Tag Archives: hammond on film

Do You Hear The Academy Singing? The Daunting Oscar Odds Of ‘Les Miserables’

The Academy Award nominations brought good news and bad news to one of my favorite movies of the year.   Les Misérables   eight nominations including Best Picture, Actor, for Hugh Jackman , and Supporting  Actress, for Anne Hathaway . That ain’t chopped liver, but the highly  publicized snubbing of its director Tom Hooper  along with its absence in all-important bellwether categories like screenplay and editing means what was once considered a front runner is now a real long shot to actually win Oscar’s top prize. You have to go all the way back to 1931’s Grand Hotel  to find a Best Picture winner that didn’t have at least one of those three nominations. In the face of those daunting stats,   Les Misérables  would be a shocking Best Picture winner, but if any movie deserves the upset , it’s this one. A certified box office hit domestically, it just opened to huge numbers over the weekend in England and looks to be a continuing international smash. “Do You Hear The People Sing?   is not only the stirring anthem from Hooper’s adaptation, it’s an apt metaphor for the impact of  a revolutionary film about revolutionary spirit. Hooper took great risks in the telling of  Les Misérables  — and he succeeds. Twenty-seven years in development, the film looked like it might never be made when The King’s Speech director came up with the novel idea of shooting the cast’s musical performances live instead of taking the usual movie-musical tack of pre-recording the songs and dubbing them in later. Without that artificial technique hampering the actors, Hooper and the creative team from the original musical — Alain Boublil, Claude-Michel Schoenberg and Herbert Kretzmer — along with the adaptation’s screenwriter, William Nicholson, found a way to meld the dramatic impact of Victor Hugo’s classic, gritty novel with the theatricality of the beloved stage production for a movie musical experience that hasn’t been seen on the big screen in years. Emotion is at the core of this remarkably entertaining and powerful film. Jackman , with his considerable musical chops, was the obvious choice to play petty-criminal-made-good Jean Valjean, and he delivers even in the difficult two-and-a-half-octave range the role requires.  Although Russell Crowe  can’t  match his co-star in the singing department, he still scores as a potent Javert.   Hathaway breaks hearts as the doomed Fantine, as does Samantha Barks in the role of Eponine.  And though Amanda Seyfried’s portrayal of Cosette is not so dramatically challenging, she still manages to shine in the role. That said, it’s Eddie Redmayne , as Marius, who  threatens to steal the whole show with an impassioned performance that heralds the arrival of a major new movie star. Hooper’s aesthetic choice to shoot the emotional moments in unrelenting close up is a good one, and this is a musical  that even those who hate musicals should find satisfying in its dramatic pull and remarkable ability to move us. Oscar, are you listening? RELATED:  Review: Les Misérables’ Hits High Notes, But Also Skitters Follow Pete Hammond on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter. 

Originally posted here:
Do You Hear The Academy Singing? The Daunting Oscar Odds Of ‘Les Miserables’

Apatow’s ‘This Is 40’ Is ‘Scenes From A Marriage’ With Laughs − And Viagra

Movieline  would like to welcome Pete Hammond to the pages of this site with a new column that we’re calling Hammond on Film.  If you love movies, then you’re probably familiar with Pete’s byline. He’s the Awards columnist for our sister site,  Deadline Hollywood,  as well as a veteran movie critic who has written more than 600 reviews for the best-selling  Leonard Maltin’s Movie Guide  and, most recently, was the film critic for Boxoffice Magazine and Boxoffice.com.  He has also reviewed features for  CNN.  For his first column, Pete takes a close look at Judd Apatow ‘s   This Is 40 , which opens Dec. 21. ‘This is 40’: The Sort-of-Sequel to ‘Knocked Up’ Revisiting the married supporting characters Pete and Debbie of his 2007 comedy hit,  Knocked Up , writer/director Judd Apatow has crafted his most personal and affecting film to date. In some respects,  This Is 40 is an Apatow home movie with Paul Rudd , returning as Pete, subbing for the director. Real-life wife Leslie Mann and daughters Iris and Maude Apatow taking on the same roles here, and it isn’t a stretch to think we’re watching the filmmaker’s life unfold  onscreen. Smart, funny and truthful in too many ways to count, Apatow, who’s actually 45,  picks up the story of Pete and Debbie’s marriage five years after we first met them. Both are facing 40th birthdays — although Debbie is fudging the truth — and Apatow uses this conceit to build an episodic look at their marital and familial ups and downs over the course of a month. This Is 40 is the most sharply observed and cutting edge of all four Apatow-directed efforts to date, and I suspect that’s because he’s really writing what he knows here. Yes, there is still plenty of Apatow’s trademark raunch, including an opening shower sex scene in which Pete reveals he has taken Viagra, much to Debbie’s chagrin. There’s also a self-inflicted prostate exam and a wild weekend in a hotel room, but  these scenes add up to more than just a collection of outlandish comic moments: This is 40 is such an honest, piercing look at middle-aged marriage that it recalls Ingmar Bergman’s Scenes From A Marriage in unexpected ways. Comparing the commercially successful Apatow to the critically revered Bergman is not something I’d ever thought possible but it is to the credit of a wise , if overlong , screenplay that his film enters that arena. Rather than heavy plotting we meet the family: There’s the overbearing older daughter Sadie, who’s embarrassed by her parents and married to everything wired , and her sweet younger sister Charlotte. There’s also Pete’s needy father ( Albert Brooks ) ,who is dependent on his son for money infusions, as well as Debbie’s aloof dad (John Lithgow), who reluctantly attends a family party that turns extremely awkward in terms of his attempts to renew his relationship with his daughter. Debbie also has a know-it-all trainer ( Jason Segel ) and co-workers in her clothing store business ( Megan Fox , Charlyne Yi) that she suspects of stealing from the cash register. From Pete’s fledgling business — he’s the owner of an indie record label that specializes in reviving moribund musical artists (like the proto-punk god Graham Parker, who plays himself) — we meet his associates. Chief among them is Ronnie, who’s nicely played by Chris O’Dowd ( Bridesmaids ). There’s also a very funny, if over-the-top encounter with a mother at the kids’ school that Melissa McCarthy plays to the hilt with her combustible comic style. But at the heart of This Is 40 is Pete and Debbie’s struggle to keep alive the family unit and the spark in a marriage that’s faded a bit. It’s this very relatable pair that makes the movie work so well. Just as Apatow does with his pungent script , Mann and Rudd manage to hit the exact right tone, walking a narrow line between comedy and drama and nailing it. Special kudos go to Mann, in her first genuine leading role, who has never been this appealing or real.She proves she not only has great comic instincts but real dramatic chops. Yes, these are scenes from the marriage of an upper, upper middle-class Brentwood family, but anyone in the delicate game of ongoing relationships should find plenty amusing, revealing and familiar in this movie. Apatow and family have provided a comedy for adults that is welcome relief this holiday season. Related:  Review: Apatow Grows Up, Takes A Step Back With Messy ‘This Is 40’ Follow Pete Hammond on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter. 

Original post:
Apatow’s ‘This Is 40’ Is ‘Scenes From A Marriage’ With Laughs − And Viagra