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SUNDANCE REVIEW: James Franco’s Infuriating ‘Interior. Leather Bar.’ Is An Empty Glory Hole

Proving that a movie shot over a day and a half can premiere at Sundance if it has James Franco’s name attached, Interior. Leather Bar .  is an infuriating stunt that misrepresents itself as Franco and co-director Travis Mathews’ reimagining of the 40 minutes William Friedkin claims he was forced to cut from Cruising   to get an R rating. Yet it would seem “James Franco’s 40 Minutes” don’t exist either, leaving only this hastily tossed-off companion piece, a partly authentic, partly scripted behind-the-scenes featurette that never quite conveys the star’s “high/curious” interest in all things taboo. After Sundance and Berlin, relative obscurity awaits. On paper, the project echoes Franco’s earlier Memories of Idaho , two experimental films made from scraps that Gus Van Sant  discarded during the making of My Own Private Idaho . A notorious embellisher, Friedkin has often said that he brought Cruising to the ratings board 50 times before they relented and gave him an R, despite still-graphic footage and talk of bondage and numerous other fetish acts, nearly all of it unsimulated. In his DVD director’s commentary for Cruising , Friedkin explains how he recruited actual members of Gotham’s leather-bar scene: “Of course, I filmed all these activities in their entirety, but all the other film that I shot has somehow disappeared.” With or without the lost X-rated material, Cruising was an important and controversial film in its time, serving as a time capsule of a pre-AIDS sexual subculture, while conflating its play-acted aggression with a series of ripped-from-the-headlines New York murders. As such, it’s a rich text to reopen, though Mathews (an openly queer director who shook up the LGBT fest circuit with his art-porn feature I Want Your Love ) makes no effort to investigate what went missing or query Friedkin, but instead focuses on Franco as the pic’s more marketable meta-subject. Recognizing how the “is he or isn’t he” debate has dogged nearly all of Franco’s recent art projects (beginning with his blatantly homoerotic NYU student short, The Feast of Stephen ), Mathews attempts to shift the attention onto Franco and his creative process. None of the young actors who agreed to participate in the film, least of all Val Lauren (a longtime Playhouse West cohort and star of Franco’s directorial debut, Sal ), would have enlisted if not for Franco’s involvement. Although Franco appears in the film, his role is mostly that of the man behind the curtain, stirring things up with half-baked opinions, such as his complaint that the MPAA is to blame for his hetero-normative upbringing: “Why don’t they gives us violence in a little more palatable way, and amp up the sex?” Franco really should have agreed to take the pic’s Al Pacino part himself — a Kinsey Zero assigned to go undercover and blend with an extreme queer subculture — but instead delegates it to Lauren, asking the actor to “play” a version of himself. To the extent that this sloppy assembly has a shape, the film constructs an arc in which Lauren constantly questions his participation in the project (different from the controversial tension underlying Cruising , where exposure to leather bars may be turning Pacino’s cop aggressive and/or gay). Lauren is seen debating his choice with the other actors, most of them straight, and improvising calls to a homophobic friend (performed by one of Franco’s producers) and his supportive wife. The Cruising re-creations make up only a small portion of the pic’s running time, shying away from Crisco-covered forearms and the other extreme acts that caused Friedkin so much grief, while trying to portray barroom fellatio and a random, unrelated rough-love scene between three bears as “just right.” This last act pushes the underlying insult to new extremes, cutting between “dirty” closeups and the expressions on Lauren and Franco’s faces as they watch from the sidelines, pretending that witnessing this act of outre lovemaking has somehow broadened their minds. Follow Movieline on Twitter. 

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SUNDANCE REVIEW: James Franco’s Infuriating ‘Interior. Leather Bar.’ Is An Empty Glory Hole

James Franco Gay Rumors Aren’t New — And He Still Doesn’t Care

‘Interior. Leather Bar.’ star opens up to MTV News about lifelong rumors concerning his personal life. By Jocelyn Vena, with reporting by Josh Horowitz James Franco Photo: MTV News

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James Franco Gay Rumors Aren’t New — And He Still Doesn’t Care

Sundance 2013 Reviews: James Franco’s Porn-Soaked ‘Interior.’ And More

Our friends at Film.com review one of Franco’s three festival flicks, plus the horror movie, ‘S-VHS’ and a Dick Cheney documentary. By MTV News Staff James Franco Photo:

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Sundance 2013 Reviews: James Franco’s Porn-Soaked ‘Interior.’ And More

The Lumineers May ‘Weasel’ Into Jennifer Lawrence ‘SNL’ Skit

‘No one would recognize us, so cameos wouldn’t really work,’ the Lumineers tell MTV News ahead of Saturday night’s performance. By Cory Midgarden The Lumineers Photo: MTV News

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The Lumineers May ‘Weasel’ Into Jennifer Lawrence ‘SNL’ Skit

Gucci Mane’s ‘Spring Breakers’ Role Makes Waka Flocka Laugh

‘He did that on the low. I can’t wait to see it,’ Waka tells MTV News of his buddy’s role in the upcoming James Franco flick. By Rob Markman Gucci Mane in “Spring Breakers” Photo: Annapurna Pictures / A24

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Gucci Mane’s ‘Spring Breakers’ Role Makes Waka Flocka Laugh

WATCH: The First ‘Spring Breakers’ Trailer Is Here, Bitches

The Spring Breakers trailer has FINALLY arrived, and it’s even more packed with girls and guns and bikinis and James Franco ‘s grimy braided hot mess than I’d ever dreamed. Also, the words “Spring Break” are spoken so many times in these two minutes of mayhem (I count 11 feverish utterances) that it’s seeping into my subconscious. Watch and whet your whistle for the March 22 opener after the jump and start working on your Franco-as-Alien Halloween costumes now. Franco may be the bizarro Riff Raff-ian centerpiece of Harmony Korine ‘s pic (shout out to Gucci Mane in the trailer!) but our restless antiheroines are played by Selena Gomez , Vanessa Hudgens , Ashley Benson , and Rachel Korine, who attempt to finance the best Spring Break ever by robbing a fast-food joint before Franco comes into the picture and makes their Vice Magazine -esque fantasies come true. [via MTV ] Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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WATCH: The First ‘Spring Breakers’ Trailer Is Here, Bitches

James Franco, Michael Winterbottom, Jane Campion & More Head To Berlin International Film Festival

The Berlin International Film Festival continues to roll-out its program for its February event, adding new titles to its Panorama and other sections. Many of the titles will debut as world and international premieres, with some titles headed to the festival post-Sundance. New work from the U.S. include Travis Mathews and James Franco ‘s Interior. Leather Bar , Stacie Passon’s Concussion , Shane Carruth’s Upstream Color as well as new work from Ken Loach and Jane Campion. Michael Winterbottom’s The Look of Love and Tom Hooper’s Les Misérables are among the Galas added in addition to titles in the festival’s Panorama and Berlinale Special screenings. The Berlin International Film Festival’s added titles: Panorama fictional films: Boven is het stil ( It’s All So Quiet ) – Netherlands/Germany, By Nanouk Leopold with Jeroen Willems, Henri Garcin, Wim Opbrouck, Martijn Lakemeier World Premiere Concussion – USA By Stacie Passon with Robin Weigert, Maggie Siff, Emily Kinney, Daniel London, Ben Shenkman, International Premiere Flores Raras ( Reaching for the Moon AKA: The Art of Loosing ) – Brazil By Bruno Barreto, with Miranda Otto, Gloria Pires, Tracy Middendorf, World Premiere Hayatboyu ( Lifelong ) – Germany By Asli Ozge with Defne Halman, Hakan Çimenser World Premiere Interior. Leather Bar. – USA By Travis Mathews, James Franco with Val Lauren, Christian Patrick, James Franco, International Premiere Kai PO Che – India By Abhishek Kapoor with Sushant Singh Rajput, Raj Kumar, Amit Sadh, Amrita Puri, World Premiere Burn it up Djassa – Ivory Coast/France By Lonesome Solo with Abdoul Karim Konaté, Adelaïde Ouattara, Mamadou Diomandé, Souleymane Bamba, European Premiere Lose Your Head – Germany By Stefan Westerwelle, Patrick Schuckmann with Fernando Tielve, Marko Mandić, Sesede Terziyan, Stavros Yagulis, Samia Chancrin, World Premiere Maladies – USA By Carter with James Franco, Catherine Keener, David Strathairn, Fallon Goodson, Vince Jolivette, World Premiere Mes séances de lutte – France By Jacques Doillon with Sara Forestier, James Thiérrée World Premiere Soğuk ( Cold ) – Turkey By Uğur Yücel with Cenk Alibeyoğlu, A. Rıfat Şungar, Valeria Skorohodova, Yulia Vaniukova, Yulia Erenler, Şebnem Bozoklu, Ezgi Mola, World Premiere Something in the Way – Indonesia By Teddy Soeriaatmadja with Reza Rahadian, Ratu Felisha, Verdi Solaiman, World Premiere Upstream Color – USA By Shane Carruth with Amy Seimetz, Shane Carruth, Andrew Sensenig, Thiago Martins, Kathy Carruth International Premiere Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow? – Taiwan By Arvin Chen with Richie Jen, Mavis Fan, Stone, Kimi Hsia, Lawrence Ko, World Premiere Workers – Mexico/Germany By José Luis Valle González with Susana Salazar, Jesús Padilla, World Premiere Youth – Israel/Germany By Tom Shoval with Eitan Cunio, David Cunio, Moshe Ivgy, Gita Amely, Shirili Deshe, World Premiere Berlinale Special Galas at the Friedrichstadt-Palast The Best Offer  Italy 
By Giuseppe Tornatore (Cinema Paradiso, Malèna, Baarìa)
With Geoffrey Rush, Jim Sturgess, Sylvia Hoeks, Donald Sutherland
International Premiere The Look of Love , Great Britain
 By Michael Winterbottom (In This World, The Road to Guantanamo, 24 Hour Party People) 
With Steve Coogan, Anna Friel, Imogen Poots, Tamsin Egerton
European Premiere Les Misérables   Great Britain
 By Tom Hooper (The King’s Speech)
With Hugh Jackman, Russell Crowe, Anne Hathaway, Amanda Seyfried, Eddie Redmayne, Aaron Tveit, Samantha Barks, Helena Bonham Carter, Sacha Baron Cohen
German Premiere Tokyo Kazoku ( Tokyo Family ) Japan 
By Yoji Yamada (About Her Brother, KABEI – Our Mother, The Twilight Samurai)
With Isao Hashizume, Kazuko Yoshiyuki, Satoshi Tsumabuki, Yu Aoi, Yui Natsukawa, Masahiko Nishimura, Tomoko Nakajima, Shozo Hayashiya
International Premiere   Panorama special screening – Heiner Carow Prize Die Legende von Paul und Paula ( The Legend of Paul and Paula ) – Germany, By Heiner Carow Panorama short supporting films: After Hours – Germany, By Steffen Köhn, World Premiere Jury – Republic of Korea, By Kim Dongho with Ahn Sung-ki, Kang Soo-yeon, Jung In-ki, Tony Rayns, International Premiere Two Girls Against the Rain – Cambodia, By Sao Sopheak, European Premiere Fictional films previously announced: Baek Ya ( White Night ) by Hee-il LeeSong, Republic of Korea – European Premiere Behind the Camera by E J-Yong, Republic of Korea – International Premiere Chemi sabnis naketsi ( A Fold in my Blanket ) by Zaza Rusadze, Georgia – World Premiere Deshora ( Belated ) by Barbara Sarasola-Day, Argentina/Columbia/Norway -World Premiere Don Jon’s Addiction by Joseph Gordon-Levitt, USA -International Premiere Frances Ha by Noah Baumbach, USA – European Premiere Habi, la extranjera ( Habi, the Foreigner ) by María Florencia Alvarez, Argentina/Brazil – World Premiere Inch’Allah by Anaïs Barbeau-Lavalette, Canada – International Premiere Kashi-ggot ( Fatal ) by Don-ku Lee, Republic of Korea – European Premiere La Piscina ( The Swimming Pool ) by Carlos Machado Quintela, Cuba/Venezuela – International Premiere Lovelace by Rob Epstein, Jeffrey Friedman, USA – International Premiere Meine Schwestern ( My Sisters ) by Lars Kraume, Germany – World Premiere Rock the Casbah by Yariv Horowitz, Israel – International Premiere Tanta Agua ( So Much Water ) by Ana Guevara Pose, Leticia Jorge Romero, Uruguay/Mexico/Netherlands/Germany – World Premiere The Broken Circle Breakdown by Felix van Groeningen, Belgium – International Premiere   
Berlinale Special at the Haus der Berliner Festspiele   Assistance Mortelle ( Fatal Assistance ) – documentary France/Haiti/USA/Belgium
By Raoul Peck (Moloch Tropical), World Premiere Gold – Du kannst mehr als Du denkst ( Gold – You Can Do More Than You Think ) – documentary 
Germany, by Michael Hammon, World Premiere Mein Weg nach Olympia ( My Way to Olympia ) – documentary
, Germany, by Niko von Glasow, World Premiere Top of the Lake 
Australia/New Zealand
 By Jane Campion (An Angel at My Table, The Piano, Bright Star), Garth Davis (Alice) 
TV series with Elisabeth Moss, David Wenham, Peter Mullan, Holly Hunter, European Premiere The Spirit of ’45 – documentary, 
Great Britain, by Ken Loach (The Wind that Shakes the Barley, Looking for Eric, The Angels’ Share)
World Premiere Unter Menschen ( Redemption Impossible ) – documentary
Germany, by Christian Rost, Claus Strigel, World Premiere Berlinale Special at the Bundesplatz-Kino:   Berlin Ecke Bundesplatz – Bäckerei im Kiez  
Germany , by Hans-Georg Ullrich, Detlef Gumm, World Premiere   Berlin Ecke Bundesplatz – Feine Leute 
Germany , by Hans-Georg Ullrich, Detlef Gumm, World Premiere   Berlin Ecke Bundesplatz – Schornsteinfegerglück 
Germany , by Hans-Georg Ullrich, Detlef Gumm, World Premiere   Berlin Ecke Bundesplatz – Vater Mutter Kind 
Germany , by Hans-Georg Ullrich, Detlef Gumm, World Premiere

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James Franco, Michael Winterbottom, Jane Campion & More Head To Berlin International Film Festival

‘Fifty Shades of Grey’ To Be NC-17? Dream On, Inner Goddesses

Things had been quiet on the Fifty Shades of Grey movie front of late, as the hotly anticipated erotic fiction bestseller teased its way through development — that is, until screenwriter Kelly Marcel ( Terra Nova , Saving Mr. Banks ) spilled a tantalizing tidbit to The Sunday Times : “There is going to be a lot of sex in the film,” she said. “It will be rated NC-17 .” NC-17!? Be still, our BDSM-loving hearts! EL James’s steamy erotic lit juggernaut, about demure college grad Anastasia Steele and Christian Grey, the emotionally tortured millionaire she enters into a kinky relationship with, has its fair share of sexy clinches. If you’ve read the series — or the Twilight fan fiction it started out as — you know it’s pretty much a series of sexcapades tempered by interludes of soap operatic dramarama. (For a borderline NSFW idea of what happens in the first book, check out this fantastic fan-made animated trailer . Splash !) A Fifty Shades movie without the deliciously racy sex would hardly be a Fifty Shades movie at all (seriously, we still have Skinemax to serve our softcore needs) but once Focus Features and Universal snapped up the property a proper envelope-pushing rating seemed out of reach. How can studio heads sell an erotic film franchise to the masses that nails Ana and Christian’s heated psychosexual bond onscreen as vividly as it does on the page? Common sense says be prepared for a gentler, more suggestive-rather-than-graphic Fifty Shades movie. And yet, Marcel (who “pored over” the book with James for ten days) insists that they’re going all the way to NC-17 Town on the film: “[There] is going to be a lot of sex in the film,” she says breezily. “It will be rated NC-17 [18 here]. It’s going to be raunchy.” While they are not toning it down — “We are 100% going there” — some of the sex scenes have had to be edited out in order to get some plot in. “We did go through and decide which are our favourites and which are not,” she concedes. “Most of them are in there, but I can’t say more than that.” It’s a fine thought to have, and more power to Marcel if she and James manage to penetrate the MPAA’s conservative sensibilities with Christian Grey’s, to quote from James’s tome, ” kinky f***ery .” It just sounds a bit too much like screenwriter fantasy at this point, but hey — if I’m wrong I’ll send Marcel a pair of Ben Wa balls as a mea culpa and a thank you, on behalf of Fifty Shades fans everywhere. [via The Sunday Times ] MORE ON FIFTY SHADES OF GREY : Law & Order: SVU Spanks Fifty Shades of Grey Author E.L. James 50 Shades Of Grey Hires Saving Mr Banks Writer (Tom Hardy For Christian Grey, Anyone?) 50 Shades of Grey Composite Yields The ‘Perfect’ Christian Grey Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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‘Fifty Shades of Grey’ To Be NC-17? Dream On, Inner Goddesses

WATCH: James Franco Drops New Art Video For Justin Bieber’s ‘Boyfriend’

Polyglot actor-cum-performance artist James Franco has struck again, releasing yet another of his multitudinous side art projects unto the world for dissection and intense theoretical analysis, and — nah, just kidding! Here’s a video of Franco lip-synching to Justin Bieber ‘s “Boyfriend” in full Biebs gear, mop top and pubescent cherub-grin and all, as he and Spring Breakers co-star Ashley Benson writhe around in a brunette wig like they’re in the world’s worst American Apparel ad. Is Franco just a huge Belieber? Is he confronting mass media’s sexualization of youth by turning JB’s pick-up jam into a seedy softcore home video? What does fellow Spring Breaker Selena Gomez think?! Franco nails the whisper-rap and all, but personally I like his Riff Raff impersonation better. Fingers crossed that for every weirdo soap opera appearance and Three’s Company installation piece and college professorship and Oscar hosting fiasco and meta mixed media performance art project he unleashes into the ether he does another one of these pop impersonations because it proves that stars really are like us: Secretly obsessed with Justin Bieber. ( Swaggy .) Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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WATCH: James Franco Drops New Art Video For Justin Bieber’s ‘Boyfriend’

James Franco Says He’s Likely Not In ‘Planet Of The Apes’ Sequel

James Franco said he is unlikely to return to Dawn of the Planet of the Apes following the exit of the sequel’s director Rupert Wyatt . “I was going to be a small part of the next one,” he told MTV. “There was a moment when Rupert Wyatt was going to direct the second one. A lot of the human characters that were in the first movie were dead in the sequel that Rupert was going to direct…” Franco said there was an opening for his character to make a return to Dawn of the Planet of the Apes , but changes at the Fox studio made it unlikely he’ll reprise his role. “There was one scene, between Caesar and my character, maybe even just like on a video that was left behind,” said Franco, adding, “but then a lot of things happened, like [former Fox co-chairman] Tom Rothman who was a big part of the first movie, left. Now Rupert’s not a part of it so I don’t know. My guess is I won’t be in it. Nobody’s talked to me since Rupert left.” Not that James Franco is in need of things to do. At the upcoming Sundance Film Festival, two of his co-directorial efforts, kink , a documentary about fetish website kink.com and Interior. Leather Bar , described as the “lost 40 minutes from ‘Cruising’ as a starting point to a broader exploration of sexual and creative freedom,” will debut. He is also starring in Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman’s Lovelace at the festival (this will be quite a racy Sundance for Franco apparently). And a quick look at his IMDb page lists about a dozen projects in various stages of completion. And just to keep things interesting, Franco recently signed with a small Minnesota publisher to debut a collection of his poetry set for April 2014. According to The Guardian poetry editor Jeffrey Shotts described Franco’s written work as a “series of portraits of American successes and failures from within Hollywood … But they are also smart and highly aware notes of caution of what can happen when the filmed self becomes fixed and duplicated, while the ongoing self must continue living and watching.” Franco published his first poetry, Strongest of the Litter earlier this fall. [Sources: Digital Spy , MTV , The Guardian ]

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James Franco Says He’s Likely Not In ‘Planet Of The Apes’ Sequel