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Posts with tag Mike Binder

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Continue reading Now Playing at Cinematical Indie: The Ten, a John Sayles Primer, and the Film World Mourns Bergman and Antonioni

Interview: Writer-Director Mike Binder, 'The Search for John Gissing'



Most of the time when you interview a director, you're talking with them about their latest film; interviewing Mike Binder about The Search for John Gissing, a comedy about corporate backstabbing as an American executive (Binder) arrives with his reluctant wife (Janeane Garofalo) in London to smooth over a multinational merger with soon-to-be-outcast fellow executive John Gissing (Alan Rickman) sabotaging his every move, is a different story. It's not a recent film -- it was shot in early 2001, before Binder released The Upside of Anger or Reign Over Me -- but it's just coming to DVD now; the other thing is that The Search for John Gissing is, in fact, Binder's movie -- he's releasing it himself, selling it via the website www.thefreebird.com, and doing so without any studio involvement. Binder spoke with Cinematical about making The Search for John Gissing, working with star Alan Rickman, The Search for John Gissing's long road to release and his dream of what he calls "a big-ass pipeline" that gets his movies directly into the hands of fans.

Cinematical: The Search for John Gissing has taken a little while to get out there; let's talk about that gap between the making of the film and it being available.

Mike Binder: Well, it's a long story, but what happened was: I made the movie, and I cobbled together the money – I put up a lot of my own money, and some family and friends money, and I really just made it on the cheap. And we started playing it, and we got in a lot of festivals, and it played really well to audiences – but the only deals we could get were from people who wanted to own it. Forever. For doing nothing. And I also started, it was the type of thing where I felt, 'Boy, if I could go back in there for two more weeks, I could really open this up a little, do a little more work to it." So I thought I was going to do that, and I did some re-writing, and I was going to do two more weeks of shooting., and then I started doing The Mind of the Married Man; and then I started planning to the other two weeks of shooting, and I got the second series of The Mind of the Married Man, so I didn't do it then ... And then I went into The Upside of Anger, and it became too long, you know? And I owned it, and had lost all this money on it ... and I ultimately sat down one day and re-wrote the whole script. And I called it The Multinationals and really started over, and I thought "Okay, I want to do this without me and without Janeane (Garofalo) and maybe still with Rickman; I want to re-cast it and start over." And when I went back to the people who wanted to buy it, they wanted the rights, to do that, and I couldn't give those rights away. ...

Cinematical: Couldn't or wouldn't?

Continue reading Interview: Writer-Director Mike Binder, 'The Search for John Gissing'

Mike Binder Tapped To Write Julia Roberts 'Knitting' Movie

For a guy who's usually at his best when he writes about male relationships, The Friday Night Knitting Club was probably the last project I expected Mike Binder to be involved in. According to The Hollywood Reporter, the Reign Over Me director has been hired to adapt Kate Jacobs' popular novel for the big screen, with Julia Roberts attached to produce and star. Knitting Club is similar in nature to Binder's The Upside of Anger -- both feature single moms who find themselves in a situation where they are forced to juggle several responsibilities at once; in this case, it's running a knitting store while raising a teenage daughter.

Currently, no director is attached, though I imagine Binder would be up for the part if he turns in a dynamite script. One of the reasons why I think Binder was hired for the job, and might also snag the helming gig, is because the film (and book) is set in New York City -- where, lately, these little knitting shops are all the rage. There aren't many writer-directors who truly know how to capture a city; to use its tenacious beauty as a character within the film. Woody Allen and Martin Scorsese are the NYC masters (though both men have recently expanded their repertoires by setting their films in other cities across the globe). While Binder isn't quite at that level, Reign Over Me showed he's more than capable of providing an enjoyable NYC-based film. I've always been a Binder fan (that first season of Mind of a Married Man was freaking hilarious), and would totally support his directing Knitting Club. Here's hoping he knows how to knit -- most of the guys I know are clueless when it comes to that stuff.

Review: Reign Over Me




I took a class in graduate school devoted to melodrama in film. I'm not sure what that says about higher education or my own education, but it enabled me to label Reign Over Me concisely as male melodrama, a type of dramatic movie we don't see very often since many people equate "melodrama" with "women's film." Many people also wrongly equate melodrama with hackneyed filmmaking that manipulates an audience to wring tears out of them (thus the term "tearjerker"). The stories are often overwrought and unbelievable, but the point is the effect of the film as a whole. For the most part, Reign Over Me succeeds on a melodramatic level, offering an emotional ride without excess artificiality.

Reign Over Me is about two men approaching middle age with varying degrees of problems, who discover the joys of friendship (platonic) with one another. Alan (Don Cheadle) is a successful dentist whose troubles all seem to stem from females: his wife wants too much of his time in pursuit of dull hobbies, his female clients practically stalk him, and the woman he turns to for help and free therapy rebuffs him. He accidentally runs into his old college roommate, Charlie (Adam Sandler), who's changed a lot in the past half-decade. Charlie lost his wife and daughters on Sept. 11, and his persistence in locking away any memories of his life with them has made him eccentric at best and psychotic at worst. Still, he's able to help Alan by doing Guy Stuff with him: riding a scooter around New York, playing video games, making music together, going to a Mel Brooks marathon. Alan wants to help Charlie confront his past and return to some semblance of a normal life, but Charlie thwarts him at every turn.

Continue reading Review: Reign Over Me

SXSW Review: Reign Over Me




Something unusual happens watching Reign Over Me, the new post-9/11 drama from writer-director Mike Binder (The Upside of Anger); the longer you have to actually think about it, the more diminished it becomes in your view. There's no denying that Reign Over Me is well-intentioned and well-acted, thanks to lead performances from Adam Sandler and Don Cheadle; at the same time, Reign Over Me feels a little off, with more than a few holes in it that become apparent viewed from a distance.

New York Dentist Alan Johnson (Cheadle) has it all -- great wife, great family, successful career. Having it all is, in fact, driving him a little nuts; where's the room for him to be him? One night, by chance, he sees his old college roommate Charlie Fineman (Sandler) on the street; Alan and Charlie fell out of touch a bit after school, and Charlie's been off the map completely since his wife and three children were killed on one of the planes that crashed into the World Trade Center on 9/11. Charlie is a mess -- tic-ridden, hunched into his headphones, blotchy and haggard -- but after a few more chance meetings, he and Alan do connect, over video games, all-night jam sessions, Mel Brooks movie marathons. Alan's retreating to juvenilia because adult life is crushing him; Charlie is mired in it because it's all he has left.

Much as P.T. Anderson did in Punch-Drunk Love, Binder takes Sandler's two most prominent comedic assets -- mumble-mouthed child-like meanderings and unglued, irrational rage -- and turns them into dramatic ones. Cheadle is, as ever, rock-solid; Alan's not irresponsible, and he's not a bad husband, but he thinks he could use a break, and Cheadle gets to not only deliver a few sterling laugh lines but also do some subtler, more affecting acting.

Continue reading SXSW Review: Reign Over Me

Sandler Goes Kooky for New Non-Comedy

OK, I know I should take this seriously. We're about to discuss a serious movie that deals with the aftermath of 9/11, the loss of a family, and one man's descent into madness. We also know that Reign Over Me comes from Mike Binder, the fine filmmaker behind The Upside of Anger, Indian Summer and, well um, ok, Blankman. But having said all that, I still have to admit that this new trailer kinda made me chortle ... and Reign Over Me is not a comedy.

Based on the trailer, it seems that Don Cheadle is a successful professional whose life is thrown into disarray when he crosses paths with his old college roommate (Adam Sandler), a mildly wacko loner whose family was killed in the World Trade Center. The film looks to be very somber, very sincere and very sober.

So why does the idea of Adam Sandler going "wide-eyed kooky" make me want to chuckle? And not in a Happy Gilmore sort of way, but in an I Am Sam sort of way. Obviously it's not cool to judge a movie solely by its marketing clips, but this trailer gave me a case of the guilty giggles. Hate to say it, but Sandler's funnier by accident these days than he is on purpose.

Still, Binder deserves a benefit of the doubt after the rather solid Upside, so please feel free to dismiss my disdain at your convenience. Unless you agree with me. ...

Quickhits: Hurt, Harden Head Into the Wild, Rhames, DMX Snag Roles and Sandler Talks Empty City

Odds and ends from Thursday:

  • Seems everyone wants in on Sean Penn's first feature-film directorial effort since 2001's The Pledge. Oscar winners William Hurt and Marcia Gay Harden have signed on to play husband and wife in Into the Wild. The pair will join Emile Hirsch, Vince Vaughn and Catherine Keener in the film, which is based on Jon Krakaurer's non-fiction book about a guy (Hirsch) who hitchhikes to Alaska to live in the wild, only to wind up passing away four months later.
  • In an interesting sort of shuffle, Ving Rhames will replace DMX as the lead in Marble City, a film which will mark stunt man Jim Vickers' directorial debut. Rhames will play an recently paroled ex-con hell-bent on settling scores and kicking ass. With DMX off the project, it opened him up to join Lou Diamond Phillips (Ya know, the guy from La Bamba?) in Death Toll. Story will revolve around gang warfare in New Orleans.
  • Speaking for the first time about his role in Mike Binder's upcoming 9/11 drama Empty City, Adam Sandler admitted it's a pretty "heavy-duty movie." In a role that's completely opposite his usual comedic shtick, Sandler will play a man who lost his family in the 9/11 attacks. After going five years without talking to anyone, he runs into his old college roommate (Don Cheadle) who helps re-connect Sandler with the world around him. Also starring in the pic will be Jada Pinkett Smith and Liv Tyler. Personally, I think Binder is a fantastic writer who really knows how to tap into true human emotion. Definitely cannot wait for this one.

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