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February 04, 2015

They play lovers in their latest movie and James Franco and Zachary Quinto gave a sneak peek of their on-screen chemistry last week.
The two actors were caught on camera passionately kissing as they tried out the New York Times’ slow motion video booth.
James and Zachary can be seen gazing intensely into each other’s eyes before locking lips

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February 03, 2015

James Franco’s newest film, I Am Michael, sprung from something banal: an email from his friend and director Gus Van Sant. In an exchange between friends, Van Sant emailed Franco a link to the New York Times Magazine profile of Michael Glatze , who James Franco plays in the movie, and Franco was immediately intrigued not only by the story but by the fact that he knew the author, Benoit Denizet-Lewis. Denizet-Lewis was a friend of Michael Glatze, the former gay rights activist who proclaimed he was straight and became a pastor who Franco portrays in the film, directed by Justin Kelly.

“If I hadn’t followed up Gus’ pretty casual suggestion, we probably wouldn’t be here right now, I have learned to listen to whatever Gus says,” Franco said in an interview with The Huffington Post at Sundance. It’s not bad advice for Franco to follow; he’s seen great success working with Van Sant before in playing Harvey Milk’s partner Scott Smith in the 2011 film Milk. In a post-screening interview at Sundance, Bustle’s Anna Klassen reported, Franco said he found a way inside Michael Glatze’s character by focusing on his humanity: ”With this role, I thought what is primary here is his journey, his experience, his transformation — his beliefs and how those change.”

Director Justin Kelly was meticulous about writing the script and doing justice to Glatze’s unique story, mining people from his life to help round out the biopic:

Kelly spent over a year working on the script, traveling to meet Glatze and some of his former friends, most notably three of his ex-boyfriends in Nova Scotia. According to Kelly, those men helped fill in the meat of the story and bring color to who Glatze had been in his gay advocacy days.
It’s this respect to the complexity of the human spirit that tied Kelly and Franco together with the Glatze in the film; the real Michael Glatze, surprisingly, came to Sundance for the screening and afterwards, thanked the cast and crew for telling his story. The most interesting part about I Am Michael is that Franco’s and Kelly’s motivations were not about passing judgments, but rather to illuminate the difficulty of the journey of life and attempting to show how one man struggles. Franco said it’s obviously near impossible to capture exactly what Glatze was feeling when he decided to leave his partner of ten years and become a pastor identifying as straight:

It’s not so simple. We came to this belief that the character really did believe that he was changing. That he’s not lying to himself. He was somebody who, for his whole life, had been grappling with and defining identity. Or defying identity. It was already something that was at the forefront of his mind.

It’s this commitment to authenticity and realism that make Franco a great character actor. As much as he enjoys poking fun at himself at Comedy Central roasts and making comedies like The Interview (and as much as we can poke fun at him for it), Franco really chooses roles that many actors would not be brave enough or dedicated enough to play.

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February 03, 2015

I have add two Sundance Film Festival Portraits to the gallery.

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February 02, 2015

On the final day of Slamdance 2015, the festival presented a Special Screening of Yosemite. The film was produced by James Franco, who also acts in a supporting role because he literally can not stop arting all over the place. Franco’s prolific artistic output was the primary topic of discussion when Franco sat down with Variety’s Scott Foundas prior the screening as part of Slamdance’s “Coffee with…” series. Franco spoke eloquently for almost 40 minutes with only a few questions posed by Foundas. It’s easy to imagine him as one of those longwinded professors who never finishes his lectures in time for the bell. We were fortunate enough to get a great vantage point and capture the entire talk.

After listing off some impressive numbers pulled from Franco’s imdb page, Foundas asked Franco to describe his journey from actor to content creator. Franco starts by saying that it’s long answer that he will give as “fast as possible”, which for him meant just under twelve informative yet entertaining minutes.

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February 01, 2015

I have add photos of Rupert Goold, James Franco – Victoria Will ‘True Story’ 2015 Sundance Film Festival to the gallery

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February 01, 2015

The next directorial effort from James Franco will be an adaption of the John Steinbeck novel In Dubious Battle, and he has assembled a big-name cast: Selena Gomez, Vincent D’Onofrio, Robert Duvall, Ed Harris, Bryan Cranston and Danny McBride. The film will shoot in March, and we have a few more details on Franco’s In Dubious Battle film adaptation below.

THR got the jump on the announcement, but we’ve got more from the press release. Matt Rager (As I Lay Dying) wrote the screenplay based on the novel.

Published in 1936, In Dubious Battle is considered the first major work of Pulitzer Prize-winning author John Steinbeck. Set in a fictionalized valley in California, the story explores themes Steinbeck continued to develop: group behavior, social injustice, man’s inhumanity to man— all themes which continue to be relevant today. A labor conflict between migrant apple pickers and the local growers’ association is the backdrop against which Jim Nolan (Franco) becomes involved in the labor movement and rapidly matures as he learns what it means to do organizational fieldwork.

Franco has been adapting literary works on a frequent basis lately, taking on William Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying and The Sound and the Fury, Cormac McCarthy’s Child of God (and, in rough draft form, Blood Meridian), Steve Erickson’s pop-film history Zeroville, and the story of poet Hart Crane. Whether he has done most of those well is a big question — the answer is often “kinda? Maybe.” I appreciate that he’s trying, and that he’s reaching for really difficult material. I do keep hoping he’ll come away with a more firm grasp of that material, and maybe this one will be the success story.

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