ReportWire

Tag: Sean Penn

  • Sean Penn reveals what really happened during ’80s arrest involving Madonna and paparazzi

    Sean Penn may be considered one of the industry’s most respected and outspoken actors now, but back in the 1980s, soon after making his film debut, he was also considered one of its troublemakers. While earning major credit for films like Fast Times at Ridgemont High and At Close Range, he was also involved in a very highly-publicized relationship with Madonna, who he was married to from 1985 to 1989, plus a string of legal issues during that decade often involving the paparazzi.

    The actor, now 65, who stars in the new acclaimed Paul Thomas Anderson film One Battle After Another, spoke with the New York Times about some of his troubles then as part of their “The Interview” series, specifically honing in on an incident in 1986, when he allegedly dangled a photographer off a hotel balcony in Macau, where he was staying with Madonna.

    Further referenced in his biography Sean Penn: His Life and Times, Sean was asked about whether he’d apparently broken out of jail after being charged over the incident and “escaped” the country via a jetfoil. At first, he simply quipped: “It’s like the ferry. They go back and forth all day,” before diving into the whole situation further.

    “We were passengers on the jetfoil,” the two-time Oscar winner continued. “We got on like normal passengers and then had to go to a house on the Kowloon side and wait until something got settled,” and then went on to explain whether he did actually dangle the photographer over a hotel balcony, believed to be a correspondent for the Hong Kong Standard

    © Getty Images
    Sean Penn looked back on his life and career, specifically even honing in on an incident in 1986

    “But the guy, first of all, we didn’t put him past his waistline over that balcony. There was never an intent to drop him off of it,” Sean detailed. “My friend at the time, who was my kickboxing trainer, needed a job, so I got him a job as security. He overreacted. This guy was holding something when he jumped out at us, and my friend responded instinctively; I responded instinctively.” 

    Musician Madonna and actor Sean Penn attend the 5th Annual Sean Penn & Friends HELP HAITI HOME Gala benefiting J/P Haitian Relief Organization at Montage Hotel on January 9, 2016 in Beverly Hills, California.© Getty Images
    The actor was married to Madonna from 1985-89, although they remain friends to this day

    “About halfway to the balcony, I saw it was a camera and not a weapon. So I was marching him through the room, also through what was an open balcony, and yeah, we got him down across it and I’m yelling at my friend, ‘It’s a camera,’ and we didn’t have time to pull him back before the hotel security turned on us and grabbed us.”

    Actor Sean Penn and singer Madonna leave the Mitzi E Newhouse at Lincoln Center, New York, New York, August 13, 1986. They were on a break during rehearsals for the Lincoln Center Workshop's production of 'Goose and Tomtom.'© Getty Images
    The couple were often followed by the paparazzi, and their turbulent relationship was highly publicized

    He joked: “We never got to show we weren’t gonna kill him, and that’s when ‘Midnight Express’ happens and we just blew out of there and ran to the jetfoil, and that’s the whole story,” clarifying that there wasn’t any “James Bond” element to the story. Sean channels that anger into his current role in One Battle After Another as well, playing Colonel Steven J. Lockjaw.

    "We never got to show we weren't gonna kill him, and that's when 'Midnight Express' happens and we just blew out of there and ran to the jetfoil."© Getty Images
    “We never got to show we weren’t gonna kill him, and that’s when ‘Midnight Express’ happens and we just blew out of there and ran to the jetfoil.”

    The film revolves around Bob Ferguson (Leonardo DiCaprio), a father and ex-revolutionary struggling to protect his daughter Willa (Chase Infinity) from Colonel Lockjaw, who is hell bent on wiping out revolutionary and racial idealism. Other characters include Willa’s mother Perfidia (Teyana Taylor), and some of Bob’s accomplices, sensei Sergio (Benicio del Toro) and Deandra (Regina Hall).

    Ahad Sanwari

    Source link

  • Reviews For The Easily Distracted: One Battle After Another

    Title: One Battle After Another

    Describe This Movie In One Simpsons Quote:

    LISA: What do you think, Thomas Pynchon?
    PYNCHON: These wings are V-licious!

    Brief Plot Synopsis: Always remember your code phrases.

    Rating Using Random Objects Relevant To The Film: 4.5 Gil Scott-Herons out of 5.

    Tagline: “Some search for battle, others are born into it…”

    Better Tagline: “Maybe it’s … Pyncholine.”

    Not So Brief Plot Synopsis: Bob (Leonard DiCaprio) and Perfidia (Teyana Taylor) are revolutionary lovers, working with their fellow members of the French 75 (not the cocktail) to free immigrant detainees and blow up government/right-wing headquarters. Perfidia isn’t mother material, however, and bails on Bob and their infant daughter Willa. Fast forward 16 years, and Bob and Willa (Chase Infiniti) are living an uneasy under-the-radar life. That changes when a figure from the past, the fanatical Col. Lockjaw (Sean Penn), has a sudden personal interest in their family.

    “Critical” Analysis: Paul Thomas Anderson doesn’t much like making movies set in the 21st century. Aside from 2002’s Punch Drunk Love (which really shouldn’t count, since the subplot adapts an event that took place in 1999) and two set contemporaneously with their release (Hard Eight, Magnolia) both came out way back in the 1900s.

    That trend ends in a big way with One Battle After Another, which seizes fiercely upon current events to depict an America bent to the breaking point by fear and hatred, but still possessing the capacity to change. That representation is personified in DiCaprio’s Bob, whose post-revolutionary years have been taken up with substance abuse, nostalgia, and neglectful parenting. It isn’t until Willa disappears that he’s forced into action.

    It’s only recently that DiCaprio has loosened up with his roles (winning an Oscar will do that), but Bob isn’t even as half-assed effective as OUATIH’s Rick Dalton with a flamethrower. His initial efforts to track down Willa (and a charger for his 1G phone) are only occasionally effective because of assistance from fellow subversives working stealthily in the community. He is, not to beat around the bush, a goof.

    Chief among these is Sergio (Benicio Del Toro), Willa’s sensei and an organizer of Borrego Springs’ version of the Underground Railroad. Del Toro is delightfully laconic, and his Zen idiosyncrasies are a nice counterpoint to the freakier performances of DiCaprio and Penn.

    Because there’s little in the way of subtlety here. Anderson is on record as wanting to make a movie of Thomas Pynchon’s Vineland, having already loosely adapted the author’s V. for The Master and, more faithfully, Inherent Vice to great effect in 2015. And if anything, the director is even more on the nose here in bringing Pynchon’s balance of conspiracy and chaos.

    click to enlarge

    Never mess with a man in a robe (with a gun).

    For example, the white supremacist cabal behind America’s pumped-up crusade against — not just immigrants, but all people of color — is as sinister as it is ridiculous. Their focus on “native born” allies and strict policy against interracial relations, which directly leads to “Bedford Forrest (look him up) Medal of Honor” winner Lockjaw’s actions. Meanwhile the revolutionaries, while certainly on the side of the angels, are only marginally more competent.

    That said, Anderson isn’t trying to make friends. The powers that be are nakedly racist and the opening scenes, showcasing Perfidia’s (full name Perfidia Beverly Hills) rampages and command of the screen, might as well come with screen prompts for the audience to yell, “Fuck yeah!”

    One Battle After Another is as audacious as it is funny. And it *is* funny. Penn’s post-Spicoli output hasn’t exactly been light-hearted, but his Lockjaw — with his Simple Jack haircut — is marvelously twitchy, from his opening credits boner (don’t ask) to his not at all ignominious, uh, finale. Del Toro effortlessly commands every scene he’s in, while Taylor is as intimidating as she is formidable.

    But it’s Infiniti who’s a real discovery, helping turn Bob into something wholly alien to DiCaprio; a father figure. As much as OBAA is a breakneck adventure, barely letting up for its almost 3-hour running time (the climactic car chase is somehow not overindulgent), it’s also a study in fatherhood and nontraditional families. It seems a revolution takes a village, too. And One Battle After Another is PTA’s best since Inherent Vice.

    One Battle After Another is in theaters today.

    Pete Vonder Haar

    Source link

  • Sean Penn Is Ready to Fight in ‘One Battle After Another’: “God Knows I’ve Not Been Shy”

    Did Paul have to pitch the role to you or convince you in any way?

    No, we were primed to work with each other. I was only a few pages in by the time I knew I absolutely wanted to do it.

    What was it about those few pages?

    I remember the words “he’s going there” going through my head, because I had no idea what the subject matter was going to be, what it was going to be approaching or reflecting about our lives today. And Paul, he’s sort of like Hal Ashby. Each movie is coming from a different world, a different tone. He’s so diverse in this way that there was no anticipating what it was going to be. When it was this, I knew I was in for something.

    This character is so unique. How much did you add to what was on the page?

    That’s always hard to say, because really good writing is like really good music. But that doesn’t mean I’m hearing the music like everyone else. You’re always a part of a bigger puzzle. With his writing—I’ve experienced it a few times, mostly in the theater, where the writing drives the choices.

    What other films have you experienced that on?

    I had a very similar experience with Woody Allen’s movie Sweet and Lowdown, where I felt like I heard the song clearly. I think it’s not surprising that the best directors, whether they write them or not, are working with the best material. And I’ve had a chance to work some. In fact, Leo and I have worked with a lot of the same directors, and it’s just nice to have the script feel you. Some of them could be interesting movies, but every day, you’re looking to find an organic thing, so you’re almost functioning like a writer. I prefer to be an actor.

    Do you gravitate toward projects that speak to the present moment, or things that may be already weighing on your mind about the world or politics?

    I’ve quoted this a lot over the years. E.L. Doctorow had a line: The responsibility of the artist is to know the time within which he lived. So somebody can make a period film, but in doing that, the good ones reflect something very current. Not modernizing it, but there’s something that is rhyming in history. I think that this became exponentially more timely after production finished and we watched, kind of shaking our heads. It’s also a great thing that because he doesn’t have a conventional dependence on what satire is, the movie is malleable. It’s not dependent on being a far-fetched idea that makes us laugh. And now that some of it is not at all far-fetched it takes on a more full quality.

    You have said that before making the 2023 film Daddio, you had become disillusioned a bit with making movies.

    You said it when you’re talking about the importance of narrative being somehow in rhythm with what’s interesting to you at that time. At a certain point, I found the criteria that maybe used to work—good project, interesting material, great director, fantastic cast—if that subject isn’t really what’s in your heart or interest, for me it just got miserable. And especially if you’re playing a leading role, you also have to offer leadership in spirit every day.

    Rebecca Ford

    Source link

  • Paul Thomas Anderson’s ‘One Battle After Another’: What the Critics Are Saying

    Paul Thomas Anderson‘s hotly anticipated One Battle After Another officially hits theaters Sept. 26, but the reviews from critics are already pouring in.

    The Warner Bros. Pictures film, which is loosely based on Thomas Pynchon’s 1990 novel Vineland, sees a group of ex-revolutionaries reunite to rescue the daughter of one of their own. The film stars Oscar- winners Leonardo DiCaprio, Sean Penn and Benicio del Toro, as well as Regina Hall, Teyana Taylor and Chase Infiniti, and had its premiere in Los Angeles on Sept. 8.

    The Hollywood Reporter previously reported that One Battle After Another carries a hefty production budget north of $130 million, making it Anderson’s most expensive film to date. When news of the film’s budget broke, Warners’ film studio was facing scrutiny following a string of box office disappointments. Since April, however, the studio has been on something of a hot streak, with seven consecutive movies — A Minecraft Movie, Sinners, Final Destination: Bloodlines, F1: The Movie, Superman, Weapons and The Conjuring: Last Rites — all opening to more than $40 million at the North American box office.

    Despite its budget, Warners is clearly confident One Battle After Another has the potential to maintain the streak, and film studio chiefs Michael De Luca and Pamela Abdy told THR earlier this month that they plan an awards campaign for the film. Given the ecstatic response from critics, thus far, to One Battle After Another, De Luca and Abdy would be mad not to.

    The review aggregator sites are high on One Battle After Another, with the film boasting a 97 percent critics score (from 66 reviews) on Rotten Tomatoes, a 96 percent critics score on Metacritic and a very early 4.3/5 score on Letterboxd.

    Below, see what leading critics are saying about the film.

    In his rave review for THR, Richard Lawson described One Battle After Another as “a bracingly timely film,” in which Anderson situates us “in our dismayingly recognizable era of fascist creep.” “It is a frightening and galvanizing vision, Anderson putting away his complicated nostalgia for old (and more easily understood) days to confront, with disarmingly noble purpose, the here and now,” Lawson writes. He adds, “One Battle After Another is the rare American film released in these benighted times of ours — with the backing of a major studio, no less — to be clear and insistent in the target of its anger, its despair and its prescriptions for what might make things better.”

    In the Guardian, Peter Bradshaw awarded One Battle After Another five stars, and described the film as “partly a freaky-Freudian diagnosis of father-daughter dysfunction — juxtaposed with the separation of migrant children and parents at the US-Mexico border — and a very serious, relevant response to the US’s secretive ruling class and its insidiously normalised Immigration and Customs Enforcement roundups: the toxic new Vichyite Trump enthusiasm.” Bradshaw writes that, “One Battle After Another is at once serious and unserious, exciting and baffling, a tonal fusion sending that crazy fizz across the VistaVision screen — an acquired taste, yes, but addictive.”

    Empire‘s Alex Godfrey also gave One Battle After Another five stars, writing that, “In years to come, when this appears on TV late at night, it’ll be impossible to switch off. It’s just one of those films. A stone-cold, instant classic.” Godfrey is full of praise for Anderson pulling off the wealth of characters and plot points, writing that “there is a lot going on, and not an ounce of fat on it.” “One sequence in particular, involving a horribly tense, sinisterly mannered car-chase, unfolds on rolling desert roads, terrifying blind summits providing omniscient doom, front-and rear-mounted cameras taking us on a sort of haunted roller coaster ride, the landscape itself signalling death. It’s a real thrill, cinema absolutely harnessed. Everything is here.”

    Vulture‘s critic Alison Willmore was also effusive, describing One Battle After Another as “top-tier Paul Thomas Anderson.” Willmore praises Anderson for his adaptation of Pynchon’s novel and for dragging the work into the 21st century, as well as the action in the film, comparing it to Terminator 2. “For all that the film revels in satire — a powerful white-nationalist secret society is Christmas themed, and its members greet one another with “Hail, St. Nick!” — it’s electric when it veers into action, and a chase sequence on a series of cresting hills manages to both reference and stand up to the one in which the T-1000 pursues John Connor into the L.A. River.”

    Writing for the BBC, Caryn James praises Anderson for creating a film where “drama and comedy co-exist with remarkable, virtuosic ease.” “The film, which was shot in widescreen VistaVision, has an epic feel throughout, whether it depicts a large military helicopter landing or a ramshackle street in Baktan Cross,” writes James adding that “it’s rare to see such an ambitious film work so smoothly, but then, one of Anderson’s signatures is his ability to coolly control raucous, sprawling stories.”

    In his gushing review for IGN, Michael Calabro described One Battle After Another as a “masterpiece,” and that “Anderson has hit another high point of his career.” Calabro was blown away by the performances, in particular Teyana Taylor playing Perfidia Beverly Hills: “The end of One Battle — and how it tugs on your heartstrings — wouldn’t be nearly as effective if it weren’t for Taylor’s performance.” But Calabro reserves most of his praise for the director, writing, “To be blunt, I’m still in awe that this film actually exists. It’s so much fun to watch, while also telling a timeless story about what a father would go through to protect his daughter. And PTA does all this while making an incisive commentary on America’s current political climate. Let us not forget that he does all of this while managing to make his most expensive movie to date, of original-ish IP, no less.”

    Abid Rahman

    Source link

  • Julia Roberts, Sean Penn Host Screening for Brazilian Oscar Contender ‘Manas’: ‘It Will Change You’

    Sean Penn, Julia Roberts, and John and Nancy Ross hosted a screening of Marianna Brennand’s debut film “Manas” on Saturday in Los Angeles.

    The film, one of those vying to be the Oscar contender for Brazil, was introduced by Roberts and Penn, who serves as an executive producer. The screening was followed by a Q&A with Brennand, the film’s director, writer and producer, and its star, Dira Paes.

    Sean Penn and Julia Roberts with Marianna Brennand at the Los Angeles screening
    Courtesy of Phil Faraone, Getty Images

    Roberts told the audience: “I am so excited for what’s about to happen to everyone in this room because it happened to me and it will change you. This movie is life-affirming in such a sad and beautiful and magical way.”

    Building on that sentiment, Penn reflected on the first time he encountered Brennand, recalling: “At the Cannes Film Festival this year, there was a Kering Foundation dinner, and a woman came up to the stage to accept the Emerging Talent Award. She gave a speech, and the authenticity of this person was the kind of power that could only make a great film.”

    Julia Roberts with Marianna Brennand and Sean Penn at the Los Angeles screening
    Courtesy of Phil Faraone, Getty Images

    Brennand expressed her gratitude to her hosts: “Thank you, Sean, for seeing us, for recognizing the power of this story, and for speaking out… And Julia, thank you for empowering us with your presence here today. You both are immensely amplifying our voices.”

    The film was born out of 10 years of research in the Amazon by Brennand, who began her career as a documentarian. It tells the story of Marcielle (Jamilli Correa), a 13-year-old from Marajó Island. Silenced in a society that ignores violence against women and children, she “confronts generational wounds and takes control of her destiny, forever altering her family’s fate,” according to a statement.

    “Manas” won Brennand the best director award at Venice Days, the independent parallel section of the Venice Film Festival, and has collected a total 27 awards to date. The Brazilian film is one of six titles shortlisted to represent the country at the 2026 Academy Awards, with Penn, Academy Award winner Walter Salles, two-time Palme d’Or winners Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne, and “I’m Still Here” producer Maria Carlota Bruno serving as executive producers.

    On his decision to join as executive producer, Penn previously stated: “In the tradition last fulfilled by Walter Salles’s ‘I’m Still Here,’ Marianna Brennand’s film ‘Manas’ continues Brazil’s most enduring cinematic legacy. Films of striking social relevance that never fall to polemic or sensationalism, but instead so trustingly fulfill their characters’ plight and courage. ‘Manas’ is deeply emotional, stirring, and God forbid… important. I felt as if I had to put my skin back on after watching it.”

    Leo Barraclough

    Source link

  • Robin Wright opens up on ‘huge regret’ parenting with ex Sean Penn

    Robin Wright has opened up on her ‘huge regret’ parenting with ex Sean Penn. The actress who was married to the actor in 1996 and divorced in 2010 shares two children, Frances and Jack with the star

    “He was gone so much of the time. He’d come back and be the policeman and then he’d leave me with the residue,” She told The Sunday Times. “Then I would soften the blow. We were both extremes. They didn’t get that grey area in the middle, which is stern, and that is what they needed.”

    The 65-year-old then spoke of her struggles as a mother while with Sean.

    © Toronto Star via Getty Images
    Robin and Sean in happier days.

    “I have a huge regret as a mother and have experienced the fallout of this regret for many years with my kids – I wasn’t hard enough on them,” she confessed to the outlet.

    Their son Hopper, who has suffered from drug addiction, has been candid about his struggles too.  

    Hopper told ES Magazine: “I was doing a lot of stuff but meth was the main one that brought me down. I went to rehab because I woke up in hospital and my dad said, ‘Rehab? Or bus bench?’ I was like, ‘I’ll take the bed.”

    “Thank God I got out of that because that was the worst time in my life. Because it’s not fun when it gets to a point where you just need it.”

    Robin with her children, Hooper and Dylan.© Corbis via Getty Images
    Robin with her children, Hooper and Dylan.

    Sean and Robin had a tempestuous on and off relationship and planned to divorce two years earlier in 2007 but got back together four months later. 

    They split again in 2009 and finalized their divorce a year later. 

    robin wright penn
    The former couple pictured at the height of their marriage.

    They met on the set of State of Grace in 1990 but had an on and off relationship until they married six years later. 

    The two divorced in 2010, and Robin, who had previously changed her name to Robin Penn before changing it back to her maiden name after their split, previously opened up about the dissolution of her marriage in a 2014 interview with the Telegraph. She said: “Divorce in and of itself, and with children, is devastating.”

    robin wright© Photo: Rex
    Robin Wright and Kevin Spacey in their acclaimed political drama House of Cards.

    The actress added: “One of the reasons why we got back together and broke up so much was trying to keep the family together. If you’ve got kids, it’s a family, and you try again, and you try again.”

    Shortly after their divorce, Sean told Vanity Fair that his ex-wife was a “ghost” to him now, explaining: “We spent all those years together,” and that: “Now she’s just gone.”

    Both Sean and Robin married again after their divorce, though they have both since split from their respective spouses. The former finalized his divorce from Lila George in April of 2022 after nearly two years together, and the House of Cards lead filed for divorce from Clément Giraudet in September of 2022 after four years together.

    Faye James

    Source link

  • Celebrity birthdays for the week of Aug. 17-23

    Celebrity birthdays for the week of Aug. 17-23:

    Aug. 17: Actor Robert De Niro is 82. Guitarist Gary Talley of The Box Tops is 78. “Downton Abbey” creator Julian Fellowes is 76. Actor Robert Joy (“CSI: NY”) is 74. Singer Kevin Rowland of Dexy’s Midnight Runners is 72. Bassist Colin Moulding of XTC is 70. Country singer-songwriter Kevin Welch is 70. Singer Belinda Carlisle of The Go-Go’s is 67. Actor Sean Penn is 65. Jazz saxophonist Everette Harp is 64. Guitarist Gilby Clarke (Guns N’ Roses) is 63. Singer Maria McKee (Lone Justice) is 61. Drummer Steve Gorman (The Black Crowes) is 60. Singer-bassist Jill Cunniff (Luscious Jackson) is 59. Actor David Conrad (“Ghost Whisperer,” “Relativity”) is 58. Rapper Posdnuos of De La Soul is 56. Actor-singer Donnie Wahlberg (New Kids on the Block) is 56. TV personality Giuliana Rancic (“Fashion Police,” ″E! News”) is 51. Actor Bryton James (“Family Matters”) is 39. Actor Brady Corbet (“24,” “Thirteen”) is 37. Actor Austin Butler (“Dune: Part Two,” “Elvis”) is 34. Actor Taissa Farmiga (“American Horror Story”) is 31.

    Aug. 18: Actor Robert Redford is 89. Actor Henry G. Sanders (“Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman”) is 83. Drummer Dennis Elliott (Foreigner) is 75. Comedian Elayne Boosler is 73. Country singer Steve Wilkinson of The Wilkinsons is 70. Comedian-actor Denis Leary is 68. Actor Madeleine Stowe is 67. TV news anchor Bob Woodruff is 64. Actor Adam Storke (“Mystic Pizza”) is 63. Actor Craig Bierko (“Sex and the City,” ″The Long Kiss Goodnight”) is 61. Singer Zac Maloy of The Nixons is 57. Musician Everlast (House of Pain) is 56. Rapper Masta Killa of Wu-Tang Clan is 56. Actor Edward Norton is 56. Actor Christian Slater is 56. Actor Kaitlin Olson (“The Mick,” ″It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia”) is 50. Comedian Andy Samberg (“Brooklyn Nine-Nine,” ″Saturday Night Live”) is 47. Guitarist Brad Tursi of Old Dominion is 46. Actor Maia Mitchell (“The Fosters”) is 32. Actor Madelaine Petsch (“Riverdale”) is 31. Actor Parker McKenna Posey (“My Wife and Kids”) is 30.

    Aug. 19: Actor Debra Paget (“The Ten Commandments,” “Love Me Tender”) is 92. Actor Diana Muldaur (“Star Trek: The Next Generation”) is 87. Actor Jill St. John is 85. Singer Billy J. Kramer is 82. Country singer-songwriter Eddy Raven is 81. Singer Ian Gillan of Deep Purple is 80. Actor Gerald McRaney is 78. Actor Jim Carter (“Downton Abbey”) is 77. Singer-guitarist Elliot Lurie of Looking Glass is 77. Bassist John Deacon of Queen is 74. Actor Jonathan Frakes (“Star Trek: The Next Generation”) is 73. Actor Peter Gallagher is 70. Actor Adam Arkin is 69. Singer-songwriter Gary Chapman is 68. Actor Martin Donovan is 68. Singer Ivan Neville is 66. Actor Eric Lutes (“Caroline in the City”) is 63. Actor John Stamos is 62. Actor Kyra Sedgwick is 60. Actor Kevin Dillon (“Entourage”) is 60. Country singer Lee Ann Womack is 59. Former MTV reporter Tabitha Soren is 58. Country singer Clay Walker is 56. Rapper Fat Joe is 55. Actor Tracie Thoms (“Cold Case”) is 50. Actor Erika Christensen (“Parenthood”) is 43. Actor Melissa Fumero (“Brooklyn Nine-Nine”) is 43. Actor Tammin Sursok (“Pretty Little Liars”) is 42. Singer Karli Osborn (SHeDaisy) is 41. Rapper Romeo (formerly Lil’ Romeo) is 36. Actor Ethan Cutkosky (TV’s “Shameless”) is 26.

    Aug. 20: News anchor Connie Chung is 79. Trombone player Jimmy Pankow of Chicago is 78. Actor Ray Wise (“Reaper,” ″Twin Peaks”) is 78. Actor John Noble (“Lord of the Rings” films) is 77. Singer Robert Plant (Led Zeppelin) is 77. Singer Rudy Gatlin of the Gatlin Brothers is 73. Singer-songwriter John Hiatt is 73. Actor-director Peter Horton (“thirtysomething”) is 72. “Today” show weatherman Al Roker is 71. Actor Jay Acovone (“Stargate SG-1”) is 70. Actor Joan Allen is 69. Director David O. Russell (“Silver Linings Playbook,” “American Hustle”) is 67. Actor James Marsters (“Angel,” ″Buffy the Vampire Slayer”) is 63. Rapper KRS-One is 60. Actor Colin Cunningham (“Falling Skies”) is 59. Actor Billy Gardell (“Mike and Molly”) is 56. Singer Fred Durst of Limp Bizkit is 55. Actor Ke Huy Quan (“Everything Everywhere All at Once,” “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom”) is 55. Guitarist Brad Avery of Third Day is 54. Actor Misha Collins (“Supernatural”) is 51. Singer Monique Powell of Save Ferris is 50. Actor Ben Barnes (“Westworld,” ″Prince Caspian”) is 44. Actor Meghan Ory (“Once Upon a Time”) is 43. Actor Andrew Garfield (“The Amazing Spider-Man”) is 42. Actor Brant Daugherty (“Pretty Little Liars”) is 40. Singer-actor Demi Lovato is 33.

    Aug. 21: Guitarist James Burton (with Elvis Presley) is 86. Singer Jackie DeShannon is 84. Actor Patty McCormack (“Frost/Nixon,” “The Ropers”) is 80. Singer Carl Giammarese of The Buckinghams is 78. Actor Loretta Devine (“Boston Public”) is 76. Newsman Harry Smith is 74. Singer Glenn Hughes (Deep Purple, Black Sabbath) is 73. Guitarist Nick Kane (The Mavericks) is 71. Actor Kim Cattrall (“Sex and the City”) is 69. Actor Cleo King (“Mike and Molly”) is 63. Singer Serj Tankian of System of a Down is 58. Actor Carrie-Anne Moss (“The Matrix,” ″Chocolat”) is 55. Musician Liam Howlett of Prodigy is 54. Actor Alicia Witt (“Law & Order: Criminal Intent,” ″Cybill”) is 50. Singer-chef Kelis is 46. Actor Diego Klattenhoff (“The Blacklist”) is 46. TV personality Brody Jenner (“The Hills”) is 42. Singer Melissa Schuman of Dream is 41. Comedian Brooks Wheelan (“Saturday Night Live”) is 39. Actor Cody Kasch (“Desperate Housewives”) is 38. Musician Kacey Musgraves is 37. Actor Hayden Panettiere (“Nashville,” ″Heroes”) is 36. Actor RJ Mitte (“Breaking Bad”) is 33. Actor Maxim Knight (“Falling Skies”) is 26.

    Aug. 22: Newsman Morton Dean is 90. TV writer/producer David Chase (“The Sopranos”) is 80. Correspondent Steve Kroft (“60 Minutes”) is 80. Guitarist David Marks of The Beach Boys is 77. Guitarist Vernon Reid of Living Colour is 67. Country singer Collin Raye is 65. Actor Regina Taylor (“The Unit,” ″I’ll Fly Away”) is 65. Singer Roland Orzabal of Tears for Fears is 64. Drummer Debbi Peterson of The Bangles is 64. Guitarist Gary Lee Conner of Screaming Trees is 63. Singer Tori Amos is 62. Keyboardist James DeBarge of DeBarge is 62. Country singer Mila Mason is 62. Rapper GZA (Wu-Tang Clan) is 59. Actor Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje (“Oz,” “Lost”) is 58. Actor Ty Burrell (“Modern Family”) is 58. Celebrity chef Giada De Laurentiis is 55. Actor Melinda Page Hamilton (“Devious Maids,” ″Mad Men”) is 54. Actor Rick Yune (“Die Another Day,” “The Fast and the Furious”) is 54. Guitarist Paul Doucette of Matchbox Twenty is 53. Rapper Beenie Man is 52. Singer Howie Dorough of the Backstreet Boys is 52. Comedian Kristen Wiig (“Bridesmaids,” ″Saturday Night Live”) is 52. Actor Jenna Leigh Green (“Sabrina the Teenage Witch”) is 51. Keyboardist Bo Koster of My Morning Jacket is 51. Bassist Dean Back of Theory of a Deadman is 50. Actor and TV host James Corden is 47. Guitarist Jeff Stinco of Simple Plan is 47. Actor Brandon Adams (“The Mighty Ducks”) is 46. Actor Aya Sumika (“Numb3rs”) is 45. Actor Ari Stidham (TV’s “Scorpion”) is 33.

    Aug. 23: Actor Vera Miles is 95. Actor Barbara Eden is 94. Actor Richard Sanders (“WKRP In Cincinnati”) is 85. Country singer Rex Allen Jr. is 78. Actor David Robb (“Downton Abbey”) is 78. Singer Linda Thompson is 78. Actor Shelley Long is 76. Fiddler-singer Woody Paul of Riders in the Sky is 76. Singer-actor Rick Springfield is 76. Actor-producer Mark Hudson (The Hudson Brothers) is 74. Actor Skipp Sudduth (“The Good Wife”) is 69. Guitarist Dean DeLeo of Stone Temple Pilots is 64. Singer-bassist Ira Dean of Trick Pony is 56. Actor Jay Mohr is 55. Actor Ray Park (“X-Men,” ″The Phantom Menace”) is 51. Actor Scott Caan (“Hawaii Five-0”) is 49. Singer Julian Casablancas of The Strokes is 47. Actor Joanne Froggatt (“Downton Abbey”) is 45. Actor Jaime Lee Kirchner (“Bull”) is 44. Saxophonist Andy Wild of Nathaniel Rateliff and the Night Sweats is 44. Actor Annie Ilonzeh (“Chicago Fire”) is 42. Musician Sky Blu of LMFAO is 39. Actor Kimberly Matula (“The Bold and the Beautiful”) is 37.

    Source link

  • I’d Like A Quiet Ride: Daddio

    I’d Like A Quiet Ride: Daddio

    Before even going into Daddio, the premise is already a hard sell. It’s just Dakota Johnson and Sean Penn talking for roughly one hour and forty minutes (or one hour, thirty-three if you exclude the credits). And yet, the script, written by Christy Hall, managed to make its way onto the Black List in 2017. Unsurprisingly, it was originally intended as a stage play, hence the minimalism and dialogue-heavy nature of it. But, being that a play usually has to be slightly more “bulletproof” with its dialogue, it’s a bit of a shock to see that the content of Daddio is so undeniably cringe. Not, as Hall, Johnson and Penn seemed to be hoping, “edgy” and “no holds barred.” In this case, some holds definitely ought to have been barred, starting with the unsavory gender cliches that both Johnson’s character, whose name is never revealed, and Clark, the driver played by Penn, embody.

    Perhaps just as vexing is that one keeps waiting (and hoping) for some theoretically inevitable twist that finds “Girlie” (this is how Johnson is referred to in the credits) upending everything that Clark thought he knew about life and women (and contempt for modern conveniences). Sort of the way Steve Buscemi’s 2007 film, Interview, did. In a similar fashion to Daddio, Interview also relies solely on the dialogue between a man and a woman of very different stature and in very different places in their lives, while also leaning mostly on one location: Katya’s (Sienna Miller) loft in Manhattan. The film was a remake of Theo van Gogh’s (yes, Vincent is his great-granduncle) 2003 movie of the same name, with Buscemi directing and starring in it, in addition co-writing the script with David Schechter. Like “Girlie” and Clark, Katya and Pierre (Buscemi) play what amounts to a game of verbal cat and mouse, with each person one-upping the other on “emotional sluttiness” as the movie unfolds.

    Hall likely thought that the context of a cab ride remains a totally plausible milieu in which someone might get overly confessional with a stranger. Even though, more than ever, no one wants to talk to their driver, least of all a female passenger forced to engage with a male “ferrier.” But, in having “Girlie” opt to take a yellow cab instead of using an app to call an Uber or a Lyft, etc., Hall seems to want to leave the impression that this woman is an “old soul.” Therefore, also willing to talk to an “old man” like Clark instead of totally disappearing into her phone. In fact, one of the first things Clark says to her is, “It’s nice you’re not on your phone. You don’t have to keep talking to me or nothing, but, just…nice. You, know? To see a human, not plugged in.” Here, it’s worth noting that a great many people do still relish the small talk interactions of the cab ride, along with small talk in other service-centric environments as well. Indeed, some are appalled at the idea that “quiet mode” a.k.a. “quiet ride” could even exist. That it only serves to make us all more isolated from one another and, consequently, even lonelier and more depressed. But then one looks to what a conversation between “Girlie” and Clark is like, and it’s enough to kill off all romanticism about the need for “interacting” with strangers.

    Something that “Girlie” appears rather deft at as she gives an obsequious laugh to Clark’s comment about her being off her phone and asks, “What’s your name?” When he tells her what it is, he doesn’t feel at all inclined to do the “human” thing and ask her what her own name is in response. Therefore, the namelessness of “Girlie,” despite the numerous opportunities presented where he could have asked for it, is one of many things about Daddio that makes it so inherently sexist. That a woman created the product, as usual, has nothing to do with the fact that it is a misogynistic one. Indeed, throughout the movie, rather than being repulsed by the type of man Clark is, “Girlie” only encourages him with her “coy looks” and reinforcing giggles.

    Clark’s overt chauvinism begins around the ten-minute mark of Daddio, when he tells “Girlie” that her “little outfit” gave her away in terms of being someone who actually lives in New York rather than someone who’s just visiting. Instead of being grossed out by that description, she titters and repeats, “My little outfit?” Clark then proceeds to rattle off the reasons why her outfit represents, ultimately, that she can “handle herself,” the supposed true mark of being a New Yorker (who can often never “handle themselves” anywhere else). For those wondering, at this point in the “narrative,” how the fuck it’s going to manage to drag on for a full movie-length amount of time, Hall presents the convenient obstacle of a standstill traffic jam around the twenty-one-minute mark. A.k.a. the proverbial “end of act one.” At which time, it starts to become clear that even 2004’s Taxi has more value when it comes to romanticizing cab rides.   

    With act two, Clark’s freak flag flies unchecked as he has the audacity to turn around (as “Girlie” is engaged in another gross text exchange with the older married man she’s having an affair with), slide open the partition and ask her, “Did you like getting tied up?” This in reference to a story she just told about her much older sister tying her up by her hands and legs and putting her in the empty bathtub when she was a kid. A means to teach her how to “escape” if she was ever kidnapped. Obviously, Clark is more turned on by than “sympathetic” to the story. Rather than shutting him down at this point, as she should have long ago, “Girlie” continues to invite Clark’s skeevy rhetoric by justifying the question with the answer, “I liked the challenge of getting free.”

    After enduring Clark’s “shrink bit” for a while though, there does come a point when “Girlie” finally has the presence of mind to say, “Go fuck yourself”—and it certainly took her long enough. Unfortunately, she opens the door, so to speak, to him again after he “apologizes” by saying, “I just like to push buttons.” Sounds like something his first wife, Madonna, might wield as an excuse. And yes, there’s a missed opportunity for playing one of her songs in the cab when Clark asks if “Girlie” wants to listen to the radio. To keep some aspect of the ride “quiet,” she opts to say no. And it goes without saying that there wasn’t enough money in the budget for “Papa Don’t Preach” (the lead single from the album Madonna actually dedicated to Penn, True Blue) to blast from the speakers—which, for “Girlie,” would have been far more emotionally soothing than indulging Clark for this fucking long. Or even the married man she keeps texting with, often revealing facial expressions that indicate how “icky” she feels at certain moments throughout the “conversation,” not least of which is when the married guy, saved in her phone as “L,” keeps insisting that he “needs her pink.” Needs her to get him off, etc., etc. Alas, she’s already busy getting Clark off on an emotional level in the cab.

    The car doesn’t start moving again until around the fifty-four-minute mark, which means thirty-three minutes have gone by wherein these two are as stationary as the plot and dialogue itself, the latter always dancing around the trope of “Girlie’s” “Daddy issues,” hence the reason why she’s with an older man who’s already taken. And yes, “Girlie” does get into it with Clark about her absentee father, and the fact that he never actually touched her as a child (you know, in the affectionate way, not the molester way).

    Far earlier than this point, a reasonable viewer might ask themselves: are there times when one is feeling this chatty with their driver? Apart from when one is a rich woman with a regular chauffeur? Sure, but this goes well-beyond the “TMI” level of believability. Granted, when straight women are in an especially vulnerable state, particularly over a dude, it’s not out of the realm of possibility for her to become confessional with another man—ideally, an “objective” stranger. Alas, the grotesqueness of their conversation would seemingly require a certain amount of drunkenness to be at play. Not least of which is the almost Woody Allen-meets-Jean-Luc Godard-esque exchange during which “Girlie” says to Clark, “If I told you that I was twenty-four or thirty-four, your opinion of me would drastically change.” He replies, “That’s not true.” She rebuffs, “For women, it is true. It is fuckin’ true. The moment we hit thirty, our value is cut in half.” Clark shrugs, “I mean, fine. Fuck it, it’s true.” He then “comforts” her by adding, “You really do look twenty-something, but by the way you talk all smart and shit, you know, if I wasn’t lookin’ I would guess you were fifty.” (Side note: Dakota Johnson is thirty-four.)

    Through all this supposed repartee (again, by more twentieth century standards of what would constitute that), a tension seems to keep building, but there is never any real release. Never any grand denouement that would make it worthwhile enough to, as a viewer, endure this very long cab ride. Not even the “revelatory” final piece of information that “Girlie” metes out to Clark.

    Worse still, “Girlie” is so “touched” by Clark’s toxic masculinity-based candor that she tips him five hundred dollars at the end of the ride. Of course, an Uber would have been much cheaper in every way, not to mention the prior-to-booking offer it gives to have a “quiet ride” and not deal with any chatty bullshit from fundamentally lonely men like Clark, a driver who, in the end, doesn’t make anyone feel all that nostalgic about the slow death of the yellow cab.

    Genna Rivieccio

    Source link

  • What’s In A Belittling Nickname? Andrew McCarthy’s Brats Seeks to Find Out

    What’s In A Belittling Nickname? Andrew McCarthy’s Brats Seeks to Find Out

    Oddly (or fortuitously) enough, Brats comes out at a time when the commentary surrounding both brats and rats has become very favorable. The former because of Charli XCX and the latter because of the “hot rodent boyfriend” trend. Each example giving a strong indication of how far pop culture has moved away from anything resembling the monoculture of the 1980s. And nothing was more monoculture-oriented in the teen world than the Brat Pack. Depending on who you ask, some will say the group was born out of The Breakfast Club. Others, St. Elmo’s Fire. Others still might argue it could have originated with Taps, starring Timothy Hutton, Tom Cruise and Sean Penn. In fact, Brat Packer/Brats filmmaker Andrew McCarthy calls Hutton (who also appears in the doc) the “godfather” of all the Brat Packers as he was the first young person to star in a movie that actually took young people seriously at the beginning of the 80s, specifically for his role as Conrad Jarrett in 1980’s Ordinary People. But the specific who and when of the group’s precise genesis isn’t as relevant as the June 1985 article that decided to corral all of them together into one blob and brand them with the name that would define them and their movies forever. 

    The consequences and aftermath of that branding is the subject McCarthy wishes to explore in his documentary, a companion piece to his 2021 autobiography, Brat: An 80s Story. And if titling his book as such didn’t give the indication he’s doing his best to reappropriate the name, then surely titling his movie Brats will drive the point home: he’s ready to take back the narrative. One created by a little-known (and still little-known) journalist/writer named David Blum. In a sense, it’s arguable that Blum was among the first writers to take offense over nepo babies having everything handed to them. Of their galling sense of privilege under the guise of having “earned their place” despite having an automatic leg up. After all, the piece was originally just supposed to be about Martin Sheen’s boy, Emilio Estevez. And yes, Nicolas Cage, Coppola progeny extraordinaire, is also called out in the article, which features the subtitle: “They’re Rob, Emilio, Sean, Tom, Judd and the rest—the young movie stars you can’t quite keep straight. But they’re already rich and famous. They’re what kids want to see and what kids want to be.”

    That condescending summation being a precursor to the idea that fame for fame’s sake (or at least the sake of partying like a VIP) was the thing to aspire to (in which case, the message has been received beyond anyone’s wildest imagination). Because it was true, with a single two-word phrase, Blum had effectively diminished these “young people’s” work to something totally unserious. And solely because they were young. It’s the oldest trick in the book: discredit or minimize someone’s talent or opinions because of their youth. (Granted, in the present, the youth is paying back “olds” with a vengeance by discrediting or minimizing anyone over twenty-five.) 

    Accordingly, Blum does come across as a curmudgeonly boomer begrudging youthful Gen Xers (and, in McCarthy’s case, Gen X-cusping—while actors like Nelson, Penn and Hutton are all actually classifiable as being in the baby boomer category) their moment in the spotlight. Though, incidentally, Blum was twenty-nine when he wrote the article and McCarthy was twenty-two. So not that vast of an age difference. And yet, even more than speaking to a matter of age discrepancy in terms of “reasons why” Blum came at them, it was a matter of class discrepancy. For it’s so obvious in the article—and now—that Blum is filled with contempt for ilk of this nature. You know, rich, hot people who seem to have no problems apart from which free, swag-filled event to slip into. And in this sense, one can’t help but side with him, for who among us ordinary mortals hasn’t been prone to such flare-ups of rage and jealousy when it comes to witnessing privilege in motion and wondering why we shouldn’t have it instead (or, in a more ideal world, in addition to)?

    Yet on the other, it’s not hard to sympathize with a Brat Pack “charter member” like Andrew McCarthy, clearly so shaken up by the unwanted “rebranding” of who he was all these years later. While some might deem this as a product of “snowflakeism” being chic, even among those who aren’t millennials and Gen Zers, it’s true what McCarthy says in the documentary: “Things that happen to us when we’re young, they’re really intense and they go deep. You know, had the same thing, Brat Pack, if the Brat Pack happened when we were forty, we would have gone like, ‘Whatever dude.’ You know, because you’re young, you just take it so personally because you’re not sure of yourself yet and so I think that article tapped into doubts and fears that we had about ourselves. ‘My God, are we maybe really undeserving of this?’”

    This fear, to a more legitimate extent, seems to be the exact reason so many nepo babies, finally forced to reconcile with their privilege (though not really), had a strong reaction to the New York Magazine (the same place where “Hollywood’s Brat Pack” was published in 1985) cover story published for the December 19, 2022–January 1, 2023 issue. Titled “Aww, look! She has her mother’s eyes. And agent. Extremely overanalyzing Hollywood’s nepo-baby boom,” the article by Nate Jones solidified the derogatory term (originally tweeted by Meriem Derradji as “nepotism baby” in reference to Maude Apatow in February of 2022) as an ultimate takedown. Because only does everyone want to believe there’s a secret “easy way” that success is achieved (true, being born into the right family helps), they want to believe that not achieving it is through no fault of their own. They just didn’t get popped out of the right vagina. And now, the “poor” nepo babies have to go around living with the Scarlet “NB” forever, put in a place to constantly question whether they’re talented or just, to use a Buellerism, born under a “good” sign.

    At the time of the fever pitch over the term, certain nepo babies who wouldn’t otherwise have acknowledged their privilege came out of the woodwork to weigh in. This included Lily Allen, daughter of the increasingly lesser known Keith Allen. Her take? “The nepo babies y’all should be worrying about are the ones working for legal firms, the ones working for banks and the ones working in politics. If we’re talking about real world consequences and robbing people of opportunity. BUT that’s none of my business. And before you come at me for being a nepo baby myself, I will be the first to tell you that I literally deserve nothing.” The deflection and “self-effacing” approach being one way to minimize a backlash. Or there’s the Hailey Baldwin Bieber (a “double nepo baby”) approach: taking ownership of the “slur” by wearing it like a positive term on a t-shirt she sported around town during the first week of 2023 (when the NY Mag article was still fresh). 

    In fact, members of the Brat Pack probably look back and wish they had done something similar in order to “take back the narrative” when it was still fresh. But, as McCarthy points out, they were so young (Bieber was twenty-six when the nepo baby article came out and she chose to don that shirt in response) when it happened, that it was impossible not to be affected, not to take the unwanted branding seriously. McCarthy added, “If it didn’t touch something, you know, it’s that old saying, ‘If it gets you, you got it.’ If it didn’t touch some fear that we had harbored about ourselves, it wouldn’t have mattered, you know? Was it touching truth? It was touching fear, and fear is a powerful thing.”

    In a sense, by giving the term so much power, the group allowed the name to flourish. In short, they chose not to take the Madonna route after photos from her nude modeling days were published in Playboy and Penthouse (also in 1985, a big year for life-altering cover stories) by saying, “So what?” And with those two words, she steamrolled any attempts on the media’s part to end her career. Words, thus, only have the power or meaning that people give to them. Or, as Blum says to McCarthy during their first-ever meeting, “I just figured ‘sticks and stones.’” As in: “Stick and stones may break my bones but words will never hurt me.”

    But it’s clear that words can hurt in instances such as these, that they have the power to alter the trajectory of careers, therefore lives. Look at someone like Lindsay Lohan, who was ridiculed ad nauseam in the media for her drunken, drug-addled hijinks to the point where she became an irrevocable laughingstock in Hollywood (and, if we’re being honest, still is). However, there were certain sects in the media that sided with the Brat Pack at the time. In point of fact, the movie opens on an interviewer asking McCarthy, “Are we doing a disservice to you and the rest of the young group that, by calling you the Brat Pack and sort of putting in one group and stereotyping all of you as young actors who’ve made it now sort of control a lot of Hollywood…?” It’s here that McCarthy bursts out laughing, “Oh I wouldn’t say control… I think it’s easy to just group people together in any level. So it’s just an easier way to get a handle on people, but I think all of us are very different.” Sort of like The Breakfast Club itself. Which McCarthy wasn’t a part of.

    To be sure, one of the running jokes of Brats is asking different people who they think was in the Brat Pack and what movies are actually considered “Brat Pack movies.” Either everyone has a different answer, or no one knows for sure. Lea Thompson, now a mother to nepo babies Madelyn and Zoey Deutch, declares that she’s merely “Brat Pack-adjacent.” After all, she was in Back to the Future (some people considered Michael J. Fox classifiable in the Brat Pack category) and Some Kind of Wonderful (written by John Hughes, maker of Brat Packers, and directed by Howard Deutch, the Pretty in Pink director who would end up marrying Thompson in 1989). 

    It is also Thompson who points out that there’s a reason why this group of young actors was so impactful. For, in addition to bringing the collective youth sentiment to life onscreen at a time before social media existed to fill that void, Thompson posits, “I think we were at a very unique moment in history, and I boil it down to this: it was the first time you could hold a movie. And you could buy it. And you could put it in your thing and play it over and over again. And it was a very small part of time… It meant something more, it was physical.” And it was mostly the youth market buying these tangible items for their VCRs or record players (and yes, the soundtracks to these movies were just as important). Therefore, the young generation of that time connected with a specific set of people in a way that, say, Gen Z never will. Their lives are devoid of physical media in a way that further detaches them from the content they’re more mindlessly consuming. 

    So yes, to be a member of this as-of-yet-unnamed group in as late as May of 1985 held quite a lot of weight and influence. The kind that might start to go to even the most humble person’s head. And oh how they were humbled. For example, the fallout after the article resulted in many of the actors distancing themselves from one another (though McCarthy and Molly Ringwald, noticeably absent from the documentary, would go on to reteam for the inevitably panned Fresh Horses in 1988)—even if some of the best roles they were offered were in films co-starring their fellow Brat Packers. Estevez confirms this to McCarthy in the documentary when he admits that he backed out of an adaptation of Young Men With Unlimited Capital upon learning that McCarthy was potentially going to be cast as well.

    Rob Lowe was probably the least concerned out of everyone, or that’s how he comes across in Brats, informing McCarthy that there’s nothing but “goodwill” infused into the term. Now. The two also muse on one of their more ribald nights out, starting at Spago with Liza Minnelli and then ending up at Sammy Davis Jr.’s house—the only time, the pair notes, that the worlds of the Rat Pack and the Brat Pack meta-ly collided. Lowe adds to his reflection on that strange night, “When I think of the Brat Pack, I think of that night. Because stuff like that routinely happened. As it does, when you were in that moment. And you see that recycles every generation. With different people, different names and different places, but it’s the same story. Someone is having that moment. It can fuck you up, or it can be fun or it can be all of the above, but there are very few people that are ever in a place to go through that moment. And yet there are always people who will go through that moment every generation.” It seems the last time it really happened at full force though was with the consumption of “tabloid queens” like Paris, Nicole and Britney in the 2000s. 

    With regard to the absence of certain Brat Packers in the documentary, namely Ringwald, Judd Nelson and Anthony Michael Hall (who isn’t mentioned at any point), McCarthy fills in that space with hot takes on the unwanted epithet by such scholars/experts of social science meets pop culture as Malcolm Gladwell and Susannah Gora, who wrote 2010’s You Couldn’t Ignore Me If You Tried. It was Gora who said, upon the book’s release, “When [the Brat Pack article] first came out… these actors were stuck with that label. It was kind of a difficult and painful thing to deal with both personally and professionally.”

    As for Gladwell’s opinion on why the name endured, he insists it relates to encapsulating the generational transition in Hollywood that was going at that specific moment. And, what’s more, that paying attention to such a pop culture moment is “possible then in a way it’s not possible now… You can’t have a cultural touchstone that everyone in their twenties can refer to… Things have been fractured; we’ve gone from a relatively unified youth culture to a youth culture that looks like every other aspect of American society, which is everything’s all over the place. There’s no common denominator.” 

    And yet, among the many detailed explorations in Brats is the idea that America in the 80s was extremely fractured. But, to loosely quote Andrew Clark in The Breakfast Club, the country was just better at hiding it during that time (in part because there was no internet). Hence, bringing up the now all-too-common callout that John Hughes’ movies, ergo Brat Pack movies, were extremely white. But rather than chalking that up to Hughes being racist, Gladwell tells McCarthy, “He’s reflecting the way the world was in the 80s. You know, the Brown decision is ‘54, which is the legal end of educational segregation in this country, but the country just resegregates after that, just along kind of residential lines. So it, like, the reality of being a suburban, upper-middle-class suburban kid from outside Chicago in the 1980s is that there were, there was like one Black kid in your class. That’s the reality of it in that era… So we can watch those movies and be reminded that’s, that’s what America was.” From the perspective of the people with the privilege to tell stories in Hollywood. 

    In any case, McCarthy saves his pièce de résistance for the final minutes of the film: meeting David Blum for the first time. The writer who set all this trauma in motion. In truth, Blum himself reveals a certain kind of privilege that no writer today knows the security of: being on a contract with New York Magazine (instead of that other dreaded word: freelance) that required him to only write eight stories a year, complete with the perks of any paid airfare, paid hotels and paid meals required to write those stories. And, as he rehashes how the article came about, one can argue that it’s really Estevez’s fault for invoking the whole thing. For what was to be a simple feature article about him evolved when Estevez invited Blum out for a night on the town with him, Rob and Judd. 

    Observing them as though a fly on the wall, for no one was paying much attention to the “nobody writer,” Blum tells McCarthy that they were getting a lot of “special attention.” And he wasn’t. That clearly must have struck a nerve. He also makes mention of where the idea for the name first came from. Begging the question: is it actually Alan Richmond’s (of People) fault for “incepting” the idea of doing a play on the Rat Pack by calling him and a group of other journalists eating at a restaurant the Fat Pack?

    Through it all, Blum remains decidedly glib and defiant about the whole thing, reminding McCarthy, “There’s tradeoffs to being a celebrity. And some of it is you get whisked around the gate to get into the nightclub. These people wanted to be written about. These people agreed to talk to me. These people behaved the way they did. I’m doing my job as a journalist… It wasn’t meant to destroy or hurt anyone, but really just to define a group of people in a clever and interesting way.” But there’s the rub—why did Blum take it upon himself to “define” anyone? Because, as people need to be reminded all the time, that’s what writers do. They observe and, that’s right, define the world around them. That night, the world to be defined was the one orbited by Estevez, Lowe and Nelson. 

    While many wanted to push back on the impression that was given, in the original article, Blum has no trouble painting an all-too-accurate picture of the kind of male privilege that would have gone totally unchecked in 1985, regardless of being famous or not. But add fame and money into the mix, and there was an even more palpable air of “swagger.” So it is that the account of Estevez’s, Lowe’s and Nelson’s interactions with women were expectedly cringeworthy. And placed right in the first page of the article: “…by the time the blonde girl arrived, Rob Lowe had long since forgotten she was coming. He had turned back to the table, where his friends had once again lifted their bottles in a toast: for no reason, with no prompting, for what must have been the twentieth time of the night, the boys were about to clink bottles and unite in a private pact, a bond that could not be broken by all the pretty young girls in the room, or in the world, or even, perhaps, by the other, less famous young actors who shared the table with them as friends. As the bottles clinked, the boys cried together at the top of their lungs, “Na zdorovye!”—Russian for ‘good health,’ but really something else, a private signal among the three famous boys that only they understood.” A “secret handshake,” if you will, that only those on the inside of such a bubble of privilege could understand and appreciate. This extended even to “youth writers” of the time, like Jay McInerney, who was also invited out for evenings with Estevez and co. 

    It didn’t take long for Less Than Zero writer Bret Easton Ellis (also appearing to give his two cents in Brats) to enter the Brat Pack realm the same year the Blum article came out (two years later, he and McInerney would also suffer the blowback from the coining of that phrase by being dubbed as part of the “Literary Brat Pack”). In fact, as though to simply embrace both of their reputations for being “brats” by sheer non-virtue of being young and rich, Easton Ellis and his own article subject, Judd Nelson, decided to have a bit of fun trolling Tina Brown and Vanity Fair. After befriending Nelson, of whom Brown supposedly said, “I don’t like him”/“I want to bring him down a bit,” they decided to repitch the article, released in November of ‘85, as being about how the two visit the “hippest” places in L.A., eventually giving it the title, “Looking for Cool in L.A.” The troll? Easton Ellis and Nelson either deliberately went to the most “over” places they could name-check or made up locations altogether, namely “The Bud Club,” which could crop up anywhere in town depending on the night. Indeed, the entire article becomes centered on their quest to find out where it might be on that particular evening. The level of commitment to making readers believe it was real, along with all their other “advice” about where to go in L.A., is truly something to behold. By the time Brown caught on to the ruse, the article had already been published. Ellis never wrote for the magazine after that. 

    As for Blum, he continued his career in writing magazine articles (and even books), while Brat Packers started to fall off the radar as the 90s got underway. Ironically, the writer himself will never be known for anything else but coming up with that moniker. He, too, committed a form of seppuku on his career, taking a gamble on what he thought would elevate it instead of leaving it perhaps in a state of stagnation. Just as it was the case for many Brat Packers. Those on the periphery of it were, in fact, more likely to endure beyond the 80s. Sean Penn, for example, whose association with the “pack” even trickled over into his then wife’s life when she started hanging out with Sandra Bernhard and Jennifer Grey. That’s right, Madonna, Bernhard and Grey decided to call themselves the “Snatch Batch” after enough jaunts out on the town together. 

    With regard to Blum’s professional plateau, he admits to McCarthy that the article didn’t affect his career success as much as he thought it was going to. As he tells it, “I really thought I was going to be suddenly ushered into Tina Brown’s office [no, instead that was Bret Easton Ellis]. I’ve spent my whole, honestly, really, whole life—it comes up sooner or later with people I know. ‘You created the Brat Pack?’ I mean people just literally don’t know how to process that information.” He eventually concludes, “I hope it’s not the greatest thing I ever did. I really do.” The same way any Brat Packer might. 

    Though McCarthy pretends to make peace with Blum, as he’s walking out of the apartment, he asks, “But do you think you could’ve been nicer?” Blum laughs. McCarthy insists, “Seriously.” Blum replies, “It’s collateral damage, in my view, to making the point that here was a bunch of people that had become very famous and popular and I’m calling them the Brat Pack and here’s how I’m saying it.”

    This, clearly, isn’t what McCarthy wants to hear (i.e., closure not received), though he perks up at Blum’s casual admission to invoking collateral damage with the article. Either way, part of McCarthy’s subtle revenge seems to be filming Blum during this interview with his bare belly protruding out from the bottom of his shirt. Now forever immortalized just like the Brat Pack name. 

    Demi Moore, whose presence in the movie is possibly more surprising than Ringwald’s absence, is the one to distill the whole thing down to this: “And it actually wasn’t even about really any of us. It was about the person who wrote it. Trying to be clever and get their next job.” Apart from unwittingly speaking to how capitalism hurts us all, it’s also a very “celebrity way” to negate a writer’s work and worth. But perhaps it’s a fair trade considering how much he managed to denigrate theirs.

    Even so, rather than Brats being a “revenge of the Brat Packers” story, it is one of acceptance, of making peace with something. And, more than anything, projecting a new, more positive meaning onto it. Besides, no matter what they do, you’ll still see them as you want to see them—in the simplest terms, in the most convenient definitions.

    Genna Rivieccio

    Source link

  • ‘Rebel Nun’ Review: Sister Helen Prejean, the Activist Who Inspired ‘Dead Man Walking,’ Gets a Lackluster Doc Portrait

    ‘Rebel Nun’ Review: Sister Helen Prejean, the Activist Who Inspired ‘Dead Man Walking,’ Gets a Lackluster Doc Portrait

    Sister Helen Prejean is best known as the inspiration for the film Dead Man Walking, based on her 1993 book, with Sean Penn as a man facing the death sentence and Susan Sarandon as Sister Helen. But her story goes well beyond that. In the decades since, she has continued her campaign to save men from execution, without success, and to offer them comfort, guilty as they may be and however much she is horrified by their crimes. It’s a life’s work she continues to do at age 85. “I’ve watched six men die on death row and I’m about to watch my seventh,” she says in Rebel Nun. Yet, “I wake up each morning filled with hope.”

    That story deserves a great documentary. This well-meaning film is far from that. Rebel Nun is pedestrian at its best and cringe-worthy at its faux-arty worst. Sister Helen’s narrative is interrupted by clichéd filmmaking that includes flat-footed imagistic montages and far too many tracking shots down narrow prison hallways toward an execution chamber. Sister Helen herself is a powerful but soothing presence, and fortunately much of the running time is given over to her first-person account, straightforward and down-to-earth. Her strong character doesn’t get lost, but to see it you have to get past the director Dominic Sivyer’s (the Netflix series The Masked Scammer) stock choices.

    Rebel Nun

    The Bottom Line

    A missed opportunity.

    Venue: Tribeca Film Festival (Spotlight Documentary)
    Director: Dominic Sivyer
    Writers: Dominic Sivyer, Kari Lia

    1 hour 40 minutes

    Sister Helen’s narrative goes back to her middle-class Catholic childhood in Louisiana in the 1950s, seen in family photos, and her decision to become a nun. In the early 1980s, working in disadvantaged communities, she was asked to volunteer as a pen pal for prisoners, and eventually went to meet Patrick Sonnier, a murderer and rapist. She recalls that when she first entered the ominous gates of Angola State Prison, she thought, “I’m not in nunville anymore. Bride of Christ? Let that go.” You can see why people relate to her. She was at Sonnier’s execution but closed her eyes as he died. On the drive home she vomited but later decided she’d be a witness and never shut her eyes at an execution again. Her memory and descriptions are vivid and create a portrait of how she came to be the person she is, visiting killers and puttering around her house feeding pet birds.

    But then there are those montages. The first, when we’re introduced to Sister Helen’s work, includes a smash-up of religious music and statues, bolts of electrical currents (as if we wouldn’t get it — electrocution!), wilting flowers and an old-fashioned clock. Later, she talks about how the Catholic Church’s reforms in the 1960s changed the dynamic of her social service. Able to wear ordinary clothes instead of a nun’s habit made it easier to connect with people. That good point is almost overshadowed by a 60s montage: flower children and a rocket being launched into space backed by the song “The Age of Aquarius.” Maybe these images were meant to jazz up the narrative or add a visceral connection, but they land as hokey and laughable.

    Sarandon is in a bland scene, visiting Sister Helen today. Kim Kardashian is seen Face-Timing with her, as Sister Helen enlists her help spreading the word on social media about Richard Glossip, currently on death row. The celebrity scenes add little except a bit of glamour and a sense of Sister Helen’s determination.  

    The documentary is up to the minute taking us through to Glossip’s case. He was convicted on shaky evidence, not of committing a murder but of ordering it. Even a conservative legislator in Oklahoma, where the killing occurred, says he believes the case was mishandled. The Supreme Court has temporarily blocked the execution, and Glossip is waiting for a ruling on whether he will get a new trial. He would be the first convict Sister Helen actually saved from a death sentence.

    In a section more revealing than most, we see archival video of Sister Helen meeting the parents of Faith Hawkins, murdered by Robert Lee Willie (one of two men Penn’s movie character was based on). They are furious at her. And in a new interview for the film, Hawkins’ sister resists the idea that people suffer when they are electrocuted. “Unlike their victims, they feel nothing,” she says. Depicting this tension doesn’t both-sides the issue — the film is consistently on Sister Helen’s side — but it demonstrates the complexity of the subject, and that advocates against capital punishment aren’t dismissing the anguish of the victims’ families. “No matter how much pain and grief [the families] suffer, no human being deserves to be executed,” Sister Helen says. If only Sivyer had created the film this thoughtful activist deserves.

    Caryn James

    Source link

  • Sean Penn, Adam Driver, Academy Chief Bill Kramer to Attend Camerimage, Alongside Robbie Ryan, Ed Lachman, Peter Biziou

    Sean Penn, Adam Driver, Academy Chief Bill Kramer to Attend Camerimage, Alongside Robbie Ryan, Ed Lachman, Peter Biziou

    The 30th edition of the Camerimage Film Festival, Europe’s top cinematography event, will welcome a host of stellar guests to the Gothic Polish town of Torun, including Adam Driver, Sean Penn and Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences CEO Bill Kramer.

    Driver and Penn will screen their latest films, respectively, the high-octane biopic “Ferrari” and the portrait of Eastern Europe’s most remarkable wartime president, Volodymyr Zelensky, “Superpower.”

    As regular fest guests have learned, the calendar of film screenings is just as important to study as the schedule for panels, seminars and masterclasses. That’s because Camerimage, with limited event space for now, strategically holds filmmaker talks following film projections, often in the same hall of the Jordanki cinema space.

    Which means opening-night audiences who linger after Camerimage screens Robbie Ryan-shot “Poor Things,” the Frankenstein-esque fairytale by Yorgos Thanthimos starring Emma Stone, will be able to quiz the cinematographer himself on how he shot the visually arresting feature.

    Likewise, audiences at the next day’s screening of Pablo Larrain’s dark fantasy built around the life of Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet, “El Conde,” will hear from two-time Oscar-nommed lenser Ed Lachman in the same hall.

    “Saltburn” cinematographer Linus Sandgren will also be talking about the filming of the Emerald Fennell-directed black comedy in the Jordanki.

    Panels in lecture halls, of course, will be addressing the most pressing concerns in the cinematography profession, as well. “Some will be talking about AI,” says fest organizer Kazik Suwala, while others will address larger issues such as the importance of film culture centers. That subject, to be addressed by Kramer, will draw on lessons gleaned from the vast new AMPAS museum project, which opened its doors in Los Angeles in 2021. Kramer’s talk will take on the issue of audiences with less and less time to spare for film and strategies for offering experiences that provide multiple forms of engagement in one venue.

    It’s a lesson Camerimage is already acting on, says Suwala, with its ongoing investments and development of the European Film Center, which he will direct. The project is planned around an approach similar to the one Kramer advocates.

    Still more opportunities to inspire Camerimage’s crowds of upcoming filmmakers are guests Rebecca Miller, novelist, actor and director of “She Came to Me” and “The Ballad of Jack and Rose,” and director Floria Sigismondi, who is to be feted for her outstanding work in music videos – a field this fest has long honored with competitive awards.

    Provocative director Jeff Gibbs, whose YouTube-released climate change doc “Planet of the Humans,” produced by Michael Moore, rocked boats in 2019, will be speaking as well, cheering on filmmakers to go beyond the genre’s traditional conventions.

    Gibbs is pledging to coach filmmakers on creating work “that will be seen by millions and just might change the world” while Oscar-winning cinematographer Peter Biziou will be sharing insights from a career that spans “Bugsy Mallone,” “Pink Floyd – The Wall” and “Truman Show.”

    Other talks by luminaries such as Walter Murch, the editor of “The Unbearable Lightness of Being” and sound designer for “Apocalypse Now” (often credited with coining that term), are also expected to fill halls, while events run by camera manufacturers, lighting and filmmaking technology companies will bring cinematographers of every stripe up to speed on the latest offerings being rolled out.

    Source link

  • 9/24: The Takeout: Actor and documentarian Sean Penn

    9/24: The Takeout: Actor and documentarian Sean Penn

    9/24: The Takeout: Actor and documentarian Sean Penn – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Actor and filmmaker Sean Penn joins Major Garrett for this edition of “The Takeout” to discuss his latest documentary, “Superpower.” The film centers around Ukrainian President Volodomyr Zelenskyy and his leadership during the early days of Russia’s invasion.

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


    Source link

  • Person to Person: Norah O’Donnell interviews actor and activist Sean Penn

    Person to Person: Norah O’Donnell interviews actor and activist Sean Penn

    Person to Person: Norah O’Donnell interviews actor and activist Sean Penn – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    In this episode of “Person to Person” with Norah O’Donnell, she speaks with Sean Penn about his new documentary about the invasion of Ukraine, “Superpower,” and his work as an activist.

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


    Source link

  • Sean Penn gives firsthand account of war in Ukraine

    Sean Penn gives firsthand account of war in Ukraine

    Sean Penn gives firsthand account of war in Ukraine – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Actor Sean Penn, the co-director of the new documentary “Superpower,” has personally witnessed the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine. He sat down with “CBS Evening News” anchor and managing editor Norah O’Donnell to discuss the war.

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


    Source link

  • Face The Nation: Turner, Warner, Penn

    Face The Nation: Turner, Warner, Penn

    Face The Nation: Turner, Warner, Penn – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Missed the second half of the show? The latest on…Mike Turner of Ohio tells “Face the Nation” that “from what I’ve seen,” the classified documents allegedly retained by former President Donald Trump and President Biden from his time as vice president are “equally egregious”, Mark Warner of Virginia tells “Face the “Nation” that he hasn’t been briefed by the White House on the prisoner swap deal with Iran, and Sean Penn tells “Face the Nation” that the U.S.’ response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine has been “to date, a tragic mistake.”

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


    Source link

  • Sean Penn, “Superpower” co-director, says U.S.’ Ukraine policy has been a “tragic mistake”

    Sean Penn, “Superpower” co-director, says U.S.’ Ukraine policy has been a “tragic mistake”

    Sean Penn, “Superpower” co-director, says U.S.’ Ukraine policy has been a “tragic mistake” – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Sean Penn, the co-director of the new documentary “Superpower” about the war in Ukraine, tells “Face the Nation” that the U.S.’ response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine has been “to date, a tragic mistake.”

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


    Source link

  • 9/17: Face The Nation

    9/17: Face The Nation

    9/17: Face The Nation – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    This week on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan,” days after the Big Three go on strike at the same time for the first time in history, we talk to United Auto Workers president Shawn Fain and Rep. Debbie Dingell of Michigan. Plus, Republican House intelligence chair Mike Turner of Ohio and Democratic Senate intelligence chair Mark Warner of Virginia.

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


    Source link

  • Sean Penn Still Fuming Over Oscars’ Refusal To Allow Ukraine’s Zelenskyy To Speak: ‘Guess What You Got Instead? Will Smith!’

    Sean Penn Still Fuming Over Oscars’ Refusal To Allow Ukraine’s Zelenskyy To Speak: ‘Guess What You Got Instead? Will Smith!’

    By ETCanada.com Staff.

    Sean Penn is promoting the new documentary he co-directed, “Superpower”, which focuses on the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the stand taken by the Ukrainian people to defend their homeland, led by President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

    In a new interview with Variety about the film, Penn admits he’s still irked that efforts to bring Zelenskyy to speak at the 2022 Academy Awards, shortly after Russia launched its invasion, were refused.

    “The Oscars producer thought, ‘Oh, he’s not light-hearted enough.’”

    “The Oscars producer thought, ‘Oh, he’s not light-hearted enough,’” Penn recalled.

    “Well, guess what you got instead? Will Smith!” he added, referencing Smith’s infamous slap of Chris Rock.


    READ MORE:
    Amy Schumer Pitched Ukraine President Zelenskyy To Appear At The Oscars

    During a 2022 appearance on “The Drew Barrymore Show”, Amy Schumer — who co-hosted that year’s Oscars alongside Wanda Sykes and Regina Hall — confirmed that she was among those who wanted Zelenskyy to be a part of the telecast.

    “I actually pitched, I wanted to find a way to have Zelenskyy satellite in or make a tape or something just because there are so many eyes on the Oscars,” she said, but explained that producers nixed the idea.

    “I am not afraid to go there,” she added, “but it’s not me producing the Oscars.”

     

    Etcanadadigital

    Source link

  • Sean Penn, Backing WGA Strike, Says AI Dispute Is ‘A Human Obscenity’ At Cannes Film Festival

    Sean Penn, Backing WGA Strike, Says AI Dispute Is ‘A Human Obscenity’ At Cannes Film Festival

    By JAKE COYLE, The Associated Press.

    Sean Penn strongly backed the current Hollywood screenwriters strike while speaking at the Cannes Film Festival on Friday, saying the dispute over artificial intelligence is “a human obscenity.”

    Penn addressed the ongoing Writers Guild of America strike in a press conference for his new film, “Black Flies”, director Jean-Stéphane Sauvaire’s harrowing, gritty drama about New York paramedics. Asked about the strike, Penn said “the industry has been upending the writers and actors and directors for a very long time.”

    “There’s a lot of new concepts being tossed about including the use of AI. It strikes me as a human obscenity for there to be pushback on that from the producers,” said Penn, a veteran writer-director in addition to being an actor.


    READ MORE:
    Tony Awards Won’t Be Televised Due To Writers’ Strike

    Film and TV screenwriters earlier this month began striking after talks with producers broke off. The WGA is seeking better pay, new contracts for the streaming era and safeguards against the use of AI-scripted work-arounds.

    “The first thing we should do in these conversations is change the Producers Guild and title them how they behave, which is the Bankers Guild,” added Penn. “It’s difficult for so many writers and so many people industry-wide to not be able to work at this time. I guess it’s going to soul-search itself and see what side toughs it out.”

    After the press conference, Penn said in a statement that he meant to refer to the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP), which is negotiating on behalf of producers, not the Producers Guild of America.


    READ MORE:
    Robin Wright Says Her Appearances With Ex Sean Penn Are ‘For Their Children’

    Penn’s comments come as the potential for a wider work stoppage in Hollywood may be growing. The Directors Guild is also negotiating a new contract with producers. The board of SAG-AFTRA, the actors union, this week voted to ask members for strike authorization as it prepares to enter negotiations for a new contract.

    In Cannes, the strike has been a regular topic for American stars, filmmakers and producers. On Thursday, Ethan Hawke wore a shirt that read “Pencils Down.” On the festival’s opening day Tuesday, juror Paul Dano said he planned to join his wife, Zoe Kazan, on the picket lines soon.

    “My wife is currently picketing with my 6-month-old, strapped to her chest,” said Dano. “I will be there on the picket line when I get back home.”


    READ MORE:
    Mindy Kaling Shows Support To Writers On Strike In ‘Never Have I Ever’ Post

    At the press conference Friday for “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny”, Lucasfilm chief Kathleen Kennedy, one of the top film producers, said “most people are in full support of the writers getting what they deserve.”

    “The meta issue here is how that it’s being impacted by an industry that’s really changing, that is in the midst of change, both technologically and just basic aspects of how we work,” Kennedy said. “That’s going to take time. That’s what everyone is getting ready for.”

    Melissa Romualdi

    Source link

  • Sean Penn loans Oscar statuette to Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy – National | Globalnews.ca

    Sean Penn loans Oscar statuette to Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy – National | Globalnews.ca

    In a grand, symbolic gesture, American actor Sean Penn presented his Oscar statuette to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy during a recent meeting in Kyiv.

    In a video of the meeting posted to Zelenskyy’s Instagram account on Tuesday, Penn revealed the statuette to the president and insisted he take the coveted prize.

    “I feel terrible,” said Penn, 62. “It’s just a symbolic silly thing, but if I know this is here with you then I’ll feel better and stronger for the fight.”

    Read more:

    Aaron Carter death: Nick Carter wipes away tears during Backstreet Boys tribute

    “When you win, bring it back to Malibu, because I’ll feel much better knowing there’s a piece of me here,” he added.

    Story continues below advertisement

    This was Penn’s third trip to Ukraine since Russia invaded the country in February. He has been a vocal advocate for Ukraine and a staunch supporter of Zelenskyy since the start of the war.

    In his Instagram caption, Zelenskyy called the Oscars statuette “a symbol of faith in the victory of our country.”

    Penn has two Academy Awards for Best Actor in a Leading Role from Mystic River in 2003 and Milk in 2008.


    Hollywood actor and film director Sean Penn (R) meets Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy (L) as he hands over his own Oscar statuette to the Ukrainian president in Kyiv, Ukraine on Nov. 8.


    Ukrainian Presidency / Handout

    Zelenskyy also presented Penn Ukraine’s Order of Merit. The president made sure to specify that the award is not from him, but rather “from Ukraine.”

    Read more:

    Kathy Griffin suspended from Twitter after impersonating Elon Musk

    The pair then walked through the streets of Kyiv where Zelenskyy revealed a plaque in the ground bearing Penn’s name, signature and the date of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Feb. 24, 2022.

    Story continues below advertisement

    The plaque is a part of the Walk of the Brave, which Zelenskyy described as a place where “present and future generations of Ukrainians will remember those brave people who have stood with Ukraine from the very beginning.”

    “There are three places in the world that all the pride of my life will be,” Penn said while standing over the plaque. “The place where my daughter was born, the place where my son was born and this.”

    Story continues below advertisement

    In March, Penn threatened to publicly “smelt” his Oscars if Zelenskyy — who was an actor himself — was not permitted to speak at the 2022 Academy Awards. Though Zelenskyy did not speak at the event (and Penn did not destroy his statuettes), the Ukrainian president gave a speech at this year’s Grammy Awards.

    In his pre-taped address, Zelenskyy urged entertainers and viewers at home to speak about the Russia-Ukraine invasion and fill the silence of war with music.

    &copy 2022 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

    Sarah Do Couto

    Source link