Category Archives: Film Fodder

“Finding Nemo” is an even bigger adventure in 3-D

Amidst the ocean of movie releases that comes out each year, Finding Nemo has eluded me since it’s original 2003 release. But after receiving accolades as not only one of the best animated films, but one of the best feature films, of all time, then becoming one of the best-selling DVD releases in history, Nemo and his friends jump from the proverbial pond that is the small screen back to the sea of movie theaters, this time making an even bigger splash in 3-D.

Nemo (Alexander Gould) and Marlin (Albert Brooks) are a happy father and son in "Finding Nemo"

Though I can’t honestly compare the original version to this new 3-D version, what I can say is that Pixar definitely created a beautifully rendered animated version of the already colorful world that exists in the coral reefs and in the deepest, darkest parts of the oceans. It’s a world most of us never get to see in person, so seeing it brought to three-dimensional Pixar life is an impressive sight.

Like most Pixar films, no matter what setting the characters are in, it’s going to be a comical adventure. And Finding Nemo is no exception. After his wife and eggs are eaten by a predatory sea creature, Marlin (who’s not a marlin at all, but a clownfish voiced by Albert Brooks) becomes the lovingly overprotective father of Nemo (Alexander Gould), who is born with a gimp fin. Nemo has never betrayed his father’s trust, but in a sole act of defiance on his first day of school (see what they did there?), Nemo is captured by a scuba diver and added to the aquarium of an Australian dentist’s office. From there, Marlin’s search for Nemo is a parallel adventure to Nemo’s attempts to escape from the aquarium and get back to the ocean.

Along the way, they both encounter an interesting cast of characters. Marlin befriends Dory (Ellen DeGeneres), a Pacific blue tang with short-term memory loss. And Nemo meets an aquarium full exotic creatures such as a pufferfish names Bloat (Brad Garrett), a starfish named Peach (Allison Janney), a shrimp names Jacques (Joe Ranft) and Gill, a scarred moorish idol voiced by Willem Dafoe who wants Nemo to find his freedom as badly as Nemo himself does.

Dory (Ellen DeGeneres) and Marlin (Albert Brooks) are pursued by a great white shark (Barry Humphries) in "Finding Nemo"

Along the way to Sydney Harbour to find Nemo, Marlin and Dory encounter an Alcoholics Anonymous-like group of sharks who have vowed that fish are friends, not food, illuminated predators from the oceans darkest depths, a group of laid-back sea turtles and other helpful creatures willing to lend a helping fin. After a chase scene reminiscent of the Millennium Falcon‘s asteroid belt evasion, Marlin and Dory find themselves in a seemingly perilous Moby-Dick-like situation inside a whale, and in what has to be a reference to the field of poppies in The Wizard of Oz, they’re also bombarded by jellyfish when they make a wrong turn, and Dory comes out worse for wear after receiving a few jellyfish stings. But these are the types of tragedies that have always led to big Disney triumphs, and through determination and the learning of life lessons, Marlin and Nemo simply have to find each other in the end.

As visually and thematically glorious as Finding Nemo must have been the first time around, the added 3-D effects make it all the more immersive. But that’s not the only new addition to this release, as it is preceded by a new Toy Story short called Partysaurus Rex. After Woody (Tom Hanks) and the rest of the gang reject Rex (Wallace Shawn), he finds a new group of friends in the bathtub who want to party for more than their allotted 15 minutes each day. Because he has arms, Rex is able to turn the water on to help create a rave-like bubble bath scored by BT. So from the bathtub to the ocean, there are plenty of aquatic adventures to be had with this Finding Nemo rerelease.

Finding Nemo 3D. Directed by Andrew Stanton. Starring Alexander Gould, Albert Brooks and Ellen DeGeneres. Rated G. www.disney.go.com/finding-nemo/home/ 

Chyna’s return to the ring may not be what wrestling fans were expecting

Stephanie McMahon looks a little more enhanced in “Chyna is Queen of the Ring”. Photo courtesy of Vivid Entertainment.

Did y’all know Chyna is still wrestling? I got this new DVD called Chyna is Queen of the Ring and it’s pretty good. It looks like it’s from a pay-per-view called Fucklemania, which features Chyna in two hardcore matches against some of the industry’s biggest legends. I popped at the beginning when Chyna’s in the locker room getting ready for her first match and Vince and Stephanie McMahon walk in. It looks like Chyna’s going to finally get revenge on Vince for firing her, and Steph for marrying Triple H, but they’re all able to do what’s best for business and get really friendly with each other. I never realized Vince had all those tattoos but I guess he’s gotten some since I last saw him with his shirt off. And I’ve always wondered if Steph’s boobs were fake, but now I’m pretty sure they are. But, I mean, you know.

Some people will piss and moan about how this show starts with talking and a backstage vignette. I mean, it’s probably, like, 20 minutes before we even see any in-ring action. But I really like how they’re able to work a spot for that long and you really don’t even realize there hasn’t been any actual wrestling yet. And I hope this whole thing isn’t a work because it seems like Chyna has paid her dues now and can get the proper sendoff and WWE Hall of Fame induction she deserves. I mean, she’s the only woman to ever be Intercontinental Champion and Vince can’t just ignore that. He’s definitely not ignoring her on this DVD! And if he doesn’t already, he will own this footage within 18 months.

It doesn’t take Chyna long to get cleaned up and in the ring for her first Queen of the Ring match, a nine-wrestler gang bang featuring Bret Hart, The Iron Sheik, “Stone Cold” Steve Austin, The Rock, Doink the Clown, John Cena (hate you, Cena!) and Chyna. And, I mean, I popped big time when Triple H joined the match because I don’t think he and Chyna have even seen each other since Trips married Steph. I don’t really follow the rules of this match, but all I know is Chyna takes on all these guys at the same time, with “Mean” Gene Okerlund coming out from behind the announce table sometimes to get in on the action. The ring girl also never gets out of the ring and takes care of some of the guys when Chyna has her hands full.

Even though he’s the best there is, best there was and the best there ever will be, the Hitman is first one eliminated from the match. And that was all the reason I needed to start chanting, “You screwed Bret! You screwed Bret!” in my living room. (Why was he on Raw the night before this DVD came out and didn’t even plug it?) The rest of the guys finish the match at the same time for a big finish, but it takes them a long time because Chyna is as tough as ever and is able to handle all these legends at the same time. She has fought some tough battles during her wrestling career and she has the scars to prove it.

Before the Fucklemania main event gets underway, Chyna has to go back to the locker room to get ready for it. When she gets back there, that guy from that Kid Rock video is back there and he’s doing a live sex celebration with some girl. (The only reason I listen to Kid Rock is because he did ‘Taker‘s “American Bad Ass” entrance music.) I think it’s the same ring girl that was part of the gang bang match thing. I don’t remember this guy’s name, but I heard he’s in some new movie with Jerry Lawler. (We’re praying for you, King!) If he was a wrestler I would call him the Hedgehog. Chyna joins the celebration for a few minutes and it’s more hardcore than the Attitude Era or ECW (ECDub! ECDub!)!

Chyna gets ready for her stipulation match – a nine-wrestler gang bang – in “Chyna is Queen of the Ring”. Photo courtesy of Vivid Entertainment.

But then it’s time for the main event and it’s the two biggest legends of all time: Ric Flair (whoooo!) and Hulk Hogan (brother!). Though it’s not the same as the first time I saw Flair and Hogan wrestle, these guys look really good for their age. But then Chyna joins the match and, hey, I think this might be part of the Hulk Hogan sex tape that Vince is going to own in 18 months time. But I didn’t know that sex tape had wrestling. It’s pretty good. But since Vince was in the opening segment, I’m sure he already owns this footage and Chyna’s whole Vivid video library because you know WWE will put out a new Chyna DVD when she comes back to WWE. But he didn’t put this one out under the WWE banner because it doesn’t fit with the company’s current PG rating.

Even though she gets double-teamed and hit from behind for the entire match, Chyna is able to bring out the best in two wrestlers who are past their primes. And in the end (SPOILER ALERT!) Chyna finishes off Hogan and Flair at the same time to win the Fucklemania Championship. I knew she could do it, but it’s a lot of fun watching her overcome the odds to win the Queen of the Ring.

The DVD features a bunch of extra stuff, including a scene from Avengers. I never saw The Avengers, but now I want to see it because Chyna plays She-Hulk, and she has her own She-Hulk movie coming out soon. There’s also a behind-the-scenes documentary that breaks kayfabe a little bit, but it’s pretty cool seeing the workers getting ready for their Queen of the Ring matches. There’s also a photo gallery and some other bonus stuff. I’m just kind of suprised Val Venis wasn’t anywhere on this DVD. For some reason it seems like he should have been included somehow. And it’s weird how all the wrestlers look a little different than usual. I guess maybe they were off the juice going into these matches. But it’s a pretty good show and good to see Chyna back in action.

www.vivid.com/movie/queen-of-the-ring

“For a Good Time, Call…” is a crudely touching good time

Phone sex can really bring two people together. Especially if those two people are young, attractive females who have never liked each other, yet find a way to coexist in the same small New York City apartment at the urging of a mutual male friend.

Katie (Ari Graynor, left) and Lauren (Lauren Miller, right) become reluctant roommates at the encouragement of Jesse (Justin Long) (photo courtesy Focus Features)

Though it sounds like the premise of an otherwise plotless porno movie, it’s actually a comically touching new movie called For a Good Time, Call… based on the real-life experiences of Katie Anne Naylon and Lauren Miller, who wrote the film’s screenplay. In the film, Lauren (played by Miller) was really pissed off (or on) by Katie (Ari Graynor) after a drunken frat party several years ago. Now struggling to get by in the big city, the two reluctantly move in together to cut costs. But when Katie discovers that Lauren is secretly working as a phone sex operator, the two decide to go into business for themselves with Lauren taking the calls and Katie managing the business.

Before they know it, all hard feelings are off the hook between the two and they find themselves not only as thriving businesswomen, but also paling around as BFFs. Naturally, they have to keep their thriving enterprise a secret to most (though their gay friend played by Justin Long thinks it’s all fabulously intriguing), which makes it a bit awkward when Lauren’s parents pay their daughter a surprise visit while Katie is “with a client.” And that’s only one of many funny moments in Good Time.

Lauren (Lauren Miller) and Katie (Ari Graynor) come together in "For a Good Time, Call..." (photo by Ryder Sloane / Focus Features)

When Katie is unable to keep up with all the calls coming in, she teaches Lauren the art of the faux phone seduction. This scene makes for a physically funny moment in the film that brings the girls closer together without overtly crossing the lesbian line. Instead, the intimacy the two share is platonic while continuing to grow more and more emotionally intense. Which is why it’s all-the-more devastating to Katie when Lauren is offered (and accepts) the dream job she was after before this whole phone sex thing took off.

The girls split up and, much like many romantic splits, they both soon realize their mistakes and make that important call to each other once again. Yes, it’s all very cutesy and girly. But it’s also crudely funny and features cameos by the likes of Seth Rogen and Kevin Smith as satisfied customers. And as long as you don’t have any odd expectations going into this call, you’re likely to leave satisfied as well.

For a Good Time, Call… Directed by Jamie Travis. Starring Ari Graynor, Lauren Miller and Justin Long. Rated R. www.focusfeatures.com/for_a_good_time_call.

It’s not difficult to find “The Words” that will create the next great novel

Life is often stranger than fiction, and that sentiment has never been so effectively displayed as it is in the The Words, a story within a story (within a story) about a struggling writer who finally happens upon that masterpiece he’s been trying to get published. Only problem is, his success is all fiction. Rory Jansen (a somewhat suprisingly dramatic turn by Bradley Cooper, who typically plays less serious roles in movies like The Hangover and Hit and Run) has dedicated his life to being a professional writer, only to receive rejection letter after rejection letter, with only brief glimmers of backhanded hope here and there. But that doesn’t keep him from living a storybook life as he and his lover (Zoë Saldana) get married, honeymoon in Paris and start a young life together in New York City.

Dora and Rory Jansen (Zoë Saldana and Bradley Cooper) ponder the satchel that will change their fate in "The Words" (photo by Jonathan Wenk)

Some time after they return from Paris, Rory finds the gripping story he’s been looking for… tucked away inside a leather satchel his wife purchased for him at a French antique shop. Unable to stop thinking about the story, he finds himself inspired once again, staying up late to transcribe the words from the yellowing paper into his laptop. His wife reads the story, mistakes it for Rory’s own writing, encourages him to submit it to publishers and, before he knows it, he’s a celebrated plagiarist with a best-selling book. And what’s the harm in it all, really? Rory’s secret will never be revealed, and the success of this book will allow him to get his other novels (the ones he’s actually written) published.

Well, that seems to be the case until Rory meets a sickly old man (Jeremy Irons) who has a story of his own to tell about a young boy who falls in love in Paris, finds happiness, suffers tragedy and copes with the tragedy by putting his thoughts on paper, only to lose the leather satchel in which those pages were kept. The irony of the situation, of course, puts Rory in quite a predicament. Rory’s secret is in danger of being exposed and this old man could destroy the life Rory has built (in much the same way the old man’s own young life was destroyed, inspiring the story Rory has claimed as his own).

Rory Jansen (Bradley Cooper) and the old man responsible for his success (Jeremy Irons) are at an impasse in "The Words" (photo by Jonathan Wenk)

As if that wasn’t a big enough moral dilemma, The Words throws the viewer for another loop as the equally successful Clay Hammond (Dennis Quaid) reads excerpts from his latest novel to a packed college auditorium. And Clay’s work of fiction recounts the story of a young writer who finds the perfect novel, publishes it as his own and is confronted by the old man who claims to be the actual author. But is Rory’s story actually Clay’s story? Is the old man a character in one of these stories or the real person responsible for Rory and/or Clay’s success? Is it all a lie or has life truly proven to be much stranger than fiction? These are the struggles at the heart of The Words, and thankfully the viewer is left on his own to decide how the story truly ends.

The Words. Directed by Brian Klugman and Lee Sternthal. Starring Bradley Cooper, Zoë Saldana, Jeremy Irons and Dennis Quaid. Rated PG-13. www.thewordsmovie.com

WWE Studios’ “The Day” proves that humanity has seen better days

WWE has made it clear in recent years that it wants to be recognized not just as a wrestling company, but as a global entertainment entity. One way that the company has successfully crossed over into other areas of pop culture has been through WWE Studios, which releases films that normally feature WWE stars alongside more established actors. But with its latest release, the post-apocalyptic thriller The Day, there are no wrestlers to be found. In fact, there aren’t many people at all as it focuses on five survivors of some sort of future war that has left little in the way of civilized human interaction.

Ashley Bell as Mary in "The Day." Photo by Petr Maur.

Before I get into the many confusing flaws of the movie, I’d like to talk about some of the positive aspects of this bleak look at humanity’s future. First, director Doug Aarniokoski’s washed-out approach really adds to the sense of hopelessness and despair that permeates the entire film. And the acting (especially that of The Last Exorcism‘s Ashley Bell) is impressively distraught considering that most of the stars of the film are relative unknowns. As the name implies, The Day takes place over the course of one 24-hour period after this machete-toting bunch happens upon a house in the countryside that appears to be unoccupied and stocked with food and other essentials. It turns out, however, that this house is a giant trap, and it doesn’t take long for a larger, more barbaric group of survivors to show up with a thirst for blood.

Despite the similarities to Night of the Living Dead and other zombie movies, the attackers in The Day are not reanimated corpses or infected by anything. They’re just other people, so it’s never really made clear why they would be out to trap and kill another group of people. I guess the idea is that humanity will revert to its animalistic nature when confronted with such insurmountable odds. But it’s also not clear what those odds are and why there are so few survivors living under such anarchaic conditions.

Dominic Monaghan as Rick in "The Day."

The film’s biggest star is Dominic Monaghan, who was Raw‘s social media ambassador last Monday (which means he tweeted during the entire broadcast) and is featured prominently in every trailer and poster I have seen for The Day. So it’s a little disappointing that he seems to get less screen time than any one else in the movie. It does, however, give the other actors time to shine and, as I pointed out before, they definitely do a good job of that. Though it is unclear why the thought processes of the individual characters sometimes changes drastically from one scene to the next, that can easily be explained as the type of paranoia and distress that one might suffer while being one of the last people on Earth.

When the warring tribes of survivors enter into their climactic battle, it’s an intensely gory fight that would be a better fit in the old Extreme Championship Wrestling than in today’s PG-rated WWE broadcasts. But since I never figured out why they were fighting, rather than working together to try and reestablish some sort of civility, the broken bones and blood spatters are little more than visceral visuals. While WWE has been focusing more and more on creating engaging wrestling matches and exciting interaction between its competitors as of late, WWE Studios should be taking notes so its next releases offer a little more emotional investment with their action, suspense and drama.

The Day. Directed by Doug Aarniokoski. Starring Shawn Ashmore, Ashley Bell, Michael Eklund, Cory Hardrict, Dominic Monaghan and Shannyn Sossamon. Rated R. www.wwe.com/inside/overtheropes/wwestudios.

Author Matt Bondurant’s family legend is brought to bootlegging life in “Lawless”

Howard (Jason Clarke), Forrest (Tom Hardy) and Jack (Shia LaBeouf) are the immortal Bondurant Boys in "Lawless"

When one uncovers some dark secret from his family’s past, the common inclination is to want to find out more. Even if the people involved were long gone before you were born, there’s still a sense that the actions of these people so many years ago might help define who you are today. Just as the new Southern bootleg film Lawless is derived from Matt Bondurant‘s 2008 novel The Wettest County in the World, Bondurant himself has created a story rooted in historical events involving his grandfather Jack and uncles Forrest and Howard. These Bondurant Brothers were the stuff of legend in Franklin County, Va. for staving off authorities to create a thriving moonshine business during the Prohibition. While Lawless graphically recounts the conniving violence and brutality that naturally came along with such successful criminal activities, it also delves into the nuances of the personal struggles of everyone involved. As his fictional portrayal of his family’s own part in bootlegging business hits theaters today (with Shia LaBeouf playing the author’s grandfather), Matt talks to Wrestling with Pop Culture about the differences between the novel and the film, the research that went into his book and how it feels to have discovered these notorious tales that preceded him.

At what point did you realize that this story needed to be told?

I had a general sense that my grandfather was involved in moonshine when I was younger, but it wasn’t something we discussed within the family. It wasn’t until 15 years ago, when my father started doing some research and uncovered some newspaper articles and showed them to me. We came across this article describing this incident at a place called the Maggodee Creek Bridge in December of 1930, which is the climactic scene in the film. The news version described my grandfather Jack and his two brothers as the Bondurant Boys. Some of the things that were said there made it clear they weren’t just simple moonshiners, they were a known entity that was somewhat notorious. This was a revelation to my father and me, so I wanted to know more about this. I was intrigued about it for the family story aspect, it seemed cool. It wasn’t until I published my first novel in 2005, The Third Translation, that I had the confidence to attack a project like this.

In the early stages I was thinking of it as a non-fiction piece, but it became clear that there wasn’t enough material to work with. There’s no diaries or letters and very little to account for these men’s lives day to day, month to month or year to year. Around 2004, I decided I was going to do a novelization. So I took what information I did have and worked a dramatic narrative to connect it.

Why did you decide to use Jack as your focal point?

He’s kind of the most transformative figure. Maybe it’s because he was my grandfather and is closest to me, and I knew my grandfather as a young boy. From what we do know, Forrest was clearly the acknowledged leader of the group and was a tough character. Jack was the one that seemed like the most obvious transformative figure that I think the reader would more closely align themselves with as somebody who’s trying to enter into this world and these activities with his brothers. He’s also the one who is striving to change himself and his situation. He wants to get out, he has bigger dreams of other things, so I think that’s naturally who the reader would gravitate towards. It may be because he’s the youngest I just felt closer to him in some way.

Jack (Shia LaBeouf) awkwardly woos Bertha (Mia Wasikowska) in "Lawless"

In the book, Sherwood Anderson, who is not in the movie at all, gets a lot of time. And I think in the book the three brothers get closer to equal treatment. Howard gets hardly any time at all in the movie, but in the book there’s a whole thing with Howard and his backstory, his wife and all the things going on in Howard’s life. There’s a bit more with Forrest and Maggie in the book as well, which was unfortunately shortened in the film. I know there are some scenes with Howard that were cut out of the film just for time. So I think that emphasis is more pointed in the film than the book.

Speaking of the differences between the book and the film, Nick Cave wrote the screenplay for the movie. Did he ask you for input at all?

No, he didn’t. At the press conference from Cannes, somebody asked him that directly and his answer was, “Nope.” But I understand it totally because my vision is there in black and white. He needed to take that and come up with his own vision for it, so consulting with me would be like me getting my stuff in there again. If I was in his shoes, I wouldn’t have consulted with the author either because everything that I have to say is in the book. The way that I think anything should be done with the story is in the book, so he could come up with his own take on it and to include me might be kind of strange. I have great respect for him and I think he did a good job with the script. I saw a couple of different iterations of the script about a year before the movie was made and I could tell he had condensed things in a way that made sense, which is a difficult process, and had some sharp scenes in there. The way he adapted some of the scenes in the book, I thought he did a good job. I’ve read one of his novels and he’s a good writer. I was kind of surprised to find out he wrote screenplays, but then it kind of makes sense if you listen to his lyrics.

What was the process of bringing your story to life as a film like for you?

Most of it was happening at a great distance. Agents were doing things in L.A. and New York and they were notifying me of things occasionally. When we sold the rights for the film to Columbia Pictures, that was a pretty big deal and I just happened to be in New York at the time with my agent having dinner with my wife. He actually concluded the deal over the phone while we were having dinner. You don’t really think that someone’s going to make the film because lots of rights get sold all the time and I know lots of writers who have had film rights bought and it just doesn’t get made. Very quickly, though, [director John] Hillcoat, Cave and Shia were attached. My understanding of it is that the three of them were the ones who liked it from the very beginning and were the ones who caused the producers to buy it.

We sold it in 2008, then there was a strange period in 2010 when all these other actors started becoming attached to it. I knew none of it means anything until somebody puts money down and they start building a set. Then in 2011 everything fell into place really quickly, and I think a lot of that had to do with Tom Hardy becoming involved. I think everybody wanted to work with John Hillcoat and they really wanted to work with Nick Cave, they thought the screenplay was good, and Shia, of course, is interesting and is a draw. But it’s a mid-to-low budget indie film and the funding was weird for a while. When they finally went to green light it into production, they said Tom Hardy was on board and all of a sudden everybody else just piled on there. Then Jessica Chastain gets in there and everybody wants to work with her, and Gary Oldman, and everybody was trying to get in.

Forrest (Tom Hardy) is the unkillable leader of the Bondurant Brothers in "Lawless"

Then they started production and they did invite me down to the set, so my dad and I came down for a couple of days. The producers kept me really involved, Hillcoat called me and we had several phone conversations and email exchanges, some of the actors called me and emailed me, and they did, out of their own generosity, keep me involved quite a bit. They didn’t have to, there was no contractual obligation, but they consulted with me on a few points for accuracy. They wanted to stay true to the spirit of the book and maintain the spirit of the characters, and to some small degree they wanted me to be happy with the product. They weren’t setting out to please me, but maybe my opinion mattered just a tiny bit.

Were there any scenes from the book you would have liked to have seen in the movie that were omitted?

The film doesn’t really go into the background of Howard [Jason Clarke] and how he came to be the way he is. That’s not a fault of the film, I’m just saying that that kind of character development is difficult to do. There are a lot of scenes with Howard and his wife exploring his impulsiveness, his drinking problem and he has kind of a rage issue. That comes from his experiences in World War I, which is not in the film at all.

The film opens up with the same scene that the book opens with, which is a pig slaughtering scene, although it’s done slightly different in the book. Forrest actually straddles the pig and cuts its throat, which is what you’d normally do. It’s a really bloody, gory sort of scene and Hillcoat told me they tried to do that with a pig cadaver, but they just couldn’t make it look right so they just had to shoot the pig. But there’s a whole series of stuff about them as boys surviving the Spanish flu epidemic, there’s a whole thing about their grandfather, who was a Civil War veteran who carved these little wooden figures of Civil War soldiers with missing limbs and suffering and stuff, and Forrest liked to play with them as a child. So, yeah, I wish the film could have been 45 hours long and thrown all that in there, too.

Were you pretty confident in Hillcoat’s direction of this movie following his adaptation of The Road?

Absolutely. I’m a huge fan of The Road. It was just out when I found out he was attached to this film. His first film was The Proposition, and Nick Cave wrote that one. After I saw those two films, I was like, “Awesome! This is great.” At first I was envisioning the book in the style of The Road, which is really dark. But they went in a different direction with this film. It’s more like The Proposition. Just to have the person that adapted the Cormac McCarthy book adapt mine is a great honor, and I think he’s highly skilled.

One of the things that I most admire about Hillcoat, and this is reflected in Lawless, is that he’s not afraid to look directly at things. That’s what a lot of novelists try to do because when you’re writing, you want to look at the most horrible thing directly. And I don’t mean horrible as in the grossest, bloodiest thing. It could be, also, the look on somebody’s face when some terrible thing happens. When we see something horrible, we get this instinctual urge to not look at it straight on and stare at it for a few seconds. And if you’re confronting the viewer or the reader with something they have trouble with, it’s challenging us in a way that’s really unique and interesting. And he’s able to do that, especially with this film, in a way that’s sort of packaged within a film that has some conventional gangster genre things going on, so there’s mass market appeal, too. But at the same time, it bears a stamp or quality and I think he has a signature style. I think he’s one of the real up-and-coming directors and I’m excited to see what he does next. I think he’s going to have a good career and I hope this film furthers that and is appreciated in that way, which I think it will.

If you were to write another book that was appropriate for optioning, would you want to be more involved? Do you see yourself getting into screenwriting or being more creatively involved, or do you appreciate that distance?

I do like film a lot, I’m a fan of film. My third novel came out in January. It’s called The Night Swimmer and it’s being shopped around for film rights. Nobody’s bought it yet, and I don’t think it will be bought. It’s about a young couple who moves to the coast of Ireland and it’s more of a love story. People aren’t getting their throats cut and shit. It’s also not based on a true story, which is a big deal for this film. I think my first and third books don’t seem to be too translatable to film, and the fourth book that I’m starting now, I can’t really even think about that yet. I think it’s such a distant art form, and I have great respect for the art form of screenplays. But I don’t really know anything about it. I don’t really know how to do it, I don’t think I’d be very good at it, I think I would have trouble condensing and keeping it short and direct. That’s not my natural inclination, so when I’m writing I’m anticipating that none of these will be made into films. If somebody decides they want to buy the rights, obviously that’s great. But I don’t think I’d want to be involved. I like the position I was in now where they kind of include me, but I’m not responsible for anything. I think I’d rather receive a nice check for it and hopefully sell some more copies of the book that will allow me to write another book. All I hope to gain out of this whole process is the ability to write another book. That’s what selling the film rights means to me is it increases my chances of being able to write my next book by increasing my notoriety so that some publisher wants to publish my next book.

What’s the relationship between Guy Pearce’ s special agent character in the movie and the same character in the book?

Guy Pearce gives Charlies Rakes a shot of eccentricity in "Lawless"

That’s the largest departure from the book is the characterization of Charlie Rakes. Charlie Rakes was a real guy, he was a real deputy, but he was a Franklin County resident. He did really want to kill my grandfather and his brothers for some reason. In the book I try to give a more complex, nuanced depiction of Charlie Rakes as a real person who had come to this point because of plausible scenarios that would cause these men to intersect in 1930 where he really wants to kill them. Hillcoat told me this was going to be a big departure and he ran it by me. But it was to sort of accentuate the outsider quality of Rakes to make him from Chicago, bring in somebody from the outside. It just helped translate him into a villain faster since there’s no backstory of Charlie Rakes in the film. He’s just a lunatic that shows up and is immediately crazy. I knot that Guy Pearce had a fair amount to do with the depiction and the way that he played him. And that’s what films have to do. The medium of film is limited in ways that novels are not, so that was the biggest departure.

The character of Maggie was the second one. In the film she’s from Chicago and in real life she was also a Virginia resident. But she was mysterious, she wore nice clothes and fancy dresses and things. We don’t even know the last name of the real Maggie. After Forrest died, they found out he was secretly married to her, and they lived a strange life. They lived together at the service station and they never had any children.

How did you go about doing most of your research, aside from going off the stories of your relatives?

A couple of the articles about these incidents are kind of helpful because they talk about Jack Bondurant saying things to the deputy and stuff like that. But a big part of the character stuff came from photos. There’s only two or three of my grandfather from this period and in all of them he’s sitting on top of his car wearing these nice clothes with a cigar in his mouth and his hat cocked, really trying to look tough. And I depicted those scenes in the book. Same thing with Bertha, my grandmother. So, Jack was clearly someone who wanted to have some flash and wanted to look like a character or gangster, to some degree. Also, the court transcripts from the Moonshine Conspiracy Trial of 1935 relate some of these incidents, like the shooting at Maggodee Creek and other run-ins between deputies like Charlie Rakes and the brothers. So we had lines where we’d hear things that they said, which are in the book and the film. They had a reputation and he clearly had a thing against them. Forrest supposedly had his throat cut and walked nine miles to the hospital, which is a pretty sketchy story. So I came up with the plausible explanation for that was that Maggie was there, and they play that pretty straight in the film to the way I wrote it. We also know that he … lived through all these things, so he’s kind of like this Rasputin figure because you couldn’t kill him.

My dad says he remembers Forrest as this tough character and nobody wanted to mess with him, but they don’t seem like the type of guys who were running around slapping people around in order to scare them. So why were they scared of them? They were scared of them because you couldn’t seem to kill this guy, Forrest. The film really took this and jacked this up, it’s one of the principal elements, this immortal thing. It’s natural that this is what made them scary … and Forrest understands this to some degree.

How does your father feel about the way his father has been characterized in the book and the film?

He seemed to like the book. He was a little concerned about the violence. He and my mother hadn’t seen a film in 30 years, so they were a little bit shocked. The only thing he feels strange about is having his mother portrayed in the midst of this bloodiness, even though the real Bertha Minnix married a known criminal. My father’s not a particularly talkative individual, so it’s hard to get much of a complex response out of him. I know he’s really proud of what I’ve accomplished, and of the notoriety, to some degree, of his family being known now. He’s 80 years old and I think he’s proud that our family has some sort of pointed history, even it is a little bit negative.

Lawless. Directed by John Hillcoat. Starring Shia LaBeouf, Tom Hardy, Gary Oldman, Mia Wasikowska, Jessica Chastain, Jason Clarke and Guy Pearce. Rated R. www.lawless-film.com.

“ParaNorman” reanimates stop-motion fun

With computer effects continuing to dominate the animated movie scene, it’s good to see an old-fashioned stop-motion animated picture on the big screen. Especially when said animated film features reanimated corpses, ghosts and other supernatural creatures.

Norman (Kodi Smit-McPhee) and his gang experience another fright in "ParaNorman"

Much like 2009’s Coraline, Laika‘s ParaNorman is a 3-D horror adventure based on a book (written by Elizabeth Cody Kimmel and illustrated by Ross Stewart). Norman (Kodi Smit-McPhee) is an unintentionally macabre little boy who lives in the equally morbid New England town of Blithe Hollow, which thrives off tourists’ curiousity about the witch hunts that took place there hundreds of  years ago. Given its haunted history, Blithe Hollow is naturally filled with the spirits of those who have died with yet-to-be-settled business in the mortal world. And Norman has a sixth sense, which means he sees these ghosts as he walks to school, watches TV or performs in school plays.

You’d think such abilities would be admired, especially in a town like his. But instead, Norman is an outcast at school and a disappointment to his parents (Jeff Garlin and Leslie Mann) who spends most of his time watching horror movies while having conversations with his grandmother (Elaine Stritch), whose ghost sits on the couch behind him. When crazy uncle Prenderghast (John Goodman) gives Norman the task of breaking a witch’s curse (just after comically keeling over, no less), Norman’s talents are suddenly appreciated as he is the only one who can communicate with the ghost of the witch (Jodelle Ferland) who wants her revenge on the town that cursed her to an unjust demise.

Norman (Kodi Smit-McPhee) attempts to break the witch's curse in "ParaNorman"

Norman races up witch mountain, encounters a bunch of zombies and is eventually saved by his vapid older sister Courtney (Anna Kendrick), his chubby friend Neil (Tucker Albrizzi), Neil’s jock brother Mitch (Casey Affleck) and Alvin (Christopher Mintz-Plasse), the school bully. The whole thing turns into a Goonies-like adventure as this unlikely gang fights off zombies, evades the police and tries to break the witch’s curse before she destroys the town. But no matter how many years have passed since those horrific witch trials, it doesn’t take long for the people of today’s Blithe Hollow to wage a new witch hunt as these supernatural events become harder and harder to ignore. And that only complicates things for Norman, who is suddenly tasked with more responsibility than he’s ever known before.

ParaNorman is definitely safe for kids, even with darkly comical moments including a segment when Norman is trying to pry a book out of his dead uncle’s hands, resulting in an awkward dance between child and corpse. But the references to classic horror movies ranging from Night of the Living Dead to Halloween will keep older horror fans happy, as will the sometimes crude dialogue. The redemptive quality of the story (not only for Norman, but for the witch and her one-time oppressors) keeps things lighthearted amidst the whimsically dark atmosphere. And while CGI has worked for similiar movies such as Monster House, ParaNorman probably wouldn’t have been given such vibrant life had it not been done in the stop-motion style.

ParaNorman. Directed by Sam Fell and Chris Butler. Starring Kodi Smit-McPhee, Tucker Albrizi, Anna Kendrick, Casey Affleck, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Jeff Garlin and Leslie Mann. Rated PG. www.paranorman.com.