Tag Archives: tina fey

More Good Times: Three Other 1970s Sitcoms That Should Be Adapted For The Big Screen

Deadline’s report  that Sony Pictures and Scott Rudin  plan to turn the 1970s sitcom Good Times into a feature film reminded me that there are still quite a few sitcoms from that era that are substantial enough to translate to feature films.  Here are three:  1. Sanford and Son :   Redd Foxx’s character, junk dealer Fred Sanford, was initially touted as a black Archie Bunker, and the show’s writers certainly did explore racial and cultural issues, but the real genius of the show was the give and take between Foxx and a great supporting cast of comedians that played his family and friends, including LaWanda Jackson (Aunt Esther),  Whitman Mayo (Grady Wilson) and Slappy White (who inspired one of Tom Hanks funniest appearances on David Letterman’s NBC Late Night Show.) There’s only one funny guy who could adapt this to the big screen and make it count, and that’s Dave Chappelle.  He could make a Sanford and Son feature relevant, find roles for Charlie Murphy and other cast members from his Comedy Central show and pull in some impressive hip-hop cameos like the RZA. 2. Barney Miller:  I see Hal Linden’s salt-and-pepper mustache and I can’t help thinking Will Ferrell would be great as the captain of that series multicultural squad of plain-clothes detectives in chaotic 1970s Greenwich Village.  Ferrell would get to stretch comedically by playing more of a straight man role and you could cast J.B. Smoove against type as the natty, urbane Sergeant Ron Nathan Harris, rewrite the Sergeant Nick Yemana role for Korean-American actor John Cho  and feature David Koechner as Detective Stan “Wojo” Wojciehowicz.  The best part:  Abe Vigoda, who played Det. Philip K. Fish in the original series (and briefly had his own spinoff)  is still around to make a cameo. 3. The Mary Tyler Moore Show:  Tina Fey and Amy Poehler are too original and ambitious to ever attempt a straight parody film, but since Fey has cited The Mary Tyler Moore  as inspiration for 30 Rock,  I can still fantasize about the feminist fun she and Poehler would have with this landmark sitcom.   Entertainment Weekly once even drew parallels between MTM and 30 Rock characters, but, unlike that publication, I’d rather see Alec Baldwin in the Ted Baxter weatherman role. [ Deadline , USA Today , EW.com ] Follow Frank DiGiacomo on  Twitter . Follow Movieline on  Twitter .

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More Good Times: Three Other 1970s Sitcoms That Should Be Adapted For The Big Screen

REVIEW: Tina Fey’s Class Clown Act Can’t Save C-Level ‘Admission’

Though smarter than your average dramedy, Paul Weitz’s  forced Admission faces some major identity issues. Tina Fey  plays a discombobulated Princeton admissions officer who must confront the limits of her morals when she learns that a potential Princeton applicant might be the son she gave up for adoption. What appears on paper to be an ideal three-dimensional, morally complex role for the quick-witted comedienne backfires in practice, relying on Fey to be funny in a movie that works better serious. Despite offering consolation to the world’s many Ivy League rejects that the gatekeepers sometimes make mistakes, low entrance levels await. Clearly, what Weitz wanted was to recapture some of Fey’s Baby Mama mojo (it earned a surprise $60 million, after all), relying on the actress to bring the same vulnerable uncertainty to another harried working-woman role. But that film was conceived as a traditional laffer, whereas Admission is based on Jean Hanff Korelitz’s more nuanced novel, in which Fey’s seemingly straightlaced character is thrown for a loop by a highly unusual applicant. While the book treats this wrinkle as its big surprise, the more plot-driven adaptation serves it up as a central concept, positioning Fey’s Portia Nathan as an increasingly screwball character struggling (and mostly failing) to maintain her professional ethics amid a messy personal crisis. Through a series of clunky, on-the-nose character-development scenes, the pic establishes Portia’s life — or, more accurately, her current state of denial: She’s fallen into a predictable routine with her tweedy lit-professor b.f. ( Michael Sheen ), her fastidiously clean workspace and her general intolerance of kids. Instead of indulging auds’ natural curiosity with a look inside the closed-door world of college admissions, the pic leaves Fey and her co-stars to play dress-up in a wood-paneled office where Wallace Shawn amiably poses as the dean of admissions and everybody carries around orange folders like so many hyper-efficient Oompa Loompas. The impression essentially favors Princeton as it reveals the fair, yet relatively inflexible process by which Portia and rival Corinne (Gloria Reuben) evaluate high school seniors’ essays and extracurriculars. Each folder conjures a fresh, optimistic-looking teen at the edge of the reader’s desk, the majority of whom then plummet through an invisible trapdoor after failing to meet the high threshold. With Portia and Corinne competing for a promotion, Portia throws herself into her usual visits to prospective students, giving the same canned speech at every stop until she arrives at New Quest, a newly accredited — and highly experimental — school overseen by fellow Dartmouth grad John Pressman ( Paul Rudd ). Implausibly, John remembers the day and hour Portia gave her baby up for adoption and has somehow managed to match it to his star pupil, a freakishly smart but terribly awkward teen named Jeremiah (Nat Wolff). But Pressman’s timing in revealing the information couldn’t be worse: Not only is this a sensitive time at work, but Portia’s b.f. is searching for an opportunity to break things off, and her long-frazzled relationship with her mother ( Lily Tomlin ) is coming to a boil, all of which drives Portia to behave as only movie characters do, sobbing, smooching and puking at the most inopportune moments. Other New Quest students question the value of what they see as the sexist, racist, homophobic institution Portia represents, but Jeremiah wants to attend Princeton. Problem is, he lacks the grades to get in. Watching the final admissions process, one wants to believe the officers become this invested in everyone they consider. And yet Portia goes to extremes to boost Jeremiah’s chances, manipulating co-workers and even breaking in to alter his file. The comedy feels forced as Fey works overtime to insert unnecessary zingers at the tail of every scene. If the cast weren’t so endearing, her actions could easily sour an audience on the whole experience, and Admission digs itself a hole only an ensemble this appealing can escape. Tomlin in particular enlivens her limited screentime as an irrepressible free spirit — a woman who truly understands the meaning of acceptance. Follow Movieline on  Twitter .

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REVIEW: Tina Fey’s Class Clown Act Can’t Save C-Level ‘Admission’

WATCH: The Best Of Tina Fey & Amy Poehler’s Golden Globes Performance

Aspiring awards-show hosts, do I have a training video for you.  Here, in one sweet video-clip compilation, is a highlight reel of Tina Fey  and Amy Poehler’s pitch-perfect performance at the Golden Globe Awards on Sunday. Included are Poehler’s lines about the “beautiful people of film rubbing shoulders with the rat-faced people of television,” Les Miserables  actress  Anne Hathaway not being cut out for porn, and  Fey’s warning to singer/songwriter  Taylor Swift to “stay away from Michael J. Fox’s son,” Sam.     This nicely edited clip, which was posted by The Guardian in the U.K.,  also features audience reaction to the jokes.  You get to see Jessica Chastain’s  gasp after  Poehler does the joke about Zero Dark Thirty director Kathryn Bigelow  understanding torture because of her three-year marriage to James Cameron. And Daniel Day-Lewis plays along by extending his index finger when Poehler and Fey tell the audience that the method actor actually worked for Steven Spielberg before Lincoln when he played E.T.  There’s even a bonus shot of Tommy Lee Jones scowling, which makes this video a must-have for any awards-show aficionado’s collection.  My only regret is that the video doesn’t include the shot of Poehler cuddling with George Clooney .  Check it out below, but put down the coffee cup first or you’ll be doing a spit take like Quentin Tarantino . RELATED:  Do The Tommy Lee Jones! 5 Top Golden Globe Moments WATCH: Jodie Foster Wins The Golden Globes With Her ‘Coming Out’ Speech [ The Guardian ] Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.

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WATCH: The Best Of Tina Fey & Amy Poehler’s Golden Globes Performance

Tina Fey And Amy Poehler Pimp Out The Golden Globes

Tina Fey and Amy Poehler are not only co-hosts of the 70th Golden Globes this year, they’re also competitors. Both were nominated for Best Actress in a Television Musical or Comedy, with Fey duking it out with her counterpart for 30 Rock , while Poehler is up for the award for Park and Recreation . [ Related: Golden Globes Unveil 70th Edition Nominees ] But while the co-hosts won’t conceivably know the results until the envelope opens at the ceremony on January 13th, the pair are busy working together in the lead-up to the big event, and no doubt re-calling those good ol’ Saturday Night Live days. In this promo for the Globes, the duo are dressed in matching golden sparkly dresses and they both dish out cheesy Brit(ish) accents (until they don’t). Maybe they’re commenting on the resurgence of British-speak in Hollywood films reminiscent of the very early “golden days” of Hollywood? Who knows, but here’s a funny look at what may bode well for the Globes telecast after the New Year. [ Source: Huffington Post ]

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Tina Fey And Amy Poehler Pimp Out The Golden Globes

Check Out Woody Allen, Alec Baldwin, Jesse Eisenberg, and Ellen Page on Bop Decameron’s Rome Set

It’s nice to see to four Oscar nominees getting along this well. In new pictures from the set of Woody Allen’s latest film, Bop Decameron , the director mixes it up with his pitch-perfect cast including Alec Baldwin , Jesse Eisenberg (brother to Hallie), and Ellen Page. Don’t worry, Greta Gerwig, your golden moment is forthcoming, I’m sure.

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Check Out Woody Allen, Alec Baldwin, Jesse Eisenberg, and Ellen Page on Bop Decameron’s Rome Set

Talkback: Will You Still See the Next Tracy Morgan Movie?

Famous people sometimes say horrible things, but does that ever mean you stop ankling to the cineplex and spending $13 to see their new movie? In the case of the now-apologetic Tracy Morgan , who made “jokes” (for lack of a better word) during a standup act about how he’d stab his own son if he said he was gay, the commitment to protesting his movies isn’t a harrowing one; he’s obviously known more for his TV roles on 30 Rock and SNL than, say, his filmic contributions like Death at a Funeral . But based on principle alone, do you refuse to see his next movie, which is likely to be released this year?

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Talkback: Will You Still See the Next Tracy Morgan Movie?

9 Stars Who Should be Cast in Woody Allen Movies

Penelope Cruz, who will be starring in yet another Woody Allen film , thanked the director during her 2009 Oscar acceptance speech for creating a number of great roles for women. She could’ve thanked him for creating great roles for a certain type of star: the thinking, compulsively relatable thespian who can balance with sophisticated ease with exasperation. Here are nine who deserve a spot in Woody Allen’s magnificent oeuvre.

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9 Stars Who Should be Cast in Woody Allen Movies

Buck Gets Standing Ovation; Real Life Horse Whisperer Wants to Meet Cesar Millan

First time director Cindy Meehl brought the capacity audience at Austin’s Paramount Theater to its feet with her crowd-pleasing documentary Buck , about Buck Brannaman, the gentleman cowboy-horse whose life and work partially inspired Robert Redford’s The Horse Whisperer . After the film, Brannaman and the filmmakers walked onstage to a rousing standing ovation for a Q&A filled with horsemanship advice, behind-the-scenes details, and a shout out to the Dog Whisperer, Cesar Millan.

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Buck Gets Standing Ovation; Real Life Horse Whisperer Wants to Meet Cesar Millan

Tina Fey Chooses Team Gwyneth

Like Gwyneth Paltrow, Tina Fey believes people are overly mean to Gwyneth Paltrow. “Any time you talk about being a working mother and you complain about it in any way, people eat your face,” Fey tells InStyle . “I remember reading some interview where Gwyneth Paltrow said something like, ‘I missed my kids on the set one day and I was crying.’ And I thought, Yeah, I’ve totally done that.” She added, “But on the Web site where I read it there were these furious comments. ‘But you’re a movie star!’ Yes, it’s much worse for a mom serving in Afghanistan. Of course. But there’s just no forgiveness.” [ People ]

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Tina Fey Chooses Team Gwyneth

Tina Fey Chooses Team Gwyneth

Like Gwyneth Paltrow, Tina Fey believes people are overly mean to Gwyneth Paltrow. “Any time you talk about being a working mother and you complain about it in any way, people eat your face,” Fey tells InStyle . “I remember reading some interview where Gwyneth Paltrow said something like, ‘I missed my kids on the set one day and I was crying.’ And I thought, Yeah, I’ve totally done that.” She added, “But on the Web site where I read it there were these furious comments. ‘But you’re a movie star!’ Yes, it’s much worse for a mom serving in Afghanistan. Of course. But there’s just no forgiveness.” [ People ]

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Tina Fey Chooses Team Gwyneth