern Star

There have been a few other DVD announcements:

- The Betrayal, 2008, d. Ellen Kuras, Thavisouk Phrasavath, Cinema Guild, 1 September
- Goodbye Solo, 2008, d. Ramin Bahrani, Lionsgate, 25 August
- In a Dream, 2008, d. Jeremiah Zagar, Indiepix, 25 August
- The Tiger's Tail, 2006, d. John Boorman, MGM, 11 August, w. Brendan Gleeson, Kim Cattrall, Ciarán Hinds, Sinéad Cusack
- Tyson, d. James Toback, Sony, also on Blu-ray, 18 August
- Full Battle Rattle, 2008, d. Tony Gerber, Jesse Moss, First Run Features, 15 September

And some new-to-Blu-rays:

- Billy Jack, 1971, d. Tom Laughlin, Image, 29 September
- Braveheart, 1995, d. Mel Gibson, Paramount, 1 September
- Child's Play, 1988, d. Tom Holland, MGM, 15 September
- Escape from L.A., 1996, d. John Carpenter, Paramount, 15 September
- Forrest Gump, 1994, d. Robert Zemeckis, Paramount, 3 November
- Friday, 1995, d. F. Gary Gray, New Line, 8 September
- Gojira [Godzilla], 1954, d. Ishirô Honda, Classic Media, 22 September
- Hot Fuzz, 2007, d. Edgar Wright, Universal, 13 October
- It's a Wonderful Life, 1946, d. Frank Capra, Paramount, 3 November
- Menace II Society, 1993, d. Albert Hughes, Allan Hughes, New Line, 8 September
- Misery, 1990, d. Rob Reiner, MGM, 15 September
- The Ninth Gate, 1999, d. Roman Polanski, Lionsgate, 11 August
- Set It Off, 1996, d. F. Gary Gray, New Line, 8 September
- Shaun of the Dead, 2004, d. Edgar Wright, Universal, 13 October

25 May 2008

Cannes: Un Certain Regard

Fatih Akin (The Edge of Heaven) gave out the awards for the Un Certain Regard section of the Cannes Film Festival last night. The top prize was honored to Sergei Dvortsevoy's Tulpan; the film is set in Kazakhstan and co-produced by Germany, Poland, Russia and Switzerland. The jury also awarded four other prizes, though I have no idea what their importance is:

The Jury Prize (which I would imagine to be second prize): Tokyo Sonata - dir. Kiyoshi Kurosawa - Japan/Netherlands

Coup de Cœur Award: Cloud 9 [Wolke Neun] - dir. Andreas Dresen - Germany

KO Prize (I hope that isn't just a stupid pun): Tyson - dir. James Toback - USA

Hope Prize: Johnny Mad Dog - dir. Jean-François Sauvaire - France

The prizes of the official selection, including the Palme d'Or should be announced later today.

23 April 2008

Un Certain Regard

The line-up for the Un Certain Regard category was also announced today with a few familiar faces. The line-up is as follows:

- Versailles - dir. Pierre Schöller (screenwriter of Hotel Harabati) - with Guillaume Depardieu
- Johnny Mad Dog - dir. Jean-Stéphane Sauvaire
- Sol Cowboy - dir. Thomas Clay
- Wolke 9 - dir. Andreas Dresen (Summer in Berlin)
- O' Horten - dir. Bent Hamer (Factotum)
- Tokyo! - dir. Bong Joon-ho, Michel Gondry, Leos Carax
- Tulpan - dir. Sergei Dvortsevoy
- I Want to See [Je veux voir] - dir. Joana Hadjithomas, Khalil Joreige - with Catherine Deneuve
- Le Sel de la mer - dir. Annemarie Jacir
- Los Bastardos - dir. Amat Escalante
- A Festa da Menina Morta - dir. Matheus Nachtergaele (an actor from City of God making his directorial debut)
- Afterschool - dir. Antonio Campos
- Tokyo Sonata - dir. Kiyoshi Kurosawa (Doppelganger, Bright Future)
- Ting che - dir. Chung Mong-Hong
- Yi ban Haishui, Yi ban huoyan - dir. Liu Fendou (writer of Shower, making his directorial debut)
- Wendy and Lucy - dir. Kelly Reichardt (Old Joy) - with Will Patton, Larry Fessenden, John Robinson
- Tyson - dir. James Toback (Two Girls and a Guy, When Will I Be Loved)

Thanks to GreenCine Daily for the updates. And I must second one of the reviewer's disappointment that Claire Denis' latest, White Material, with Isabelle Huppert, Nicolas Duvauchelle and Isaach De Bankolé was either not ready in time or not selected. The same goes for Bertrand Bonello's De la guerre, with Asia Argento, which also makes zero appearances this year from last year's princess of Cannes.