AlexanderPayne Tagged Articles at Cinematical
George Clooney in Talks for Alexander Payne's 'The Descendants'
Filed under: Comedy », Drama », Casting »
While he's one of the main men of superstardom, George Clooney also keeps one foot firmly in the world of quirk and strangeness. He may be Mr. Ocean, but he's also the dude who was in Return of the Killer Tomatoes and The Men Who Stare at Goats. Clooney knows how to be ridiculous, and now he's jumping into a whole new world of quirk.Variety reports that the actor is in talks to star in the new Alexander Payne dramedy The Descendants. His first feature since Sideways, the film got cooking back in August and follows a rich landowner and father who decides to grab his two hard-to-handle daughters and search for his wife's lover in an attempt to keep his family together -- while she's in a coma after a catamaran accident. ...I still can't fathom the logic behind this one.
This is definitely one of those it's about time! collaborations. Clooney has skirted around the world of Payne with the likes of David O. Russell and Grant Heslov, while Payne grabbed the likes of Matthew Broderick and Paul Giamatti. It's surprising that this didn't come sooner. While Payne's I want to be a little person story still sounds a touch more tantalizing, it's hard to resist the idea of George getting into the mind that brought us Election and Sideways. But the real magic will depend on who gets cast alongside him...
Alexander Payne's Flirtation with Dysfunction
Filed under: Comedy », Drama », Deals »
Okay, after all these years, maybe Alexander Payne is doing a little more than flirting with dysfunction.He's brought to life the manic world of Tracy Flick, teenage sexuality, and cheating spouses with Election, aging pains and hot tub sauciness with About Schmidt, and wine snobbery at its finest with Sideways. He's the man who finds strange books and make them a usually irresistible cinematic experience. He's even gearing up to shoot a film that focuses on people who want to become little people to have a happier retirement. But before that can happen, Payne is going to follow The Descendents, according to Variety.
Alexander Payne Downsizes to Giamatti, Witherspoon, and Cohen!
Filed under: Comedy », Casting », Scripts »
Some casting news is horrendous, some is good, and just sometimes there's news that seems too good to be true -- like Alexander Payne teaming up with his best stars and making a strangely wonderful-sounding film about downsizing -- not focusing on our rich lifestyles, but rather, our stature.Variety reports that Payne is finishing up a new script about little people called Downsizing, and he's gotten Paul Giamatti, Reese Witherspoon, and Sacha Baron Cohen to commit. What's this about? Look at the clues -- downsizing, statures, and little people. Oh yes -- Downsizing will focus on people who want to become little people. As the story goes, Giamatti and Witherspoon will play a married couple who don't have a lot of cash and figure they can lead a better retired life as little people. But then the Mrs. decides to pull out, leaving her regular-sized, and Giamatti little. Cohen slips into the mix as twins -- one is a tiny Spaniard, and the other is his normal-sized business partner (a role that might evolve as the script heads to completion).
I'll forgive the continuation of the male Hollywood fantasy (Giamatti and Witherspoon, really?), and focus on the fact that both actors excel in the world of Payne. Add to that the fact that this is NOT an animated film, but rather a movie that relies on special effects, and how can he go wrong? In a world where every fantastical story gets animated, I'm loving the idea of a live-action, special effects-laden Payne world, and just hoping Lily Tomlin gets a cameo.
Anyone else really loving this idea?
Cinematical's Friday Night Double Feature: Big Screens and Booze
Filed under: Comedy », Home Entertainment », Friday Night Double Feature »

This weekend I get to cat sit the two cutest bengals on earth, but the perks of this gig are much more than sitting around, indulging in cable television, and playing with the furry little beasts. It also means I have a huge selection of liquor, wine and beer at my disposal to cook with and imbibe. So, while my mind is scheming up what sort of exotic drink I will make tonight, it's also thinking of alcohol-laden movies.
For this double feature, I'm giving you two of my favorite movies that are completely intertwined with the love of alcohol. One is quirky, but fairly straight-laced, while the other is just insanity, but in the immensely fun sort of way. I give you: Alexander Payne's Sideways and Guy Maddin's The Saddest Music in the World. (If you're looking for even more choices, check out Christopher Campbell's Cinematical Seven from last December.)
Cinematical Seven: My Favorite Screenplays of the Decade
Filed under: Classics », Comedy », Drama », Romance », Scripts », Home Entertainment », Cinematical Seven », Remakes and Sequels »

Well, it's official. The Writers Guild of America is going on strike tomorrow. Here's hoping the strike ends quickly and that all parties come away happy. And writers? Use this time off to study my choices for the seven best screenplays of the 2000's:
The 40 Year Old Virgin by Judd Apatow & Steve Carell
The blending of improvisation and the written word gives Apatow's two classic comedies -- Knocked Up would be the other -- a feeling of authenticity that is all too rare in today's film world. Apatow takes the strategy of writing for specific performers and their strengths, and it really pays off. Scoff if you want at a sex comedy making the list, but for a movie to be this incredibly funny -- while keeping an oddly touching romance and a spot-on character study afloat -- the screenwriters deserve high praise.
About Schmidt by Alexander Payne & Jim Taylor
One of the saddest comedies ever made, and one of the most truthful and painful portraits of old age. Payne and Taylor specialize in scripts about people on the verge of cracking, depressed souls who tend to find the smallest redemption possible. Payne/Taylor characters never go from Point A to Point B over the course of the screenplay, they go from Point A to Point A.1. The small, gradual changes in their characters are reflective of the way actual humans (as opposed to movie humans) work. Warren Schmidt's personal growth is so minor that it is confined to the last thirty seconds of the film, but when it comes it's an emotional punch in the gut.
Script Changes Discussed for 'Chuck and Larry' and Alexander and Jim
Filed under: Comedy », Gay & Lesbian », Romance », New Releases », Scripts »
I really loved the early Adam Sandler comedies, but his comedic output has been pretty grim lately. I expected better things from I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry for two reasons: co-screenwriters Alexander Payne and Jim Taylor. Along with the involvement of Steve Buscemi (and I'll be honest, the Jessica Biel underwear shot in the trailer), seeing Payne and Taylor's names in the credits had me downright excited to see the film. They're two of my favorite screenwriters -- Citizen Ruth, Election, Sideways, the beautiful About Schmidt -- these dudes can write. They did an uncredited polish on one of my favorite comedies of this decade -- Meet the Parents -- and I had high hopes that they'd take the struggling Sandler formula into similar territory. I hoped they'd make Chuck and Larry darker, more interesting, more truthful. And apparently they did. You just won't see that version on the screen. Over at Hollywood Elsewhere, Jeffrey Wells discusses the Payne/Taylor draft of the film.
According to Wells, the Payne/Taylor version "is way more invested in realism -- recognizable human behavior, logical bits and plot turns, real-seeming textures. It's obviously a "comedy" but the tone is less slap-sticky, more naturalistic." Wells discusses a lot of differences between the Payne/Taylor script and what wound up in theaters (like a Sandler/James kiss that didn't make it to the final cut), and closes by writing "I've thought and thought about this, and I know a Payne-Taylor version would have gone over better than the one opening on Friday. I know it. Certainly with the critics and the genuinely serious comedy fans (i.e., the ones who own DVDs of Some Like It Hot and Tootsie and Flirting With Disaster)." I do often wonder how many Hollywood movies start out in script form as strong and original and different and weird, and wind up lifeless and unimaginative and boring and stale. I'd imagine a whole lot of crappy films started out great on the page. I hear all these horror stories from writers who had their visions massacred by studios and executives, stars and directors, and it makes me sad. I'll still see the film (hey, it's got to be better than Click, right?), but with lowered expectations. If you get Alexander Payne and Jim Taylor to work on your script, doesn't it make sense to listen to absolutely everything they have to say?
Ye Olde Trailer For The King Of California
Filed under: Comedy », Drama », Independent », Trailer Trash », Movie Marketing », Cinematical Indie »
Director Alexander Payne might only have three films under his belt, but you have to admit, Election, About Schmidt and Sideways were pretty impressive films. Payne was considered to be a great director that was going to revolutionize Hollywood comedies. The only problem was Payne hasn't exactly thrown himself into his work. His films have been few and far between, so we might have to settle for Payne producing a new film starring Michael Douglas and Evan Rachel Wood titled King of California.There hasn't been any sign of this movie yet in North America, but an international trailer has been released. King of California follows an estranged father and daughter who bond during a road trip in a misguided search for treasure. Douglas portrays a man who has just been released from a mental institution that comes to live with his grown daughter and gets her to agree to come with him on a search for Spanish gold hidden somewhere in California. The film looks to be in line with Payne's quirky sense of humor and Douglas looks like he might be gunning for the Oscar that eluded him for Wonder Boys. King of California was written and directed by Mike Cahill and Nu Image Films is planning on a 2007 release.
[via Ain't It Cool News]
A domestic partnership for Sandler and James
Filed under: Comedy », Casting », Universal », Newsstand »
For some reason, Universal has been working on
I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry, a movie about firemen who pretend to be gay in order to win domestic
partnership benefits, for years and years and years. (Actually, many states offer domestic partner benefits for
heterosexual couples, too, but I guess that's less funny.) The movie's been through an almost endless parade of writers
(Jon Favreau among them) and stars (Will Smith, Nicolas
Cage, James
Gandolfini, Vince Vaughn, and Wilson #2), but has never gotten out of the blocks. Now, however, the
studio has found its dream team, and the movie is a go: according to The Hollywood Reporter, Adam
Sandler and Kevin James will play the happy "couple."The Sandler-James edition of the script has been written by, of all people, the Sideways team of Jim Taylor and Alexander Payne, and currently slated to direct is David Dobkin of Wedding Crashers fame, all of which sounds pretty promising. Though there are a lot of people in that Nearly Starred list that I'd rather see in this movie than the two currently on board, it's hard to deny that the behind-the-scenes team that's in line for this installment is the best group so far. Of course, whether the movie will actually happen this time is something else entirely.
Oscar winners and hopefuls join Sundance juries
Filed under: Awards », Sundance »
Remember that whole pact the Sundance programmers
made to de-glitz this year's line-up? It looks like what the films might lack in terms of big-name headliners, the
juries will pick up the slack. Thomas Vinterberg, Lars Von Trier's founding partner in Dogme 95 and the director of
Dear Wendy, one of the most revilied films at last year's fest, will lead a World Cinema jury also including
chinese filmmaker Lu Chan, and Locarno Film Festival head Irene Bignardi. Alexander Payne, who won an Oscar last year
for writing Sideways, will sit at the center of this year's Documentary jury, flanked by fellow Oscar winner
Zana "Born into Brothels" Briski, editor/frequent Werner Herzog collaborator Joe
Bini, and producer Heather
Rae. The Dramatic Competition jury is equally noteworthy: Good Girl director Miguel
Arteta will join Terrence Howard, whose work in Hustle and Flow was last year's Sundance sensation and will
very likely earn the actor his first Oscar nomination, and Alan
Rudolph, the Robert Altman protege who has unfortunately not graced us with a picture since 2003's very good The
Secret Lives of Dentists. Less familiar names on the same list include cinematographer Nancy
Schreiber (whose most notable IMDB feature credit is Blair Witch 2) and Audrey
Wells, a screenwriter-for-hire and the director of Under the Tuscan Sun.Oh, to be in Sarajevo
Filed under: Foreign Language », Independent », Exhibition », Cinematical Indie »
When I think of European film festival locales, I might recall Cannes, Venice, Berlin ... but Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegovina has never crossed my mind, even though the Sarajevo Film Festival is in its 11th year. This year's festivities kicked off Friday. Director Alexander Payne (Sideways) is president of the jury for the short film award. Vanessa Redgrave, Emily Watson, and Daniel Craig are among the celebrities expected to attend.The film festival site explains that the festival started in 1995 when Sarajevo was at war as a way "to see the outside world and, in the same time, to make the world aware of their suffering and struggle in the besieged city." The first festival drew 15,000 moviegoers; last year's festival drew 100,000.
I hadn't heard of most of the films premiering at Sarajevo Film Festival either: the gala selections include Waiting for the Clouds (Bulutlari beklerken), filmed in Turkey, France, and Germany; and Hostage (Omiros), filmed in Greece and Turkey. Most of the competition films are from Croatia, Serbia, Hungary, or Bulgaria. The international "Panorama" selections do include films I know: Broken Flowers, 2046, and one from Austin: Kyle Henry's Room, which also screened at Cannes this year.
Schedules like this remind me of the reason why I particularly like attending film festivals: not to see big-name independent films before everyone else does (although that does hold a certain appeal), but to see wonderful movies that I might not otherwise have the opportunity to see. I've become particularly fond of short films recently, and outside of a film festival, when do you ever get to see those? I keep thinking about going to Toronto next year around this time, but perhaps southeastern Europe would be more rewarding.









