DGA Nominees Announced; Hooper, Bigelow, Spielberg, Lee, Affleck Make List

On January 8, 2013, DGA President Taylor Hackford announced the five nominees for the DGA Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Feature Film for 2012.

The nominees are (in alphabetical order):

BEN AFFLECK

Argo
(Warner Bros. Pictures)

Mr. Affleck’s Directorial Team:
Unit Production Manager: Amy Herman
First Assistant Director: David Webb
Second Assistant Director: Ian Calip
Second Second Assistant Directors: Clark Credle, Gavin Kleintop
First Assistant Director (Turkey Unit): Belkis Turan

This is Mr. Affleck’s first DGA Feature Film Award nomination.

KATHRYN BIGELOW

Zero Dark Thirty
(Columbia Pictures)

Ms. Bigelow’s Directorial Team:
Unit Production Manager: Colin Wilson
First Assistant Director: David A. Ticotin
Second Assistant Directors: Ben Lanning, Sarah Hood
First Assistant Director (Jordan Unit): Scott Robertson
Second Assistant Directors (Jordan Unit): Jonas Spaccarotelli, Yanal Kassay
Second Second Assistant Director (Jordan Unit): Tarek Afifi
Unit Production Manager (India Unit): Rajeev Mehra

This is Ms. Bigelow’s second DGA Feature Film Award nomination. She won the DGA Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Feature Film for The Hurt Locker in 2009.

TOM HOOPER

Les Misérables
(Universal Pictures)

Mr. Hooper’s Directorial Team:
Unit Production Manager: Patrick Schweitzer
First Assistant Director: Ben Howarth
Second Assistant Director: Harriet Worth
Second Second Assistant Director: Dan Channing Williams

This is Mr. Hooper’s second DGA Feature Film Award nomination. He won the DGA Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Feature Film for The King’s Speech (2010) and was previously nominated for the DGA Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Movies for Television/Mini-Series for John Adams in 2008.

ANG LEE

Life of Pi
(Twentieth Century Fox)

Mr. Lee’s Directorial Team:
Unit Production Manager: Michael J. Malone
Unit Production Manager (Taiwan): Leo Chen
First Assistant Directors: William M. Connor, Cliff Lanning
Second Assistant Directors: Robert Burgess, Ben Lanning
Unit Production Manager (India Unit): Sanjay Kumar
First Assistant Director (India Unit): Nitya Mehra
Second Assistant Director (India Unit): Ananya Rane
Second Second Assistant Directors (India Unit): Namra Parikh, Freya Parekh
Second Assistant Directors (Montreal Unit): Derek Wimble, Renato De Cotiis

This is Mr. Lee’s fourth DGA Feature Film Award nomination. He won the DGA Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Feature Film for Brokeback Mountain (2005) and Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000) and was nominated for Sense and Sensibility in 1995.

STEVEN SPIELBERG

Lincoln
(Dreamworks Pictures/Twentieth Century Fox)

Mr. Spielberg’s Directorial Team:
Unit Production Manager: Susan McNamara
First Assistant Director: Adam Somner
Second Assistant Director: Ian Stone
Second Second Assistant Directors: Eric Lasko, Trevor Tavares

This is Mr. Spielberg’s eleventh DGA Feature Film Award nomination. He won the DGA Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Feature Film three times for Saving Private Ryan (1998), Schindler’s List (1993) and The Color Purple (1985). He was also nominated in this category for Munich (2005), Amistad (1997), Empire of the Sun (1987), E.T.: The Extra Terrestrial (1982), Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981), Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977) and Jaws (1975). Mr. Spielberg was honored with the DGA’s Lifetime Achievement Award in 2000.

“DGA members have chosen an incredibly rich and varied group of filmmakers to nominate for this year’s Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Feature Film Award. These directors represent the highest standard of filmmaking, and their films are a testament to artistic achievement, innovative storytelling and the passion that filmmakers share with their audiences,” said Hackford. “Being nominated by their peers is what makes this award particularly meaningful for directors, and I congratulate all of the nominees for their outstanding work.”

The DGA Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Feature Film has traditionally been one of the industry’s most accurate barometers for who will win the Best Director Academy Award. Only six times since the DGA Awards began in 1948 has the Feature Film winner not gone on to win the corresponding Academy Award.

The six exceptions are as follows:

  • 1968: Anthony Harvey won the DGA Award for The Lion in Winter while Carol Reed took home the Oscar® for Oliver!
  • 1972: Francis Ford Coppola received the DGA’s nod for The Godfather while the Academy selected Bob Fosse for Cabaret.
  • 1985: Steven Spielberg received his first DGA Award for The Color Purple while the Oscar® went to Sydney Pollack for Out of Africa.
  • 1995: Ron Howard was chosen by the DGA for his direction of Apollo 13 while Academy voters selected Mel Gibson for Braveheart.
  • 2000: Ang Lee won the DGA Award for his direction of Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon while Steven Soderbergh won the Academy Award for Traffic.
  • 2002: Rob Marshall won the DGA Award for Chicago while Roman Polanski received the Academy Award for The Pianist.

The winner will be named at the 65th Annual DGA Awards Dinner on Saturday, Febnuary 2, 2013, at the Ray Dolby Ballroom at Hollywood & Highland.

LIFE OF PI Featurette & New Poster

Check out this exciting featurette where writer Yann Martel & director Ang Lee discuss taking LIFE OF PI from the page to the big screen. In her glowing review Anne Thompson of IndieWire wrote “Scenes of breathtaking beauty have to be seen to be believed.”

Lee’s film made its World Premiere as the Opening Night Gala presentation at the 50th New York Film Festival in September. On November 2nd, LIFE OF PI will screen as one of the Centerpiece Galas at the AFI FEST 2012.

Based on the book that has sold more than seven million copies and spent years on the bestseller list, Academy Award winner Lee’s LIFE OF PI takes place over three continents, two oceans, many years, and a wide world of imagination. Lee’s vision, coupled with game-changing technological breakthroughs, has turned a story long thought un-filmable into a totally original cinematic event and the first truly international all-audience motion picture. LIFE OF PI follows a young man who survives a disaster at sea and is hurtled into an epic journey of adventure and discovery. While marooned on a lifeboat, he forms an amazing and unexpected connection with the ship¹s only other survivor… a fearsome Bengal tiger.

Twentieth Century Fox will release the movie on November 21, 2012.

http://www.lifeofpimovie.com/

https://www.facebook.com/LifeofPi

https://twitter.com/LifeofPiMovie

The Film Society Of Lincoln Center Announces World Premiere of Ang Lee’s LIFE OF PI As Opening Night Gala Selection For 50th Anniversary Of NEW YORK FILM FESTIVAL

The Film Society of Lincoln Center announced today that Ang Lee’s LIFE OF PI will make its World Premiere as the Opening Night Gala presentation for the upcoming 50th New York Film Festival (September 28 – October 14). The screening will mark the Academy Award-winning director’s return to NYFF, 12 years after CROUCHING TIGER, HIDDEN DRAGON served as the Closing Night Gala presentation (2000). The selection of LIFE OF PI also allows Lee to join Robert Altman, Pedro Almodóvar and François Truffaut as the only directors to have had more than one film chosen to open NYFF. (THE ICE STORM was the Opening Night Gala selection in 1997.)

A respected presence at the New York Film Festival and the Film Society of Lincoln Center, in 2009 FSLC celebrated Lee’s career with a complete retrospective of the director’s work at the Walter Reade Theater. The LIFE OF PI screening will also mark the first time a film has been presented in 3D for NYFF’s Opening Night Gala.

Among the films that have been selected for the prestigious Opening Night Gala slot over the course of NYFF’s 50-year history include Luis Buñuel’s THE EXTERMINATING ANGEL (1963), Gillo Pontecorvo’s THE BATTLE OF ALGIERS (1967), Akira Kurosawa’s RAN (1985), Pedro Almodóvar’s WOMEN ON THE VERGE OF A NERVOUS BREAKDOWN (1988) Quentin Tarantino’s PULP FICTION (1994), Mike Leigh’s SECRETS & LIES (1996), Stephen Frears’s THE QUEEN (2006) and David Fincher’s THE SOCIAL NETWORK (2010) (complete list below).

“LIFE OF PI is a perfect combination of technological innovation and a strong artistic vision. Ang Lee has managed to make a deeply moving, engrossing work that will delight audiences as much as it will astonish them. We’re enormously proud to have this film for our Opening Night for the 50th NYFF,” says Richard Peña, Selection Committee Chair & Program Director, The Film Society of Lincoln Center.

Based on the book that has sold more than seven million copies and spent years on the bestseller list, Academy Award winner Lee’s LIFE OF PI takes place over three continents, two oceans, many years, and a wide world of imagination. Lee’s vision, coupled with game-changing technological breakthroughs, has turned a story long thought un-filmable into a totally original cinematic event and the first truly international all-audience motion picture. LIFE OF PI follows a young man who survives a disaster at sea and is hurtled into an epic journey of adventure and discovery. While marooned on a lifeboat, he forms an amazing and unexpected connection with the ship¹s only other survivor…a fearsome Bengal tiger. The Twentieth Century Fox release is due in theaters on November 21, 2012.

Regarding his return to NYFF, Ang Lee said, “I am both delighted and honored to be back at the New York Film Festival with LIFE OF PI. I have the deepest respect for Richard Peña and his team and to be selected by them as the Opening Night Film for the 50th Anniversary is extremely gratifying. I am also excited because this is my hometown, and to be unveiling this film that I am so proud of here is a real pleasure.”

Rose Kuo, Executive Director, The Film Society of Lincoln Center, added, “Ang Lee has shown us his mastery of intimate psychological drama as well as epic action-adventure and we are thrilled to welcome him back to the New York Film Festival with an exciting film that displays of all his talent.”

The 17-day New York Film Festival highlights the best in world cinema, featuring top films from celebrated filmmakers as well as fresh new talent. The selection committee, chaired by Peña also includes: Melissa Anderson, Contributor, Village Voice; Scott Foundas, Associate Program Director, The Film Society of Lincoln Center; Todd McCarthy, Chief Film Critic, The Hollywood Reporter; and Amy Taubin, Contributing Editor, Film Comment and Sight and Sound.

It was announced last week that Robert Zemeckis’s FLIGHT will make its World Premiere as the Closing Night film for the upcoming 50th New York Film Festival.

An action-packed mystery thriller, Academy Award winner, Denzel Washington stars in Robert Zemeckis’s FLIGHT as Whip Whitaker, a seasoned airline pilot, who miraculously crash lands his plane after a mid-air catastrophe, saving nearly every passenger on board. Although he is immediately acclaimed as a hero, the legal, moral and ethical aspects of Whip’s behavior before and after the accident are much more ambiguous than initially meet the public eye. FLIGHT is a compelling drama anchored by a great performance from one of our most distinguished actors. The stellar supporting cast includes John Goodman, Don Cheadle, Melissa Leo, Bruce Greenwood and Kelly Reilly. The Paramount Pictures release is due in theaters on November 2.

General Public tickets will be available September 9th. There will be an advance ticketing opportunity for Film Society of Lincoln Center Patrons and Members prior to that date. For more information visit www.Filmlinc.com/NYFF or call 212 875 5601.

Watch 20th Century Fox’s LIFE OF PI Trailer – In Theaters November 21

This November, Pi Patel (Suraj Sharma) and a fierce Bengal tiger named Richard Parker must rely on each other to survive an epic journey in Ang Lee’s LIFE OF PI. Initial footage from the film first screened in April at Cinema Con.

Plays a lot like WHAT DREAMS MAY COME – which I thought after the first trailer for Robin Williams’ movie was an Oscar slamdunk. Any notions of an Academy Award in 1998 came to a screeching halt after seeing it. Talk of Oscar for Lee’s film based on this trailer may be somewhat premature, expected and remains to be seen. Audiences have already seen parts of the trailer this summer. Fox debuted the first preview before 3D screenings of PROMETHEUS in June and other clips were shown with ABRAHAM LINCOLN: VAMPIRE HUNTER and ICE AGE: CONTINENTAL DRIFT.

The film is based on the best-selling novel by Yann Martel and stars Suraj Sharma, Irrfan Khan, Tabu, Rafe Spall, and Gerard Depardieu. From 20th Century Fox, THE LIFE OF PI hits theaters on November 21.

Visit the film’s official site:  http://www.lifeofpimovie.com/ 

“Like” it on Facebook:  http://www.facebook.com/LifeofPi  

Follow on Twitter: http://twitter.com/LifeofPiMovie  #LifeofPiMovie  

Ang Lee Gets a LIFE OF PI

life of pi

Being someone who reads roughly two books every three years, I’m not going to say that you should heed my advice on this, but Yann Martel’s novel LIFE OF PI is an astonishing experience.   Being someone who far prefers the art of film, I was exuberant when I first heard a number of filmmakers were trying to get the novel adapted to the big screen.   Names so far attached to the film have been M.Night Shyamalan, Alfonso Cuaron, and Jean-Pierre Jeunet, all exciting choices for this subject matter.

Today comes word from The Guardian that director Ang Lee has stepped into the director’s chair on this.   The news was just a rumor back in February, but Lee confirmed it in a recent interview.

I’m delivering the first draft.   I think I’ve cracked the structure of the movie and I’ll figure out how to do it later.   How exactly I’m going to do it, I don’t know … A little boy adrift at sea with a tiger. It’s a hard one to crack!

Lee’s explained that the film was set for a tentative release in 2011.   Lee is a satisfying choice to tackle this story.   His more recent films haven’t exactly garnered much recognition, but if he were able to channel the Ang Lee of ten years ago, we could have an unforgettable, cinematic experience on our hands.

Review: ‘Taking Woodstock’

takingwoodstock01

I would love to tell you that Ang Lee’s new film made a big impression on me as a viewer, taking me back to Woodstock itself and giving me an intimate, insider’s look into a significant American cultural event that I was unfortunately not yet born to experience for myself but, alas, I cannot. What I can tell you is that TAKING WOODSTOCK is a light-hearted and fun dramedy that offers a small slice, or glimpse perhaps, into a bit of the essence of Woodstock, or at least of what my imagination and collected exposure to film and music of the event can muster.

TAKING WOODSTOCK marks director Ang Lee’s sixth English-language film. That’s one more than the five foreign-language films Lee has made. What I find interesting about Lee is his choice of topics for his American films. I don’t think I am making too big of a leap in suggesting Ang Lee, originally from Taiwan, is attempting to better understand the American culture through film, and perhaps even attempting to help us understand our own culture a little better in the process.

Lee’s first American film being SENSE AND SENSIBILITY, not necessarily entirely an American topic, but does have it’s place in our culture as a significant work of English literature. From here, Lee tackles the 70’s culture in America with his brilliantly realized film THE ICE STORM, followed by a trek back in time to study the lesser-known pages of the American Civil War with another great film RIDE WITH THE DEVIL. From here, Lee would truly challenge himself by taking on a topic also very much rooted in our American culture. I feel Ang Lee wasn’t entirely sure he knew what he was getting into when he made HULK, perhaps unfamiliar with the essence of this portion of our culture more than the others.

Of course, Ang Lee made waves with BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN, which would also prove to be his most “controversial” film. But, enough of the Ang Lee history lesson. Let’s talk about peace, love and rock-n-roll. Let’s talk the late 60’s, Vietnam and Woodstock. Actually, we’re not going to talk much about the Vietnam War because the film barely touches on the topic at all. Strange, considering how the entire phenomenon known as Woodstock came about in response to the war.

In general, this portion of the era and story are embodied within Emile Hirsch’s performance as Billy, a friend of Elliott’s who has returned from the war and suffers from flashbacks, or post-traumatic stress disorder, but it’s not mentioned as such in the film. As much as I admire and appreciate Hirsch (INTO THE WILD, MILK) as a talented actor, his performance in TAKING WOODSTOCK left me unaffected, wanting something more and to some small extent unhappy with the minimal inclusion of this crucial element to the big picture of the story.

TAKING WOODSTOCK tells the story of Elliot Teichberg (Demetri Martin) and his unsuspected success at being the catalyst that made Woodstock happen. Elliot is a college-aged Jewish boy who has returned home to the rural upstate New York town of White Tail to assist his parents with their fledgling motel business as it teeters of the brink of failure. It’s clear that Elliot hates the idea of being shackled to the responsibility of running and saving the family business, but does so out of a sense of duty.

It isn’t until Elliot hears about a music festival seeking a rural venue after being repeatedly thrown out of one small farm town after another. He hears about the event from an eccentric theatre troupe bunking in his parents’ barn, led by Devon (Dan Fogler). In an effort to attract the event to his town as a way to boost tourism and save his family business, Elliot forms a surprising pact with local dairy farmer Max (Eugene Levy) to use his land for the festival. Michael Lang (Jonathan Groff) acts as a sort of Zen-like mediator in the process of securing the deal between the event promoters and Max.

What I liked the most about this story was the attention to character development, especially with Elliot, but the film suffers a bit as a result of the two-hour running time. It’s not an uninteresting or painful two-hours, but it does slow the pace of the film enough to weaken the entertainment value. TAKING WOODSTOCK offers some great characters from great actors, including Eugene Levy’s thoughtful and uncharacteristically under-played performance as Max, Elliot’s parents Jake (Henry Goodman) and Sonia (Imelda Staunton) and best of all Liev Schreiber as Vilma, a transvestite and Korean War veteran who asists with security and befriends Elliot and his father.

What disappointed me the most about TAKING WOODSTOCK is that the film focused more on being funny and pleasing to the general audience and not nearly enough on the heart of the event. For example, there was an altogether shameful lack of music that appeared directly in the film. Marijuana and Acid had a bigger role than the music. That’s just not right, considering it’s a movie about how Woodstock came to be. Clearly the film isn’t intended to be a documentary or even focus on the musicians, but the film lacks any reasonable amount recognition to the music that made Woodstock great.

TAKING WOODSTOCK is a lushly shot film that isn’t hard to watch. Danny Elfman surprisingly earns a credit for the film’s original music, even if it is relatively hidden within the film. It’s an easy story that avoids any real controversy, and what little is there with Elliot’s character is sort of washed over with a quick brush of the director’s hand before moving back into the main arc of the story. Demetri Martin (THE ROCKER) gives a decent performance in his first starring role, but it’s difficult to separate his performance far from his persona created in his stand-up career. The film will certainly have an audience, but it’s difficult to say how well it can do, opening against some hefty late-summer competition in both Rob Zombie’s HALLOWEEN II and THE FINAL DESTINATION 3D.

Kubrick Family wants Director’s Final Film Realized

stanleykubrick

Although he lived a relatively long and full life, it often feels as though Stanley Kubrick was taken from us before his time. Kubrick died at the age of 70 on March 7, 1999 having made a total of 13 feature films including 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY, A CLOCKWORK ORANGE and FULL METAL JACKET. His final film, EYES WIDE SHUT, released after his death in July 1999.

Currently on display at an Edinburgh Festival exhibition are the late cinematic master’s research sources for what was to be his next film after EYES WIDE SHUT called THE ARYAN PAPERS. The Kubrick family now wants for his final film to be realized for the world to see, even if only influenced by Kubrick’s vision and finished screenplay. Kubrick’s brother-in-law and occasional executive producer Jan Harlan says Ang Lee is a possible candidate to helm the project.

This film was to be based on the novel ‘Wartime’ by Louis Begley. The story follows a Jewish woman and her nephew fleeing Poland. The film was originally set to begin production in the 90’s but was pushed back as not to interrupt Spielberg’s Oscar run for SCHINDLER’S LIST.

Steven Spielberg and Stanley Kubrick were good friends and Kubrick was a sort of mentor to Spielberg. One of Kubrick’s projects, A.I.: ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE, was shelved by the filmmaker as he wasn’t confident the state of FX technology was yet where it needed to be for him to realize his vision. He later encouraged Spielberg to pick up the project and run with it in 2001 instead.

In addition to THE ARYAN PAPERS possibly seeing the light of day under surrogate direction, there is one other project being developed from Kubrick’s vision. LUNATIC AT LARGE is a script being developed by writer Stephen Clarke with Chris Palmer attached to direct. Based on a story by Stanley Kubrick and Jim Thompson, the film would be set in 1956 New York and…

“…tells the story of Johnnie Sheppard, an ex-carnival worker with serious anger-management issues, and Joyce, a nervous, attractive barfly he picks up in a Hopperesque tavern scene. There’s a newsboy who flashes a portentous headline, a car chase over a railroad crossing with a train bearing down, and a romantic interlude in a spooky, deserted mountain lodge.” — IMDB

Source: Empire

‘Taking Woodstock’ Trailer

demetri-martin

I’m not quite sure what I think about this trailer or about this project in general.   The idea of Ang Lee directing a comedy about Woodstock doesn’t seem all that appealing.   From the trailer, the film looks like a pretty straight comedy.

The film follows the life of Elliot Tiber (Demetri Martin) an aspiring Greenwich Village interior designer whose parents owned a small motel in Upstate New York and at the time held the only musical festival permit in the entire town of Bethel, New York. Tiber offered both the motel and the permit to the Woodstock Festival’s organizers.

The film also focuses on Tiber’s life as a closeted gay man hiding his marijuana as well as sexual orientation from his family, and his self-discovery following the Stonewall Riots.

Check it out right here:

‘Taking Woodstock’ comes out on August 14th, 2009.

Source: Youtube

Ang Lee might Direct ‘Life of Pi’

life-of-pi

Director Ang Lee is in talks to step to the helm of the adaptation of ‘Life of Pi’,  Yann Martel’s coming-of-age survival tale.

The novel  revolves around a youth who is the lone survivor of a sunken freighter and winds up sharing a lifeboat with a hyena, an injured zebra, an orangutan and a hungry Bengal tiger.

There have been several attempts to get this novel adapted to the big screen. Â  M. Night Shyamalan was connected to the project for a long time. Â  ‘Amelie’ director Jean-Pierre Jeunet was also circling at one point.

Ang Lee will supervise a new script. Â  A screenwriter has yet to be named.

This is a great choice for ‘Life of Pi’ and for Lee. Â  Lee has an amazing way at creating characters and relationships in film, and ‘Life of Pi’, where the only human character for much of the film is a little boy, will prove to be a challenging yet rewarding project for him. Â  Not to mention the book if incredible.

Source: Variety

Ang Lee to Helm a Woodstock Movie

Focus Features will begin production late this month on “Taking Woodstock,” scripted by James Schamus and to be directed by Ang Lee (Hulk, Brokeback Mountain). Lee’s ensemble cast includes Emile Hirsch (Speed Racer), Imelda Staunton (Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix) and Liev Schrieber (X-Men Origins: Wolverine).

Pic is an adaptation of the memoir of Elliot Tiber, who played a role in helping the historic 1969 music festival unfold on his neighbor’s farm.

Less than a month ago, Focus had been thinking about postponing the start of production over concerns that a possible Screen Actors Guild strike could force a shutdown later this year. But numerous studios have begun to move forward on feature starts, and it’s understood that Focus has worked out contingency plans in the event of a work stoppage.

Demetri Martin (“The Daily Show With Jon Stewart”) had already been set to play Tiber, an aspiring interior designer in Greenwich Village obliged to run the family business, a Catskills motel. In summer 1969, he found himself at the center of a generation-defining experience when he volunteered the motel to be the home base for Woodstock concert organizers after his neighbor, Max Yasgur, made his farm available for the event.

Staunton and Henry Goodman will play Tiber’s parents, and Jonathan Groff (currently starring in the Shakespeare in the Park production of “Hair” in Gotham) will play Woodstock organizer Michael Lang; Hirsch will play a recently returned Vietnam vet, Eugene Levy (American Pie) will play Yasgur, and Schreiber is in talks to play a transvestite named Vilma.

Jeffery Dean Morgan (Watchmen) is set as a closeted married man having an affair with Tiber, while Paul Dano (The Will Be Blood) and Zoe Kazan play a hippie couple attending the concert. Dan Fogler (Balls of Fury) will play a local theater troupe head, and Mamie Gummer will play Lang’s assistant.