(Reuters) – Killing an exaggerated version of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Sony’s controversial comedy “The Interview” wasn’t a problem for actor James Franco but he found challenges in playing real-life murderer Christian Longo for thriller “True Story.”
“He’s probably the worst person that I’ve ever played, just because I have such a great family and there’s just something so horrible about killing your kids. So I have very little connection to him,” Franco told Reuters.
“True Story,” which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival on Friday and will be released by Fox Searchlight in U.S. theaters on April 10, is based on the memoir of former New York Times journalist Mike Finkel, who formed a friendship with a murderer who used his name as an alias.
What unfolds is a complex relationship as Finkel, played by Jonah Hill, meets Franco’s Longo, an Oregon man awaiting trial for brutally killing his wife and three children. The two men find common ground in writing but the dynamic wavers as each man struggles with his search for intellectual credibility.
“I think it’s to do with nemesis. I think it’s a very male thing,” said director Rupert Goold, who made his film debut with “True Story.”
Goold, a British theater director, said much of “True Story” played out like Shakespeare’s “Othello,” a story of male friendship and betrayal.
To prepare, Franco watched tapes of Longo testifying at his 2003 trial, which he called “chilling,” but he opted not to visit the convicted killer currently on Death Row.
“There was no need to go and meet him, and I certainly didn’t want to give him any attention or validation by doing that,” he said.
Franco and Hill starred together in Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg’s raunchy 2013 apocalypse spoof, “This is the End,” and Hill is well known for his comedic roles in films such as “The Wolf of Wall Street.”
But the duo spun a twist on their friendship to play out the drama of “True Story,” which Franco said was essential for the movie to work.
“You need the audience to, on some level, want to watch this budding friendship,” Franco said.
“Because Jonah and I do have a history, people do know us in a different, more comedic sphere, our relationship in this film had a little something extra because of that.”
By admin • 0 comments • 34 | True Story |
By admin • 0 comments • 45 | Gallery Update" Movie caps |
I have add Spider-Man 2 dvd caps to the gallery.
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By admin • 0 comments • 40 | Future Relic |
Juliette Lewis, Ethan Suplee, Lukas Haas and Ronald Gutman will join James Franco in a feature film version of “Future Relic.” This is an expansion of a nine minute short film called “Future Relic,” written and directed by multidisciplinary artist Daniel Arsham. Producer is Courtney Andrealis.
In the film, which may or may have dialogue, the Earth’s climate in the near future has become dangerously unstable. Scientists attempt to save the world from imminent destruction with an experiment that works temporarily. Earth is saved, but the world becomes an increasingly inhospitable place for humans after elements of the experiment backfire.
Franco, no stranger to experimental films, had already made the short with Arsham.
By admin • 0 comments • 44 | Every Thing Will Be Fine |
This long anticipated 3D redemption drama (and Wenders’ second use of the format after “Pina”) centers on a writer (Franco) who, after causing the accidental death of a child, spends the next 12 years examining the tragedy’s effect on his life and the life of the child’s mother.
As previously announced, Wenders will also be receiving an honorary Golden Bear at the festival, with 10 of his films screening as tribute, including 1984 Palme d’Or winner “Paris, Texas” and his latest documentary, the Oscar-nominated “The Salt of the Earth.”
The following films round out the Berlinale competition lineup including, notably, films from “No” director Pablo Larrain, Oliver Hirschbiegel, Andrew Haigh, Terrence Malick, Werner Herzog and, screening out-of-competition, Kenneth Branagh’s “Cinderella.”
By admin • 0 comments • 49 | Uncategorized |
James Franco has written a lengthy poetic essay about his love for Lana Del Rey and revealed that he wants to produce a film based on one of the singer’s ideas.
In the letter, published by V Magazine , The Interview actor Franco gushed that Del Rey “isn’t made for this Earth” and prompted speculation that the pair might work together in the future. “I wanted to interview Lana for a book and she said, ‘Just write around me, it’s better if it’s not my own words. It’s almost better if you don’t get me exactly, but try,'” Franco said.
He added: “She has this idea for a film. I want to do it because it’s a little like Sunset Boulevard. A woman is alone in a big house in LA. She doesn’t want to go out. She starts to go crazy, and becomes paranoid because she feels like people are watching her. Even in her own house. It’s like an awesome B-movie that lives in Lana’s head. It’s about her, and it’s not about her. Just like her music.”
Franco has expressed his adoration of Del Rey in the past. In December, the actor told Howard Stern that he wanted to “make love to her music”. “There’s a weird thing with creative types,” he said. “Sometimes I love a person’s work and, like, I’m just so enamoured with that and their persona in their work. But outside of that, it’s like, our dynamic is we’re just kind of friends, we get along so well. But all this sexual attraction is for the person and the work.”
Earlier this month, Del Rey revealed her third album will be called ‘Honeymoon’. It was reported that the singer has written nine tracks for the album already, which she says will be “very different” to last year’s ‘Ultraviolence’. It will also include a cover of the Nina Simone version of ‘Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood’. “I’m looking for a few more songs to tie everything together,” the singer explained.
By admin • 0 comments • 44 | Queen Of The Desert |
Earlier today, Werner Herzog fans got a dose of good news when it was revealed that his latest, “Queen Of The Desert,” will make its debut at the Berlin International Film Festival. And now, we’ve got the first image from the film.
Starring Nicole Kidman, James Franco, Robert Pattinson, Damian Lewis, and many more, the biopic tells the tale of Gertrude Bell, the traveler, writer, archaeologist, explorer, cartographer, and political attaché for the British Empire at the dawn of the 20th century who played a crucial role in the development of the Middle East. And Herzog has been making some big teases about the picture.
“Now, Nicole Kidman,” Herzog said last summer. “Wait for that one. Wait for it. I make an ominous prediction: How good she is.” We’ll soon find out.
No distribution yet for the movie, but if the film is even half as good as our expectations, it shouldn’t be too long.
By admin • 0 comments • 45 | Gallery Update" Movie caps |
I have add caps from Spider-Man to the gallery.
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By admin • 0 comments • 40 | Don Quixote |
James Franco, in Palm Springs Wednesday to discuss a collaboration with his USC film students, said he was happy to have his latest project screen at the Palm Springs International Film Festival, rather than die at film school and only be seen by a few – a common fate for student films.
“I’m so proud. This is so great to have a film school here and show a film,” he said, prior to the film’s screening in the Palm Springs High School auditorium.
Franco talked at great length about the collaborative process and what it was like to make “Don Quixote: The Ingenious Gentleman of La Mancha” with 10 student directors. What he did not mention, but was on some people’s minds – was his controversial movie “The Interview” released just weeks ago and likely the most talked about movie in years.
Franco and Seth Rogen, his co-star in “The Interview,” have stayed mum about the movie in the media since hackers threatened Sony with Sept. 11-type attacks at theaters that screened the movie on Dec. 25. Many theaters, however, decided to screen the movie after all and it was also released through video on demand and on the Internet.
The Desert Sun asked Franco his reaction to the controversy surrounding “The Interview,” but the actor stopped speaking and walked away without a response. He was then led away from the red carpet and into the high school for the 7 p.m. screening of “Don Quixote.”
Franco was accompanied on the red carpet prior to the screening by many of the directors – students in his advanced film production class at the University of Southern California — and actors from the comedy. It tells the tale of Don Quixote, who with his sidekick Sancho Panza, set off on adventures to bring justice to the world.
Franco said he chose the iconic Don Quixote tale by Miguel de Cervantes because it’s one of his favorite books and it also lends itself well to a collaboration with many people. He said the movie was created using an approach similar to a TV series in which there are different directors for each episode.
“It is broken up into episodes so that made it easier to split up the different sections among the students. It’s about knowing how to split up the work flow, designing a script that can be broken up but then also put back together … and once you do that multiple directors is manageable,” he said.
Horatio Sanz, who plays Panza, joined the group of 22 onstage after the screening for the brief Q&A that followed the screening. When one audience member asked advice on how aspiring filmmakers can make a movie on limited resources, Sanz suggested using a cell phone.
“If you have a phone you can make a movie I think,” he said. “Now is the best time ever, unless you don’t have a phone — in which case I will buy you one.”
In his second year of teaching film at USC, Franco said he’s proud of the final product and that likely all his students were getting an “A.”“One of the things that I try to do with the film classes that I teach is to have the class have one foot in the academic world and one in the professional world,” he said. “We bring in professional, very good actors to be in the project. I try to bring resources that I can manage into the projects and do all that so that the films don’t have to just die at film school, be shown to a few fellow students and then disappear. We can actually take it out into the world and having it here as proof that we succeeded on some level.”
By admin • 0 comments • 36 | Sundance |
The Slamdance Film Festival has selected James Franco’s drama “Yosemite” as its closing-night film on Jan. 29.
Franco, who produced through his Rabbit Bandini company, will attend the world premiere screening as part of Slamdance’s “Coffee With” program.
Gabrielle Demeestere directed the film from her own script in an adaptation of three of Franco’s short stories. “Yosemite,” set in the fall of 1985, follows the intertwining tales of three 4th grade friends in the suburban paradise of Palo Alto as the threat of a killer mountain lion looms over the community.
Past “Coffee With” guests have included Chad Hurley and the Russo Brothers; Jonathan Demme and Neil Young; Ted Hope and Vilmos Zsigmond.
“We are thrilled to have such a talented and passionate supporter of independent film sit down and share his knowledge and experience with the Slamdance filmmakers,” said festival director Anna Germanidi.
Slamdance, launched in 1995 as an alternative to Sundance, will take place Jan. 23-29 in Park City, Utah, at the Treasure Mountain Inn. The Slamdance feature competition is limited to films from first-time directors and made with budgets under $1 million.
By admin • 0 comments • 23 | Gallery Update" Movie caps |
I have add 2010 Eat Pray Love DVD caps add to the gallery
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