Jumat, 28 Juni 2013

Peter McRobbie to Play Adrian Prussia in Inherent Vice

Welp, our Friday just got a little more interesting. Deadline is reporting that Paul Thomas Anderson's Inherent Vice (which has been shooting for nearly a month now) has added Peter McRobbie to its ever-growing cast of players. McRobbie, well-known for his work on Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, will take the character of Adrian Prussia. Unfortunately, we can't confirm the roles that have been assigned to Jena Malone and Sean Penn right now. As all these casting announcements have trickled down throughout the past couple months, though, Joaquin & Kevin J. O'Connor remain the only two actors who have worked with PTA before.

In other news, the strapping young lad pictured in these set photos has been revealed as first-timer Jordan Christian Hearn. He has been cast as Denis in the film.

We've updated our Inherent Vice timeline page to the extent possible at the moment, so clap your eyes onto that whenever you see fit.

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"The Master" is now available on Blu-ray and DVD

WATCH: William H. Macy Discusses Boogie Nights With Jason Reitman



Spare little Flashback Friday for you today, mostly because we have a casting announcement coming in a bit, but here's a cool little Q&A that writer/director Jason Reitman (Juno, Up in the Air) moderated with Bill "Snake at the Door" Macy at the New Beverly Cinema in Los Angeles in 2010 over the topic of his participation in Boogie Nights. Sound's not great, video's not great, and it gets cut off at the end, but it's still got some pretty good stuff! Watch away.

Stay tuned, as I mentioned, because we'll be making a casting announcement in the next little while.

annnnd

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"The Master" is now available on Blu-ray and DVD

Rabu, 26 Juni 2013

Happy Birthday, Paul!

Wherever you're going or whatever you're doing right now, take a moment and wish a warm happy birthday to our favorite dude, Mr. Paul Thomas Anderson, who has now spent three consecutive birthdays working, in one way or another, on motion pictures. It's kind of tempting to shake your head in disbelief that the man's spending his big day toiling away to bring us more beautiful images next year, but then again, for someone so famously intoxicated by the allure of cinema for so long now, it's probably secretly the ultimate birthday present.

Thank you for everything you've given us sir. We sincerely hope the day finds you well.

Have one on us.

Vines

Rabu, 19 Juni 2013

Sasha Pieterse Joins Inherent Vice

Good afternoon

Today, via upandcomers.net, we can confirm, as some of you have long suspected, that Pretty Little Liars star Sasha Pieterse has joined the cast of Inherent Vice. With this casting, as well as the news of Yvette Yates and Hong Chau climbing aboard, it's hard not to observe that the film is developing a small subcast of young rising stars amongst the more seasoned screen veterans and it has us thrilled as hell.

Though we can't yet confirm which role Miss Pieterse will be taking, what we can do is drop some more set photos after the jump and let you Inherent Vice aficionados speculate wildly.

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"The Master" is now available on Blu-ray and DVD


















Sabtu, 15 Juni 2013

First Look At Martin Short in Inherent Vice, More Set Photos Arrive

Hiya-

Short but great little burst of an update for you all today. As the production got underway in Pasadena yesterday, some very fun new photos were snapped showing Doc Sportello in different threads than the other set of photos that leaked recently, as well as (and perhaps more excitingly) a first peek at what Martin Short will look like in the film. Once again, if you feel the photos might spoil anything for you, we'll drop 'em after the jump for ya.

 Have a groovy weekend everybody!

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"The Master" is now available on Blu-ray and DVD












Jumat, 14 Juni 2013

FLASHBACK FRIDAY: SNL FANatic


Fanatic (2000) from Vix W on Vimeo.

Good morning, you lovely animals.

We have a very special edition of Flashback Friday lined up for you today. It is the notoriously elusive sketch that Paul wrote for Saturday Night Live back in 2000, known as "SNL FANatic". I'm not going to say anything other than this: it. is. fucking. beautiful.

Watch, watch, watch!

In other news, we've received word that Inherent Vice was shooting in Pomona yesterday and has moved onto Pasadena today. Sounds like we have another true PTA California movie on our hands, folks!

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"The Master" is now available on Blu-ray and DVD

Rabu, 12 Juni 2013

Casting News, Production Updates and More for 'Vice'

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Howdy howdy

Lots of odds and ends this afternoon, so let's get right to it.

First off, you'll notice a slate of fresh new names added to the Inherent Vice IMDb page. We caught wind a week or two ago that Jeannie Berlin, daughter of comedy legend/writer/director Elaine May, had possibly joined the cast as Aunt Reet but weren't able to verify until now. Alongside Aunt Reet, the characters of Luz and Jade have been filled by Yvette Yates and Hong Chau, respectively. They are two up-and-comers who, it would appear, are best known for their television work of late.

Another small but substantial tidbit we picked up from our man @TheInSneider recently is that Josh Brolin appears poised to nab the pivotal roll of Bigfoot for the film. We obviously can't wait to see what he (or any of these folks) will do with the material.

Moving right along: A cherry article from Variety this week has divulged some specifics about where the production stands right now, in addition to discussing the status of some other pending Warner pics. The good stuff: Inherent Vice is just completing its second week of principal photography and scheduled to wrap on August 2. The article notes several areas -- PTA's native San Fernando Valley, a storefront in Slauson Blvd (presumably the Dr. Tubeside set?), driving set-ups in Malibu and Canoga Blvd, and a warehouse in Chinatown -- as the first covered in the production, but our on-the-ground source says that the man himself was seen operating camera (!) in the Long Beach area as well. Others are sure to roll out in the coming days, weeks, blah blah blah.

Next up: there's a beautifully written article on the work of PTA by a gent named Jack Welch out of the University of Tulsa. Make sure to give that a read before kneeling at your Ghoulardi altar before bed tonight.

Finally (I think finally, anyway), an Inherent Vice wiki-bible of sorts has been unearthed from the interwebs and we have been assured that it is spoiler free. So if you want to know everything about the book without actually reading the book, give that a peek here (via xixax).

We're also planning on having a super fun Flashback Friday for you this week, so keep your eyes peeled for that.

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"The Master" is now available on Blu-ray and DVD

Jumat, 07 Juni 2013

FLASHBACK FRIDAY: Robert Elswit & Helen Ostenberg Elswit Talk Filmmaking at Principia College



Hi there

What we have for you today is a somewhat unconventional Flashback Friday in that it doesn't directly involve PTA, and it's only three years old. But make no mistake. This is a relentlessly wonderful 80-minute conversation with PTA's long-time, Academy Award-winning cinematographer Robert Elswit and his wife, Helen Ostenberg Elswit, who is a special effects supervisor in the industry. The Q&A took place in 2010 at Principia College, where Helen is a trustee and an alum. What transpires is a candid, charming, and extremely fascinating back-and-forth between two seasoned veterans of the industry. Enjoy!

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"The Master" is now available on Blu-ray and DVD

Rabu, 05 Juni 2013

Interview: PTA talks The Master in Port Magazine

Good evening -

We were passed along an interview this morning that PTA did with PORT Magazine (you probably know it best from this photo) over the course of his press circuit for The Master last year, and it just went online for the first time earlier today. It's got some good little nuggets, including reflections on Boogie Nights-era porno research, and growing up with Catholicism, as well as some really choice photographs. The issue was guest-edited by none other than Mr. Daniel Day-Lewis.





When she was about to give birth to Paul Thomas Anderson, his mother was driven to the hospital in a white Avanti sports car, a rare model that Studebaker made in 1964. Anderson�s father, Ernie, an actor who specialised in voiceovers for commercials and television shows, had purchased the car from Greer Garson, the stunning Academy Award-winning actress known for playing strong-willed women. �When you are nine months pregnant, it�s not the kind of car you want to be driven to the hospital in,� Anderson told me 42 years later, as we drove through the streets of Beverly Hills. �The Avanti does not have a smooth ride.�
This early confluence � a beautiful limited-edition fast-moving vehicle, an intriguing pedigree, a bumpy journey � would seem to have set the tone for Paul Thomas Anderson�s creative life, which has consistently been, by design, thrilling and complicated. �I still own the Avanti,� Anderson said, as he made an illegal and perfectly executed U-turn across Pico Boulevard. The satellite radio was tuned to �Hits of the 40s� and a crooner underscored Anderson�s driving. �That car and I have shared some important memories.�  
Anderson, who is tall and boyish, was wearing faded jeans and a matching work shirt. He perpetually has the sleepy look of the recently awakened, but his bedhead-ness is a disarming ruse: Anderson is, actually, a brilliant and sharp judge of human nature. He has an enduring fascination with lost souls � especially men � who attempt to find their way with the help of a determined mentor. The complex nature of those tangled relationships, which Anderson sets against defining periods of American history, provide the world of his six movies. They include Sydney in 1984, the story of a gambler and his hapless prot�g�; the now classic Boogie Nights in 1997, which was set in the world of 70s porn; and There Will Be Blood in 2007, in which Daniel Day-Lewis brilliantly portrayed a ruthless man searching for an oil fortune in turn-of-the-century California.  
In 2012, Anderson wrote and directed The Master, a film inspired by L Ron Hubbard and the evolution of Scientology. The Master, which was the most fascinating and controversial movie of 2012, has divided audiences, mostly due to Anderson�s stubborn unwillingness to create �likeable� characters and a happy ending. The film stars Joaquin Phoenix as Freddie Quell, an emotionally damaged WWII war veteran, and Philip Seymour Hoffman as Lancaster Dodd, the leader of a self-devised cult. It is both enticing and challenging: shot in 70mm, a dying form of lush cinematic glory, the movie asks an audience to identify with a rage-filled, deeply unhappy, alcohol addicted protagonist. Phoenix, who is mesmerising in the film, is twitchy and emaciated � his face locked in a kind of lopsided rictus that was, reportedly, inspired by a documentary he watched on the lives of apes. Hoffman, meanwhile, is charismatic and subtly diabolical � his cult leader may be making up his religion as he goes along, but he is seductive and captivating.  
If the extreme and mixed response to The Master bothered Anderson, he wasn�t letting on. In January, we met for lunch at an old-school restaurant called Factor�s on the outskirts of Beverly Hills, an hour from Anderson�s home in Tarzana where he lives with his longtime partner, the comedic actress Maya Rudolph, and their three young children. It was six days after the Academy Award nominations were announced and, although all his actors were nominated for Oscars, Anderson was overlooked. I was incensed about this � if you like the actors, you can�t ignore the person who invented the characters and directed them in the movie � but Anderson just shrugged off my cries of outrage. �The Master is not supposed to be a riddle,� he said, when I asked him if he intentionally made the film hard to embrace. �It�s not meant to be medicine. It�s not meant to be something that you have to work hard at deciphering. It�s a same old � same old story presented in a new way. It�s about Freddie and Dodd�s love for each other, what it means to be a master and a subject and vice versa. I don�t find it particularly difficult, but maybe it�s operator error.� Anderson paused and then smiled. �Meaning maybe it is my fault, but fuck it.� 
Thirteen years ago, when I first met Anderson, his response would have been much more extreme. At the time, in 1999, he was editingMagnolia, an equally daring film about intersecting lives, family and redemption at the end of the century. There were problems: Magnolia was over three hours long and Anderson was in a furor over the marketing campaign. Back then, I was in a deeply blue mood � my beloved dog was gravely ill � and for a week, I watched Anderson and his then-editor, Dylan Tichenor, cut a 10-minute scene of Jason Robards� character dying. Anderson would snap his fingers to establish the rhythm of how he wanted Robards� 22-page monologue to be crafted. It was fascinating to watch because Anderson had no emotional distance from the film �he had fused with his creation.  
Anderson seems to move on faster now, although he may not be dwelling on the complex reaction to The Master because he is in the midst of pre-production on his next movie. It�s an adaptation of Thomas Pynchon�s 2009 novel Inherent Vice that is set to begin filming in late spring. This is the first screenplay of a Pynchon novel that the author, who is known for his literary pyrotechnics and his mysterious, reclusive nature, has authorised. The book, which is set in the late 60s and early 70s, centres on a counterculture detective that, reportedly, will be played by Joaquin Phoenix, but Anderson would not discuss any aspect of his new project. �I have always loved his work,� Anderson said, not even willing to voice Pynchon�s name. When I peppered him with questions, he shook his head no, with a stubborn half-smile.  
PORT: Let�s discuss inspiration. Did you watch a lot of 70s porn before making Boogie Nights?  
Paul Thomas Anderson: I was kind of familiar with it, but I did watch a lot of 70s porn before Boogie Nights. Amanda by Night is a great movie. Veronica Hart, my personal favourite [porn actress], is in Amanda by Night and a little bit of Julianne Moore�s character was modelled on her. There�s a great young porno actress named Faye Reagan. She looks like Julianne�s character in Boogie Nights. 
P: The porno movies are now copying you! From the beginning of your career, you�ve always thoroughly researched your movies. Before you made Punch Drunk Love, which stars Adam Sandler, you went to work at Saturday Night Live to acquaint yourself with his world of comedy.  
PTA: Well, I wasn�t working at SNL because I didn�t get paid. I was curious about the show. I�d grown up around comedy writers and it sounded really appealing to be around a live comedy show. I wrote a sketch: [the comedic actress] Molly Shannon played Anna Nicole Smith and Ben Affleck, who was the guest host that week, was involved with her. I was there for two weeks and then I left. 
P: You were inspired by the novel Oil by Upton Sinclair when you wrote There Will Be Blood. The movie is literally about the financial ascent and spiritual decline of Daniel Plainview, a character loosely based on prospector turned tycoon Edward Doheny, but it is really about the corrupting power of success. Did you write the movie for Daniel Day-Lewis?  
PTA: Yes. If he had said no, I don�t think I would have made the movie.  
P: And you wrote Lancaster Dodd for Philip Seymour Hoffman?  
PTA: Yes. Phil and I started talking about the character at the end of work on There Will Be Blood in 2008. I started doing a lot of research into Scientology. I read a lot of Hubbard�s writing. He had a great imagination: there�s a book by him called Fear that�s good and one called Typewriter in the Sky. I like that title. I�ve never been to the Church of Scientology and I never heard from them. I think people may be disappointed that the film wasn�t an expos� of Scientology. I have an interest in cults � everything is a cult, in a way. What�s the difference between a cult and dropping my daughter off at school this morning? It�s a group of people gathered in one place pursuing a likeminded set of ideas and goals. If it becomes something like Charlie Manson, which is one man telling people to knock people off, then that�s something else. But is Scientology a cult? I don�t know. 
P: Do you have to like your characters?  
PTA: Yes. I think so. I love Freddie Quell. I love Master.  
P: You don�t call him by his name, Lancaster Dodd?  
PTA: No, I call him Master. That is his name.  
Anderson nearly always wins his battles for secrecy, autonomy and control. He has never suffered from self-doubt as a filmmaker � in fact, he has been certain of his career path since early childhood. When Anderson was only seven, growing up in Studio City, a suburb in the San Fernando Valley section of Los Angeles, he wrote in a notebook: �My name is Paul Anderson. I want to be a writer, producer director, special effects man. I know how to do everything and I know everything. Please hire me.�  
�I made my first movie when I was eight,� Anderson said now, after ordering eggs Florentine, a side of sliced tomatoes and coffee. �I was the second to last of nine kids and I was closest to the two sisters younger than me. I was closest to them because I could talk them into doing crazy shit. I would tell my sister to jump off a building so I could film it. I�d say, �Go ride your bike into that pile of knives � it�ll be great in my movie.��  
�My first film involved a Charlie McCarthy doll that was primed for something scary. I shot my brother watching TV late on a Friday night and my parents were not home. In my movie, the doll comes and eats his face while he�s watching TV. What I didn�t realise is that on the TV was a porn film. When I showed my movie to my parents, you can hear this massive fucking going on in the background. Lesson learned.�  
I asked Anderson what was the first film he remembered seeing? �Rocky,� he replied. �With Sylvester Stallone. That was a really big deal to me. I told my mom, �I want to be a boxer.� She said, �No, no, no � you want to be a writer � Rocky also wrote the movie!� I went out running a couple of mornings to be like Rocky and I thought, �Fuck this � I�ll take my mom�s advice and write.��  
In high school, Anderson made a short film called Dirk Diggler, about a porn star with a 13-inch penis. That became the basis for his second film, Boogie Nights, which instantly established Anderson�s reputation as one of the best filmmakers of his generation alongside Quentin Tarantino and David O Russell. In the movie�s famous set piece of a drug deal going wrong, fire crackers explode, the song Jessie�s Girlblares and Anderson focuses the camera on the blank face of his porn star hero, played by Mark Wahlberg. For a seemingly endless 45 seconds, the camera stays still. It was a bold decision: Wahlberg�s expression � emptiness, loss, confusion, sadness � is the perfect metaphor for the movie: it may be upsetting but you can�t look away.  
One of the recurring themes of Anderson�s work is the power of forgiveness. His characters make enormous errors in judgment, cheat, fall apart, betray � even kill � and Anderson always accepts and understands. He seems to delight in the frailties of human nature, especially a particular strain of Americanism: the wish for riches and fame mixed with the quest for a sense of belonging. When I told Anderson I thought his movies were about America, he blanched. �Don�t say that!� he said, looking disgusted. �Don�t put those words in my mouth. It�s nauseating to even think about it that way.�  
But he didn�t complain when I suggested that his Catholic upbringing might have contributed to his deep sense of forgiveness. �Talk about a cult,� I said. �Catholicism holds on to you.� �It does,� Anderson replied. �I haven�t gone to church since I was 16 years old but it doesn�t matter. Even then, I would lie in confession. I would never say what I really did. I would be too embarrassed. And that�s a sin. I knew the priests behind that flimsy little curtain knew who I was and, deep down, I did not feel like I could trust them.� Anderson smiled. �What good is a Master if, at a certain point, they aren�t teaching you to not have a Master?� Anderson paused. �Then again, there are always going to be those Masters that lurk around the edges of your life. In my case, it�s my kids. They are pretty hard to resist.� 
Anderson has other Masters who loom large: the filmmakers that came before and constantly linger in his mind. The television set in his kitchen is always turned on, with the dial permanently set on TCM, which plays uncut, commercial-free classic movies 24 hours a day. �TCM soothes me at night and it�s the first or second thing I want to see when I wake up in the morning. There�s never a time that I�m unhappy when it�s on.�  
One of the key inspirations for The Master was a rarely seen John Huston documentary called Let There Be Light. Huston�s film, The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, is Anderson�s favourite movie and, when he was writing There Will Be Blood, he would put Sierra Madre on before he went to bed so he could fall asleep to it. �All of life�s questions and answers are in The Treasure of the Sierra Madre,� Anderson once told me. �It�s about greed and ambition and paranoia and looking at the worst parts of yourself.� Similarly, Let There Be Light exposes people�s vulnerabilities and mental instability with the story of soldiers returning home after WWII. �Huston wanted to show that the soldiers weren�t crazy,� Anderson said. �But, really, they�d gone through a helluva lot and they were fucking crazy! It�s a 58-minute film. For 54 minutes Huston shows you what war has done to these guys. In the last four minutes, he tries to end on an upbeat note and shows them singing a song. The US War Department said, �We are not showing this film to anybody.� If potential employers see this movie, no one is going to hire any soldiers: they seem insane.�  
This story seems to delight Anderson. It offers a strange kind of validation to The Master: the Huston film provided a model for the character of Freddie Quell, who is a distraught war veteran. However, it would also seem to be a cautionary tale of what can occur when a film is too honest � much like The Master, Huston�s documentary was deemed too difficult for an audience to applaud. That reality does not bother Anderson. �The film has to tell truth,� he said flatly. �That�s my job.�  

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"The Master" is now available on Blu-ray and DVD

Selasa, 04 Juni 2013

Set Photos From Inherent Vice Emerge; Maya Rudolph Signs On



After weeks of letting your imagination run wild about what the production of Inherent Vice would actually look like, we are pleased to finally be able to offer you something tangible: set photos showing, for the very first time, Joaquin Phoenix, in full character and costume as Larry 'Doc' Sportello, and (perhaps a bit surprisingly) PTA's long-time partner and SNL-alum Maya Rudolph also in full character and costume. Though which role she'll take has not been confirmed, this marks the first on-screen collaboration for the couple. In case you don't want these images spoiled for ya, we'll include them after the jump (though they are pretty slight.)

In other news, Ohio will finally be getting The Master in 70mm for the first time this coming weekend at the Wexner Center for the Arts. Any buckeyes who have somehow managed to resist crossing state lines to experience the film in its intended format can find out more about that here.

UPDATE: Rudolph will be playing the role of Petunia Leeway, a nurse working for a doctor who administers B12 shots. Also, we've added several new pics of Joaquin from the set. Might be best to just keep reverting back to this page for now to see if anything else makes its way out there. We'll change things around accordingly.






















(Over Joaquin's right shoulder in the first pic of him smoking is DP Robert Elswit, lending further tangibility to the whole thing.)

Stay tuned to Twitter and Facebook for the latest news and updates.
"The Master" is now available on Blu-ray and DVD.