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Tag: Todd Haynes

  • Pedro Pascal may be saving the day for Todd Haynes’ gay romance film | The Mary Sue

    pedro pascal on a carpet

    Remember when Todd Haynes was set to direct a film that centered around a gay couple, played by Joaquin Phoenix and Danny Ramirez? And then Phoenix dropped out days before shooting? Well, not all hope is lost. Pedro Pascal might be stepping up.

    The film, titled De Noche, has been dead in the water for the last year after Phoenix left. It was rumored that he got cold feet over the explicit sexual content between his character and Ramirez’s character in the film. And while many have said that the film should just recast his role, it does seem like that is, a year later, what is finally going to happen.

    In an exclusive to Deadline, it was revealed that Pascal may be taking it on and that they would begin filming in the beginning of 2026 in Guadalajara, Mexico and work around Pascal’s schedule to get the film done. Both Ramirez and Pascal are in the Marvel Cinematic Universe and both are part of the upcoming Avengers: Doomsday so it would theoretically shoot around their commitments there.

    Killer Films producer Christine Vachon has, in the past, dismissed the rumors about Phoenix’s reasoning for dropping out of the project but there is no clear reason why he was reportedly a “no show” right before production began. But if Pascal is to take over the role, it will be exciting because fans of Haynes’ work have been waiting for his next project and De Noche already had buzz prior to the pause.

    It is not yet confirmed that Pascal will take the role but the fact that the film is back on the table is a good thing and it is going to be exciting to see Ramirez shine in a Haynes’ film. Recently, Haynes got buzz for his film May December and has given us iconic movies such as I’m Not There, Carol, and Velvet Goldmine.

    (featured image: Frazer Harrison/WireImage)

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    Rachel Leishman

    Assistant Editor

    Rachel Leishman (She/Her) is an Assistant Editor at the Mary Sue. She’s been a writer professionally since 2016 but was always obsessed with movies and television and writing about them growing up. A lover of Spider-Man and Wanda Maximoff’s biggest defender, she has interests in all things nerdy and a cat named Benjamin Wyatt the cat. If you want to talk classic rock music or all things Harrison Ford, she’s your girl but her interests span far and wide. Yes, she knows she looks like Florence Pugh. She has multiple podcasts, normally has opinions on any bit of pop culture, and can tell you can actors entire filmography off the top of her head. Her current obsession is Glen Powell’s dog, Brisket.

    Her work at the Mary Sue often includes Star Wars, Marvel, DC, movie reviews, and interviews.

    Rachel Leishman

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  • Pedro Pascal Replaces Joaquin Phoenix in Todd Haynes’ Gay Romance Movie

    Pedro Pascal is replacing Joaquin Phoenix in Todd Haynes’ new movie.

    Haynes is working on a new gay romance movie titled De Noche. The film, however, ran into trouble last year when Phoenix abruptly dropped out of the project. It is still unclear why the Joker actor suddenly backed out.

    Per Deadline, however, De Noche is now back on as Pascal is circling the role that was previously going to be played by Phoenix.

    What else do we know about Todd Haynes’ new movie with Pedro Pascal?

    “Pascal would join Danny Ramirez, who was originally attached to the project,” Deadline’s article notes. “They’ll play two men in love who leave Los Angeles for Mexico, the feature set in the 1930s. Christine Vachon and Pamela Koffler’s Killer Films is producing. Killer recently worked with Pascal on A24’s summer romantic comedy Materialists.”

    Production on De Noche is expected to begin in 2026 in Guadalajara, Mexico.

    Vachon was vocal about Phoenix’s sudden departure. She said at the San Sebastian Film Festival in 2024, “Todd Haynes is 62. He’s not old, but there’s a finite number of films that he will be able to do in his lifetime. I consider him one of the most extraordinary film artists of his generation. The idea that his time was wasted and a movie is not the result of all that time working with Joaquin is a tragedy to me…That I can’t get over. The idea that we as a cultural community lost an opportunity to have a new movie by Todd Haynes is a tragedy.”

    Haynes’ filmography includes 1991’s Poison, 1995’s Safe, 1998’s Velvet Goldmine, 2002’s Far from Heaven, 2007’s I’m Not There, 2015’s Carol, 2017’s Wonderstruck, 2019’s Dark Waters, 2021’s The Velvet Underground, and 2023’s May December.

    A release date for De Noche has not yet been announced.

    Brandon Schreur

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  • Producer for Todd Haynes’ Gay Romance Film Addresses Joaquin Phoenix Exit: “A Nightmare”

    Producer for Todd Haynes’ Gay Romance Film Addresses Joaquin Phoenix Exit: “A Nightmare”

    Christine Vachon, a producer behind Todd Haynes‘ gay romance movie from which Joaquin Phoenix abruptly left last week, said on social media this weekend that the situation has been “a nightmare.”

    Reports surfaced on Friday that Phoenix exited the drama feature just five days before filming was set to begin in Guadalajara, Mexico. The role will not be recast. The actor’s reason for the exit was unclear, and felt further confusing to those around the project as Phoenix has brought the project to Haynes.

    Vachon, of Killer Films, shared an article about the situation to Facebook over the weekend, and wrote: “A version of this did happen. It has been a nightmare.”

    Vachon also addressed criticism that Phoenix, who is straight, had been set to take a starring role in Haynes film about a gay character. “If you are tempted to finger wag or admonish us that ‘that’s what you get for casting a straight actor’ — DON’T,” she wrote. “This was HIS project that he brought to US – and Killer’s record on working with LGBTQ actors/crew/directors speaks for itself. (and for those of you who HAVE — know that you are making a terrible situation even worse).”

    Vachon has since deleted the post.

    Haynes’ movie was set to focus on an intense gay romance in the 1930s and co-star Danny Ramirez, whose credits include Top Gun: Maverick and the forthcoming Captain America: Brave New World. In addition to Vachon, Pam Koffler was set to produce. A source told The Hollywood Reporter that the team was “devastated” by Phoenix’s exit, and that the amount of money spent on the film was in the low seven figures.

    Phoenix will next be seen in Todd Phillips’ Joker: Folie à Deux on Oct. 4.

    Zoe G Phillips

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  • ‘Awards Chatter’ Podcast — Julianne Moore on Reuniting with Todd Haynes for ‘May December,’ Why ‘Far from Heaven’ Almost Fell Apart and Why Oscars Matter

    ‘Awards Chatter’ Podcast — Julianne Moore on Reuniting with Todd Haynes for ‘May December,’ Why ‘Far from Heaven’ Almost Fell Apart and Why Oscars Matter

    Julianne Moore, the guest on this episode of The Hollywood Reporter’s Awards Chatter podcast, is one of the greatest screen actresses of her time, or any other. The winner of an Oscar, an Emmy and a BAFTA Award, two SAG, Golden Globe and Spirit awards and three National Board of Review and Critics Choice awards, she has also been awarded the best actress prizes of the Berlin, Cannes and Venice film festivals. She has rarely been part of a film or TV project that wasn’t at least very good, and in which she herself wasn’t great.

    Moore’s latest film, May December, is no exception. A Netflix dramedy in which the star plays a woman married to a much younger man (Charles Melton), who was underage when they first hooked up 20 years earlier. Her character is now being observed by a Hollywood actress (Natalie Portman), who is set to play her in a film. It marks Moore’s fifth collaboration with director Todd Haynes. For her performance, she already received a Golden Globe nomination; has pending nominations for Critics Choice and London Critics Circle awards; and seems likely to land her sixth Oscar nomination.

    Chosen in 2020 by the film critics of The New York Times as “one of the 25 greatest actors of the 21st century so far,” Moore has been described by the Los Angeles Times as “a bona fide Hollywood star with strong indie roots who remains impossible to pigeonhole” and by The Guardian as “the most talented actress of her generation.” Slate wrote that she is a “human Stradivarius of an actress,” who “has been so good, for so long, in such a variety of better-than-average movies — is there any other A-list actress who’s chosen her roles with such consistently excellent taste, or collaborated with as many ambitious young directors? — that it’s easy to take for granted her steady presence in some of the best American cinema.”

    Over the course of a conversation at the L.A. offices of The Hollywood Reporter, the 63-year-old reflected on her nomadic childhood and how it led her to acting; the most important roles of her career, including those in 1995’s Safe, 1997’s Boogie Nights, 1998’s The Big Lebowski, 2002’s Far from Heaven, 2010’s The Kids Are All Right and 2014’s Still Alice; her special relationship with Haynes; plus much more.

    Scott Feinberg

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  • Natalie Portman and Julianne Moore Respond to Vili Fualaau’s ‘May December’ Critique: “It’s Not Meant to Be a Biopic”

    Natalie Portman and Julianne Moore Respond to Vili Fualaau’s ‘May December’ Critique: “It’s Not Meant to Be a Biopic”

    Natalie Portman and Julianne Moore both responded to Vili Fualaau’s criticism of May December on Sunday, emphasizing the movie was not meant to tell the exact story of his relationship with ex Mary Kay Letourneau.

    “It’s not based on them,” Portman told Entertainment Tonight from the red carpet at the 2024 Golden Globes. “Obviously their story influenced the culture that we all grew up in and influenced the idea. But it’s fictional characters that are really brought to life by Julianne Moore and Charles Melton so beautifully.”

    May December tells the story of fictional actress Elizabeth Berry (Portman) sent to visit married couple Gracie (Moore) and Joe (Melton). Gracie met and victimized Joe when he was 13, doing time in prison for child rape before being released and marrying Joe. The two share three children, one of whom she gave birth to while in prison. Screenwriter Samy Burch has cited Letourneau — who started a sexual relationship with Fualaau when he was 12 and she was 34 in 1996 — as an inspiration for the film.

    Portman added that the movie is “its own story — it’s not meant to be a biopic.”

    Moore agreed with her co-star, saying the film’s director, Todd Haynes, “was always very clear when we were working on this movie that this was an original story. This was a story about these characters. So that’s how we looked at it too. This was our document. We created these characters from the page.”

    Fualaau told The Hollywood Reporter in a story published last week that he was “offended by the entire project and lack of respect given to me.”

    “I’m still alive and well,” Fualaau, now 40, said. “If they had reached out to me, we could have worked together on a masterpiece. Instead, they chose to do a ripoff of my original story.”

    He continued, “I love movies — good movies. And I admire ones that capture the essence and complications of real-life events. You know, movies that allow you to see or realize something new every time you watch them.”

    Zoe G Phillips

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  • ‘May December’ Star Charles Melton on How ‘Riverdale’ Prepared Him for His Emotionally Complex Big-Screen Role

    ‘May December’ Star Charles Melton on How ‘Riverdale’ Prepared Him for His Emotionally Complex Big-Screen Role

    Charles Melton is explaining how his six-year, almost 100-episode Riverdale run prepared him for his critically acclaimed supporting performance in Todd HaynesMay December, for which the actor is gaining serious Oscar buzz.

    “Ten months out of the year, 22 episodes, eight to 10 days to film one episode … That’s a lot of work in a short amount of time, and it really took everybody on set to come together to execute this process,” Melton tells THR. “That experience alone, and working with nearly 100 directors on that show, really gave me this confidence and this foundation — as, like, my acting school in a way — to really be able to come to a set like Todd Haynes’ and just completely let go.”

    The director, however, had never seen Riverdale, so Melton was an unfamiliar face to him when the actor auditioned for the role of Joe, a suburban dad who, when he was just 13 years old, became sexually involved with a married mother of three, Gracie (Julianne Moore). The scandalous romance rattled the pair’s close-knit community, but Joe and Gracie got married and had three children of their own.

    Once he received the script, Melton started his “journey into the research of who Joe was,” says the actor, who discovered a process for preparation along the way. In pulling together his audition, he self-taped for six hours — a hefty time commitment, he acknowledges.

    “I have to completely exhaust myself and give every fiber of my being, just so I could look back and be like, ‘OK, I gave everything I’ve got there, and there’s nothing else I would’ve done differently,’ ” says Melton. It got him through the door: Haynes sent him back notes. He self-taped again (for another six hours), which led to a chemistry read with Moore.

    “I really felt like that six-week process was the best experience in my career, because I really learned how I wanted to work and how deep I wanted to go when it came to preparing to play characters like this, which was invigorating,” says Melton. “I felt so much comfort and safety and excitement of going really deep into the psychology of who this man was and really transformed into this physicality of how he navigated his own story.”

    Melton gained 40 pounds for the role, although he and Haynes never discussed a certain way Joe was supposed to look. Melton calls it a “natural [and] external expression of the internal work I was doing with Joe. When you look at the facts, this is a suburban dad who’s 36 with three kids, a loving marriage, and has a job,” Melton explains. “Like, where does he really find time for his own vanity to really even look at himself?”

    The actor ate a lot of Five Guys, pizza and ice cream alongside his best friend, Kelvin Harrison Jr., who was prepping to play Martin Luther King Jr. in Disney+’s Genius: MLK/X. “We were inspiring each other, watching a bunch of films, talking about our characters and eating well,” he says.

    There was no rehearsal time before the 23-day shoot, so Melton didn’t practice his scenes with Natalie Portman, who in the film plays an actress portraying Gracie in a movie about her life. He often had dinners with Portman, Moore and Haynes, however, where they got to know each other on a “human level.”

    Given the subject matter, Melton says his way to decompress after shooting was watching Abbott Elementary every day, as well as football on Sundays and the Japanese anime television series Demon Slayer. “That was part of my ritualistic comedown, and then I did acupuncture three times a week to really relax, because we carry emotions in our body. So keeping my body as calm and as relaxed as possible not only helped me, but helped what I would do when it came to allowing the technical work I did for Joe to really exist when I was on set.”

    Looking back, Melton was never intimidated by the subject matter or his character’s complexities. “There’s just something about repression and tragedy and loneliness that I’m attracted to in characters, and Joe had a complex mix of all those things,” he says. “In spite of whatever the subject matter was, just understanding this human without any sort of formulated opinion or judgment and complete empathy really allowed me to just go to places that I always hoped are possible with Todd, Julie and Natalie.” 

    This story first appeared in a December standalone issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. Click here to subscribe.

    Kimberly Nordyke

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  • May December Cuts to the Core of American Culture’s Love of Real-Life Trauma As “Entertainment”

    May December Cuts to the Core of American Culture’s Love of Real-Life Trauma As “Entertainment”

    There was a time in the 90s where it seemed one couldn’t avoid a tabloid (whether in print or TV) headline about a teacher’s “inappropriate relationship” with a student. This overt euphemism, of course, meant that a sexual line had been crossed and an irrevocable trauma incurred (regardless of the protests of the student in question who insisted they “wanted it”). More often than not, these headlines seemed to be about women abusing their power as an authority figure. This would later feel like something of a conspiracy when taking into account that men in such authoritative roles, including teachers, had long been known to abuse that power. This being accepted simply as “the way of the world.” But the media choosing to home in on female teachers pursuing their male students like predators with prey seemed especially pointed during a decade when the highest office in the land, the President of the United States, was gleefully exploiting the trappings of his own influence. Many times over, mind you—not just just with Monica. Of course, Bill Clinton at least had the “decency” to hunt for women who were over the age of eighteen (the ones we know about anyway).

    The most infamous example of that teacher-student trope initially came to light in 1996, when an elementary school teacher named Mary Kay Letourneau was caught by police in a sexual act with one of her students, twelve-year-old Vili Fualaau, in her car while parked at a marina in Burien, Washington. “The scene of the crime,” as it were, where she taught at Shorewood Elementary School. It wasn’t until 1997, however, that a relative of Letourneau’s husband, Steve, reported Mary Kay’s behavior to the police after they had already turned her loose in the summer of ‘96. That same year, Todd Haynes would have been thirty-six (not at all far from Letourneau’s age when she was “exposed”) and would have just come off the high of releasing his sophomore film, Safe—also starring Julianne Moore. There’s no doubt that the headlines swirling around Letourneau were on Haynes’ radar as much as anyone else’s. And perhaps he knew that it would be best to file the story away for some later date—after the “made-for-TV movie period,” which had its biggest peak in 2000, when both Unauthorized: The Mary Kay Letourneau Story and Mary Kay Letourneau: All American Girl hit the airwaves.

    Releasing a film loosely based on Letourneau in 2023 might, to some, seem “irrelevant,” however Haynes’ decision to make the movie now actually feels timelier than ever. For the culture has only become more obsessed with involving itself in the trauma of others by both sensationalizing and constantly analyzing it. While many are quick to point out that the tabloid culture/frenzy that thrived from the late 80s to 00s is now “a thing of the past,” it seems those people are the ones who fail to make the correlation between that and the sudden obsession with true crime stories (this being a key word choice for the audience to distance itself from any culpability in causing the perpetual “recycling” of a real person’s trauma). The salivation over that kind of genuine trauma that ruined someone else’s life now serving as “pure entertainment” for the masses. And yes, the tale of Mary Kay Letourneau is very much a true crime story as well. One that, in the end, wasn’t treated like a crime, so much as “every boy’s fantasy come true.” May December seeks to obliterate the idea that scratching the “hot for teacher” itch is something to be proud of. Joe Yoo (Charles Melton), the filmic representation of Fualaau, is a prime example of that as he exhibits a state of eternal arrested development despite himself being a father to two children going off to college.

    It is amid this backdrop that a TV actress named Elizabeth (Natalie Portman, channeling her Black Swan character in search of perfection vibe) shows up to their seemingly “idyllic” world. With Haynes trading the setting of suburban Washington for sweltering Savannah, Georgia (and the student-teacher dynamic for an employer-employee one). The opening to the film, though, keeps that setting vague, showing us faint impressions of plants with a monarch butterfly occasionally appearing on one of them. The symbol of the butterfly will, of course, be both important and recurring throughout the narrative as Haynes emphasizes the point that Joe was never allowed to emerge from his own chrysalis after being effectively suffocated by Gracie Atherton (Julianne Moore) and his imbalanced relationship with her. It is during this overture with the monarch resting on select plants that the dramatic theme music from Marcelo Zarvos (who basically repurposed Michel Legrand’s theme for 1971’s The Go-Between) plays into the concept of melodrama, and how our society feeds off it—especially when it’s prepackaged in such a way as this. A “ready-made” soap opera that “writes itself” because the story really happened. That Haynes chose to bring back the long-ago extinct overture portion of a movie also plays into a notion that Adrienne Bernhard of The Atlantic addressed when remarking, “Given no option but to sit and wait, audiences quickly grow restless. But the film overture is in fact a respite from distraction, even as it’s an occasion for distractibility. These opening sequences offer the chance to rediscover music as a kind of cinematic storytelling, to think about the ways form dictates content, or to simply reflect. For moviegoers, the overture is a bridge between real life and the story they’re about to enter…” This last sentiment being key to how Haynes and casting director-turned-screenwriter Samy Burch want the viewer to understand that there is a bridge between real life and dramatization, though “mass culture gobblers” rarely seem to comprehend that there is a distinction. Simply “hungry for more drama” without realizing that there are actual people who suffered through the “story” that has been rendered into stylized “entertainment.”

    The most heart-wrenching (yet still meta-ly dramatized) example of this in May December arrives after Joe predictably (indeed, that predictability is part of the “soap opera drama” audiences are addicted to) ends up sleeping with Elizabeth, whose own morbid fascination with the story and how to best “inhabit” Gracie mirrors the public’s unhealthy interest in cases like these. Or “stories,” as they’re billed. This word encapsulating a form of distancing language that helps alleviate “audiences” of any potential guilty conscience about treating the horror that happened to somebody like Joe (or Vili) as something for “consumption.”

    So when Elizabeth, during their post-coital powwow, starts to tell him, “You’re gonna do what you’re gonna do but…stories like these—” Joe angrily interrupts, “Stories? Stories?” Suddenly, he can see that Elizabeth is treating him like a “curiosity” just as everyone else has…even (and especially) Gracie. Elizabeth tries to soothe, “You know what I mean…instances. Severely traumatic beginnings.” Joe shouts, “This isn’t a story! This is my fucking life!” Feeling once again used because he thought they “had a connection” that would make it worth cheating on Gracie, he asks, “What was this about?” “This is just what grown-ups do,” she informs him with an air of condescension. In other words, she’s digging the knife in about how naïve he still is, even after all these years. Because Gracie has all but assured his perennial arrested development, treating him like her oldest son when she chides him for drinking too much or cuts him a piece of cake for him to taste so he can praise her for its goodness.

    And as for that abovementioned word, “naïve,” Gracie swears up and down that’s what she is, too. Telling Elizabeth coldly in the bathroom of the restaurant where they’re celebrating her twins’ graduation, “I am naïve. I always have been. In a way, it’s been a gift.” So it is that she offers a dual meaning for that statement. On the one hand, her so-called “innocence” is what attracted her to a child in the first place and, on the other, it’s her defense mechanism for blocking out any sense of wrongdoing about her actions regarding Joe. As Elizabeth puts it to her presumed boyfriend or husband over the phone, “She doesn’t seem to carry around any shame or guilt.” The man’s response is, “Yeah, that’s probably a personality disorder.” And yes, Letourneau, at the bare minimum, did have bipolar disorder. Perhaps even anosognosia, based on her intense denial of how fucked up the situation was.

    The hyper-stylization that Haynes’ is known for comes in quite handy for a movie like this, which seeks to make the viewer aware of that stylization for “entertainment purposes.” One of the most glaring instances of this happens at the five-minute mark of the movie, when Gracie opens the refrigerator and Zarvos’ already signature score starts booming over the innocuous scene as a rapid zoom-in on the side of Gracie’s face occurs. The music then dies down as she says calmly, “I don’t think we have enough hot dogs.” There’s something altogether Twin Peaks-ian about it. So odd and bizarre on the surface, yet clearly intended to make the viewer hyper-aware of their participation in Hollywood’s need to play up melodrama in films “based on a true story”—that infamous disclaimer being known for automatically luring people in with even more piqued interest.

    But while the Mary Kay Letourneau “story” has so often been focused primarily on her, May December refocuses the lens on the victim in a scenario such as this by highlighting the fact that it’s a clear-cut case of grooming. Not some “fantasy fulfilled” trope that is so often reiterated in pop culture, particularly when it comes to the male student “getting to” have sex with his teacher. Among such glorifying examples being Frank Buffay Jr. (Giovanni Ribisi) and Alice Knight (Debra Jo Rupp) on Friends, Pacey Witter (Joshua Jackson) and Tamara Jacobs (Leann Hunley) on Dawson’s Creek and Donny Berger (Adam Sandler) and Mary McGarricle (Eva Amurri) in That’s My Boy. Then there was Norm Macdonald on Saturday Night Live’s “Weekend Update” quipping at the time, “In Washington State, elementary school teacher Mary Kay Letourneau pleaded guilty to having sex with a sixth-grade student… Miss Letourneau has been branded a sex offender, or as the kids refer to her, ‘The greatest teacher of all time.’” All pop culture “moments” that sought to reinforce the concept that a teenage boy is 1) “lucky” to find himself in such a scenario and 2) capable of “seduction”—of being “in charge” of the situation when, in fact, it’s always the responsibility of the adult to know better. To not allow a child like Joe to say, “Gracie didn’t take my childhood. I gave it away”—this being a caption from one of the old tabloids Elizabeth is going through for “research” (read: once again, morbid fascination).

    Meanwhile, Joe seems to be doing his own “research” on Elizabeth, repeatedly watching her “performance” in an obviously sexual face wash commercial reminiscent of those late 90s/00s Neutrogena ads starring celebrities like Jennifer Love Hewitt and Mischa Barton splashing their face with water while acting as though it wasn’t sexual at all. Between this and his constant texting to another woman (/fellow monarch enthusiast), it’s clear Joe is having plenty of second thoughts about his marriage and life in general as he realizes that, without his children around as a buffer, he’s going to have to face a far more undiluted truth about the nature of his relationship with Gracie. That includes coming out of denial with continued statements such as, “People, they, like, see me as, like, a victim or something. I mean, we’ve been together for almost twenty-four years now. Like, why would we do that if we weren’t happy?”

    The answer he can’t acknowledge, of course, is that he was manipulated into being her “boy toy” at such a formative age that he can’t imagine her as the villain. As someone who could do harm—irreparable damage—to him. The reason they would “do that” if they weren’t happy, therefore, is not only because they both risked so much for that state of togetherness, but because Joe was effectively brainwashed by Gracie. This is part of why his underlying worry for his own son, Charlie (Gabriel Chung), bubbles to the surface after the two get high together, with this marking Joe’s first time doing so (yet another indication of his enduring innocence). On the verge of tears, he tells Charlie that “bad things happen.” When Charlie tells him not to worry about him, Joe replies, “It’s all I do.” After all, who knows better than Joe what kind of wolves in sheep’s clothing exist out there?

    Nonetheless, he can’t seem to see Elizabeth for what she is either: another sicko. Grossly obsessed with the “freakshow” element of Joe and Gracie, and freely admitting so as she rolls up to their daughter Mary’s (Elizabeth Yu) drama class and tells the students, “I wanna find a character that’s difficult to, to, on the surface, understand. I want…I want to take the person, I want to figure out why are they like this. Were they born, or were they made?… It’s the complexity, it’s the moral gray areas that are interesting, right?” Getting true insight into why Elizabeth wants to play her mother, Mary storms off in a huff after being dropped off at home by the actress. As for discovering “why” Gracie is “like this,” Elizabeth briefly thinks she has it when Georgie (Cory Michael Smith), a son from Gracie’s marriage to Steve, tells her that Gracie was sexually abused by her brothers starting when she was twelve. This detail is particularly relevant when considering that, per most studies, female sex offenders not only tend to be both white and in their thirties, but also victims of sexual abuse themselves. Ergo, the old chestnut, “Hurt people hurt people.” It also bears noting that Letourneau’s childhood friend, Michelle Lobdell, would find out that Mary Kay was, indeed, sexually abused as a kid. Then there was the matter of her father, the ultra-right-wing politician John G. Schmitz, having an extramarital affair that was exposed when he admitted to fathering his paramour’s children. That woman, Carla Stuckle, also happened to be a former student of Schmitz’s. As it is said, the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree.

    Nor does Gracie’s character from Mary Kay’s actual “personage.” Both telling themselves whatever they need to in order to keep living the lie that their romance with a preteen was just another case of “forbidden love” à la Romeo and Juliet (cue the “Who was the boss?” line that was clearly repurposed from an interview Fualaau and Letourneau gave in 2018 for Australia’s Sunday Night). In some ways, Elizabeth finds that “refreshing.” The ability to wake up every day as though you’re a blank slate with no past indiscretions to pay for in the present. As though there was no collateral damage in the fallout of such reckless decision-making. As for Georgie blaming his mother’s psychoticness on her childhood, when Gracie tells Elizabeth that what Georgie told her about her brothers is a lie (the implication being, ultimately, that it wasn’t), she muses, “Insecure people are very dangerous, aren’t they? I’m secure. Make sure you put that in [the movie].” This type of arrogance on Gracie’s part (the type that leads to her insisting she was the one seduced by a twelve-year-old), of course, is the very epitome of why overly secure people (read: narcissists) are just as dangerous as your insecure Hitler and Napoleon breeds.

    Left standing in the middle of the grass at the graduation, the final minutes of May Decemeber show Elizabeth repeating the same scene in the pet shop where Gracie and Joe first began their “romance.” None too subtly holding a snake in her hand, Elizabeth-as-Gracie turns to the actor playing Joe and asks, “Are you scared? It’s okay to be scared.” “I’m not,” he says. Elizabeth-as-Gracie: “She doesn’t bite.” Actor-as-Joe: “How do you know?” Elizabeth-as-Gracie: “She’s not that kind of snake.” No, instead she’s the kind of snake who ingratiates herself gradually toward her prey.

    The scene is filmed a couple more times, with Elizabeth begging for another take as she says, “Please… It’s getting more real.” That fixation on “authenticity” all done in service of, in actuality, lending a total sense of unreality to the event in question. Which makes it even easier for the masses to digest. So for anyone asking: why dredge up this “story” again now? Well, the unfortunate truth is, it’s more pertinent to the culture than ever.

    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Video: ‘May December’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    Video: ‘May December’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    Hi, I’m Todd Haynes, and I’m the director of ‘May December.’ [DOOR OPENS & CLOSES]: “Now, this is silly.” “This is actually very serious business.” “If you say so.” So in this scene, Natalie Portman, who is playing an actor, Elizabeth Berry, who’s planning to portray the character that Julianne Moore plays, Gracie Atherton-Yoo, in a story about the origins of this scandalous relationship that took place over 20 years ago, where Gracie seduced a 13-year-old boy. And in this scene, she literally is, as actors do, looking at the way Gracie applies makeup, and her makeup choices. And so like many scenes that you will see in the film that take place in rooms with mirrors, the scene is shot with the camera occupying the place of the mirror. “You know, I think that it would be better if I just did this to you.” And so the actors are performing directly into the lens of the camera when they are looking at the reflections of themselves, and they look just off the lens at the reflection of the other actor. What’s really interesting about the scene is, that usually Natalie Portman’s character is in the position of interviewing people and asking questions and trying to collect information to help her in her transformation into portraying this woman. Here, it’s Julianne who starts asking questions about Natalie’s character and Natalie, Elizabeth’s life. “So, did you always want to be an actress?” “Always.” So, you start to hear more about Natalie’s character than we’ve ever heard in this scene. “I wanted to be on Broadway. And when I told my parents, I was nine or 10, they were so disappointed. They said, honey, you’re so much smarter than that.” “What did you say? Are you smarter than that?” “I don’t know. I don’t know.” And there’s an intimacy that starts to emerge between the two of them, and a sense that, wow, are these women going to find a kind of safety in each other rather than a sense of threat, or how far is this going to go? And that’s the sort of atmosphere that the scene conjures I think for the viewer as you’re watching. But in the end, man, as a director of great actresses that I’ve been lucky enough to mark my career by, this was a particular astonishing day to watch these two women. “What was your mother like?” “She was beautiful.” And so a shot like this is a great idea, but it doesn’t work unless you have Julianne Moore and Natalie Portman. And so the silences and the breaks and the little bit of laughter is really what’s happening, and it gives the viewer a lot to chew on. [MUSIC PLAYING]

    Mekado Murphy

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  • Inside Todd Haynes’s Twisted, Ingenious Vision for ‘May December’

    Inside Todd Haynes’s Twisted, Ingenious Vision for ‘May December’

    This shot marks the first moment we see Gracie and Elizabeth in a mirror together, as they gather for a day of graduation-dress shopping for Gracie’s daughter, Mary (Elizabeth Yu). The scene turns tense when Gracie casually humiliates her daughter by insulting her favorite selection—with Elizabeth closely attuned to every beat in the chilly back-and-forth.

    Todd Haynes: Making the film was a process of thinking about the mirrors in scenes in the movie, and using the lens of the camera as the actual mirror that actors would look into for their own reflections of themselves. But this scene kept expanding and getting more complex.

    Christopher Blauvelt: The challenge was how to hide the camera and which angles the mirrors were going to be; when you have any mirror on any set, it’s difficult because you’re hiding lights and stands and everything. I always stare at the little vanity over Natalie’s shoulder because that’s where the camera is hidden. Also, it’s great conceptually. When I watch the film and see how it works and integrates into our multiplicity of what’s happening within the story, it makes so much sense. Your eye can go in any direction. We play it mostly as a one-er, and so it relies a lot on their performances, which are just immaculate.

    Haynes: This is the only mirror scene in the movie where we literally shot through a two-way mirror and hid the camera behind the mirror. All the other mirror scenes, there is no mirror; the actors are just looking at the lens and playing it as a mirror. This took the most preparation of anything because it was so complicated. Sam Lisenco, the production designer, was…like, “Wait a minute. What if we put a mirror here, and a mirror there, and then we see the walking from the dressing room?” And to be honest, Chris, at first I was like, Oh my God, this is just going to be maybe too much!

    What you’re starting to watch is the two women watching themselves and each other in a relay. This scene is the most complex because it has Mary coming and going, and Natalie has just done her first interview in the course of this investigative part of the story, where she talked to Gracie’s first husband. But it’s so much about female bodies, the mirroring of these two women, how femininity gets passed on in corrupting ways from mother to daughter, and the spectacle and the humiliation of that being witnessed, again, in mirrors upon mirrors.

    The Walk

    David Canfield

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  • Christine Vachon, Hollywood’s Greatest Anomaly

    Christine Vachon, Hollywood’s Greatest Anomaly

    “It was like meeting a historical figure,” Celine Song says of her first encounter with Christine Vachon. Song had been a noted playwright long before deciding to helm her first movie, a semi-autobiographical love triangle between a Korean American woman, her American husband, and her Korean childhood friend who’s flown across the world to find her. Its specificity and its New York–iness made Vachon the dream collaborator, a fantasy that turned suddenly real when Song pitched her on Past Lives—and won her over.

    Distributed by A24, the achingly romantic Past Lives enjoyed a successful box office run this past summer—a rarity today for films of its scale—and is a strong Oscar contender headed into the fall. Betting on new filmmakers requires a bigger leap than ever—theatrical windows have shrunk, streaming has reduced the potential to stand out—but Vachon and Killer can take credit for launching the careers of everyone from Boys Don’t Cry’s Kimberly Peirce to Zola’s Janicza Bravo. “Every day, I would show up and say, ‘I believe this,’ and then Christine would be, like, ‘If you believe that, that’s now my belief,’” Song says of their dynamic on the Past Lives set. “She just believed in me.”

    Vachon monitors social media to see how Past Lives is reaching viewers. Two years ago, she found Twitter a crucial barometer for the COVID-afflicted Zola, whose story originated on the platform. Her instincts have everything to do with an intimate understanding of audience and engagement that dates back to Killer’s launch: “Everybody’s pointing to Oppenheimer and Barbie, and saying, ‘See? See? That’s what people wanted all along.’ But we knew that’s what people wanted all along!” Vachon remembers Poison bringing LGBTQ people in droves to the theater back in the early ’90s simply because that group hadn’t been represented in movies much at all by that point. “Half of them walked out of the theater, going, ‘What the fuck was that?’ and some of those guys were, like, ‘I just wanted to see some boys kiss,’” Vachon says. “But I realized that, if you made a movie targeted specifically to that audience, it didn’t have to cross over if you made it for the right amount of money. That was an incredibly liberating feeling—the true collision of art and commerce.”

    That unique Hollywood alchemy remains core to Vachon’s value system, even as she navigates a tumultuous period for her industry, between COVID’s extended impact and the year of labor strikes. She’s waded through decades of uncertainty: the move from VHS to DVD, the end of video rental stores, the shift to digital. “The only reason Killer is still standing is because we are very good at listening to the marketplace and pivoting quickly,” Vachon says. “I don’t cry about, ‘We aren’t shooting on film anymore’…and I don’t know what’s on the other end of these strikes. I’m just trying to figure out the way that we can keep switching seats on the Titanic.

    David Canfield

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  • Natalie Portman and Todd Haynes dive into the nature of performance in ‘May December’ at Cannes

    Natalie Portman and Todd Haynes dive into the nature of performance in ‘May December’ at Cannes

    CANNES, France (AP) — In Todd Haynes’ tonally shape-shifting “May December,” the first announcement of the movie’s playful intentions comes with a theatrical zoom in, a few lushly melodramatic piano notes and the frightful announcement that there no more hot dogs in the fridge.

    That moment — which Haynes says signals “that there’s something coy happening in the language of the film” — is just a taste of what’s to come in “May December,” a delicious and disquieting drama laced with comedy and camp that Haynes premiered over the weekend at the Cannes Film Festival.

    Natalie Portman stars as an actor researching an upcoming film that’s to dramatize a scandal from 20 years earlier. She comes to Savannah, Georgia, to spend time with Gracie Atherton-Yoo (Julianne Moore), who years earlier become tabloid fodder for a sexual relationship with a seventh grader. Now, she’s seemingly happily married to him, Joe Yoo (Charles Melton), with kids of their own and suburban barbeques to host.

    The film, scripted by Samy Burch, takes a light but deliberate touch in navigating through thorny themes of performance and identity. As Portman’s character grows increasingly like Gracie, ethical borders begin to tumble away.

    “It was tonally such an amazing script and so rigorous,” Haynes said in an interview alongside Portman. “It kept shifting the way you felt about or trusted one character versus another. That whole process as it maneuvered through the course of the script was such a compelling experience. And I just thought: Wow, how could you translate into visually?”

    “May December,” which Netflix acquired Tuesday for a reported $11 million with plans to release later this year, is the first time Haynes (who has regularly worked with Moore) has made a movie with the 41-year-old Portman. For her, “May December” was a chance to not only work with a director she’s long admired but explore some of her own fascinations.

    “It poses a lot of the questions I’m most obsessed by about performance, about the purpose of art, about innocence,” says Portman, also a producer on the film.

    “When you explore all those layers — playing someone who’s playing someone, making a movie of a movie in a movie — there’s so many layers of artifice, and what truth we can get out of artifice — which is the kind of alchemy of what we do,” adds Portman. “We’re using lies to tell the truth, and it’s magic.”

    “May December” has some unofficial roots in reality. Gracie isn’t very different in certain ways from Mary Kay Letourneau, a Washington State schoolteacher who went to prison after a relationship with a boy in her sixth grade class.

    Questions of identity and artifice have run through Haynes’ filmography, including the sumptuous ’50s romance “Carol,” the Douglas Sirk-inspired melodrama “Far from Heaven” and his most recent film, the documentary “The Velvet Underground.” In Portman, he found an actor who shared a similar approach to film.

    “A lot of narrative filmmaking and fiction-making has an internal desire to redeem oneself through the process, to sort of affirm one’s own aims. That’s the thing that I’m not particularly interested in as a director,” says Haynes. “And I’m drawn to actors who feel similarly, who are actually interested in creating a distance between maybe their own values and ideas and those portrayed in the character.”

    He praised Portman’s eagerness to engage with “and lean into the most disquieting aspects of the character.”

    Portman has famously played some real-life figures, like Jacqueline Kennedy (“Jackie”), which required copious amounts of research. But in “May December,” she plays an actor far more reckless than herself. Yet even in a performance that could have easily slid into satire, Portman deftly inhabits her.

    “Most artists who tell stories want to hold up their ethical standpoint in the light. It can be vampiric to take human emotion and human story and capitalize on it and tell a story,” Portman says. “But hopefully the energy that you come to it with is empathy and the curiosity to explore someone’s human behavior and someone’s inner self. That it’s an act of empathy and not an act of bloodsucking.”

    There were long conversations with Haynes and Moore as they prepared to make “May December” in a 30-day shooting spring. But, unlike her character, Portman’s preparation for the part was mostly already done.

    “Well,” Portman says smiling, “I’ve spent my whole life researching how to be an actress.”

    ___

    Follow AP Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP

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