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Showing posts sorted by date for query Anton yelchin. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Friday, October 14, 2011

Where are the new Jakes and Leos?

Where did all our new Leos, Tobeys, and Jakes go?

If you were wondering why the industry had so many hopes pinned on Taylor Lautner and Robert Pattinson, or why there was so much buzz on Alex Pettyfer prior to the underperforming I Am Number Four, here's the answer: We're in the middle of a pretty brutal young actor drought.

When it comes to famous names, you've got one unequivocal superstar in 25-year-old Shia LaBeouf, who toplined Transformers but can also open movies like Disturbia, Eagle Eye, and Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps, but after that, there's a real drop-off in the 25-and-under set.

There's Michael Cera and Zac Efron, who are arguably on the wane and a little niche-y to begin with. You've got Daniel Radcliffe, but who knows? And while there are several critically acclaimed, 110-pound actors out there like Ezra Miller, Logan Lerman, and Anton Yelchin, your mom has never heard of them — even the ones who've already had the chance to star in $100 million movies.

Compare their résumés with the boys who came before them, and things look even more dire. Before he turned 25, Leonardo DiCaprio was an Oscar nominee who'd starred in the then-biggest movie in the world, Titanic, as well as projects like Romeo + Juliet, The Basketball Diaries, What's Eating Gilbert Grape, This Boy's Life, and Celebrity.
Tobey Maguire hadn't yet played Spider-Man prior to his 25th birthday, but he had already shot movies like The Ice Storm, The Cider House Rules, Deconstructing Harry, Pleasantville, and Wonder Boys.

And before Jake Gyllenhaal blew out the candles on his 25th birthday cake, he'd acted in Donnie Darko, October Sky, Jarhead, Proof, The Good Girl, and Brokeback Mountain — the latter of which would earn him an Oscar nomination.

In fact, Gyllenhaal's Oscar nod for the 2005 film was the last time a 25-and-under actor found himself nominated. Curious about how many young actresses have gotten nominations since then? Ten.

Part of the issue is that TV used to be the place where your LaBeoufs, your Goslings, and your Gordon-Levitts would hone their chops as child actors, but now that Disney and Nickelodeon are searching for the next Hannah Montana, there are fewer breakout roles for teenage guys. But we suspect the problem goes even deeper than that, and it's the one we discovered when Australians and Brits started stealing all the big superhero and action movie roles: American boys simply aren't that interested in acting anymore. It's why Gary Ross had to go abroad to fill one of the two male leads in The Hunger Games, and it's why the initial casting short list for those roles was so much less impressive than the heavyweight Oscar nominees like Lawrence and Steinfeld who vied to play Katniss. Source: nymag.com

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Olivia Thirlby & Jesse Eisenberg in "Solitary Man"

Michael Douglas and Jesse Eisenberg play Ben and Cheston in "Solitary Man" (2010).
Imogen Poots, Michael Douglas and Jesse Eisenberg.

"Anchor Bay Films has released a movie trailer for Brian Koppelman/David Levien’s Solitary Man (not to be confused with Tom Ford’s A Single Man or The Coen Brothers’ A Serious Man). The film stars Academy Award winner Michael Douglas as a former car dealership mogul dealing with a string of business problems and issues in his personal life through a number of relationships with women - many women. Co-starring Jesse Eisenberg, Susan Sarandon, Danny DeVito, Jenna Fischer, and Mary-Louise Parker.
Susan Sarandon.Jenna Fischer.Mary Louise Parker.

Koppelman/Levien wrote the screenplays for Rounders, Runaway Jury and directed Knockaround Guys. The film premiered at the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival to mostly positive buzz".
Source: www.slashfilm.com

Olivia Thirlby.
Olivia Thirlby with Kat Dennings.

Olivia Thirlby has had very good co-stars:
Olivia Thirlby and Ellen Page in "Juno" (2007).Michael Angarano & Olivia Thirlby in Snow Angels (2007).Josh Peck and Olivia Thirlby in The Wackness (2008).Jason Schwartzman and Olivia Thirlby in Bored to Death (2009).Anton Yelchin & Olivia Thirlby in New York, I Love You (2009).

Jesse Eisenberg in V Magazine (2009).
Eloise Mumford and Jesse Eisenberg in "Some Boys Don't Leave" directed by Maggie Kiley.
Jesse Eisenberg & Olivia Thirlby in "Solitary Man".

Friday, February 26, 2010

Jesse Eisenberg: Emotional Nerdiness

"I just go to a therapist to brag about my job where I get to kiss girls." — Jesse Eisenberg

When Michael Cera appeared in befuddled virginal fashion in Superbad, he started a sort of a trend, although the disaffected geek has been already featured in a string of coming-of-age films and TV shows. Among some of the more notable examples are Matthew Broderick in WarGames, Anthony Michael Hall in The Breakfast Club, Timothy Hutton in Ordinary People,
Jake Gyllenhaal in Donnie Darko, Jason Schwartzman in Rushmore, Matt Damon in Good Will Hunting, Wes Bentley in American Beauty, Tobey Maguire in The Ice Storm, Ryan Gosling in The United States of Leland, Brad Renfro in Ghost World, John Heder in Napoleon Dynamite, Crispin Glover in Rubin & Ed, Paul Giamatti in American Splendor, Hayden Christensen in Shattered Glass, Anton Yelchin in Charlie Bartlett, Joseph Gordon-Levitt in Brick, Michael Angarano in Sky High, Kieran Culkin in Igby goes down, Paul Dano in Little Miss Sunshine, Patrick Fugit in Bickford Schmeckler's Cool Ideas, Nicholas Hoult in A single man, Nicholas D'Agosto in Rocket Science, Matthew Lillard in Spooner, Andrew Garfied in Here, Christopher Mintz-Plasse in Role Models, Simon Pegg in Spaced, Misfits of Science, Freaks & Geeks, Dweebs, etc.

Part whiz, part social flake, we're talking about a figure that dates back to literary icons like Holden Caulfield (The Catcher in The Rye by J. D. Salinger), misfits like Sal Mineo's character in Rebel Without a Cause, and the pre-hipsters that John Cusack played in Say Anything and High Fidelity.
Jesse Eisenberg, a revelatory up and coming actor raised in New York by a college professor and a professional clown, belongs to this exemplary area too. Eisenberg is 26 years old, unconventionally attractive and easily recognizable by his neurotic gentle shtick; his features ooze bonhomie, and he's well versed academically. In addition to his newly blossoming film career, he is currently an anthropology major at the New School in New York and a budding playwright. He was recently nominated as Rising Star to BAFTA's 2010:



Eisenberg is often compared to Michael Cera by the critics.

"The implications of focusing on the ability of humans to imitate and borrow information and then to pass it on to another by non-genetic means is genuinely far reaching. It is what makes culture possible" -Maurice Bloch in his Anthropology book "The Rehabilitation of Human Nature" (2005).
Hollywood has recently re-prioritized its old stereotypes and has given these oversensitive, intelligent dupes their chance. This character constitutes a figure that has been evolving since the '80s and got its consolidation by way of the slacker inamoratos in '90s grunge cinema (Paul Rudd in Clueless, Stephen Dorff in So Fucking What, James Spader in Sex, Lies, and Videotapes, Tim Robbins in I.Q. and Antitrust, Ethan Hawke in Before Sunrise, Giovanni Ribisi in Suburbia, etc.) who seemed to find their ascension once the indie phenomenon made its way into mainstream culture, as an article in Paste Magazine discusses.

But the inscrutable nerd in film is a more complex type than we think, since it agglomerates disparate characteristics that suggest essentially a blatant contradiction (awkwardness meets a romantic side) which could extrapolate Jerry Lewis or Rick Moranis's nuttines with Woody Allen/Dustin Hoffman's histrionics along with James Dean/Montgomery Clift's old-fashioned romanticized detachment.
Going back to the parallels to Michael Cera, it's true the two share a gawky attitude, nervous sensibility, and hip wardrobe, but the biggest difference is also what separates both irremediably, and it's how their fictional characters deal with sexual situations differently. Jesse Eisenberg takes us to a level not matched enough before the '00s films, where the disenpowered variorum of dorks started to acquire self-awareness and self-respect, and thereby their stories were more diversified and polished up.

Triumph of the Nerds: The Rise of Accidental Empires (1996) is a documentary written by Robert X. Cringely. Its title is an homage to the film Revenge of the Nerds (1984), based on Cringely's book Accidental Empires. It may not be a coincidence after all — one of Eisenberg's latest projects is The Social Network, directed by David Fincher (Se7en, Fight Club, Zodiac), about the origins of Facebook and its co-founder Mark Zuckerberg, following the creation of the hugely successful social networking site. This incremented quota of schmick, crackbrained, and high netiquette mavericks is attempted to emend the prejudices that unfairly held them back for so long.
These socially recusant male models are gaining new popularity among females due to an irresistible dualism (a combination of academic narcissism and sentimental clumsiness), and Jesse Eisenberg never recombines it as a mere caricature. There is always a disquieting humane quality through his "non compos mentis" gimmick, redefining the geek's socially unskilled scepticism in manifestly painful quips and relatable dissension. His is a prodigious alloy of '80s nerdiness and '90s hip slackerism connected via the unflappable '00s emo boy.
He began his professional career acting at 7 as Oliver Twist in a New Jersey children's theater production with Al Pacino on board. Then he landed a role in the TV show Get Real, playing Anne Hathaway's little brother Kenny Green (a sweet teenager who burst into tears when he kissed his neighbour Amy goodbye in the episode "Prey"). A lot of his screen characters can play off people — their neuroses usually portend and anticipate an oncoming breakdown, but they help the girl get her life back into gear.
Eisenberg's breakout role was in Roger Dodger (2002) directed by Dylan Kidd. Its very sharp screenplay introduces us to the main character Roger Swanson, master in sexual politics, who decides to teach his nephew from Ohio, Nick ( Eisenberg) — who's visiting New York after an interview at Columbia University — about women and seduction games with two barflies: Andrea (Elizabeth Berkley) and Sophie (Jennifer Beals). Eisenberg is perfect as the shy apprentice who, scrambling for his first sexual experience, surpasses his cynical uncle, offering us an eminent soliloquy:
"It always drives me nuts when I hear a guy going on about something a girl does that's supposed to be so sexy. Like how she flips her hair. How she stands with one foot to the side... Because that's nothing. That's just something she does. And she probably only does it because she saw it in a movie. It's not their real stuff. All that stuff- the hair flips, the mannerisms, the catch phrases. They add up to the personality. [...] You need the outside stuff. You need, like, the reasons to be in love... All her usual ways of hooking you in have no effect and yet you're still in love. It's like the act is over and you get to the part she's been hiding. And she's been hiding it because she thinks that's the part that's gonna blow it or make you leave or get bored but you get to that part, and you're still there. And you're even more in love".
After two brief roles in The Village (2004), directed by M. Night Shyamalan, and The Emperor's Club (2002), he starred in Wes Craven's Cursed as Jimmy, Christina Ricci's brother, half geek, half werewolf. He takes a shine to a schoolmate Brooke (Kristina Anapau), who dates a closeted gay bully Bo (Milo Ventimiglia). In the last act of the film he questions his sister about her clingy affection for a man who isn't ready to commit to her (screenwriter Kevin Williamson trying here to make a metaphor of a non-commital guy identified as a monster) and Jimmy says to his sister, "I know you think he's a good guy, Ellie, but don't forget, all of this, everything we've been through, is because of him, when it comes down to it, a monster is still a monster."
In The Squid and the Whale (2005) written and directed by Noah Baumbach, Jesse plays the fictionalized version of the real adolescent Baumbach as Walt Berkman, the petulant son of a washed out littérateur, Bernard, in the process of divorce from a promising novelist, Joan (played impressively by Jeff Daniels and Laura Linney). Walt whines at his mother "you disgust me" and feels proud of his elitist egomaniac father (who demeans ordinary people as "philistines") in the first part of the film, but he'll progressively communicate more with his mother looking for comfort; in this time lag he acts oblivious to his nice girlfriend Sophie (Halley Feiffer) while he maintains a childish obsession with a sexy student, Lili (Anna Paquin). Walt powerlessly observes his father's appalling despondency and he fantasizes about being intimate with Lili, who (having once plagiarized some of Lou Reed's verses) knows of Walt's secret rip-off of a Pink Floyd song that he's been passing as his own. In a double climactic father/son denouement, Bernard makes an elegant farewell citing Belmondo's 'Déguelasse' line to Jean Seberg in Godard's film À bout de souffle, and Walt accepts the scary uncertainty caused by his limitations: "The scary fish at the Natural History museum. I was always afraid of the squid and the whale fighting. I could only look at it with my hands in front of my face."
It's a fine dramatic (and marine) note to end this autobiographical film, since our visual system (primate) is made to appreciate yellow and red colors but below sea level there is no red light so male fish, when trying to attract females, only see blue tones.
In The Education of Charlie Banks (2007) directed by musician Fred Durst, Eisenberg plays Charlie, a bourgeois young man whose acquaintances belong to an uppity college environment during the '70s at Brown University in Rhode Island. He's running away from a bad boy Mick (Jason Ritter) while he tries unsuccessfully to invite the "very much out of his league" Mary to a lunch. Among decadent parties, references to The Great Gatsby and Derrida, Charlie (a "cold bitch") flips a "fuck off" to Mary (Eva Amurri) when he's the object of her condescending derision, learning a difficult moral lesson when he confronts Mick in the end.Eisenberg appeared in indie films such as The Living Wake, and One Day Like Rain in 2007, and then was cast in a supporting role in The Hunting Party, playing Benjamin Strauss, the son of a TV network's Vicepresident who's desirous of being taken seriously in journalism field, joining an unsteady twosome of veteran reporters embarking on a hunting mission to capture The Fox, the number one war criminal in Bosnia.
In Adventureland Eisenberg looks nattier and can display as James Brennan (Greg Mottola's stand-in) his full acting range (oscillating from comedic to dramatic timing) and heartthrob potential, blessed at Kristen Stewart's (Em Lewin) side: "Wait, Em. I think I maybe see you a little differently than you see yourself."
In Zombieland (2009) directed by Ruben Fleischer, he stars as the distressed Columbus, a WoW video game player who dreams of finding a girl to fall in love with, and to take her to meet his remote family. The outside landscape is draughty, full of undead zombies who chase the only surviving humans in the USA to kill and infect them. So the first chance for him will happen with an infected beauty (Amber Heard playing a mysterious blonde anonymized as #406) whose intentions are not precisely too amorous. Columbus: "You see? You just can't trust anyone. The first girl I let into my life and she tries to eat me."
Columbus joins the out of whack zombie hunter Tallahassee (Woody Harrelson). This is a wild road trip in search of an escape from a dreadful destiny, hoarding vintage guns and durable goods, but most importantly, in a desperate search for a Twinkie (for Tallahassee) or one's own trust (for Columbus). Both goofballs will meet two cute bad-ass sisters, Wichita (Emma Stone) and Little Rock (Abigail Breslin).
The movie starts with a funny exordium of Columbus explaining to the viewer his methodic catalogue of rules to survive in Zombieland, and it ends with his apogee at Pacific Playland. On the surface Zombieland is a full blast horror comedy but there is a surreptitious tongue-in-cheek conclusion, a sideswipe at America's alienating culture among plenty of wisecracking and goo.
Eisenberg attended the Sundance Film Festival to promote one of his latest films, Holy Rollers (2010), directed by Kevin Asch, which has just been purchased by First Independent Pictures acquiring U.S. distribution rights. Eisenberg plays a Hasidic Jew named Sam Gold who, influenced by Yosef (Justin Bartha), turns into a drug mule and, developing an interest in one of his drug bosses's girlfriend Rachel (Ari Graynor), lives a cultural clash against his religious precepts. The plot is inspired by actual events about Orthodox Jews recruited to illegally bring ecstasy into New York City from Amsterdam in the late '90s.
Eisenberg's laugh out loud moments may not be as frequent as in Cera's case, but the main discordance between them is that Michael Cera seems to fall into a cataplexic state when he's infatuated with an attractive chick and he's always passive towards the girls he's after, even in Youth in Revolt, where a naughty alter ego Francois Dillinger appears, his conquest weapons relied on deadpan courtship.
Cera himself confesses in
the Movieline interview:

Q: Do you have an inner Francois?

Cera: Not really. No.

As Superbad's and Adventureland's director Mottola
expresses, "Jesse, I think, is a little more sexualized than Michael."

"Every script is about a guy trying to have sex with lots of women. I read them and my veins hurt, like, what am I doing with my life? — except, of course, acting", Eisenberg told
BlackBook.

We see in Jesse Eisenberg a stubborness, a social emotional nerdiness, but also a healthy chirpiness which throws us back into reality, because we realise that even when his character has won, a sense of insecurity remains inside his privileged brain.
Published today in Blogcritics.org

Friday, February 12, 2010

Who will play Holden Caulfield or Spiderman?

"On hearing of JD Salinger's recent death, most fans probably experienced a single emotion: sadness. Over in Hollywood, however, the hills shook with the cackling of a hundred avaricious studio execs. Finally, someone will get to make The Catcher in the Rye film.
Jake Gyllenhaal as Holden in The Good Girl (2002) - Gag Reel.

Yet perhaps the biggest problem will be casting Holden himself. Leonardo DiCaprio, John Cusack and Tobey Maguire have all previously been mooted. Salinger called Holden "essentially unactable. A Sensitive, Intelligent, Talented Young Actor in a Reversible Coat wouldn't nearly be enough". The easiest way to grasp catastrophe from the jaws of success would surely be to cast a next-gen teen idol
'Twilight' star Robert Pattinson shooting new film 'Bel Ami' in the English countryside, UK.

– a Robert Pattinson or a Zac Efron – but even the more realistic candidates don't feel quite right.
There's Joseph Gordon Levitt (too old), Anton Yelchin (too Russian), Michael Cera (too geeky), or Jessie Eisenberg (too Jew-fro). Emile Hirsch as Francis Doyle in "The Dangerous lives of Altar Boys" (2002).

Emile Hirsch feels like the closest fit, but you can't help thinking the best Holden will be the true unknown that no-one expects; someone unsullied by fame's own story, able to be the Holden we imagined, in the way Salinger himself might have approved".
Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Here's how the final tally of votes shook out:
Joseph Gordon-Levitt: 27%Zac Efron: 23.2%Michael Welch: 10.5%Jesse Eisenberg: 5.7%Aaron Johnson: 5.5%Michael Cera: 4.9%Cory Monteith: 2.1%Patrick Fugit: 1.9%Erik Knudsen: 1.6%
Other: 17.4%
Source: splashpage.mtv.com

"Jews are hot.
Last year, actor Jake Gyllenhaal was included on People Magazine’s “Sexiest Man Alive” list.
Jesse Eisenberg, an attractive New York Jewish actor.

Just being Jewish by itself also seems to be attractive.
Woody Allen and Diane Keaton in "Annie Hall" (1977).

“It’s like I’m exotic,’ said a student from a major Midwestern university who asked to remain anonymous. “They seem to really be interested in my curly hair.”

“Even though I could take it as a stereotype,” he added, “they are always saying Jews are funny. I guess it’s something they like.”

But aren’t the qualities mentioned in these verses -- wisdom, dignity, generosity -- the ones that really turn on everybody?
Source: www.jpost.com