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REVIEW: Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close? More Like Utterly Dull and Mostly Insufferable

In 2005, when Jonathan Safran Foer’s novel Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close was published, Walter Kirn, writing in the New York Times Book Review , summed up the book’s “grand ambition” this way: “To take on the most explosive subject available while showing no passion, giving no offense, adopting no point of view and venturing no sentiment more hazardous than that history is sad and brutal and wouldn’t it be nicer if it weren’t.” Kirn couldn’t, at that point, have seen Stephen Daldry’s film adaptation of the book. But with that sentence, he pretty much wrote the review in advance. Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close tells the story of Oskar Schell (Thomas Horn), a perpetually wan 9-year-old New Yorker struggling with his father’s death in the events of 9/11. Dad Thomas (Tom Hanks, playing a particularly insufferable kind of ultra-reasonable dadness) was a jeweler by trade, but only because he wanted to make a decent life for himself, his wife Linda (an efficient but bloodless Sandra Bullock) and young Oskar. In reality, he was a science-nerd know-it-all type who would send Oskar out on field expeditions to discover new things about the city, and, it turns out, to get him comfortable talking to people. Oskar is a bit awkward in that department — at one point he precociously announces that he was once tested for “Asperger’s Disease,” but that “the results were inconclusive.” But of course. Oskar is obviously traumatized by his father’s death, not least because in the last minutes of his life dad left several increasingly doomy messages on the family’s home answering machine, messages Oskar heard when he was sent home early from school on that fateful day. But he never tells his mother about them; instead, he turns inside himself, trying to hang onto scraps of memories of his father. Until, one day, rooting around in his parents’ closet he finds (and breaks) a vase. Inside is a small envelope, marked with the name “Black” and containing a key. Oskar takes it upon himself to locate every person named Black in the five boroughs, paying each a personal visit (on foot — the subway, along with most other things in the city, makes him anxious). He catalogs these names and visits meticulously, pasting mementos of his search in a scrapbook. He also scratches at his skin, lashes out at his mother, and indulges in a never-ending stream of obnoxious-whiz-kid quips and insights, including a breathless interior monologue about the multitudinous things in New York (people eating, sneakers wrapped around phone lines, and so forth) that give him the heebie-jeebies. Poor little Oskar! Such an adorable, pint-sized heap of neuroses. What better mouthpiece for an author, or a filmmaker, to use as a way of exploring the personal cost of a great communal tragedy. Do you get the idea that Oskar must emerge from his own teeny-tiny personal prison and, yes, embrace the world? Never has the tragedy of 9/11 been made so shrinky-dinked. Daldry has made a career out of taking acclaimed works of literary fiction ( The Hours , The Reader ) and transforming them into snoozy, self-congratulatory, assertively tasteful movies, the equivalent of book clubs that pride themselves on choosing only “quality” books. But he’s outdone himself with Incredibly Close ; there’s something cloistered and cushy about it, as if it were a movie made by Upper East Siders for Upper East Siders (the Park Avenue sort, not the 86th-and-Lex sort). Oskar isn’t supposed to be rich; though it’s not clear what his mother does, his father is a rather modest sort of jeweler. But the family does live in a building with a doorman (played by a gruff, grumpy John Goodman) and a big, clean, well-lit marble lobby — I don’t need to tell you what that kind of real estate generally costs in New York. And when Oskar is let out of school early on that horrific day, he seems to be far enough uptown that that mythical downtown, where all the terrible stuff was happening, really does seem miles away. You may also be interested to note that many of the Blacks Oskar encounters in his investigation are, yes, actually black. (Those would include Viola Davis and Jeffrey Wright, playing two people who may or may not hold the answer Oskar is looking for. Their performances are as believable as possible, considering their characters, as written, are practically made of cardboard.) That means Oskar gets experience talking to actual black people , some of them from the lower classes. How wonderful! You can’t buy that sort of education at the Browning School. Mostly, Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close isn’t even offensive. It’s too dull and spineless to get much of a rise out of you. Shot by Chris Menges, it does give us a lush, rich, patchwork-style view of New York. But even then, there’s something too novel about the workaday food-cart vendors and pedestrians who people the movie’s universe — it’s all a bit too sparkling, too easy. Alexandre Desplat gives us one of his scribbled-on-a-napkin scores, as opposed to one of his great ones: It’s timid and nice and tiptoeing, a lot like the movie itself. In fact, even though the subject matter is very different, the picture Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close most closely resembles is Peter Jackson’s botched version of Alice Sebold’s The Lovely Bones . Like that movie, it offers a view of childhood that comes from an adult who’s constantly looking over his shoulder, rather than from a real — even a fictitiously real — child. The only bright spot in Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close is Max von Sydow, as a mysterious, and mysteriously mute, older gent who, as Oskar tells us in one of his incessant voiceovers, lived in Dresden during the war and “went through some really bad stuff.” Like, maybe even 9/11 bad. If you’re the kind of moviegoer who ducks when you see an extremely loud metaphor headed your way, you don’t need me to tell you that that one is coming incredibly close. Follow Stephanie Zacharek on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close? More Like Utterly Dull and Mostly Insufferable

Baby Boo Lovin’: Viola Davis Wants To Hook Her Little Girl Up With Sandra Bullock’s Cajun Cookie

Viola Davis seems like such a great Mommy already! And she’s only had the gig for two months… Since adopting daughter Genesis in October, first-time mom Viola Davis is reveling in every moment of her most important and life-changing role yet. “Becoming a mother has opened up my whole life and given me a whole new purpose,” Davis, 46, told PEOPLE at Thursday’s premiere of her new film Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close in New York. “I feel like a star at home only because she loves me so much. I mean, it’s a red carpet everyday. It’s wonderful!” A shining star moment for The Help actress and her husband, actor Julian Tennon, is reading books to their 16-month-old little girl during bedtime. “She loves Goodnight Moon,” Davis says. “Every time we get to the part where the old lady who is sitting and whispering hush, she goes ‘Shhh!’ I just love it. It’s something simple, but it’s the most amazing thing to see.” The Golden Globe and SAG nominated actress is so well prepared in raising her daughter that she already found a future boyfriend for Genesis with Extremely Loud costar Sandra Bullock‘s son Louis, 23 months. “Oh yeah, I’d absolutely love to set her up with Louis,” she says with a laugh. “That kid is so cute. He’s going to be a bruiser. But let’s try to get a play date in first. If they are ever in the same place, we’ll get them together.” Louis is definitely a lil cutie, but Genesis is pretty precious herself! Source More On Bossip! More Basketball Wives Beef!!! Evelyn, Shaunie And Tami Light Up Twitter Over “False Email Claims” Making It Rain On Them Hoes: Forbes List Top Ten Earning Women In Music 2011 #HumbleBrag: Celebrities That Talk About Their Weird Body Insecurities 2nd Time’s The Charm? Famous 2nd Marriages…Did They Work Or Fail?

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Baby Boo Lovin’: Viola Davis Wants To Hook Her Little Girl Up With Sandra Bullock’s Cajun Cookie

Baby Boo Lovin’: Viola Davis Wants To Hook Her Little Girl Up With Sandra Bullock’s Cajun Cookie

Viola Davis seems like such a great Mommy already! And she’s only had the gig for two months… Since adopting daughter Genesis in October, first-time mom Viola Davis is reveling in every moment of her most important and life-changing role yet. “Becoming a mother has opened up my whole life and given me a whole new purpose,” Davis, 46, told PEOPLE at Thursday’s premiere of her new film Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close in New York. “I feel like a star at home only because she loves me so much. I mean, it’s a red carpet everyday. It’s wonderful!” A shining star moment for The Help actress and her husband, actor Julian Tennon, is reading books to their 16-month-old little girl during bedtime. “She loves Goodnight Moon,” Davis says. “Every time we get to the part where the old lady who is sitting and whispering hush, she goes ‘Shhh!’ I just love it. It’s something simple, but it’s the most amazing thing to see.” The Golden Globe and SAG nominated actress is so well prepared in raising her daughter that she already found a future boyfriend for Genesis with Extremely Loud costar Sandra Bullock‘s son Louis, 23 months. “Oh yeah, I’d absolutely love to set her up with Louis,” she says with a laugh. “That kid is so cute. He’s going to be a bruiser. But let’s try to get a play date in first. If they are ever in the same place, we’ll get them together.” Louis is definitely a lil cutie, but Genesis is pretty precious herself! Source More On Bossip! More Basketball Wives Beef!!! Evelyn, Shaunie And Tami Light Up Twitter Over “False Email Claims” Making It Rain On Them Hoes: Forbes List Top Ten Earning Women In Music 2011 #HumbleBrag: Celebrities That Talk About Their Weird Body Insecurities 2nd Time’s The Charm? Famous 2nd Marriages…Did They Work Or Fail?

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Baby Boo Lovin’: Viola Davis Wants To Hook Her Little Girl Up With Sandra Bullock’s Cajun Cookie

Sandra Bullock Insists ‘Gravity’ Will ‘Blow Your Mind’

Actress says 2012 Alfonso Cuar

Jeffrey Wright Cast In Allen Hughes’ ‘Broken City’

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Veteran actor of the stage, screen, and film, Jeffrey Wright recently was added to the cast of Broken City . The film stars Mark Wahlberg and Russell Crowe. Broken City is shooting in New York City and is being directed by Allen Hughes. Mark Wahlberg plays a Brooklyn cop hired by an important politician, Russell Crowe, to find out who his wife is having an affair with. Wright’s character is the police commissioner who has a complex and tense relationship with the politician. There’s no set release date as of now. However, if you can’t wait for your Jeffrey Wright fix, he can be seen in the film, The Ides of March , which is in theaters. Also, he will be appearing in the Stephen Daldry film, Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close . That hits the big screen on Christmas Day. Spotted at BlackThespian.com RELATED POSTS: Actor Jeffrey Wright Analyzes The Future Of Black Hollywood Michael K. Williams Leaves ‘Django Unchained’ Jeffrey Wright Talks About Working With Aspiring Actors

Jeffrey Wright Cast In Allen Hughes’ ‘Broken City’

Jeffrey Wright Cast In Allen Hughes’ ‘Broken City’

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Veteran actor of the stage, screen, and film, Jeffrey Wright recently was added to the cast of Broken City . The film stars Mark Wahlberg and Russell Crowe. Broken City is shooting in New York City and is being directed by Allen Hughes. Mark Wahlberg plays a Brooklyn cop hired by an important politician, Russell Crowe, to find out who his wife is having an affair with. Wright’s character is the police commissioner who has a complex and tense relationship with the politician. There’s no set release date as of now. However, if you can’t wait for your Jeffrey Wright fix, he can be seen in the film, The Ides of March , which is in theaters. Also, he will be appearing in the Stephen Daldry film, Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close . That hits the big screen on Christmas Day. Spotted at BlackThespian.com RELATED POSTS: Actor Jeffrey Wright Analyzes The Future Of Black Hollywood Michael K. Williams Leaves ‘Django Unchained’ Jeffrey Wright Talks About Working With Aspiring Actors

Jeffrey Wright Cast In Allen Hughes’ ‘Broken City’

A Few Things About the First Trailer — and First Rumors — for Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close

This week’s edition of Oscar Index made the point of allowing for Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close as an awards contender on paper, while withholding any specific hype until we’d all seen at least a trailer. Hours later, that trailer arrived. But even more interesting than the footage therein? How about the test-screening gossip trickling out around Stephen Daldry’s magic-realist 9/11 tearjerker? [Warning: Spoilers ahead.]

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A Few Things About the First Trailer — and First Rumors — for Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close

‘Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close’ Trailer

http://www.youtube.com/v/ZqfA1BocV44

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Here’s the trailer for Stephen Daldry’s adaptation of Jonathan Safran Foer’s novel Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close, based on a script by Eric Roth. The movie has been a curiosity for me for months in part because the book is a piece of post-modernism that doesn’t lend itself easily to adaptation, and in part because Daldry chose a non-actor, Thomas Horn, to play the central role of 11-year old… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : /Film Discovery Date : 29/09/2011 02:38 Number of articles : 2

‘Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close’ Trailer

Tom Hanks Might Answer Call of Duty for Scott Rudin

It has been quite some time since Tom Hanks has done anything really dramatic, so word that he’s attached to the big screen adaptation of A Captain’s Duty so soon after shooting Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close is good news to anyone who fondly remembers when Hanx was more than a talking children’s toy. In Duty , the two-time Oscar winner would star as Richard Phillips, who was the captain of the Maersk Alabama when it was taken over by Somali pirates in 2009. Scott Rudin and the team behind The Social Network will produce. [ Deadline ]

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Tom Hanks Might Answer Call of Duty for Scott Rudin

Tom Hanks Might Answer Call of Duty for Scott Rudin

It has been quite some time since Tom Hanks has done anything really dramatic, so word that he’s attached to the big screen adaptation of A Captain’s Duty so soon after shooting Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close is good news to anyone who fondly remembers when Hanx was more than a talking children’s toy. In Duty , the two-time Oscar winner would star as Richard Phillips, who was the captain of the Maersk Alabama when it was taken over by Somali pirates in 2009. Scott Rudin and the team behind The Social Network will produce. [ Deadline ]

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Tom Hanks Might Answer Call of Duty for Scott Rudin