Tuesday, August 13, 2019

The Making of the Woodstock Documentary

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Moments after cameraman David Myers finished filming a couple having sex in the tall grass at the Woodstock festival in 1969, he happened upon a middle-aged sanitation worker cleaning out an overflowing toilet with a giant suction hose. Its hard to keep up, he says. Im glad to do it for these kids. My sons here, and I got one over in Vietnam too. Hes up in the DMZ right now flyin helicopters. As the Port-O-San man moves on to his next toilet, a tall hippie staggers out of a stall smoking a pipe, stares into the camera and says, Out of sight. Want some?

The Academy Award-winning Woodstock movie was reissued on DVD and Blu-ray 10 years ago to mark the 40th anniversary of the legendary festival. That new directors cut also included two hours of previously unreleased performances by the Grateful Dead, the Who, and Creedence Clearwater Revival. Director Michael Wadleigh, who led a 70-person crew, says the toilet scene is emblematic of whats great about the movie. One of the models we followed was The Canterbury Tales, he says. You have The Nude Bathers Tale, The Police Chiefs Tale. Youve got The Shit-Cleaners Tale. What a great goddamned metaphor, too.

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Related: Woodstock Documentary Will Head to Theaters for One Night Only

As much as performances by Sly and the Family Stone, the Who and Jimi Hendrix, its the nonmusical moments that make Woodstock the defining document of the counterculture at its zenith. Smiling nuns flash peace signs at the camera, policemen eat popsicles alongside hippies, and elderly townspeople band together to help feed the army of fans. And like every aspect of Woodstock, the documentarys very existence is a minor miracle.

Days before the Bethel, New York, festival, its producers, Michael Lang and Artie Kornfeld, inked a deal with Wadleigh who had spent much of 1968 trailing Nixon on the campaign trail. The director hastily assembled a team that included a young Martin Scorsese as assistant director. I think this was only the second or third time Marty had ever been out in the country, said sound and music supervisor L.A. Johnson, who worked for Neil Young for decades until he died in 2010. It was a struggle for him.

The short notice caused serious problems, from a shortage of film (eventually raw stock from around the country was flown in by helicopter) to getting the crew to the festival site, due to a 20-mile-long traffic jam on the New York State Thruway. But Wadleigh diligently organized his troops, stationing one crew in front of the stage while others roamed the grounds looking for interesting characters. I would come up to a group of kids, and they would be smoking a joint, recalls cameraman Hart Perry. They would pass it in my direction, and just to be friendly Id have a puff. Two hours later, I was crawling on my hands and knees.

Wadleigh and his small stage crew had a front-row seat to history, peering through a lens as key moments unfolded, from Richie Havens improvising Freedom all the way through to Hendrix closing the festival on Monday morning with the national anthem. By Sunday, I remember thinking to myself, This is just too much of a good thing,' says cameraman Richard Chew. Like, Im never going to listen to rock music again if I survive this. It was so overwhelming. The crew members had limited film, so they tried to figure out ahead of time which songs to shoot. Many of the performers were loaded with various substances, says Wadleigh. Theyd give us a rundown of their set, and wed dutifully write it down, and theyd wind up playing whatever the hell they felt like.

Scorsese, to the side of the stage, desperately worked to organize the crew through a primitive headphone system. Once the music started, I couldnt hear a thing, and I put my headset down, says Chew. Martys an excitable guy, and he just started screaming. I couldnt hear a word of it, and I think we kind of winged the whole shoot. Scorseses frustrations grew as the weekend went on. At one point, Marty tried to take a nap in a pup tent under the stage, says Perry. He knocked over the pole, and the whole thing collapsed. He had claustrophobia and was screaming for somebody to help him. But he wasnt Martin Scorsese yet, he was just some schmuck from Little Italy.

When the performances wrapped for the day, the crew slept under the stage or on the ground backstage. On the second night, a doctor gave everyone a B-12 shot. After the 15th or 20th shot, we realized this guy was using the same needle on everybody, said Johnson. I was like, Holy shit! Thats all we need right now.' Some of the crew can barely recall sleeping at all. We were really just going on adrenaline, says Perry. We were aware this was a major event. Never before had so many people come together in one spot. You never knew what was going to happen next. Was Bob Dylan going to appear? Was Jimi Hendrix really going to show up? Was the concert going to collapse? It was an unfolding story, and we didnt want to miss it.

Not every act wanted to be filmed. The Who initially refused: Pete Townshend kicked Wadleigh off the stage, so the cameras werent rolling when Abbie Hoffman grabbed the mike after Pinball Wizard and Townshend hit him with his guitar (shouting, Fuck off my fucking stage!). Later in the set, the crew began shooting surreptitiously, capturing a stunning version of See Me, Feel Me as the sun rose in the background. Neil Young also refused to be filmed during Crosby, Stills, Nash and Youngs legendary set. Woodstock was a bullshit gig, Young said later. Everybody was on this Hollywood trip with the fuckin cameras. I said, One of you fuckin guys comes near me and Im gonna fuckin hit you with my guitar.'

Related: The Triumph and Tragedy of Woodstocks Forgotten Album Producer

Amid all the chaos, no one asked the acts to sign releases. So Jerry Wexler who A&Rd the soundtrack album for Atlantic Records had to plead for signatures, one by one. Albert Grossman, who managed the Band and Janis Joplin, saw an opportunity to exploit the situation. He called all the other managers and said, We can really fuck them,' says former Warner Bros. executive Fred Weintraub. Lets get all of our acts together and threaten that if they dont sign with a large amount, we all walk.' (As a result, Joplin and the Band werent in the movie or on the soundtrack though Joplins footage is included in the directors cut. The Bands set remains unreleased. Hopefully well use the rest on the 50th anniversary, says Kurt Galvao, who edited the bonus disc.)

When the concert wrapped on Monday, Wadleigh and his crew had 70 miles of raw footage none of it synced to the sound, which was recorded separately. Wadleigh and editor Thelma Schoonmaker spent two months finding onstage cues that would allow them to sync the multiple cameras to the audio tracks.

A key decision made during editing was to mostly exclude hit songs. Every song was put in for its lyrical or thematic value, says Wadleigh. During Canned Heats Going Up the Country, youre looking at images of the Hog Farm and the whole back-to-the-land movement.

Wadleigh, who was consulted on the new edition, left the movie business in disgust after directing just one more film, in 1981. He currently lives in Wales, having spent his life working on environmental causes and living in Africa and Asia. He still vividly remembers walking through near-empty fields of mud and garbage after the festival ended. T.S. Eliots Waste Land was one of my favorite pieces of poetry, he says, and I was thinking about it at the time. I got out there and started filming that as if it were a war zone. And thats why you see people in casts on their arms and legs, and hobbling down in the dirt. I felt like the Sixties were ending, and we were going to head into more-depressed times, and that a lot of our ideals were not going to work out.

Monday, August 12, 2019

Denise Nickerson, Willy Wonka Actress, Dead at 62

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Denise Nickerson, best known for playing the snobby, gum-chomping Violet Beauregarde in the 1971 film Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory, has died following a series of medical issues. The actress family confirmed her death in a Facebook post, writing, Shes gone. Nickerson was 62.

Nickerson suffered a major medical emergency at home on Monday, followed by seizures and both pulmonary and respiratory distress. She was admitted to the intensive unit of a Colorado hospital, where doctors also discovered that she had aspirated and developed pneumonia. She previously endured a severe stroke in June 2018.

Born in New York City in 1957, Nickerson began her television career in the 1960s, debuting with a role in the adventure-drama series Flipper, and her breakout gig came in 1968 with a recurring spot on the Gothic soap opera Dark Shadows.

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She landed her most iconic part at age 13 in 1971s Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory, director Mel Stuarts film musical adaptation of the 1964 Roald Dahl novel, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. She stole scenes as the mean-spirited Beauregarde, one of several children antagonists promised a lifetime supply of chocolate from titular chocolatier Wonka, played by Gene Wilder. (She winds up with purple skin, swollen into a massive blueberry.)

Nickerson continued to work in television and film throughout the 1970s, including spots on The Brady Bunch, educational childrens series The Electric Company and Michael Ritchies satirical comedy-drama Smile. She retired from acting in 1978, later working in doctors offices and as a receptionist. Despite reports to the contrary, she never worked as a professional nurse: The career I would most closely say she held was an accountant, her family wrote on Facebook.

Nickerson is survived by her son and daughter-in-law,Joshua and Jasmine Nickerson, who created a Go Fund Me page to help pay her death expenses.

Rob Sheffield: Pennebaker, Monterey Pop and the Wow That Changed the World

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D.A. Pennebaker, the master documentary filmmaker who died Thursday at the age of 94, specialized in capturing rock & roll moments on film before they slipped away, from Bob Dylan in Dont Look Back to Depeche Mode in Depeche Mode 101. But if theres one scene that sums up his legendary career, its this perfect moment from Monterey Pop Mama Cass saying wow after seeing Janis Joplin sing Ball and Chain.

Its 1967, the Summer of Love, the Monterey Pop Festival. The flower children have gathered in the California sun to crown their new heroes: Jimi Hendrix, Otis Redding, The Who. Plus a hippie girl named Janis, who nobody ever heard of last week. She and her band, Big Brother and the Holding Company, realize its their make-or-break chance. In the crowd, you can spot Cass Elliott there she is at the 3:39 point in this clip, marveling at Janis for the first time, her jaw dropping in awe. The Mamas and the Papas singer is one of the most famous stars here, looking fab in her shades and turquoise jewelry, but shes blown away like everyone else, just another fan in a sea of faces. When Janis belts the big climax, at 5:25, Cass shakes her head and mouths the word Wow. A pause, then another wow.

This moment blew my mind when I saw it on TV as a little kid. It might be the first film footage of a female rock star admiring another one. Cass enthusiasm speaks as powerfully as Janis performance. Her open appreciation. Her sheer joy. Her generous-hearted kvelling. Her pure slack-jaw fandom. Shes headlining the festival with the Mamas and the Papas in just a few hours Mama Cass is supposed to be the prima donna here. But she isnt just welcoming Janis to the tribe. Shes also looking at the hippie singer and recognizing a piece of her own heart. You can tell they both feel seen (as the kids say) in a way they didnt an hour ago.

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Janis is nervous anyone can see it. She already did Big Mama Thorntons Ball and Chain yesterday, but it didnt get filmed, so the band stages a do-over for the cameras. She knows its a big deal and shes new to this rodeo. Just a couple of years ago, she was stuck in her high-school hellhole in Port Arthur, Texas, a girl made to feel ugly and dumb and despised by the whole town. Now here she is onstage, all eyes on her. She isnt making nice or acting pretty shes screaming it aint fair and telling the truth, her voice full of rage. (Honey it aint faaaair, baby it aint faaaaair, it aint fair what you doooo, no no no!) But when its over, she pushes the hair out of her eyes and hops off the stage, looking like a little kid. She knows she did right by the song. She knows she put herself out there into the world. The tiny girlish hop is just heartbreaking.

Janis couldnt see Cass wow, just as Cass couldnt see her hop. But the moments are deeply connected. Just a couple of private emotional gestures that would have been lost in time forever without Pennebaker. Just two women sharing a long-distance moment where they feel less alone. He had the eye to notice details like that, and the heart to get why they mattered.

Monterey Pop is the most beautiful of rock documentaries, just as Dont Look Back might be the meanest because Pennebaker makes it a love song to the emerging rock & roll audience. The performers blend in with the fans. Hey, look! Theres Brian Jones hanging out. Theres Micky Dolenz, grooving to Ravi Shankar in his dashiki. Theres Jimi Hendrix. Virtually all of these folks are very high, needless to say, but their enthusiasm is real. (Loads of people get this high without any of this communal spirit just fast-forward a couple of years to Gimme Shelter.)

There was plenty of drama behind the scenes. The San Francisco freaks clashed with the L.A. music-biz types; David Crosby clashed with everybody. The Grateful Dead refused to go on camera, man. Other artists complained that the movie made the Mamas and the Papas look too good, according to a Rolling Stone report awesomely headlined Monterey Film Bummer. The article claims that Otis Redding is very poorly filmed, proof that hot takes were already sizzling in 1968. But that spirit is there when Country Joe and the Fish play the psychedelic guitar instrumental Section 43, rousing the kids to greet the new dawn. This could be the scene Robert Plant pictures in Going to California when he sings Children of the sun begin to wake.

Pennebakers docs are full of intimacies like this. Bob Dylan and John Lennon wasted in the back of a limo, in Eat the Document, on his 1966 U.K. tour. David Bowie killing off Ziggy onstage at the end of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars. Bill Clinton cruising to the White House in The War Room. Depeche Modes Martin Gore and Dave Gahan playing pinball half-naked in 101, singing along with Roxy Musics Love Is The Drug.

Monterey Pop is full of faces you never forget. Jimis mischievous grin. Al Jackson Jr.s intense concentration behind the drums. The eye contact between Ravi Shankar and Alla Rakha. John Phillips insistence on wearing that doofy winter hat everywhere. The Croz purring groovy when they test the sound system. And the hippie who blows bubbles in her wrap-around shades during the opening San Francisco (Be Sure To Wear Flowers in Your Hair) sequence. So many dazed and anonymous faces flicker through this movie, all of them looking forward to a brighter tomorrow that (spoiler) didnt quite arrive the way anyone hoped.

But the radar love Mama Cass sends out to Janis is the loveliest moment. A wow that resonates through history. A wow that sums up the best and perpetually betrayed promises of both America and its music. A wow that lives on forever in rock & roll legend. And it exists because Pennebaker noticed it and caught hold of it. Thanks, D.A. and wow.

Trailers of the Week: Knives Out, Wu-Tang Biopic, Jumanji 2

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Whats going on trailer-wise this week? Weve got: a first look at an A-list Agatha-Christie-style whodunnit; a peek at the upcoming Wu-Tang Clan biopic series; a preview of an old rom-com favorite given a new twist or three; the trailer for the latest Jumanji romp; and an animated secret agent who looks and sounds a lot like Will Smith (at least until hes turned into a well, read below). Its your trailers-of-the-week round-up.

Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee
Because who doesnt love watching the Seinfeld star drive around in ludicrously expensive, often rare cars while talking shop with fellow funny folks and sipping a strong dark-roasted brew? After His Jerryness complains about how many other projects have borrowed his Netflix-appropriated talk shows premise methinks the millionaire doth protest too much we get peeks at the upcoming seasons guests, including Seth Rogen, Martin Short, Bridget Everett, Ricky Gervais, Matthew Broderick and [squeal of delight] Eddie Freakin Murphy. July 19th.

Four Weddings and a Funeral
Because there are only so many times you can watch the 1994 rom-com staple, no matter how much you love Hugh Grants adorable stammer. Lucky for you, Mindy Kaling has your back. She and co-creator Matt Warburton update/tweak the general story, set it in contemporary London and focus on four friends: Maya (Game of Thrones Nathalie Emmanuel), Craig (Brandon Mychal Smith), Ainsley (Rebecca Rittenhouse) and Duffy (John Paul Reynolds). Judging from the trailer, there will be a ton of sincere wedding and/or funeral toasts, many jokes about social awkwardness, at least one reference to the Richard Curtis original and what seems to be a nod to Curtiss Love Actually doorway signs scene as well. July 31st.

The Last Word: RZA on Wu-Tang's Legacy, Turning 50 and Why He Prays DailyHow Rian Johnson Turned 'The Last Jedi' Into a Personal 'Star Wars' Blockbuster

Jumanji: The Next Level
Because what, you thought there wouldnt be a sequel to Sonys insanely successful reboot of the jungle-board-game-run-amuck blockbuster? Part 2 more or less picks up where the 2017 franchise extension left off, with Alex Wolff repairing the computerized version of Jumanji, getting sucked back into the game and having his friends and his grandfather (Danny DeVito) go in after him. Dwayne Johnson, Kevin Hart, Jack Black and Karen Gillan return; Danny Glover and Awkwafina join in on the fun. If you like adventures and have ever wanted to hear the Rock talk like hes a squat, 74-year-old from Asbury Park, this is the movie for you. Dec. 25th.

Knives Out
Because who better to do a big ol-fashioned, celebrity-filled murder mystery than Rian Johnson? The Brick/Looper/Last Jedi filmmaker goes full Agatha Christie with this pomo-cinematic game of Clue, in which inspectors LaKeith Stanfield and Daniel Craig investigate the homicide of a wealthy patriarch (Christopher Plummer) in what appears to be an English country house. The suspects are [deep breath]: Chris Evans, Toni Collette, Michael Shannon, Jamie Lee Curtis, Don Johnson, Ana de Armas and Katherine Langford. Its a whodunnit with benefits! Nov. 27th.

The Righteous Gemstones
Because of course you miss Eastbound and Down and why wouldnt you watch a new HBO show from the exact same team about crooked evangelists? Danny McBride is the sideburned heir to his famous familys megachurch empire; Adam Devine is his brother; John Goodman is their pops/senior preacher-in-residence. Its hypocrisy, corruption and lies, Religion Inc. style! We cant wait. Aug. 18th.

Spies in Disguise
Because Will Smith has already played a genie this year and has another movie in which he literally fights a younger version of himself, so why not have him play an animated superspy as well? Meet Lance Sterling (Smith), the most dapper gent in the espionage business. And meet Walter Beckett (Spider-Man 3.0 himself, Tom Holland), the tech geek who accidentally turns the agent into a bright blue pigeon. You did not see that coming, did you? Shenanigans ensue. Please tell us this is not the closest well ever get to a black James Bond. Dec. 25th.

Wu-Tang: An American Saga
Because every superhero group deserves an origin story, folks. Hulus biopic series on the hip-hop collective born in Shaolin, made in America gives the Wu their own Bohemian Rap-sody. No, the actors playing RZA, Raekwon the Chef, Ghostface etc. look almost nothing like their real-life counterparts but hey, its not Casting Rules Everything Around Me now, it is? Sep. 4th.

Sunday, August 11, 2019

Top Gun: Maverick: Tom Cruise Soars in First Official Trailer

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Paramount released the first official trailer for Top Gun: Maverick, starring Tom Cruise, scheduled for release in theaters on June 26th, 2020. The trailer premiered as part of a surprise appearance by Cruise at San Diego Comic-Con, during Paramount/Skydances panel for the forthcomingTerminator: Dark Fate.

Thirty-four years ago, I made a movie in San Diego and shot across the street in a restaurant, Cruise told the crowd, according to Deadline. I was always asked, When are you going to do another one? Well, youve been very patient with me. I felt like it was my responsibility to really deliver for you.

Top Gun: Maverick also stars Miles Teller, Jennifer Connelly, Jon Hamm, Glen Powell, Lewis Pullman and Ed Harris. Jay Ellis ofInsecure will also appear in the film as a pilot trainee; he spoke toRolling Stone last year about appearing alongside Cruise.

The film is directed by Joseph Kosinski, who also directed the 2010Tron sequel, Tron: Legacy, as well as the Cruise-led Oblivion.Deadline reported that Cruise will appear on Conan OBriens Late Night on Thursday night to discuss the movie.

See Jay Ellis discuss his involvement in Top Gun in the video below:

Scarlett Johansson on Casting Controversies: I Should Be Allowed to Play Any Person

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UPDATE: Scarlett Johansson clarified that her controversial comments in an As If interview were edited for click bait. An interview that was recently published has been edited for click bait and is widely taken out of context. The question I was answering in my conversation with the contemporary artist, David Salle, was about the confrontation between political correctness and art, the actress said in a statement Sunday (via Variety). I personally feel that, in an ideal world, any actor should be able to play anybody and Art, in all forms, should be immune to political correctness. That is the point I was making, albeit didnt come across that way.

Scarlett Johansson Exits Trans Film Role After Backlash'Ghost in the Shell' Review: Anime Rehash Upgrades Software, Loses the Soul

Scarlett Johansson addressed her recent casting controversies in a new interview where the actress reflected on the current socially conscious trend permeating through Hollywood and questioned whether political correctness should inform casting decisions.

You know, as an actor I should be allowed to play any person, or any tree, or any animal because that is my job and the requirements of my job, Johansson told artist David Salle in an interview for As If.

Johanssons comments come after the actress faced a pair of casting controversies, first for her whitewashed leading role in the Ghost in the Shell adaptation and then for taking on the lead role in Rub & Tug, which told the real-life story of a mob boss who was born a woman but identified as a man; following outcry, Johansson ultimately dropped out of the latter film.

There are a lot of social lines being drawn now, and a lot of political correctness is being reflected in art, Johansson said in the As If interview.

I feel like its a trend in my business and it needs to happen for various social reasons, yet there are times it does get uncomfortable when it affects the art because I feel art should be free of restrictions.

Johanssons As If comments echo the defiant stance she took in her statement following her casting in Rub & Tug: Tell them that they can be directed to Jeffrey Tambor, Jared Leto and Felicity Huffmans reps for comment, Johansson said; Tambor, Leto and Huffman played transgender roles in Transparent,Dallas Buyers ClubandTransamerica, respectively.

However, following continued backlash, Johansson revealed in a statement to Out that, after further consideration, she would drop out of Rub & Tug. In light of recent ethical questions raised surrounding my casting as Dante Tex Gill, I have decided to respectfully withdraw my participation in the project, Johansson said in July 2018. Our cultural understanding of transgender people continues to advance, and Ive learned a lot from the community since making my first statement about my casting and realize it was insensitive.

Johansson added in the As If interview, I dont know if theres a trend in performance, but theres certainly trends in casting right now. Today theres a lot of emphasis and conversation about what acting is and who we want to see represent ourselves on screen. The question now is, what is acting anyway?

Saturday, August 10, 2019

See Jennifer Lopez, Cardi B Scam Bankers in Trailer for Hustlers

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STXfilms has dropped a trailer for Hustlers, a highly-anticipated film that sees Constance Wu and Jennifer Lopez playing strippers who swindle Wall Street bankers out of millions. Based on New York magazines 2015 article The Hustlers at Scores by Jessica Pressler, the movie follows a crew of savvy former strip club employees who band together to turn the tables on their Wall Street clients.

In the trailer, Lopez plays a hardened stripper who teaches Wus newbie her moves on the pole. Set to Cardi Bs track Money, the women decide to take advantage of a few of their clients, and apparently take things a little too far. The game is rigged, and it does not reward people who play by the rules, Lopezs character notes. We dont get more than a glimpse of Cardi B (in her debut feature role) or Lizzo, but still the trailer is promising.

The film, which also stars Julia Stiles, Keke Palmer and Riverdales Lili Reinhart, was written and directed by Lorene Scafaria. It hits theaters September 13th.

The film is an empathetic look at women and men, our gender roles, what were valued for, what weve been told is our value in every movie, TV show, every corner of culture, Scafaria told The Hollywood Reporter. Men have been told theyre worth the size of their bank accounts. Women have been told theyre worth the symmetry of their faces, their bodies, their beauty, and thats what this film is based on. The rules of the club are the rules of the world.