Tag Archive for 'Hunter S Thompson'

News Hound | Nigella Lawson inspires Tim Burton and Bruce Willis wants to Die Hard a fifth time

paw-print.jpgTim Burton says that his inspiration for the White Queen in Alice in Wonderland comes from UK’s very own Nigella Lawson.

paw-print.jpgGiovanni Ribisi has only great things to say about co-star Johnny Depp after working with him on the Hunter S Thompson adaptation The Rum Diary.

Johnny Depp

paw-print.jpgMatt Damon might be playing Robert F Kennedy in a movie based on the Evan Thomas biography His Life. It all depends on if the star likes the script that is being written by Steven Knight (Eastern Promises, Dirty Pretty Things).

Matt Damon

paw-print.jpgBruce Willis expects to start shooting Die Hard 5 in 2011 and would like Underworld director Len Wiseman to take on the project. News Hound’s suggested sequel title? Die Hard: Once and For All.

A trip down memory lane (before Brucie went bald):

The Best view - Swing Vote

Swing Vote - Kevin Costner & Madeline Carroll

With the American presidential race getting scarier by the day, surely only the savage iconoclasm of Hunter S Thompson could do justice to the election’s madness and mendacity. Just imagine the ferocious spleen the author of Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail ’72 (his account of that year’s Nixon-McGovern contest) would have unleashed on god-fearing, moose-hunting, hockey mom Sarah Palin, aka “Caribou Barbie”.

In the absence of the great Gonzo journalist, who you will recall blew his brains out with a .44 calibre pistol in 2005, it appears we will have to make do with Swing Vote, a good-natured and mildly satirical comedy from little known writer-director Joshua Michael Stern, maker of 2005’s Neverwas (Neverwhat?).

Stern’s movie stars Kevin Costner as a loveable loser named Bud Johnson, a boozy slacker who lives with his precocious 12-year-old daughter Molly (played by the equally precocious Madeline Carroll) in a battered trailer in the town of Texico, New Mexico (which sounds made up but does in fact exist). Bud has promised the civic-minded Molly that he will vote in the upcoming presidential election but passes out drunk in his truck instead.

Swing Vote

A series of contrivances then unfold, with the outcome that the entire election hinges on Bud’s un-cast vote. As a result, the media descends on Bud’s home, and so do Republican incumbent Andrew Boone (Kelsey Grammer) and Democrat challenger Donald Greenleaf (Dennis Hopper). In the days that follow, as swarms of reporters hustle for a scoop, Boone and Greenleaf, and their slippery campaign managers (Stanley Tucci and Nathan Lane), bend themselves out of shape in an effort to sway Bud’s decision.

A series of hilarious spoof campaign ads show the consequences. Bud babbles a half-baked thought; the politicians pounce on it; and end up flip-flopping their most deeply held values. So Republican Boone comes out in favour of gay marriage and ecological preservation, while liberal Democrat Greenleaf starts making anti-abortion and anti-immigration pronouncements.

In the end, though, the movie is too frightened of alienating half its audience to take sides; so cautious about offending either the Red states or the Blue states that it sits on the fence. (Can a political satire be apolitical?) A bruising scene involving Mare Winningham as Molly’s estranged mother hints at the true desperation of America’s “working poor”, as Molly accurately describes Bud, but overall the movie prefers to aim for a mood of Capraesque uplift. Ultimately, Swing Vote, like Costner’s protagonist, is too benign to go for the jugular and settles instead for tickling us gently in the ribs.

52nd Times BFI London Film Festival - first look at this year’s lineup

I’ve just returned hotfoot from the press launch of this year’s Times BFI London Film Festival, clutching a copy of the hefty programme. It’s over a hundred pages, so it will take me a while to get to grips with the 15 world premieres, 20 European premieres and 119 UK premieres that are going to be showcased in cinemas across London from 15th – 30th October. In the meantime, here are some of the films that caught my eye during the 30-minute clip reel introduced by festival director Sandra Hebron at the Odeon West End this morning.

Frost/Nixon
Frost/Nixon – the world premiere of Ron Howard’s screen version of Peter Morgan’s hit play is the festival Opening Night Gala. (Wed 15 & Sat 18 Oct)

Slumdog Millionaire

Slumdog Millionaire – Danny Boyle’s film about an 18-year-old Mumbai orphan competing in India’s version of Who Wants to be a Millionaire is the Closing Night Gala. (Thu 30 Oct)

W. - Oliver Stone’s film about George W. Bush

W. – Oliver Stone’s ‘fair, true portrait’ of George W Bush, from his roistering younger years to his first term in office. (Thu 23 & Fri 24 Oct)

Vicky Cristina Barcelona

Vicky Cristina Barcelona – Woody Allen’s latest comedy drama, starring Scarlett Johanssen, Penélope Cruz and Javier Bardem. Fingers crossed that it’s a return to form after the dismal Cassandra’s Dream. (Tue 21 & Sat 25 Oct)

Gonzo - The Life and Work of Hunter S. Thompson

Gonzo: The Life and Work of Dr Hunter S. Thompson – documentary on the late great Hunter S. from the director of Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room. (Mon 27 & Tue 28 Oct)

Of Time and the City

Of Time and the City – Terence Davies’ lyrical and deeply personal documentary collage of archive footage of Liverpool, made to mark the city’s status as European Capital of Culture. (Sat 18 & Tue 21 Oct)

Quantum of Solace

Quantum of Solace – a surprise showcase for the first public screening of the new Bond movie. (Wed 29 Oct)

More on the festival next week, after I’ve pored over the programme.