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Cannes: My Dinner with Roman Polanski on a Yacht in the Middle of the Mediterranean

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Serendipity strikes: while the black tie audience was cheering and clapping for Michael Douglas and Matt Damon in Steven Soderbergh’s “Behind the Candelabra,” I accepted a last minute dinner invite from the legendary Peggy Siegal: come to the St. Nicolas yacht, floating a mile and a half out in the Mediterranean, and meet Roman Polanski at an intimate dinner.

What would you do?

Despite Polanski’s infamous personal scandal that has plagued him, I have admired him as a filmmaker for as long as I can remember. From “Rosemary’s Baby” to “Chinatown” to “Tess” to “The Pianist” to “The Ghost Writer,” he has been one of the towering directors of modern film. As a journalist, I have very few people left whom I’d like to meet and talk to- Polanski is it. So I accepted, and off we went on a tender–a small boat that seats ten people–for the half hour ride into the dark blue water.

Jeff Berg, Polanski’s long time agent and great friend, hosted the party for his new and already very successful Resolution Agency. There would be dinner for 60, followed by a larger party for 120.

Our dinner group included Adrien Brody, who won the Oscar for Best Actor in “The Pianist,” two time Oscar winner Christoph Waltz, and several movie execs including Michael Barker of Sony Pictures Classics and Patrick Wachsburger of Lions Gate.

The boat, the St Nicolas, is two hundred and thirty feet long, delivered in 2007. It has an elevator, a gym, lots of bedrooms, and plenty of room for dining. The appointments are very elegant, all dark wood, understated. A young couple from Europe and Russia own it.

So we made the journey, because it would seem like the only way to meet Polanski. It’s not like you’re going to find him in club or restaurant. The trip by tender took so long that someone joked that we were in international waters.

But there he was: he looked just like Roman Polanski. His hair is gray. As we know from him acting, he is not a tall man. But you can’t miss him. During the dinner, he was so happy to see Brody he took pictures of him with his iPhone. And vice versa. I asked Adrien when he’d seen his director last, and he replied: “Not that long ago. I like to see him when I get to Paris.”

Polanski has two films this year in Cannes: his film of the play “Venus in Fur,” and “Weekend of a Champion,” a documentary about race car driver Jackie Stewart. He told me he had made the doc over 40 years ago, and then it just went into oblivion. The people who had the negative called and said they were going to throw it out. “So I said, no, let me have it. I remade the whole thing. And we’ll see it tomorrow,” Polanski said.

We talked about how he made suburban Germany look like Martha’s Vineyard in “The Ghost Writer.” I listened while he told Waltz– who was in his “Carnage” last year– and Berg and Peggy and me–about his turn running the Cannes jury many years ago. The thing about film festivals, he said, was that “you have to watch the films they choose, not the ones you want to see.”

We did not talk about anything other than films. And that was just fine. It’s the same in James Toback’s new doc “Seduced and Abandoned.” The other stuff is talked out. Let’s not squander a genius among us. We left the St. Nicolas as the post-dinner guests began to arrive. We’ll see Polanski tonight, again, at the premiere of “Weekend of a Champion.” And the conversation continues.

 

Michael Douglas Chokes Up at “Candelabra” Press Conference

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There was a  lot of joking around today at the Cannes press conference for “Behind the Candelabra.” Michael Douglas, Matt Damon, and Steven Soderbergh, plus producer Jerry Weintraub and screenwriter Richard LaGravenese were a lively bunch. It was clear they were happy with the overhwhelming positive reaction to their movie about Liberace and his lover, Scott Thorson.

But there was a moment that stopped the frivolity.p That’s when Douglas started speaking about how he became involved in the project. Recalling hos Soderbergh had first mentioned Liberace to him when they were making “Traffic” years ago, Dougals suddenly choked up and had to check himself. “I’m sorry,” he said, “this was right when I was getting sick,” he said of his successful battle with throat cancer. “And these guys waited for me.”

Douglas has not had an easy time of it. He’s been sick, his actress wife Catherine Zeta Jones has courageously dealt with being bi polar, his eldest son is in prison until 2018 on drug charges. But Michael Douglas is a survivor. Not only could he win a Best Actor prize in Cannes for “Candelabra” but he’s got a major commercial hit coming out this fall called “Last Vegas.” It’s an adult version of “Hangover” with Robert DeNiro and Kevin Kline, and said to be “huge.”

Meantime, Matt Damon–who’s also topnotch in “Candelabra”– just among his best work ever– laughed that now that he’s in bed with Douglas on screen he can share stories with Glenn Close, Demi Moore, and Sharon Stone among others. “We can get together,” Damon laughed.

 

Michael Douglas and Matt Damon Sex it Up in Hit about Liberace

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Michael Douglas and Matt Damon, not to mention Rob Lowe, are sensational in Behind the Candelabra. Steven Soderbergh’s terrific film premieres in Cannes tonight and plays on HBO on Sunday night. It’s so good it should be a theatrical release. Hilarious to see Douglas, a notorious ladies man, sexing it up with equally straight Damon. But they are just great. Damon plays Scott Thorson, Liberace’s lover, Douglas is the flamboyant pianist who hid his gay life and died of AIDS. The sets and costumes are sumptuous, make up is wondrous. Rob Lowe is a scene stealer as the mens’ plastic surgeon. Hollywood legend Debbie Reynolds scores as Liberace’s mother. Jerry Weintraub produced, Richard LaGravenese wrote the script. Everyone will get Emmy awards, trust me.

James Franco’s Ambitious Faulkner Movie Divides Cannes Critics

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Adapting any William Faulkner for movies is not easy — if it can be done at all. Legendary director Martin Ritt made a bad film in 1959 of Faulkner’s “The Sound and the Fury” with Yul Brynner and Joanne Woodward. Faulkner academics who stumble upon it are in for nightmares.

Yesterday multi -hyphenate James Franco premiered his ambitious adaptation of “As I Lay Dying,” a Rashomon like tale of a burial told by 15 characters from different perspectives. (Franco, I think, whittled the number down to 9.) To accommodate the many speakers of the novel Franco does two things: he uses split screens a lot and head on interview close ups. Sometimes these things work and sometimes they don’t. A few times when the split screen came up I thought it would have been more effective to just have a regular shot. The split screen diminishes powerful moments especially when of the halves is pedestrian.

At the press screening, you could see the divide: there were loads of exits before the film ended. And then there was applause. Go figure.

Of the critics, only Todd McCarthy really liked it. Everyone else was impressed but frustrated. It’s no easy sell. At a party last night one critic said, “It’s an English doctoral student’s take on Faulkner.”

The story is set in rural Mississippi in the late 1920s. Addie Bundren is dying, and then dies. She wants to be buried far away in Jefferson. Her children and husband, a not exactly brilliant bunch, must take her by wagon over a river and through the woods. Along the way a few things happen including the burning of a barn, a rape, and the revelation of a pregnancy. Also someone gets a new set of teeth.

Franco cast himself as the main child, named Darl, probably because it would help sell the movie. But he stands out like a sore thumb among the other players. Move star looks and clean white chompers– yes, this movie is about dentistry–make Darl seem like a documentary filmmaker who came to Yoknapatowpha County in search of a story.

And there are some problems with casting Tim Blake Nelson as Anse, the father of all but one of these adult children. Physically he looks nothing ike them, and he’s too young. Also, he spends most of the movie gaping, mouth wide open, toothless. His speech is largely unintelligible. I thought I’d need subtitles to understand him. Of course, this is how Anse is described, so what can you do ? But TBN is just too convincing.

What’s good about “As I Lay Dying”: Ahna O’Reilly, who is also in “Fruitvale Station” and is Franco’s ex girlfriend, lights up the screen. She’s aided by cinematographer Christina Voros, who applies a pale palette that brings a dusty flourish to the landscapes. Also the third act of this laconic screenplay suddenly jolts into action after a lot of meandering. It suggests there could be more to all this if it had been drafted one more time.

Some of the problems can be fixed. For the mother, Addie, to work, she needs a great narrator in voice over (I was thinking Melissa Leo) who could explain and comment on what’s happening, That would make the mother, played on screen briefly by veteran character actress Beth Grant, much more engaging and sympathetic.

In the end, as I said, this wasn’t easy. There’s a reason why no one tackles Faulkner like they make Jane Austen movies. And this movie can still be improved and tweaked and polished up to make it less grim and a little more accessible before it’s released by Millennium later this year.

Timberlake: “My Music Career Hangs Over Me Like a Cloud”

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Exclusive: Joel and Ethan Coen’s “Inside Llewyn Davis” got a 10 minute standing ovation last night in its Cannes premiere, the kind of reception that is real Cannes, and not the tepid deal for “The Great Gatsby” last Wednesday. Carey Mulligan, who stars in both movies, told me later (and not to put down Gatsby): “It’s thrilling to be watching a movie and feel that everyone loves it.” Indeed, the black tie audience was gaga for “Llewyn.”

The cast was all there, even John Goodman, who sort of arrived and hen vanished again. He and Garrett Hedlund have a hilarious extended cameo that actually could be spun off into another movie. Folk singer Llewyn winds up driving to Chicago with them. Goodman is a mysterious sort of white blues man who talks a blue streak.

Hedlund is Johnny Five, his “valet” who speaks almost no words.You couldn’t hope to meet a nicer celebrity couple than Justin Timberlake and Jessica Biel. They’re polite, well spoken, gracious and good looking. And smart. What else could you want?

They sort of stole the night in Cannes on Sunday at the premiere of the Coen brothers’ gem of a film, “Inside Llewyn Davis.” They’re also very well dressed: Justin in his tux, Jessica in an elegant Marchesa gown.

Justin plays Jim, a sort of clueless good guy folk singer who’s a pal of Llewyn (Oscar Isaac in his star making performance) and married to Jean (Carey Mulligan). It’s not the lead role but Justin is quite satisfied with his work and trajectory as an actor. He’s in his sweet-spot here, playing it light just the way he does in his guest appearances on “Saturday Night Live.” He actually has developed a devilish panache reminiscent of Bob Hope (also a devoted golfer).

“Llewyn Davis” is the first movie Timberlake has been in that’s featured him as a singer.

We talked about his career at the intimate gathering following the “Llewyn” black tie premiere. Timberlake is extremely thoughtful and very articulate on this subject. He said: “You know my music career hangsoer me like a cloud.” Interesting. Justin worries that he still isn’t taken seriously as an actor because of the music. He’s really devoted to the acting career. In fact, I’d say in a way that his whole “20/20 Experience” album and tour is an acting exercise. Justin is playing a part– of a Rat Pack like suave singer with a back up band. And that’s just fine since the album is a monster hit and the tour should be, too.

He told me of the whole “Suit and Tie” success: “It’s a tribute” to soul  music of the 70s with a Memphis feel. And while he’s mastered the R&B falsetto, it’s nice to hear him sing straightforwardly in “Llewyn Davis.” He, Oscar Isaac and Adam Driver perform a hilarious but seriously meant novelty song called “Please Mr. Kennedy” in the movie that should become a cult classic.

Coming up next for Justin, a movie role that could really break through for him: the late record exec Neil Bogart, whose Casablanca Records produced Donna Summer and KISS. Bogart was a mastermind who lived large in the 70s. Timberlake told me they’re about to choose a director, and he’s doing his research. This will entail a meeting with Gene Simmons–which, I hope, someone will film. That’s a movie in itself.

Paris Hilton Recording Second Album, Will DJ This Summer

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I don’t often run into Paris Hilton,but when I do there’s always something interesting going on. Around 1 am Monday, Paris and her entourage rolled into the lobby of the famed Hotel du Cap in Cap d’Antibes where a big spontaneous party had been raging for at least an hour and a half.

Among the randomly gathered guests were Justin Timberlake and Jessica Biel, Naomi Watts, Kristen Dunst and Garrett Hedlund, “Inside Llewyn Davis” director Joel Coen and star Oscar Isaac, supermodel Karolina Kurklova wtih husband Archie Drury, Robin Thicke and Paula Patton and so on. The bar was so jammed that the hotel’s front gate guards feared over crowing, we heard, and wouldn’t let in Casey Affleck.

Oscar was celebrating his arrival as a movie star and the birthday of his long time manager Jason Spire.

There were plenty more revelers, all drinking cocktails that averaged fifty bucks a pop. But it had had been a long day in Cannes, the first in a while with no rain or severe wind, just clear sunny skies and blue seas. Over in the beachfront of Cannes along the Croisette, the sidewalks and streets were packed solid in every direction.

And then there’s Paris, who’s been here essentially for the movie “The Bling Ring,” which was shot partially in her Beverly Hills home . The Sofia Coppola movie which Paris loves, recounts how teenagers burgled her for over $2 million in real jewelry. “It’s never been returned,” Paris told me.

But the big news: this nightfly who is really a successful businesswoman is recording her second album of music right now. It will be issued by CashMoney Records and will feature many hip hop acts such as Lil Wayne. Paris told me Afrojack is producing it, and she hopes to have it out this summer.

The album release will be preceded by Paris doing a residency playing records (digital tracks) this summer in Ibiza, Spain–which also happens to be the hometown of her eleven years younger male model boyfriend named River.

“This is a lot different than my first album,” Paris told me. “It’s really going to be house music.”

And her other businesses? “I’m getting ready to launch my 17th perfume,” she said. “And I’m also starting the Paris Hilton Foundation for children’s causes,” she said.

And how has she been? “I’m great,” she replied. “I just want to have the best life possible.”

And why not?

“World War Z” Will Get Month-Early Screening

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Exclusive: Marc Forster’s “World War Z,” which cost well over $200 million and stars Brad Pitt, doesn’t open until June 21st. But tonight in New York and Los Angeles there will be a couple of early tastemaker screenings. They’re designed to “test the water” with friends and celebrity fans of Forster and Pitt. These are hot hot tickets. The whole “WWZ” debacle is chronicled very nicely in the current Vanity Fair.

In Cannes, news of the screenings are making people look for Star Trek type tele-porters so we can beam back to the States for two hours. If anyone knows where they are located on the Cote d’Azur, please let me know.

 

Jennifer Lawrence. Hunger Games 2, Catching Fire in Cannes

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How do you follow up “The Hunger Games,” a movie that made — are you ready? — $408 million in the U.S. alone? LionsGate- Summit Pictures, which also gave us the “Twilight” series, pulled out most of the stops last night in Cannes. Even though part 2, called “Catching Fire,” doesn’t open until November, the studio wanted to make sure everyone knew a new adventure of Katniss and friends is coming.

The studio took over a beach club on the Croisette and completely redecorated it. This, despite torrential (how many times can I use the word? a lot) rains the likes of which are rare in this sunny beach resort. They supplied gorgeous models made up in “Hunger Games” outfits complete with multi colored cotton candy hair and streaks across their faces.

How do you get into this party, especially with that ever present rain? The invite came in a fancy white box with a padded interior and a Capitol logo embossed on the front. Open the box, the size of a hardcover book, and you find a silver rose pin with an invitation card that reads: “Capitol, in association with Lions Gate. President Snow requires your attendance to celebrate the 75th annual Hunger Games.”

To gain attendance, you wear the pin on your lapel. Clever.

I’ve never seen so many people in the film business follow instructions.

Inside the red velvet draped club, complete with chandeliers: Oscar winner Jennifer Lawrence, co-stars Liam Hemsworth and Sam Claflin, director Francis Lawrence. My pre-teen nieces will be disappointed learn Josh Hutcherson was off shooting a movie.

Harvey Weinstein, in full formal wear after the red carpet premiere of “Ain’t Them Bodies Saints” over at the Palais, managed to cut through the crowd quickly. He came to pay respect to his 23 year old 2013 Oscar winner for “Silver Linings Playbook.”

And there was Jennifer, radiant as always. We sat down on a bench and caught up. Success, I am happy to report, has not changed her. She’s like a breath of fresh air. She tells it like it is.

So where’s she been since the Oscars? “Filming the ABSCAM movie, American Hustle, with David O. Russell in Boston,” she said. “And tI have to get back to Toronto tomorrow to finish the new X Men movie. I have a two month break and then I go back to the third one of the Hunger Games.”

It’s not like she’s busy. I tell her I love it when she blurts out something honest about age or weight or Hollywood on talk shows or in interviews. She’s pretty real for the fakery of the movieland.

“That’s just me,” she says with a hearty laugh. And it’s not going to change, thank goodness.

After a week dealing with “Gatsby” and other mishegos, you can only be thrilled to see a young old pal.

 

Joel and Ethan Coen: First Real Cannes Hit with “Llewyn Davis”

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It took from Wednesday til tonight but we’ve finally seen the first great movie of Cannes. Joel and Ethan Coen’s Inside Llewyn Davis is just wonderful, a quirky massively likeable ode to folk music in Greenwich Village 1961. Oscar Isaac has a breakout role as the title character and may wind up with an Oscar (let the puns begin) nomination. Llewyn is the quintessential loser musician who’s so talented but will never catch a break himself. He’s so self involved he can’t get out of his own way and yet he’s incredibly sympathetic.

The supporting cast: Justin Timberlake and Carey Mulligan are his married pals, a folk duo named Jim and Jean. Mulligan is a no brainer–she’s good here as always. Timberlake is extremely endearing and funny in his limited role. John Goodman and Garrett Hedlund have extended cameos that may unintentionally send up On the Road–which Hedlund starred in last year.  Great to see Robin Bartlett, too, and Max Casella. There are als one or two scene stealing orange tabby cats.

The music–curated by T Bone Burnett– is perfect, mostly old folk songs reworked and played and sung by Isaac so sensationally people may forget he’s a serious actor and not a pop star.

In the end though it’s the Coens. they’ve been at this almost flawlessly for 30 years. Remember “Blood Simple”? What a ride it’s been. Their fans will rank this among their best, a little like A Serious Man, with elements of Barton Fink. But it’s also far more accessible. A few times tonight I checked my watch– not because I was getting fidgety but because I didn’t want Llewyn Davis to end. Expect big things when it’s released December 6th.

more to come….

Eric Burdon of The Animals Celebrates 50 Years with NY Show

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Say what you will about how great the Rolling Stones are or aren’t as they continue to roll on their 50 & Counting tour, but don’t forget they’re not alone among ancient British Invasion acts out there. Indeed, Eric Burdon, who performed this week at a special invite-only birthday celebration at the John Varvatos store in the former CBGB’s showed at least as much life as Mick and the lads–not to mention the ghosts of all the punk rock acts entombed in the Varvatos location that once was the historic club.

Burdon, who just turned 72, is back in full force following full recovery from the back surgery that sidelined him last year, holding back his acclaimed new album ‘Til Your River Runs Dry until January—coinciding with the 50th anniversary of Burdon’s own historic band The Animals. The album also returns Burdon to the ABKCO, home of both the early Stones and Animals catalogs; Burdon considers it one of his most personal albums ever, containing songs that reflect his unwaveringly progressive commitments politically, socially and especially environmentally.

His hour-long career overview set even had him wearing a gray peace sign on his black t-shirt to go with his usual color scheme (offset only by rainbow shades) His voice remains, in Varvatos’s own introductory words, “one of the greatest in the history of music.”

Burdon opened with his autobiographical late-edition Animals hit “When I Was Young,” which segued directly into the early Animals classic “Inside Looking Out.” It seamlessly flowed, after a one-second pause, into the new album’s impassioned lead track/first single “Water.” The song, Burdon says, came out of a conversation a few years ago with Mikhail Gorbachev, who has devoted himself to promoting water awareness; as Burdon has lived in the desert regions of Southern California since the 1970s, water conservation was already near and dear.

Eric Burdon & War’s warhorse “Spill The Wine” followed and showcased Burdon’s band made up of two guitarists, two keyboardists (one playing flute for “Spill The Wine”), two drummers and one bassist. He also performed the new album’s two Bo Diddley tributes: “Bo Diddley Special,” a “farewell song” he wrote to honor one of his blues/r&b idols, and Diddley’s own “Before You Accuse Me,” which closes the album. Another debt was paid to blues-boogie king John Lee Hooker via an acoustic slide guitar version of “Crawling King Snake,” a blues standard associated with Hooker, who gave The Animals songs including their cover hit “Boom Boom,” and Burdon a lasting memory—which he recounted—of wearing a “Hooker” t-shirt as a kid.

Burdon pulled out the stops on The Animals’ signature hit “House Of The Rising Sun” and also performed two other early Animals classics in “It’s My Life” and encore “I’m Crying”—for which he got the crowd moaning along. And while he notably neglected another Animals anthem in “We Gotta Get Out Of This Place” (characterized by Bruce Spingsteen as “every song I’ve ever written”), he did perform it Monday night when he sat in with the Letterman band, other highlights there including his rewrite of “Rising Sun” to honor fellow guest Mark Harmon, and “Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood” (not to mention Paul Shaffer’s use of “Sky Pilot” as intro for “The Top 10 Things You Don’t Want To Hear From The Person Sitting Next To You On A Plane”).

For the record, Burdon sounded way better than bland balladeer Luke Bryan, the official music guest (and 2013 Academy of Country Music Entertainer of the Year), and afterward marveled at seeing a Frank Lloyd Wright building in Mason City, Iowa, when he stayed over there while performing at the annual Buddy Holly tribute show in nearby Clear Lake in February.

Meanwhile, Burdon is finishing up a memoir, “Breathless,” for publication late this year. He was greeted backstage at Varvatos by The Dictators’ Handsome Dick Manitoba, wh kvelled over both Burdon and fellow attendee Lou Christie. Christie, who’s readying the next two episodes of his periodic oldies show on SiriusXM’s ‘60s On 6 channel, recalled headlining shows in the Deep South in the mid-‘60s with bands like The Animals and The Who (“I was wearing white pants and fringe before Daltrey!”).

Birthday boy Burden was only concerned that his show was too loud—which it wasn’t.