Tag Archives: nicholas-sparks

How the Wachowskis Came to Make a Super-Rare Appearance in New Doc Side by Side

Making its North American premiere next week at Tribeca , director Chris Kenneally’s digital-cinema study Side By Side has quite a bit going for it: There’s co-producer Keanu Reeves, narrating and leading interviews with an extraordinary range of filmmakers including Christopher Nolan, George Lucas, James Cameron, Martin Scorsese, David Fincher, Steven Soderbergh, Lars von Trier and numerous others. There’s great technical insight from Oscar-winning cinematographers like Vittorio Storaro, Wally Pfister, Anthony Dod Mantle and Dion Beebe. There’s scene-stealers like Joel Schumacher and shooter Geoff Boyle, who encapsulates the digital age with his trenchant summary, “We’re fucked.” But among all the experts, insights and disclosures herein, there’s one appearance in particular that makes Side by Side worth a look: The Wachowskis. While they’ve made seemingly random news posing for photos with Arianna Huffington and others, I can’t even find the last instance of a bona fide interview with Andy and Lana Wachowski. Roger Ebert talked to them a bit in 2008 , but for a real chat about their work or style, you’d probably have to go back to their Matrix days , when Lana was still Larry and they hadn’t yet settled completely behind their cloak of personal, professional and creative privacy. But there they are onscreen, filling Reeves and Kenneally in regarding the advancement of digital filmmaking and its influence on the Matrix and Speed Racer . And that’s not all. “The delivery system of cinema is going to change, and that’s almost kind of more exciting in a way for me, beside the actual cameras,” Lana says. “This very ancient system of putting a can of film on a truck, driving it to a city, unloading it — that’s being replaced.” And as for the social-media influence on filmgoing, Andy weighs in with his support: “In some way, the virtual experience is more rewarding, because there’s an actual dialogue going on.” There’s more, which you can see either at Tribeca (where Side by Side premieres Apr. 24 ) or when the film arrives in theaters and on VOD this August. All of which leads to the question: How did Kenneally and Reeves even get the two to agree to a sit-down with them? Kenneally sent the back story in a statement to Movieline: We are very fortunate and grateful for all the amazing people who shared their time, insights and knowledge with us for our documentary Side by Side . We were especially fortunate to have been able to interview the Wachowskis since they rarely do interviews. Andy and Lana have had a very successful and close relationship with Keanu, and I believe the reason they agreed to the interview was because of this friendship. The Wachowskis continue to create groundbreaking movies and they are truly pioneers in the use of digital technology. The images they were able to create in the Matrix Trilogy and on Speed Racer pushed the limits of filmmaking art and technology. There are beautiful shots in those films that had never been conceived of before. The Wachowskis were very busy working on their next film Cloud Atlas , which they are directing along with Tom Tykwer, in Berlin, Germany, but they found a few free hours for us one afternoon. Keanu, our producer Justin Szlasa and I flew to Berlin, set up our cameras quickly and got an amazing, insightful and at times hilarious interview. The Wachowskis had a unique, intelligent perspective on image creation, digital technology, editing, archival and couldn’t have been nicer or more welcoming to us. One of the highlights of the Side by Side journey for me was seeing Lana and Andy in the audience at our screening at the Berlin Film Festival. I had the chance to speak to them afterword. They were really happy for us and had a lot of kind words to say about Side by Side . Fantastic. Of course there are plenty of other interviewees and perspectives to catch in Side by Side ; learn more about the film and check out a few clips at its Tribeca Film Festival page . Read all of Movieline’s Tribeca 2012 coverage here . Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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How the Wachowskis Came to Make a Super-Rare Appearance in New Doc Side by Side

REVIEW: Zac Efron Muscles Up in Disposable The Lucky One

Nicholas Sparks. The name alone conjures up images of a romantic connection leaping between two people like an electric current, of fireworks illuminating the sky behind a couple canoodling at the side of a silvery lake somewhere and swearing they’ll never be parted — except that she’s dying of terminal amnesia and he has to leave tomorrow for an 50-year deployment in the Middle East, oh no! Love means never having to say “I wasn’t crying, my allergies just got really bad all of a sudden!” in Sparks’s world, and that remains true for the latest adaptation of his work, The Lucky One , directed by Shine ‘s Scott Hicks and starring Zac Efron and Taylor Schilling in a story as gauzily soft and disposable as the tissues the susceptible might need to pack. Efron plays Logan, a Marine home after three tours of duty and struggling through a sense of displacement and jolts of PTSD. One morning after a raid while he was still in Iraq, he spotted a photo on the ground and went to pick it up. The act took him out of the path of a bomb that exploded a few seconds later, one that would have killed him if he’d stayed put. After surviving a few more brushes with death, he came to believe that the picture, of a blond woman, was his lucky charm, and he vowed to find her in order to thank her. He does this by packing up a duffel and heading out on foot with his dog, walking from Colorado to Louisiana in search of the (fictional) small town of Hamden, Louisiana, located in that region of the South — I’m sure you know it — in which it’s perpetually golden late afternoon. He matched a lighthouse there to one in the background of the photo, and after a little asking around, he finds his way to a dog kennel owned by the cheery Ellie (Blythe Danner) and her granddaughter Beth (Taylor Schilling), a skittish single mom with a bullying ex-husband — and, of course, the “guardian angel” from the photo. The Lucky One is filled with talk of destiny, much of it done by Efron in the opening and closing voiceover, but like any movie romance, it needs a complication to potentially keep its fated leads apart. In this case, it’s the seemingly easily surmountable (it’s no terminal amnesia) quirk that Logan “can’t find the right words” to tell Beth why he’s really there, and so instead takes a job at the kennel and begins winning her over with his kindness and rippling biceps. What will Beth do when she finds out? She’ll get mad, but I’m honestly not sure why — maybe if he’d been carrying around a nude photo of her, or been keeping locks of her hair and smelling them compulsively, it’d be something to get creeped out about, but his explanation is pretty legitimately sappy. Efron and Schilling play a Disneyland version of a traumatized veteran and an emotionally abused spouse, their emotional wounds salved by their time together during a courtship that consists of a lot of mutual ogling through windows and fixing of boats (not a metaphor). Logan also bonds with Beth’s son Ben (Riley Thomas Stewart), a boy whose love of chess and playing the violin doesn’t sit well with his demanding, tough-guy father Keith (Jay R. Ferguson). Efron isn’t plausible as a battle-scarred soldier, but even without the fake tattoos he’s no longer built like a tween heartthrob. While Schilling — in cutoffs or floral dresses, her hair in a messy ponytail — is treated with chaste deference by the camera (she first appears walking out of the light like a near-death vision), the film has no problems lovingly objectifying the newly buff physique of its male lead. The Lucky One aspires to but never reaches the grandly melodramatic heights of the über-Sparks adaptation The Notebook , though a reconciliation embrace in an outdoor shower of some sort seems deliberately staged to evoke the earlier feature. The film can’t with any conviction portray this as a great love, even on simplified and schmaltzified scale (“You should be kissed every day, every hour, every minute,” Logan tells Beth) — Efron and Schilling simply look like two pretty people who are bound to get together because they both have the big blue eyes of a porcelain doll. Their problems are made to appear so mild, and the setting in which they live so idyllic that  The Lucky One becomes numbingly pleasant, a cinematic anesthetic. It may not be The Notebook , but  The Lucky One does unintentionally evoke another cable-TV standard in its story of a zen-like wanderer, trying to leave behind a violent past, who comes to a small town, rents a run-down place to live and falls in love with a girl whose jealous ex has a lot of local power. It’s  Road House without, well, the road house. And instead of doing tai chi out by the water, Efron’s character prefers, sensibly but less interestingly, to just walk. Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Zac Efron Muscles Up in Disposable The Lucky One

The Lucky One Poster: Zac Efron Pouts for Love

The next Nicholas Sparks joint, The Lucky One , comes out April 20, but Zac Efron gives us everything we need to survive the five-month wait — namely, a killer pout. He stars in The Lucky One as an Iraq War vet who comes home to locate the unknown woman who served as his “good luck charm during the war.” In the film’s poster, he appears to have found her: Taylor Schilling , of the unfairly canceled NBC drama Mercy , stands in frame. Pretty damn Notebook -y all around.

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The Lucky One Poster: Zac Efron Pouts for Love

Hollywood Ink: Will Ferrell Habla Español

Also in this morning’s Hollywood Ink: The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo finds two more cast members… Tom Cruise gets a pay cut… the world will have to watch another Nicholas Sparks adaptation… and more ahead.

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Hollywood Ink: Will Ferrell Habla Español

In Theaters: The Last Song

“I did not come here for some stupid summer romance,” Miley Cyrus croaks at the midway point of The Last Song , “with some stupid local boy who’s done this a thousand times before.” Sister, I’ve got at least three kinds of bad news for you. In the second Nicholas Sparks adaptation in as many months ( Dear John has the sole distinction of knocking Avatar from its first-place perch), another young lady finds herself on Georgia’s powdery beaches for the summer, balancing a shirtless suitor with hackneyed class conflicts and a passage to adulthood via untimely death. Luckily both the audiences for Sparks’s corn pone weepers and Cyrus’s Liquid Drano rasp don’t share her character’s distaste for cliché: whether they can overlook The Last Song ‘s sucking charm and chemistry voids is another story.

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In Theaters: The Last Song