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Tag: Will Gluck

  • Postcards from Sydney (Australia and Sweeney)

    Postcards from Sydney (Australia and Sweeney)

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    It’s no secret that the rom-com is an ever-dying genre. One that’s harder and harder to “spoon-feed” audiences that have gotten both younger and more jaded. The last generation to truly “revere” (or at least appreciate) the art of the rom-com (and it is far more of an art than people give it credit for) is probably millennials. Sydney Sweeney, however, is not quite a millennial, having missed the cutoff by just a year. But perhaps as a “geriatric Gen Zer,” she identifies more with the millennial heart, hence her commitment to the role of Beatrice a.k.a. “Bea” (a name that no one who is twenty-six years old would ever have, but 1) it’s a nod to Much Ado About Nothing and 2) that’s the least of one’s suspension-of-disbelief worries). A character given life by co-screenwriters Ilana Wolpert and Will Gluck (who hasn’t written a rom-com since 2011’s Friends With Benefits (itself a foil to No Strings Attached, released earlier the same year; and weirdly, Justin Timberlake probably should have starred in that film instead since NSYNC titled their 2000 album the same thing). And since Anyone But You is earnest about “bringing back the rom-com,” Bea is someone who wastes no time walking right into a meet-cute. 

    While more conventional rom-coms might wait a few scenes instead of just “raw dogging” their audience like that with a meet-cute, Anyone But You takes the plunge for a “good” reason: Bea and the object of her affection, Ben (Glen Powell), are about to hate each other far more than they ever like each other for the brief twelve or so hours they spend on a date. This after Ben does her a solid by pretending she’s his wife so she can jump the line at the coffee shop to be able to buy something, therefore use the bathroom. Then, of course, further hijinks ensue because the sink ends up spraying her entire crotch with water so she has to air dry her jeans by taking them off. Miraculously (and because of rom-com “law”), the jeans are able to fully dry so that she can exit the bathroom without seeming like “the girl who pissed her pants” to Ben. 

    Like many beloved and, at times, “awesomely bad” rom-coms (most of them falling into the subcategory of “teen movie”) of the last few decades (including Just One of the Guys, 10 Things I Hate About You, She’s the Man and Warm Bodies), Anyone But You borrows the core of its plotline from William Shakespeare. Specifically, Much Ado About Nothing. And yet, like 10 Things I Hate About You, the film opts to “pepper in” multiple “little” Easter eggs pertaining to the British bard. For example, after Bea walks out of Ben’s apartment in the morning, there’s a wall she passes that features the manicured graffiti: “Here’s much to do with hate, but more with love.” (Maybe that’s believable enough in an “erudite” town like Boston.) This being extracted from a monologue by Romeo in The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet during which he continues on with a barrage of oxymorons: “Why, then,/O brawling love!/O loving hate!/O any thing, of nothing first create!/O heavy lightness! serious vanity!/Mis-shapen chaos of well-seeming forms!/Feather of lead, bright smoke, cold fire, sick health!/Still-waking sleep, that is not what it is!/This love feel I, that feel no love in this./Dost thou not laugh?” Gluck and Wolpert’s allusion to this monologue from Romeo is an intentional nod to the adage, “There’s a fine line between love and hate” (or “thin line,” depending on who you ask). 

    Obviously, this applies very much to the dynamic between Bea and Ben, who vacillate between the two so-called extremes at any given moment throughout the movie. As far as being anything like a “direct” adaptation of Shakespeare’s play, the crux of what Anyone But You borrows is the idea that various people, particularly one couple, are trying to convince Bea and Ben that each one is in love with the other. 

    This is done by Bea’s sister, Halle (Hadley Robertson), and Ben’s good friend, Claudia (Alexandra Shipp), the ones getting married and choosing to have a destination wedding in Sydney when they do. As for the seemingly “random” location choice on Gluck’s part, he explained to The Hollywood Reporter that it was a mere matter of funneling his love for the city into something. So it was that he stated, “I wanted Anyone But You set specifically in Sydney because I had really fallen in love with the city, starting back in 2018. After making Peter Rabbit in Sydney, I liked it so much that for Peter Rabbit 2: The Runaway, I moved my whole family down there.” He also added, “Almost every time you shoot a movie in Sydney, you have to pretend it’s somewhere else and frame out the Opera House and the Harbour Bridge. For Anyone But You, I thought, ‘Why do that?’ We actually wrote this movie one hundred  percent for Sydney—very specific to the destination.” The person, maybe not so much. For Sydney Sweeney’s character could easily be played by just about any current Hollywood ingenue (of which there are surprisingly few compared to the days of 00s-era Hollywood). Except maybe Maude Apatow (a.k.a. Sweeney’s “TV sister”). In any case, Anyone But You does build on a rather lacking selection of mainstream movies set in Sydney (most of them “full-on Australian” fare like Strictly Ballroom or Muriel’s Wedding). Alluring viewers to take a trip there as much as it allures them to play “Unwritten” by Natasha Bedingfield (Gluck clearly has a thing for Bedingfield’s music if we’re also going by Easy A). 

    As for Halle and Claudia, like Bea and Ben, their names are also a callback to Much Ado About Nothing’s Claudio and Hero. The couple theoretically “at the center of it all.” Instead, though, everyone gets into the spirit of trying to manipulate Bea and Ben into falling in love. Or at least falling in like for a couple of days (though the movie, at times, feels as though it takes place over a week). Largely out of convenience and wanting to get through said wedding weekend without hearing any more of their bickering. Which is, per rom-com rules, merely just “Hepburn-Tracy”-esque “repartee” that ultimately acts as a kind of foreplay. Indeed, not giving in immediately to the temptation to fuck the “hate” away is half the fun/appeal for Bea and Ben. 

    In terms of dialogue related to that repartee, as well as the plotline itself, Anyone But You might not have the most stalwart of scripts (despite being “adapted” from the unbesmirched Shakespeare). Nor is it anywhere in the same league as rom-com classic standards like His Girl Friday or Some Like It Hot (and later, movies like Pretty Woman, Clueless [which favors a Jane Austen riff rather than a Shakespeare one], The Wedding Singer and How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days. But what it lacks in substance and “pedigree,” it makes up for in postcard-from-Sydney (Australia and Sweeney) appeal and, well, the sheer fact that it’s a rom-com at all. Because, a​​part from No Hard Feelings, there hasn’t been much in the way of recent rom-com fare for Anyone But You to compete with. In fact, people just seem grateful to bear witness to the existence of a new rom-com at all, what with their increasing unicorn status. It doesn’t have to be anything as “highfalutin” as Shakespeare either. Which Anyone But You certainly isn’t—though it does what it can to “pay tribute.” Mainly through “carefully-curated” lines inserted arbitrarily into the mouths of select characters (e.g., “Some cupids kill with arrows and some with traps”) or on signage where you least expect it (e.g., “Assume thy part in some disguise”). 

    One supposes that’s the height of “sophistication” these days when it comes to a Shakespeare “remake” (though “Shakespeare hodgepodge” seems like the more appropriate phrase—an amalgam of “little references” and “collage-like interpretations” of Shakespeare’s work). Throw in a cute koala and a song that can help a clip go viral on TikTok and, voilà, suddenly you have a hit rom-com on your hands. The song, mind you, is the aforementioned “Unwritten.” Not, say, Olivia Rodrigo’s “bad idea right?,” which soundtracks the trailer (perpetuating a “Rodrigo trend” in trailers if also having “get him back!” played during the Mean Girls 2024 trailer is an indication…but hey, Wolpert did previously work on High School Musical: The Musical: The Series, so perhaps her Olivia love goes way back). 

    Indeed, it’s been said that some people are only going to the movie to make it to the credits scene where “Unwritten” plays in all its…glory? (that can’t be the right word). Then they can film themselves with the outtakes (complete with a koala whose stoic facial expression is translated to: “Please leave me alone”). And here one thought that seeing Dermot Mulroney and Rachel Griffiths (both of whom appeared in rom-com staple My Best Friend’s Wedding) act as Bea’s parents would be enough. But alas, no one seems to remember such “little details” about rom-coms of yore. Which is how rom-coms like Anyone But You might continue to prevail if the studio system agrees to keep making and distributing them in movie theaters instead of just via online platforms. In which case, there’s going to be a need for more “destination movies” to compete with the success of this one. Which has firmly marked its territory, for better or worse, on Sydney (Australia and Sweeney).

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • ‘Anyone but You’ Is an Ode to Rom-Com Classics

    ‘Anyone but You’ Is an Ode to Rom-Com Classics

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    When Ilana Wolpert imagined her life, she pictured much of it tucked away in a library, analyzing the works of Shakespeare after earning her PhD in English. Instead, she’s days away from walking the red carpet for her feature screenwriting debut Anyone but You, a modern-day romantic comedy inspired by Much Ado About Nothing that stars Sydney Sweeney and Glen Powell. Wolpert uprooted her own trajectory during her senior year of college, when she opted to enroll in a screenwriting class. It was love at first sight. “Everything clicked,” she tells Vanity Fair, “I haven’t looked back since.”

    After her collegiate meet-cute, Wolpert moved to Los Angeles, where she worked as an assistant to Rachel Bloom on The CW’s Crazy Ex-Girlfriend and then secured a plum staff writing position on High School Musical: The Musical: The Series. “I met some of my best friends writing on the show, met my girlfriend writing on the show,” Wolpert says, referencing Tony-nominated cast member Julia Lester. But during breaks from production on the Disneyfied teen series, Wolpert devoted herself to her passion project: an R-rated romantic comedy she wrote in her parents’ Utah home mid-pandemic. Often she’d work next to her dog Ella, who snoozes behind Wolpert during our Zoom interview. “I missed my friends. I missed weddings. I wanted to fall in love,” she remembers. The film “was an escapist fantasy for me.”

    But what resonated with Sweeney, who was the first to board the project as an executive producer, was the realistic uncertainty that plagues protagonists Ben and Bea (named for Much Ado’s Benedick and Beatrice, naturally). Like Wolpert, Bea upends her plans by withdrawing from law school and getting “deprogrammed” from the idea of marriage, despite childhood Halloweens spent dressing as a bride.

    “One of the things that we talked about is this pressure in your mid-to-late 20s to have your life look a certain way, to know what your career is going to be, who you’re going to be with,” Wolpert says. “When we first met, we were in the place of all of our friends getting married, dealing with people trying to set me up or meddle in my life because they think that, to be happy, you need to be in a relationship…. She just totally got that.” And even as Sweeney’s star status soared with dual Emmy nominations for Euphoria and The White Lotus, Wolpert says that she always made room for the movie. “It would not exist at all without her,” she says.

    Just as it did with May December’s Samy Burch, what started as a first-time film writer’s spec script morphed into a major motion picture once big names got attached. This time, they were Top Gun: Maverick’s Powell and director Will Gluck, whose own film Easy A was inspired by classic literature in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter. Persistent discourse about the state of the rom-com is “a little tiresome,” says Wolpert, but the fact that hers is getting a prime Christmas release is a promising sign.

    “What I’m grateful for is that both Sydney and Glen were so down for a rom-com. There are not a lot of people in their age demographic, actors of any gender, who wanted to do rom-coms—at least from early stages when we were exploring the cast,” she adds. But Wolpert doesn’t consider it “a dying genre.” In fact, she’s set her sights on tackling a queer rom-com next.

    “I really just wanted my life to look like a romantic comedy,” says Wolpert. Evidence of her lifelong adoration is all over Anyone but You, from a Titanic-referencing scene, to perhaps the most consequential grilled cheese since Nate’s burnt beauty in The Devil Wears Prada.

    Wolpert drew inspiration from Much Ado About Nothing, which she calls “the perfect enemies-to-lovers story,” as well as other modern works based on literary classics, including Clueless (loosely based on Jane Austen’s Emma), 10 Things I Hate About You (born from Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew), and She’s the Man (from Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night). “The sense of farce, especially in She’s the Man, was something that I really leaned into and loved when it comes to Bea and Ben getting tricked into being together,” Wolpert explains. “That incredible scene where Amanda Bynes goes to the carnival and is running around and trying to be two people at once—I loved that sense of physical comedy too, which we have in Anyone but You.

    Like other faithful students of the rom-com, Wolpert classifies herself as a Nora Ephron devotee, referring to 1989’s When Harry Met Sally, 1993’s Sleepless in Seattle, and 1998’s You’ve Got Mail as “my holy trinity.” Wolpert continues: “She just so effortlessly made you fall in love with those characters and the conflict really came from a place of character…. But I definitely saw [the movies] at too young of an age on a cable channel I probably shouldn’t have been watching,” she adds with a laugh.

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    Savannah Walsh

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  • Anyone But You Rating Revealed for Glen Powell Rom-Com, Contains ‘Graphic Nudity’

    Anyone But You Rating Revealed for Glen Powell Rom-Com, Contains ‘Graphic Nudity’

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    Glen Powell and Sydney Sweeney’s upcoming Anyone But You rom-com has earned an R-rating for “brief graphic nudity.”

    Per ComicBook.com, the Motion Picture Association’s (MPA) Film Ratings Board has officially given Anyone But You an R-rating for “language throughout, sexual content, and brief graphic nudity.” Previous trailers for Anyone But You have hinted at an R-rating and ScreenRant said the movie has “lots of naked scenes” in an April 2023 tweet; however, the confirmation means that younger children should probably be sitting this one out.

    What is Glen Powell and Sydney Sweeney’s Anyone But You about?

    “In the edgy comedy Anyone But You, Bea (Sydney Sweeney) and Ben (Glen Powell) look like the perfect couple, but after an amazing first date something happens that turns their fiery hot attraction ice cold – until they find themselves unexpectedly thrust together at a destination wedding in Australia,” the official synopsis reads. “So they do what any two mature adults would do: pretend to be a couple.”

    Anyone But You is directed by Will Gluck, who previously made 2009’s Fired Up!, 2010’s Easy A, 2011’s Friends with Benefits, 2014’s Annie, 2018’s Peter Rabbit, and 2021’s Peter Rabbit 2: The Runaway.

    Gluck also co-wrote the screenplay, which is based on William Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing, with Ilana Wolper (High School Musical: The Musical: The Series).

    Along with Powell (Top Gun: Maverick, Everybody Wants Some!!) and Sweeney (Euphoria, Madame Web), Anyone But You stars Alexandra Shipp, GaTa, Hadley Robinson, Michelle Hurd, Dermot Mulroney, Darren Barnet, Rachel Griffiths, and Bryan Brown.

    Gluck, Joe Roth, and Jeff Kirschenbaum produce the movie, while Sweeney, Alyssa Altman, Jacqueline Monetta, Catherine Bishop, Natalie Sellers, Charlie Corwin, Sidney Kimmel, Mark O’Connor, and Jonathan Davino all serve as executive producers.

    Anyone But You releases in United States theaters on December 22, 2023, from Sony Pictures Entertainment.

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    Brandon Schreur

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  • Sydney Sweeney, Glen Powell Fake Flirt in ‘Anyone But You’ Trailer

    Sydney Sweeney, Glen Powell Fake Flirt in ‘Anyone But You’ Trailer

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    Sydney Sweeney and Glen Powell can barely disguise their disgust for one another that dates back to college but pretend to be the perfect couple at a destination wedding, in the trailer for the edgy rom-com Anyone But You unveiled on Thursday.

    The Euphoria star plays Bea, and Top Gun: Maverick’s Powell is Ben in the enemies-to-lovers comedy about college rivals reuniting and thrust together at a glitzy wedding in Australia. “Let’s just tell everyone we’re together… Could be kind of fun,” Bea tells a puzzled Ben at one point in the trailer as they then replace hate stares with fake flirty glances as their personal chemistry gets pretty complicated around wedding guests.

    “There’s no way we could convince anyone we actually like each other,” Ben tells Bea, suspicious of the challenge she sets for her nemeses at the gathering. “But through pretending, they actually fall in love,” Sony’s official synopsis for Anyone But You adds.

    Will Gluck directed the romantic comedy based on a story by Ilana Wolpert and a screenplay they co-wrote together. The ensemble cast includes Alexandra Shipp, GaTa, Hadley Robinson, Michelle Hurd, Dermot Mulroney, Darren Barnet and Rachel Griffiths.

    The producer credits on Anyone But You are shared by Gluck Joe Roth and Jeff Kirschenbaum. Alyssa Altman, Jacqueline Monetta, Catherine Bishop, Natalie Sellers, Charlie Corwin, Sidney Kimmel, Mark O’Connor, Sweeney and Jonathan Davino are executive producers.

    Sony Pictures Entertainment will release Anyone But You to theaters on Dec. 22.

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