Will "Pierre" be Lucky for Jason Reitman and Jim Carrey?
Filed under: Comedy, Casting, Celebrities and Controversy, Scripts, Distribution, Fox Atomic
It's a familiar tale: Hitch a falling star to a rising talent ... and see what happens. This week's iteration comes in the form of a Variety story that sees Juno director Jason Reitman teaming with Jim Carrey on a new comedy titled Pierre Pierre. The film -- budgeted at a fairly-modest $13 million -- is pitched as the tale of a "self-indulgent French nihilist who transports a stolen painting from Paris to London." In his heyday -- Ace Ventura, The Truman Show, Liar, Liar -- Carrey's salary alone would have exceeded the proposed budget of Pierre Pierre; however, as any viewer of The Majestic, The Number 23 or Fun with Dick and Jane can tell you, those bright days are far in the past. Pierre, Pierre is going to be released under the Fox Atomic specialty banner, and also features a script from first-time writers Edwin Cannistraci and Frederick Seton. I guess the question I'm pondering is which Jim Carrey will show up -- the tired, makeup-coated hack of Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas and Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events or the more interested, more invested Carrey of The Truman Show and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind? And does new talent Reitman have the skills, and vision, to coax the latter kind of performance out of an actor many consider a fading funnyman?









Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
3-06-2008 @ 1:50PM
Nathaniel said...
Way to cherry pick your movies there Rocchi. In between those movies you mention at the top are Bruce Almighty and Eternal Sunshine. As for your ponderance about which Carrey will show up, did you not notice that the "tired, makeup-coated hack" roles you first mention are, um, makeup-coated? I.e. they were kiddie movies? My guess is, unless this role somehow inexplicably calls for 8 hours of makeup and Jason Reitman has forsaken indie comedy for a payday (maybe his salary wasn't included in the minuscule $13 million budget), that this will probably veer closer to the latter examples. On the other hand, considering this movie's about a "self-indulgent French nihilist," I would say it's safe to assume Reitman won't be coaxing another Joel Barish or Truman Burbank out of Carrey.
All that aside, I'll say I'm nothing but excited to see what these two come up with.
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