Category Archives: Film Fodder

Ryan Coogler makes relevant filmmaking debut with “Fruitvale Station”

Michael B. Jordan (second from left) stars as Oscar Grant in Ryan Coogler's "Fruitvale Station". Photo by Ron Koeberer, courtesy The Weinstein Company.

With his feature-length debut Fruitvale Station, writer/director Ryan Coogler offers an intimate look at a day in the life of Oscar Grant, a man struggling to right some of his previous wrongs as he prepares to ring in the New Year. Unbeknownst to Grant and those around him, these will be his final hours as he is fatally shot by a Bay Area Rapid Transit police officer following a subway scuffle in the first few hours of 2009. Having received huge praise this year at the Sundance Film Festival and the Cannes Film Festival, Fruitvale Station now brings Coogler’s fictionalized portrayal of the events leading up to this real-life tragedy to theaters across the country. (And the timing couldn’t be more appropriate given the recent developments from a very similar incident that took place in Florida last year.) As the film opens in even more theaters this week, Coogler takes a moment to talk to Wrestling with Pop Culture about his filmmaking motivations and processes.

This film was a success at Sundance, it sparked a bidding war and has received all sorts of critical praise. What has all that been like for you as a first-time filmmaker?

It’s all been incredibly overwhelming. Every step in the process has been a big surprise. This film was made with a very modest budget, with very short time constraints and a lot of incredibly talented people. This was my first time making a feature film and for us it was a great victory. Each stage of the process was a great achievement, in my eyes. Just getting the movie done, then premiering at Sundance, it was like, “Wow! The movie’s going to play six times at this festival.” For me it was always about just getting people to see it, whether they love it or hate it, and at least think about some of the things that are in the film and engage in dialogue, hopefully. If people who didn’t know about this incident [could] learn about it, that was the mindset I had. So for it to acquire distribution and get released has been moving and completely unexpected.

 

Director Ryan Coogler (right) works with Jordan (left) and Octavia Spencer in "Fruitvale Station". Photo courtesy The Weinstein Company.

There’s been a somewhat similar incident in the news as of late that’s been getting a lot more attention than the incident from your film ever got. Why do you think one incident received so much exposure while you had to work pretty hard to make people aware of the incident in your film?

The release [of the film] coming at this time was purely coincidental. The similarities are what they are, but the biggest thing is the differences. The biggest difference is that what happened to Oscar was recorded and people filmed it, but in the other situation no one was there to film it so it was basically one person’s account. What inspired me to do this film was loss of life. The loss of life for African-American males in urban environments is happening rapidly; it’s a constant thing. For me, the focus isn’t necessarily who’s holding the trigger because the result’s going to be same for the people that person matters to.  Whether it’s another black male holding the trigger (which it so often is), whether it’s a cop holding the trigger, whether it’s a person who’s neither one holding the trigger, that goes on whether or not there’s media coverage, whether or not there’s a trial, it keeps happening.

Why did you choose to do just one day in Oscar’s life rather than showing more of his life?

I’ve studied a lot of movies and I was in film school when I came up with it. As a viewer I would often feel closer to a character the less time elapsed during the movie. You have films that transpire over several years and you have films where you just spend a few hours with a person. I always felt that the act of waking up with somebody, following him throughout the day, watching him move in and out of the daily operations, was an intimate thing to do. Some of the films that operate like that are 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days, Elephant by Gus Van Sant, Spike Lee does it in a couple of films like Do the Right Thing and 25th Hour and La Haine, which is a French film. I think it comes from the nature of being a fly on the wall with somebody for a whole day [because] that’s something that you only do with people that you’re really close to. More than anything, seeing how somebody changes when they go into a location or how they change around certain people. I would think about just riding around with my dad back in the day and just hanging with him. I would look up at him while he went about his day and watch how he talked to somebody from this way and how he’d talk to somebody from that way, you learn a lot from somebody if you hang with them for a day.

The other thing was I found it to be insanely ironic that it was New Year’s Eve, the fact that he was talking, like everybody does, about resolutions. It was a very domestic day and I was interested in seeing this guy who was known for being an ex-con and a drug dealer dropping his girlfriend off, preparing for his mom’s birthday. The fact that this happened on the first day of the year was another reason why I chose a 24-hour period. And a big thing was that I was interested in his life, not everything that happened afterwards because you can find coverage for all that.

Oscar Grant (Michael B. Jordan) shares a touching moment with his daughter (Ariana Neal) in "Fruitvale Station". Photo courtesy The Weinstein Company.

Given the social and political aspects of this film, especially in light of what’s going on in Florida right now, this is the type of film where every single decision can be scrutinized. Every moment in this movie seems very deftly chosen, so how did you balance making every moment mean something without every moment being some grand statement?

It was a razorblade to walk at all times. At the end of the day all you have is yourself as a filmmaker. You can get feedback on the script or on cuts, but it really comes back to you making choices. And if they work for you, that’s what you have to go with. If you lose yourself, then you’re trying to hit a moving target. So I tried to make decisions based on the research that I did. It’s not a documentary, but I had a lot of material to pull from and was making decisions based off that. Sometimes I made creative decisions, but most of his day was pretty documented because he was around other people most of the time. So it was a combination of using research, using my own personal judgment and just going with it. I definitely don’t have it figured out though. This was my first time, so I’m looking forward to doing it again and getting better.

How much input did you have from the people that are portrayed in the movie? Did you run into any obstacles from people who didn’t want to co-operate or didn’t want this film to be made?

The people who knew Oscar were there as a source of information. That’s the position they took. They were very trusting of us with the project and it wasn’t them looking over our shoulders saying, “You can put this in. You can’t put that in.” So I would ask them about certain things and they would tell me about them and I would make decisions based off that stuff.

The biggest obstacles came from shooting on location, but those obstacles also worked in our favor because the community really embraced the film. So we shot in the real working businesses in the Bay Area, we used a local crew, local cast and people were very passionate about it. A big motif of the film was location, what kind of places Oscar had been through. The institutional places that he traveled through that day and his memories of that day were very important, so we shot in the real places. Because of that, some constraints came up. When we shot in BART facilities, we never got a full day. BART was gracious enough to give an olive branch to the community and let us film, [but] they’re not going to shut down the Bay Area’s transit system for us to make a movie. They still have to get people to work and get people home, so we had to go shoot in four-hour shifts from 1 a.m. to 5 a.m. So we had to break that scene up over three days, and that was a scene with a lot of moving pieces to it. We could only shoot in Highland Hospital for basically a day, so the surgery, the doctors coming in and out of the morgue, that was all shot in ten hours. Same with San Quentin: only limited crew was allowed in there, there were real inmates and we had real time constraints. They’re not going to shut down a prison or a hospital for us to make a movie.

Your casting of Michael B. Jordan was critical because you can’t help but like the characters he plays. That’s important for the character of Oscar given the situation he’s in. What was it like working with Jordan and how you led him to discovering Oscar?

Michael B. Jordan as Oscar Grant in a climactic scene from "Fruitvale Station". Photo courtesy The Weinstein Company.

Mike’s an incredible actor. I can’t say enough good things about him and I wrote this script with him in mind before I knew him; I just knew his work. I needed somebody who could fit a lot of categories for this project because I knew it would live and die by his performance because he’s on the screen for 98 percent of this movie. His relationships are the vehicle that the audience travels in, and I needed someone who kind of looked like Oscar, I wanted somebody who was young, I needed somebody who could work on a fast schedule, and Mike’s done years and years of television. I also needed somebody that could be a bunch of different people. Oscar’s kind of like this community who, as an emotional tactic, was a people pleaser. He would kind of hide how he was feeling on the inside out of fear of rejection. So oftentimes he had to go from being tough to being soft, sometimes within the same scene.

I wrote the script with Mike in mind and I knew it would be a close working relationship, so I wanted to meet him before I offered him the part. So we met and he read the script and agreed to do it, which was the best thing ever because he’s truly a great actor.

When you were writing this character based on the impressions of people who knew him, what was the process of crafting and honoring this person like for you?

Coogler and Jordan collaborate to accuratley portray the character of Oscar Grant. Photo courtesy The Weinstein Company.

It was always my goal to get to the full depths of who this guy was, and that came from talking to his friends and family and learning things about him, and recognizing some of those things in myself. In looking at the scenes, you learn that Oscar was a people pleaser who often hid things from other people. He struggled with dishonesty, even with the people closest to him. So I investigated, “Why is that? Where does that come from?” My theory was that it came from a fear of rejection, somebody who didn’t want to be rejected. He oftentimes would mess up when he was by himself and get into trouble when he was away from his loved ones. I think there are people who want to be in the company of others so they don’t have to face their own vices. So I was really asking the question, “What does Oscar want from this person that he’s dealing with right now? What does he want to project?” That was kind of where the script came from. So when he’s dealing with his daughter, he wants her to feel safe, happy and secure – he wants her to love him. With his mom, he knows that her worst fear is him going back to prison. He doesn’t want his mom to reject him and shut him off again, so he’s going to try and deny certain things. With Sophina he wants to prove that he’s masculine and can take care of her, but also that he’s not going to go back to prison or being unfaithful, even though he might be. When he’s dealing with the girl in the grocery store, she’s cute, so what does he want from her? He wants to impress her, but he also wants to show her he’s somebody worth listening to, not somebody she’s just going to brush off. So the question was always, “What does he want from this person and what are the tactics he’s going to use to get that?”

Prior to Fruitvale Station, you directed some award-winning short films that dealt with similar themes of harsh realities. What draws you to the subjects that you choose to make films about?

I just try to make films about things that move me emotionally, things I don’t have answers to. I’m trying to find answers. I made a short film before this one that was about street prostitution. That’s something that, when I worked in juvenile hall back in the Bay Area, girls would often come through for loitering. I would talk with them and it was something I could never really understand. What would make a woman want to do that? That was something that impacted me emotionally and making a film about it was a way for me to deal with those questions and search for those answers. So I make movies about things that sit with me personally.

www.fruitvalefilm.com

“Grown Ups 2” is hilarious in the most immature ways

The gang is back together in "Grown Ups 2". Photo by Tracy Bennett.

Even though the name of the film is Grown Ups 2, you can’t expect too much maturity from a film starring Adam Sandler, Kevin James, Chris Rock and David Spade. And with a supporting cast that includes Nick Swardson, Maya Rudolph, Jon Lovitz, Cheri Oteri, Tim Meadows, Shaquille O’Neal, WWE Hall of Fame“Stone Cold” Steve Austin and Salma Hayek’s cleavage, any grown-up expectations should be flushed down the same toilet as the ball-breaking potty humor that dominates almost every frame of this buddy comedy.

Childhood friends Lenny (Sandler), Eric (James), Kurt (Rock) and Higgy (Spade) are each dealing with their own minor conflicts as their kids deal with bullies, puberty and other adolescent problems on the last day of school. And that’s pretty much the gist of the plot, which is all you really need when you have an ensemble cast steeped in ridiculously comedic talent. Swardson as a drug-addled school bus driver who constantly bears the brunt of the films physical comedy? Maria Bello as the open-minded wife who indulges her husband Eric with a cheerleader car wash, only to have the male squad (led by Andy Samberg) get seductively sudsy instead of the buxom females? Austin as Lenny’s high school bully who still intimidates him as an adult? Oh, hell yeah!

Shaquille O'Neal and Peter Dante play a pair of comical cops in "Grown Ups 2". Photo by Tracy Bennett.

Oh, and then there’s the local fraternity led by Twilight‘s Taylor Lautner that challenges the dads to something that involves unnecessary backflips and elaborate handshakes. Plus, Higgy finds out he has a psychopathic illegitimate son (Alexander Ludwig), Shaq basically plays a balding version of Police Academy‘s Hightower and the CGI is way better than White House Down. Higgy’s love interest is a bodybuilding chick named Kitty (Kris Murrell), and she makes an impeccable Hulk Hogan at the ’80s party that serves as the movie’s climax. If it sounds like I’m just rambling off random tidbits of hilarity that’s because that’s basically what this movie amounts to. And that’s exactly what makes Grown Ups 2 the type of idiotic comedy that you’re likely to be quoting for months, as long as you don’t feel too guilty admitting you enjoyed it.

www.grownups2-movie.com

Giant robots and monsters do cerebrally sci-fi battle in “Pacific Rim”

American Jaeger Gipsy Danger becomes humanity's last hope in "Pacific Rim". Photo courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures.

Tired of seeing supernatural and otherworldly forces destroy cities and threaten humanity in movie theaters? Neither are we! But even if you think you’ve had enough of apocalyptic disaster movies this summer, you owe it to yourself to see Guillermo del Toro‘s Pacific Rim. Sure, in the hands of just about anyone else this movie would likely have been another big summer action spectacle with giant robots fighting enormous monsters with explosively appeasing visuals, but little plot to hold it up. But with del Toro at the helm, Pacific Rim pays homage to the Japanese kaiju and mecha movies of the ’50s and ’60s while bringing refreshingly new sci-fi concepts to the screen.

 

A massive Kaiju wreaks havoc on Earth in "Pacific Rim". Photo courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures.

Set in the near future, Pacific Rim centers around an alien invasion coming not from outer space, but from a portal that has opened in the floor of the Pacific Ocean. The creatures that emerge from this other dimension wreak havoc throughout the surrounding areas, forcing humanity to stop fighting each other and unite to fight off this global threat. The only successful answer to the Kaiju threat is the Jaeger, a massive nuclear-powered robot that is able to fight off each new monstrous threat by using advanced weaponry and brute force. Because the neurological load is too much for one person to handle, it takes two people to pilot each Jaeger. And in order to stay coordinated the two pilots must be able to successfully drift, which is basically a cool way of saying they have to have really, really good chemistry because they’re going to be sharing their thoughts, memories and a telepathic connection with each other in order to function as a singular unit.

 

Robert "Kurrgan" Maillet and Heather Doerksen are Russian Jaeger co-pilots in "Pacific Rim". Photo courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures.

Familial ties obviously make such a deep connection a little easier to achieve, as is the case with Raleigh (Charlie Hunnam), an accomplished and cocky Jaeger pilot who loses his will to fight after suffering a crippling loss during battle. But as the Kaiju’s become bigger and stronger, and the decision is made from higher up to decommission the Jaeger program, Raleigh is recruited back to the cause by Stacker (Idris Elba), the commanding officer looking to make one last effort at saving the planet. Raleigh reluctantly agrees, then is re-inspired upon meeting Mako (Rinko Kikuchi), a female rookie with whom he feels a mysterious bond that drifts (pun intended) beyond simple romance. Stacker assembles a squadron of the world’s top Jaeger pilots (including former WWE competitor Kurrgan, who plays an imposing Russian pilot) to do battle with the ever-evolving Kaijus, now coming through the portal in pairs.

In the meantime, Dr. Newton Geizler (Charlie Day) and Dr. Hermann Gottlieb (Burn Gorman), a couple of bumbling scientists obsessed with all things Kaiju, figure out how to drift with a Kaiju, which not only provides the knowledge necessary to close the portal, but also provides the Kaiju with somepsychic insight into what we have planned for them. In order to find out even more about the Kaiju dimension, these scientists are referred to Hannibal Chau (Ron Perlman), a snazzy-dressing black market trader specializing in goods derived from fallen Kaiju. Though this subplot provides some comic relief to the otherwise impending doom, it also provides information that becomes crucial to winning the war to save the Earth.

Raleigh (Charlie Hunnam) and Mako (Rinko Kikuchi) become unlikely drifting partners in "Pacific Rim". Photo by Kerry Hayes.

While purists might be wary of watching Godzilla-like monsters fighting Ultraman-like robots without the use of rubber suits and miniature cities, Pacific Rim utilizes computer technology in a way that makes these battles seem surprisingly realistic (and even more massive if you see it in IMAX). Though I admit to having a soft spot for seeing giant robots fighting giant sea creatures, del Toro is able to provide such spectacles without being completely outlandish and implausible. In fact, even with only a slight suspension of disbelief, Pacific Rim is a pretty believable sci-fi adventure that is massively realized and enjoyable in multidimensional ways.

www.pacificrimmovie.com

Gru’s babyface turn is solidified in “Despicable Me 2”

Dr. Nefario (Russell Brand) bids Gru (Steve Carell) and his minions adieu. Photo courtesy Universal Pictures and Illumination Entertainment.

Sometimes the best way to track down a bad guy is to be a bad guy yourself. No longer trying to steal the moon or commit other villainous acts,  Gru (Steve Carell) has settled into his new role as adoptive father in a suburban setting quite well in Despicable Me 2. But given his supervillainous past and his seemingly less malicious new demeanor, it’s no surprise to anyone but Gru himself when the Anti-Villain League comes calling to recruit him to their undercover cause. Reluctant to leave his daughters (and possibly slip into his heelish old habits), Gru realizes he should join the AVL when Dr. Nefario (Russell Brand) decides he’s tired of making fart guns and inedible jams (his new job now that Gru is a good guy) in Gru’s lab and wants to get back to something a little more evil.

Much to the delight of the adorable unicorn-loving Agnes (Elsie Fisher), Edith (Dana Gaier) and Margo (Miranda Cosgrove), Gru is paired up with slinky AVL agent Lucy Wilde (Kristen Wiig) who admires more than just his former talents as a villain. In the guise of two cupcake shop employees, Lucy and Gru start spying on the other tenants of the local shopping mall in hopes of figuring out which one is responsible for using a giant magnet to steal some sort of super soldier serum (and the entire lab in which it was created) that turns anyone’s Jekyll into a Hyde-like monstrosity. When the owner of the Mexican restaurant suspiciously stops by to welcome the new cupcake shop to the mall, Gru’s gut tells him that this man is actually El Macho (Benjamin Bratt), a luchador mask-wearing desperado who is so manly he is said to have died while riding a shark loaded with explosives into an erupting volcano.

Gru (Steve Carell) and Lucy (Kristen Wiig) bake up more than just cupcakes in "Despicable Me 2". Photo courtesy Universal Pictures and Illumination Entertainment.

Gru is convinced that El Macho is also the man they are looking for, but the AVL thinks otherwise and takes someone else into custody. With the case closed, Lucy is set to be relocated to Australia for her next assignment, leaving Gru with the horrific realization that his cold heart might actually be beating for Lucy. Meanwhile, Gru’s pill-shaped yellow minions are gradually being abducted as test subjects for the stolen serum, which turns the jovial fellows into frizzy-headed purple monsters. Still determined to prove that El Macho is alive and behind all this mayhem, Gru is faced with the additional obstacles of reuniting with the woman he has feelings for and rescuing his missing minions (all while maintaining his regular fatherly duties). But if anyone can save the day it’s going to be the guy who saved the world from total destruction in the last movie.

With his remaining minions, his new girlfriend and his cheerleading children (as well as the unexpected help of an old friend), this villain-turned-hero has an adventurous romp that’s just as hilarious as the first Despicable Me. Even through their animated avatars, the comedic chemistry between the actors is apparent and the writing is delightfully entertaining. And it’s a good thing good guy Gru was once bad; otherwise he may not have the necessary instincts to find the real villain and save the damsel (and minions) in distress.

www.despicableme.com

 

Guns, girls and a touch of humanity make “Violet & Daisy” touchingly exploitative

Violet (Alexis Bledel) and Daisy (Saoirse Ronan) are seemingly normal teenagers, aside from the fact that they kill people for a living. Photo by MV Nepenthes LLC, courtesy Cinedigm.

Violet and Daisy are just your average teenage girls on the cusp of discovering the harsh realities of adulthood. But while their obsessions with pop singers and designer dresses seem innocent enough, it turns out these girls have already amassed some unexpected job experience far beyond what most of us will ever include on our resumes. Violet & Daisy, the directorial debut from Precious screenwriter Geoffrey Fletcher, is a dark comedy in which Violet (Alexis Bledel, who looks like a cross between Reese Witherspoon and Emily Blunt) and Daisy (Saoirse Ronan from The Lovely Bones and The Host) earn their spending money by gunning down people on Russ’ (Danny Trejo) hit list.

Reminiscent of Peter Jackson’s demented 1994 drama Heavenly Creatures (replacing Jackson’s surrealism with Tarantino-esque blood and violence), Violet & Daisy follows the two girls on their weirdest hit yet. Unlike most of their targets, Michael (James Gandolfini) not only seems to be expecting to be gunned down, but even seems to welcome it. And the fact that his assassins are Lolita-esque hotties rather than rugged gangsters only makes the situation that much more absurdly amusing. After the girls fall asleep on Michael’s couch waiting for him to arrive, they wake up to a guy who has gently covered them with a blanket, then offers to bake them cookies.

Daisy (Saoirse Ronan) and Violet (Alexis Bledel) have a rare nonviolent moment in "Violet & Daisy". Photo by MV Nepenthes LLC, courtesy Cinedigm.

“We’re not here to clean your bathtub or organize your closets or make you happy,” says Violet while aiming a gun at Michael. “We’re here to kill you.” His lack of concern causes hesitation on their part, allowing an odd relationship to develop. Violet and Daisy want to know why Michael is calmly awaiting his demise while Michael is curious how two young girls ended up being the ones on the other side of the guns. But with a rival gang on its way for its own hit on Michael, there’s no time for hesitation.

The odd tension of the situation, coupled with the obviously mixed morals of everyone involved, makes for some darkly hilarious moments. But with Michael’s longing for his estranged daughter and the lack of positive parental figures in the lives of Violet and Daisy, a grotesque bond is formed that makes the inevitability of it all rather touching. There’s a delicate balance between comedy and tragedy at the heart of Violet & Daisy that Fletcher and the cast achieve rather adeptly. When it comes down to it, anything involving gun-toting girls and Danny Trejo is sure to be fun. But rather than coming across as gratuitous and indulgent, Violet & Daisy provides enough humanity and emotional growth for it to be taken a bit more seriously.

www.violetanddaisyfilm.com