Harsh Reality of Film Distribution
Filed under: Action, Drama, MGM
It was about 15 months ago when I sat down at a Toronto Film Festival screening and enjoyed the hell out of David Ayer's Harsh Times. It's a stark, dark and (yes) harsh piece of 70's-style hard-boiled character study, and one that features two fantastic performances: one from Freddy Rodriguez and the other from the mega-chameleon known as Christian Bale. It's the story of a frantic Gulf War veteran who desperately wants to earn a career in law enforcement -- despite the fact that the guy's maybe three whiskers short of Postal Mode. Anyway, it's a damn good flick, so I kept my eye out to see when the thing would hit the cinemas already.(Harsh Times was obviously a labor of love for Ayer, who, after penning the screenplays for The Fast and the Furious, Dark Blue and Training Day (among others), decided it was time to re-finance his house and use the money to direct his first feature. And so he did.)
The New York Times just published a rather excellent article that details what went on after the upstart Bauer Martinez boys offered Mr. Ayer $4 million for his movie. Needless to say, bitterness and animosity bubble just beneath the surface: Ayer hasn't received his full paycheck, Martinez claims to have dropped $15 million on advertising, although that money most likely came from MGM. Oh yeah, apparently MGM will be doing the distributing for Bauer Martinez ... which is weird because Bauer Martinez was supposed to be, well, a distribution company.
Long story short: Harsh Times will (finally) hit about 800 screens come November 10th, although most of you movie fans will have to be content with catching it on DVD some time early next year. Bale's performance is pretty much a force of nature, but I doubt a flick this "low profile" will be yielding any Oscar nominations. And that's a shame, because Bale's long overdue for some award-time affection. Isn't he?
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
10-26-2006 @ 10:02PM
Erik Davis said...
While I totally agree with you as far as Bale's performance goes, I do not share the same thoughts regarding the actual movie. Sure, it has its moments, but the story was a bit all over the place, mainly that it started in the wrong place. I found FR's character to be rather annoying and his relationship with Longoria was not believable at all. Bale was great, but everything that surrounded him was rather jumpy and somewhat boring.
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10-27-2006 @ 3:17PM
Cath said...
Bale does what real actors do: he goes for the story and the character and not the statuette. This is why, for me, the Oscars and similar awards will remain a disappointment. The marketing necessary to receive a nomination is so prohibitive that only the films which don't need the promotion that an award can bring are the ones to receive them. And most Academy voters only see the mainstream fare despite their passes. One day Bale may inadvertently end up in such a film, but then again, he may not. In the event of the latter, he would be in stellar company.
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