lauren bacall Tagged Articles at Cinematical
Real-Life Romances On The Big Screen
Filed under: Thrillers », Deals », Mystery & Suspense », Tom Cruise », Angelina Jolie », Brad Pitt », Lists », Nicole Kidman », Trailers and Clips »

It's not that strange for two people who work together to fall in love, but it does seem to happen an awful lot in Hollywood (although to be fair, most of us don't spend our days rolling around half-naked with our co-workers). So even though it might be easy to fall in love at work, it isn't as easy for a couple to stay in love once they're spending every waking moment together -- and the latest celebrity couple who will put my theory to the test is Anna Paquin and Stephen Moyer (better known as Sookie and Vampire Bill) from HBO's True Blood. The two fell in love (and got engaged) while working on the vampire soap, and now they're heading back to work together in the thriller, Open House.
According to IMDB, the story will center on a couple whose marriage is on the rocks, and are trying to offload their palatial home during a weekend 'open house'. But, things start to get a little weird when it turns out one of the potential buyers never left. The film was written by Paquin's brother Andrew (who will be making his directorial debut), and the cast will include Tricia Helfer (BSG), Rachel Blanchard (Spread), and Brian Geraghty (The Hurt Locker) in unspecified roles while the True Blood stars will play the married couple.
Moyer and Paquin aren't the first real-life couple who like to work together, and over the years plenty of Hollywood power couples have tried and failed to translate that relationship onto the big screen. After the jump: some other famous real-life couples on the big screen...
Lauren Bacall and Cinematic Lessons from Grandma
Filed under: Classics », Celebrities and Controversy », Fandom »
Twitter is a website rife with the technologically obsessed, the geeks, the hipsters, the has-beens, and everyone in between. But there are also some classic names who can provide a slice of history and perspective to our modern mumblings -- such as the lovely Lauren Bacall. Since joining in May, she has not only gotten snarky about the backlash against smoking, but offered some thoughts on our cinema-going public.Most recently, she discussed Twilight, which has sent the blogosphere buzzing. See, her granddaughter insisted that she watch the film, calling it the "greatest vampire film ever." Of course, Grandma Bacall had to set her straight. "After the 'film' was over, I wanted to smack her across her head with my shoe, but I do not want a book called Grannie Dearest written on me when I die, so instead I gave her a DVD of Murnau's 1922 masterpiece Nosferatu and told her, now that's a vampire film! And that goes for all of you! Watch Nosferatu instead!" Even earlier, she raved about the wonders of Nine, and Fellini's classic 8½, saying: "Almost forgot if you have not seen 8½ I suggest you do or else be condemned to hell."
Scenes We Love: The Big Sleep
Filed under: Classics », Noir », Mystery & Suspense », Scenes We Love »

Despite my fondness for a fellow in a sharp suit and fedora, it's the women characters that have me hooked. I'm not talking about the femme fatales who hook our private dick, and then triple cross him. I'm fascinated by the secretaries, taxi drivers, and witnesses that pepper these stories. They're always there in the nick of time, or possessing some vital bit of information that cracks the case. They're impeccably dressed, well-informed, hard drinking, and they never encounter Spade or Marlowe without trading a few sarcastic quips. The Big Sleep is particularly full of them. From the Sternwood sisters to the taxi cab driver, every single one has a sexy quip for Marlowe, and he eats it right up. My absolute favorite is the bookstore clerk, who knows her antique tomes, pays attention to creepy neighbors, and is more than willing to close shop, and get drunk with Marlowe. Femme fatales are a dime a dozen ... but geeky bookstore girls? She's a treasure.
Trailer for Paul Schrader's 'The Walker' Online
Filed under: Drama », Trailer Trash »
Writer and director Paul Schrader doesn't have too many screenplay credits under his belt, but most of the ones that do reside on the list are beyond impressive. The man is responsible for Taxi Driver, American Gigolo, Raging Bull, The Mosquito Coast and The Last Temptation of Christ. Then the 90's came, and he traveled around the ratings map for a bit, and heck, he is even responsible for bringing Touch to the big screen. (If you don't remember it, that might not be a bad thing.) Now, it looks like he might have re-discovered his earlier success with his upcoming film -- The Walker, a movie that Cinematical first posted about last year.The film stars Woody Harrelson as a gay, social escort to a number of Washington DC wives in the 50's. When one of his closer lady friends (Kristin Scott Thomas) finds herself on the edge of a scandal abyss, he helps by covering for her -- thereby turning the heat on himself, and forcing him to find the true culprit. Coming Soon now has linked to the film's website, which has a trailer for the film, as well as to YouTube, which is actually showing the first seven minutes of it. Between the trailer and the clip, it looks like Harrelson has successfully wiped away the granola and yoga to portray the "gay weather vane," as his character calls himself. All of the other performances look great as well, at least those by the main ladies -- Kristin Scott Thomas, Lily Tomlin and Lauren Bacall, as the trailer and clip focus on them. But we can't forget that Willem Dafoe (who we see only briefly in the trailer) and Ned Beatty also star, along with Mary Beth Hurt and 2006 Silver Bear winner and old Run Lola Run co-star Moritz Bleibtreu. The film is currently traveling through the festival circuit with some great reviews, and will head into limited release this December.
Is Bad Television Dragging Down the Standards of Movies?
Filed under: Classics », Berlin », Celebrities and Controversy », Cinematical Indie »
Screen legend Lauren Bacall has never been one to keep her opinions to herself. At a press conference in Berlin for her new film, The Walker with Woody Harrelson, about a high-class male escort, Bacall spoke about the negative impact that television has had on the movie business. Bacall was quoted as saying, "I think there are still people who really want to do good work. Unfortunately, in television, sometimes they want to do good work but a lot of the time they're doing terrible work - and I think that has affected moviemaking badly." Bacall never quite explained what that effect was, and as much as I hate to argue with a screen icon, personally I would disagree.
TV shows like 24, LOST, and The Sopranos have definitely raised the bar on what to expect from a television show. In some cases, critics think that TV might even surpass Hollywood fare. Whether Bacall is debating what makes a legend or standing up to the House of Un-American Activities, she isn't afraid to speak her mind. When you've managed to survive for over sixty years in the movie business, you have probably earned the right to. What do you think -- is the proliferation of bad television hurting the movies?
Guilty Pleasures: How to Marry a Millionaire
Filed under: Comedy », Guilty Pleasures »
I feel guilty every time I watch How to Marry a Millionaire ... and somehow I end up watching it once every couple of years. I worry I am betraying feminism by choosing to watch a movie with lines like, "Of course I want to get married. Who doesn't?" and "I know you better than you know yourself." The 1953 film follows three models who pool their money to rent a fancy apartment as part of their scheme to lure and catch rich husbands. It ought to be terribly distasteful, and indeed it is at times. By the end, I'm not particularly pleased for the women and their fates, but instead feel sorry for them. The scene in which they show off their modeling talents is almost degrading.Despite the Fifties sexism, How to Marry a Millionaire is a lot of fun to watch, primarily due to the cast. Lauren Bacall plays the smartest of the trio of golddiggers, setting her sights on millionaire oilman William Powell, who is always charming (and a welcome relief from the usual Texas oilman stereotypes). Her roommates are Betty Grable and a bespectacled Marilyn Monroe. Monroe is wooed by a suspicious "millionaire" with an eyepatch played by Alexander D'Arcy (the singing instructor in The Awful Truth), and Grable is stuck with Fred Clark, (stuffy Mr. Babcock in Auntie Mame). If you're a fan of The Simpsons, here's your chance to see Rory Calhoun in person, playing a forest ranger, and standing and walking just like the greyhound puppy that delights Mr. Burns.
For every annoying line that recalls sexual stereotyping of the era (including Monroe's butchering of a Dorothy Parker witticism), the film offers a delightful bit of dialogue or business: Bacall trying to convince Powell that she finds older men terribly attractive: "Look at that old fellow whatshisname in The African Queen!" (who happened to be married to Bacall at the time), Grable insisting that a band on the radio must be Harry James (Grable's ex-husband), and a dream sequence in which Bacall and Monroe are both fantasizing about millionaires ... but Grable is dreaming about food. The women's resourcefulness and clever schemes are admirable even in an awful cause. How to Marry a Millionaire was one of the first films shot in Cinemascope, and the wide aspect ratio is preserved on DVD. You can enjoy every guilt-inducing moment in gorgeous color and sound.
Humphrey Bogart Has Permanent Place in NYC
Filed under: Classics », Fandom », Newsstand »
Eventually every block in Manhattan should have an extra nickname in addition to its actual address. Enough famous things happen in the borough, I'm sure. One of these famous things was the growing up of Humphrey Bogart at 245 W. 103rd Street. Over the weekend, super-fan Gary Dennis, a video store owner who campaigned for the honoring of Bogie and Lauren Bacall, who was married to the actor until his death in 1957, joined other fans in the drizzling rain to declare that block of 103rd Street "Humphrey Bogart Place."
"I'm happy he is honored," Bacall said at the event, "of course, it's only brass on a wall." Only brass? Certainly Bacall has never taken delight in learning about the city's history via plaques, which I've gotten more into since reading Sarah Vowell's Assassination Vacation. Just the other day I learned that a building I pass sometimes in Brooklyn was the first multi-family home in the borough. Okay, so maybe most people don't care about that stuff, but everyone cares about movie trivia, right? With all the movies shot in New York, perhaps the city could put up more plaques and rename more streets to showcase where film shoots occurred. The most obvious I can think of is the corner of N. Moore and Varick, which should definitely be renamed Ghostbusters Place if it hasn't been already.
Woody Harrelson, American Gigolo for the 21st Century
Filed under: Drama », Casting », Newsstand »
It appears that Paul Schrader is more into American Gigolo now than most of us were 25 years ago, because
he's once again mining that territory for a film. And to the dismay of maybe only me, Richard
Gere (Every time I look him up on the IMDb, I giggle anew when I remember that his middle name is
"Tiffany." I'm a bad person.) will not be involved. The new film, which beings shooting this week in the UK,
is entitled The Walker, and centers on the writer/director's "vision of what his American Gigolo
protagonist would have become when he hit 50." This time the character, to be played by the
frighteningly-close-to-50 Woody
Harrelson, is an "escort of society ladies" in DC, whose gifts are, in Schrader's words, "more social
than sexual. He's this society walker who has his lady friends, and a boyfriend on the side." A boyfriend, eh? And
the plot thickens...Among Harrelson's clients will be the still-stunning Lauren Bacall; other cast members include Ned Beatty, Lily Tomlin, and English Patient pals Willem Dafoe and Kristen Scott Thomas.









