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Someone Call Mark Lindsay: Quentin Tarantino’s “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” Soundtrack Revives Paul Revere and the Raiders

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Exactly 48 years ago this week, Paul Revere and the Raiders were number 1 on the Billboard charts with “Indian Reservation.”

That song isn’t on the soundtrack of Quentin Tarantino’s “Once Upon a time in Hollywood,” but four other hits from that long ago pop group fronted by Mark Lindsay are including “Mr. Sun, Mr. Moon.”

Tarantino always curates fascinating soundtracks, and this one is no exception. All these songs drift through 1969 Los Angeles, but the highlights are certainly Neil Diamond’s “Brother Love’s Traveling Salvation Show” aka “Hot August Night,” Jose Feliciano’s hit cover of “California Dreamin’,” Simon & Garfunkel’s “Mrs. Robinson,” and Deep Purple’s “Hush.”

One song you won’t hear in this movie: the Beatles’ “Helter Skelter.” Thank goodness.

Columbia Records releases the soundtrack tonight. The label needs a hit, and they’re going to have it. Lucky for them, Paul Revere and the Raiders were on Columbia back in the day. They were part of Clive Davis’s league of hitmakers.

PS “Indian Reservation” was just Lindsay on vocals, and two actual legends– Carol Kaye (bass), Hal Blaine (drums) of the Wrecking Crew. (In the video below, the “Raiders” are faking it.)

 

ONCE UPON A TIME IN… HOLLYWOOD SOUNDTRACK TRACKLISTING:

1.   Treat Her Right – Roy Head & The Traits
2.   Ramblin’ Gamblin’ Man – The Bob Seger System
Boss Radio feat. Humble Harve:
3.   Hush – Deep Purple
4.   Mug Root Beer Advertisement
5.   Hector – The Village Callers
6.   Son of a Lovin’ Man – Buchanan Brothers
7.   Paxton Quigley’s Had the Course (from the MGM film Three in the Attic) – Chad & Jeremy
8.   Tanya Tanning Butter Advertisement
9.   Good Thing – Paul Revere & The Raiders
10. Hungry – Paul Revere & the Raiders
11. Choo Choo Train – The Box Tops
12. Jenny Take a Ride – Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels
13. Kentucky Woman – Deep Purple
14. The Circle Game – Buffy Sainte-Marie
Boss Radio feat. The Real Don Steele:
15. Mrs. Robinson – Simon & Garfunkel
16. Numero Uno Advertisement
17. Bring a Little Lovin’ – Los Bravos
18. Suddenly / Heaven Sent Advertisement
19. Vagabond High School Reunion
20. KHJ Los Angeles Weather Report
21. The Illustrated Man Advertisement / Ready For Action
22. Hey Little Girl – Dee Clark
23. Summer Blonde Advertisement
24. Brother Love’s Traveling Salvation Show – Neil Diamond
25. Don’t Chase Me Around (from the MGM film GAS-S-S-S) – Robert Corff
26. Mr. Sun, Mr. Moon – Paul Revere & the Raiders (feat. Mark Lindsay)
27. California Dreamin’ – Jose Feliciano
28. Dinamite Jim (English Version) – I Cantori Moderni di Alessandroni
29. You Keep Me Hangin’ On (Quentin Tarantino Edit) – Vanilla Fudge
30. Miss Lily Langtry (cue from The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean) – Maurice Jarre
31. KHJ Batman Promotion

 

 

MTV Documentary Slate with Legendary Producer Sheila Nevins Announced: Can She Make Vapid Channel Important Again?

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MTV at present is mired in a schedule of junk. It’s all reality programming on the low end, a tribute to vapidity.

But now comes Sheila Nevins, an actual legend of documentary filmmaking, hired to resurrect the former music video channel and make it important. Can she do it? Nevins has been charged with turning the M in MTV to stand for meaningful. The famed producer has 31 prime time Emmy Awards and 3 Peabody Awards on her extraordinary resume.

Nevins’ first two films for MTV will be:

Emmy®-award winner Davy Rothbart’s “17 Blocks,” a transcendentally personal film spanning 20 years in the life of an African American family living mere blocks away from the U.S. Capitol in Washington, DC.

and the award-winning short documentary “St. Louis Superman,” directed by Smriti Mundhra and Sami Khan, about Representative Bruce Franks Jr., a Ferguson activist and battle rapper who was elected to the overwhelmingly white and Republican Missouri House of Representatives.

Both films will get theatrical runs to qualify for the Oscars before being shown on MTV. That will be a major boost for a channel that shows “Teenage Mom” 24 hours a day.  It’s hard to know how or when these films will air on a schedule that now consists of “Ridiculousness,” “Jersey Shore,” “The Hills,” and “How Far is Tattoo Far?” But they’re going to try, and that’s something.

Faye Dunaway Has Done Away with Broadway Debut of “Tea at Five,” as She’s Left the Production

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Back in March I told you I was rooting for Faye Dunaway’s Broadway debut this fall as Katharine Hepburn in “Tea at Five.”

But after a good run in Boston this spring, Dunaway has been done away with by the producers. They announced today that Faye will not be coming to New York in the one woman show.

Oscar winner Dunaway got good notices in Boston. But even on opening night critics noticed she was having trouble with her lines. They also thought she was too good for the material. The play itself, tried years earlier with Kate Mulgrew, was never a favorite of anyone.

So maybe the producers got the jump by announcing Faye was out before she could– see “All About Eve” for the vicious way that game is played.

Faye really got screwed in the press 40 years ago for doing “Mommie Dearest.”  Her career never recovered. I’ve never known a male actor who was punished for all eternity for one bad movie. John Travolta’s made 200 bad movies and keeps coming back. But she’s never stopped working or trying to make good projects. I’m sure she’ll have something better soon.

Hey Ryan Murphy– this is your bailiwick. Give us back Faye Dunaway!

Showtime’s Roger Ailes Series “Loudest Voice” Fails to Make List of Top 150 Cable Shows Sunday Night

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Showtime is a mess, that much we already know. They produce quality shows but can’t get people to watch them.

On Sunday, their Roger Ailes-Fox News mini series, “Loudest Voice,” had just 354,000 viewers. But the show didn’t make the top 150 cable shows of the night. Why? In the key demo, “Loudest Voice” had just 4,000 of that total in the key demo, 18-49. Everyone who watched it was older than the desired audience by advertisers, marketers, and everyone else in the ad world. I was part of that group.

By contrast, HBO’s “Big Little Lies” finale scored 1,981,000 viewers. A half million of them were in the key demo. “Big Little Lies” was the second highest rated cable show of the night in the key demo race.

“Loudest Voice” wasn’t the only Showtime show not attracting people under 49 years old. Kevin Bacon in “CIty on a Hill,” which should be a smash hit, garnered 406,000 viewers total. But their key demo was also 4.0 or 4,000 viewers. They also missed the top 150 cut off. Five other entries for Sunday night had an o.4 and lower overall numbers than the Showtime shows. But according to Showbuzz Daily, when the numbers were unfolded to their nth degree, “Loudest Voice” and “City on a Hill” finished lower than even an untitled Paid Program on the Syfy channel that had 75,000 viewers. Ouch!

So what is the deal with Showtime? This year they managed to get only 18 Emmy nominations, 3 lower than last year. Their chief competitor, HBO, had 137. Showtime’s great show, “Billions,” is ignored by all the awards groups despite an all star cast and four star writing and directing. Something is very wrong over there. I wish they could fix it. As for “Loudest Voice,” it’s pretty damn good. And “City on a Hill” should be their “Sopranos.”

 

Valerie Harper’s Husband, Tony, Says He Won’t Put Her in Hospice Care Despite Professional Advice

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Valerie Harper’s husband, Tony Cacciotti, is in a tough situation. On Facebook he’s posted a statement that says professionals are advising him to put the beloved 79 year old actress in hospice care. He won’t do it, and you can’t say he’s right or wrong. Even though “sending prayers” has been mocked recently as a cliche, let’s do it for them. They will figure out what’s right for them.

from Facebook

Message from Tony Cacciotti

I have been told by doctors to put Val in Hospice care and I can’t [because of our 40 years of shared commitment to each other] and I won’t because of the amazing good deeds she has graced us with while she’s been here on earth.

We will continue going forward as long as the powers above allow us, I will do my very best in making Val as comfortable as possible.

There are two special ANGELS on this planet masquerading as humans who live and work together, that have made it possible to have all of Val’s needs taken care of.

For those of you who have been in this position, you will totally understand that “it’s hard letting go.” So as long as I’m able and capable, I’ll be where I belong right beside her.

Many, many thanks for your outpouring of kindness and support.

Tony

Willie Nelson Goes Top 10 on iTunes Pop Chart after “Big Little Lies” Scores 2 Million Finale Viewers

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We love Willie Nelson but even he will tell you it’s been some time since he had a real hit on the singles charts.

But Willie’s version of John Fogerty’s “Have You Ever Seen the Rain,” a duet with daughter Paula Nelson, has jumped to number 10 on the iTunes pop chart. The single, from a 2013 album, was the closing song on Sunday night’s season or series finale of HBO’s “Big Little Lies.”

The show had its highest rating in two seasons, scoring nearly 2 million viewers just on HBO at 9pm, first play. More numbers are coming, but it was HUGE.

The beneficiary seems to be Willie, and that’s alright, I think, with everyone.

Peggy Siegal’s A List Crowd Shows Support for Her at NY Premiere of “Tel Aviv On Fire,” Foreign Film of the Summer

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You would not know by the looks of the crowd on Tuesday night that the movie biz’s premiere party thrower, Peggy Siegal, was having a difficult week.

Her crowd showed up and showed support for at the Landmark 57 Theater and Ousia restaurant premiere of the hot foreign film of the summer, “Tel Aviv On Fire.”

Oscar winning director Barry Levinson hosted the screening without question. He and Peggy go back to “Diner.”

Among the guests who loved the movie, directed by Sameh Zoabi, a Palestinian who grew up in Israel and went to Columbia University, were Oscar winning filmmaker Barbara Kopple, famed journalist Gay Talese and his famed book editor wife Nan; former NYPD commissioner Ray Kelly and his wife Veronica, Washington Post columnist Richard Cohen, “GoodFellas” writer and equally famed journalist Nick Pileggi, as well as movie and theater producer Jean Doumanian, former CNN and Fox correspondent Paula Zahn, and award winning producer-writer James Schamus.

The group– which also included Jeffrey Epstein journalist Vicky Ward–was happy to come support Peggy, but also perplexed by the viciousness of the recent pieces describing Siegal’s friendship with Epstein. Ward, who knows everything about Epstein, lamented, “I think Peggy was conned by Jeffrey.”

The many guests concurred, and were surprised to learn about studio defections based on innuendo.

“No one knows how to get people together to have a meaningful impact for a new film,” said more than one guest.

Siegal is out of town. But her staff and that of CohenMedia, which releases “Tel Aviv on Fire” on August 2nd, knew the drill. It didn’t hurt that the movie is sensationally funny, witty, and human. The director mixed Israeli and Palestinian stars in a well written saga of a live Palestinian soap opera that’s become a huge TV hit in both countries. Everyone is hanging on the lives of the characters.

Kais Nashif (looking like a Middle Eastern Stephen Mangan from “Episodes”) plays the Palestinian producer’s ne’er do well nephew Salaam who winds up writing scripts for the show, set in 1967. Salaam becomes entangled with an Israeli border crossing captain (Yaniv Biton) who starts helping him, surreptitiously, with the show and becomes more demanding about the characters’ outcomes.

Zoabi cleverly entwines the Israeli and Palestinians as they go back and forth across the border until you realize, late in the game, he’s declared peace among these people. He also blends the current day mishegos at the soap with the soap itself to the point where it’s almost hard to remember if the past is influencing the present or vice versa. The soap’s main characters a triangle of a female spy, an Arab “freedom fighter,” and an Israeli soldier. Somehow Salaam must resolve their story live, while two countries watch and root for their own sides.

Great movie, great night, and Peggy’s crowd is looking forward to an Oscar season full of these kinds of films.

Taylor Swift Releases Most Interesting Single Yet, “The Archer,” Written, of course, with Jack Antonoff

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Taylor Swift has dropped a new single — on a Tuesday, just like the old days. It’s her most interesting one, yet, from her forthcoming album. “The Archer” is co-written by Jack Antonoff. It’s moody and disturbing, as opposed to peppy and poppy. The lyrics will be picked apart by her fans, but they’re just clever, which is fine. Should be programmed between The Cars’ “Drive” and Cyndi Lauper’s “Time After Time.”

Toronto Film Fest: No Scorsese, But Bruce Springsteen, Tom Hanks, “Motherless Brooklyn,” Todd Philip’s “Joker,” Almodovar and Banderas

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The 2019 Toronto Film Festival looks pretty swell. No Scorsese “Irishman,” but everything else we need, want, and expect including Tom Hanks in the Mister Rogers movie “Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood,” Bruce Springsteen’s “Western Stars,” Edward Norton’s “Motherless Brooklyn,” Pedro Almodovar’s “Pain and Glory” with Antonio Banderas’s Cannes winning performance, and Todd Philip’s “Joker.” They’ve also got Isabelle Huppert in “Frankie,” Renee Zellweger as “Judy,” and “The Goldfinch.”

GALAS 2019
A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood
Marielle Heller | USA
World Premiere
Abominable
Jill Culton | USA
World Premiere
American Woman
Semi Chellas | Canada
Canadian Premiere
Blackbird
Roger Michell | United Kingdom
World Premiere
Clemency
Chinonye Chukwu | USA
International Premiere
Ford v Ferrari
James Mangold | USA
Canadian Premiere
The Goldfinch
John Crowley | USA
World Premiere
Harriet
Kasi Lemmons | USA
World Premiere
Hustlers
Lorene Scafaria | USA
World Premiere
Joker
Todd Phillips | USA
North American Premiere
Just Mercy
Destin Daniel Cretton | USA
World Premiere
*
Opening Night Film
*
Once Were Brothers: Robbie Robertson and The Band
Daniel Roher | Canada
World Premiere
Ordinary Love
Lisa Barros D’Sa, Glenn Leyburn | United Kingdom
World Premiere
*
Closing Night Film
*
Radioactive
Marjane Satrapi | United Kingdom
World Premiere
The Sky Is Pink
Shonali Bose | India
World Premiere
The Song of Names
François Girard | Canada
World Premiere
True History of the Kelly Gang
Justin Kurzel | Australia
World Premiere
Western Stars
Thom Zimny, Bruce Springsteen | USA
World Premiere
SPECIAL PRESENTATIONS 2019
A Herdade
Tiago Guedes | Portugal
North American Premiere
Bad Education
Cory Finley | USA
World Premiere
Coming Home Again
Wayne Wang | USA/South Korea
World Premiere
Dolemite Is My Name
Craig Brewer | USA
World Premiere
Ema
Pablo Larraín | Chile
North American Premiere
Endings, Beginnings
Drake Doremus | USA
World Premiere
Frankie
Ira Sachs | France/Portugal
North American Premiere
The Friend
Gabriela Cowperthwaite | USA
World Premiere
Greed
Michael Winterbottom | United Kingdom
World Premiere
Guest of Honour
Atom Egoyan | Canada
North American Premiere
Heroic Losers
(La odisea de los giles
) Sebastian Borensztein | Argentina/Spain
International Premiere
Honey Boy
Alma Har’el | USA
International Premiere
Hope Gap
William Nicholson | United Kingdom
World Premiere
How to Build a Girl
Coky Giedroyc | United Kingdom
World Premiere
*
Opening Special Presentations Film
*
I Am Woman
Unjoo Moon | Australia
World Premiere
Jojo Rabbit
Taika Waititi | USA
World Premiere
Judy
Rupert Goold | United Kingdom
Canadian Premiere
Knives Out
Rian Johnson | USA
World Premiere
La Belle Époque
Nicolas Bedos | France
North American Premiere
The Laundromat
Steven Soderbergh | USA
North American Premiere
The Lighthouse
Robert Eggers | USA
North American Premiere
Marriage Story
Noah Baumbach | USA
Canadian Premiere
Military Wives
Peter Cattaneo | United Kingdom
World Premiere
Motherless Brooklyn
Edward Norton | USA
International Premiere
No.7 Cherry Lane
Yonfan | Hong Kong
North American Premiere
The Other Lamb
Malgorzata Szumowska | Belgium/Ireland/USA
World Premiere
Pain and Glory
Pedro Almodóvar | Spain
Canadian Premiere
The Painted Bird
Václav Marhoul | Czech Republic/Ukraine/Slovakia
North American Premiere
Parasite
(Gisaengchung)
Bong Joon- ho | South Korea
Canadian Premiere
Pelican Blood
(
Pelikanblut
)
Katrin Gebbe | Germany/Bulgaria
North American Premiere
The Personal History of David Copperfield
Armando Iannucci | United Kingdom
World Premiere
Portrait of a Lady on Fire
(
Portrait de la jeune fille en feu
)
Céline Sciamma | France
Canadian Premiere
The Report
Scott Z. Burns | USA
International Premiere
Saturday Fiction
(Lan Xin Da Ju Yuan)
Lou Ye | China
North American Premiere
The Two Popes
Fernando Meirelles | USA/United Kingdom/Italy/Argentina
Canadian Premiere
Uncut Gems
Benny Safdie, Josh Safdie | USA
International Premiere
Weathering With You
Makoto Shinkai | Japan
North American Premiere
While at War
(
Mientras Dure La

Review: Leonardo DiCaprio and Brad Pitt Triumph in Quentin Tarantino’s 9th Movie, “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood,” a Glorious Fable

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WARNING: THERE MAY BE SOME SPOILERS.

Sharon Tate and Roman Polanski get the happy ending they always deserved in Quentin Tarantino’s 9th movie, “Once Upon a Time…in Hollywood.” This isn’t much of a spoiler. You had to know Tarantino was not going to go all Helter Skelter on us and deliver a gory re-enactment of what took place in Los Angeles in August 1969. There’s no point to that.

So instead, Tarantino has gloriously reimagined Hollywood in 1969, as a certain kind of filmmaking left over the from the 1950s is coming to an end. This is right before Coppola and Lucas, Spielberg, Robert Altman, Martin Scorsese, Woody Allen, Peter Fonda overtook the business. It’s really a minute before movie making and Hollywood were turned upside down.

I think the threat of Charles Manson-like mayhem got people’s attention because Tarantino is known for violence, and the Tate-LaBianca murders would be imagined by his fans as the ultimate gore fest. But this is not that movie. Tarantino was six when all this went down in nearby Hollywood (he was in the suburbs). What he’s recalling here is not Charles Manson carving crosses into Squeaky Fromme’s forehead, but the beauty of Los Angeles as western frontier. There’s one sequence of all the neon in Hollywood coming to life at twilight that is the most romantic thing Tarantino has ever filmed.

So Leonardo DiCaprio is kind of a washed up star, maybe a little inspired by Chuck Connors, called Rick Dalton. He’s sort of a cult star from the 50s who’s drifted between TV and movie roles with minor success. (DiCaprio less mannered than usual, going deep, great to watch.) Brad Pitt (best work maybe ever, watch out Oscars) is his loyal stunt double, Cliff Booth, who’s got maybe a bad history. (It’s rumored that he killed his wife, no one can say for sure.) Rick and Cliff are Hollywood buds, thick as thieves, devoted to each other.

Rick has done well enough in his career that he owns a decent home in the Hollywood Hills, where Cliff hangs out as his major domo. Who moves in next door but Polanski and Tate, into the house where Terry Melcher lived. So you know Tarantino has put Rick and Cliff in proximity of what we know happened in real life. But we know it’s not going to happen in this story. Tarantino telegraphs that early on. He’s certainly not going to end the movie with a blood bath (even though he does, in another way).

Margot Robbie is the third piece of the puzzle here as Sharon Tate, who was a beautiful girl not destined to win Oscars. She was a starlet, albeit one maybe with a good sense of humor. Robbie seems like she’s peripherally in the movie, but she’s more important than that. I think hers is the toughest role, and pulls it off with aplomb. She’s a little like a Robert Altman character who you don’t pay attention to at first, but suddenly ties everything together. Tarantino gives her a little Easter egg when she buys Polanski a first edition of “Tess of the Durbanvilles” as gift. Nice touch.

There are lots of people in this movie, from Lena Dunham to 50s and 60s star Clu Gulager (born in 1928, he must see Rick as based on his own career). Some of the young people jump right off the screen including Maya Hawke, Austin Butler, most especially Margaret Qualley. Dakota Fanning, now only 25, reminded of  why we loved her as a teen. Rumer Willis has a cool turn as actress Joanna Pettet. Bruce Dern is spot on as George Spahn, who let the Manson family run wild over his ranch. Damian Lewis (whom we love in “Billions”) is an uncanny Steve McQueen.

“Once Upon a Time” is long (two hours forty five minutes), often rambling, in need of more tightening. But it also has a dynamite soundtrack, of course, and Robert Richardson has made it look Los Angeles is melting in the summer sun. This is a movie made on film! Reels have to be changed, and you can see the marks in the upper right hand corner. No one wears a cape or has a super power and there will be no sequel. But it’s a movie that will last a long, long time in audience’s memories. It’s cinema, like we used to know it.

PS Sit through the credits. There’s a clever bit after the movie ends, an then an audio piece from the ’60s that will make some 60 year old boys and girls smile nostalgically.

Go see this movie this weekend. It’s the best summer gift we’ve had in a long time!

 

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