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Showing posts with label Mandela. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mandela. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Jonathan Demme ‘Silence of the Lambs’ Director Dies at 73


Jonathan Demme, ‘Silence of the Lambs’ Director, Dies at 73




Oscar-winning director Jonathan Demme has died of esophageal cancer and complications from heart disease, according to published reports. He was 73 years old.

Demme is best known for directing “The Silence of the Lambs,” the 1991 horror-thriller that was a box office smash and a critical triumph. The story of an FBI analyst (Jodie Foster) who uses a charismatic serial killer (Anthony Hopkins) to track a murderer became only the third film in history to win Academy Awards in all the top five categories ( picture, actor, actress, director, and adapted screenplay), joining the ranks of “It Happened One Night” and “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.”
Though he had his greatest success terrifying audiences, most of Demme’s work was looser and quirkier. He showed a great humanism and empathy for outsiders in the likes of “Melvin and Howard,” the story of a service station owner who claimed to have been a beneficiary of Howard Hughes, and “Something Wild,” a screwball comedy about a banker whose life is turned upside down. He also scored with “Married to the Mob” and oversaw “Stop Making Sense,” a documentary about the Talking Heads that is considered to be one of the great concert films.

Following “The Silence of the Lambs,” Demme used his clout to make “Philadelphia,” one of the first major studio films to tackle the AIDS crisis and a movie that won Tom Hanks his first Oscar for playing a gay lawyer.
The director most recently made 2015’s “Ricki and the Flash,” starring Meryl Streep as an aging rocker who must return home to Indiana due to a family crisis. The film disappointed at the box office and reviews were muted.

Demme’s box office prowess waned in the late 1990’s and early aughts. There was an ill-advised 2002 “Charade” remake “The Truth About Charlie,” which starred Mark Wahlberg and Thandie Newton and proved a disservice to the classic Stanley Donen original. He also failed to convince critics that his 2004’s big-budget,,M high-profile remake of “The Manchurian Candidate” needed to be made. The film starred Denzel Washington, Liev Schreiber and Meryl Streep, which hit in the middle of a contentious presidential election between George W. Bush and John Kerry, but failed to make much of a splash.
He was nominated for an Independent Spirit Award for directing “Swimming to Cambodia” in 1988, and his 2009 feature “Rachel Getting Married” drew Indie Spirit nominations for best feature and director.

Demme won the International Documentary Association’s Pare Lorentz Award in 1997 for his film “Mandela,” and his docu “Jimmy Carter Man From Plains” picked up the Fipresci Award at the Venice Film Festival in 2007. He made two documentaries about Haiti, 1988’s “Haiti Dreams of Democracy” and 2003’s critically acclaimed “The Agronomist.” Of the latter the New York Times said, “The turbulence that led to the removal of Jean-Bertrand Aristide from Haiti’s presidency gives ‘The Agronomist,’ a superb new documentary by Jonathan Demme, a melancholy timeliness. Its hero, Jean Dominique, embodies the fragile, perpetual hope that Haiti might someday nurture a just and decent political order.” Another standout documentary was 1992’s “Cousin Bobby,” about Demme’s cousin, an Episcopalian priest in Harlem.

In addition to “Stop Making Sense,” Demme did documentaries on the Pretenders, Bruce Springsteen and Neil Young, and he also directed quite a number of music videos, drawing a Grammy nomination in 1987 for best long form music video for “Sun City: Artists United Against Apartheid.”
Demme came to the attention of Hollywood with the 1980 film “Melvin and Howard,” in which Jason Robards starred as a bearded, bedraggled Howard Hughes encountered by struggling Everyman Melvin Dumont, who helps Howard out — only to be left $156 million in a Hughes will of dubious authenticity. The film worked because it was not about Hughes but about Dumont, played by Paul Le Mat (one of Demme’s favorite actors). Roger Ebert said: “Dummar is the kind of guy who thinks they oughta make a movie out of his life. This time, he was right.” The film drew three Oscar nominations, winning for best supporting actress (Mary Steenburgen) and original screenplay (Bo Goldman), while Robards also drew a nomination.
The 1984 film “Swing Shift,” a romantic dramedy set on the homefront during WWII and starring Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell, was directed by Demme but taken out of his hands by the studio and recut, reportedly to make Hawn’s characterization more flattering.
The same year, however, he also directed Talking Heads concert film “Stop Making Sense.” Reviewing it when it was re-released in 1999, the San Francisco Chronicle wrote of the “tingle of satisfaction” that comes “when a piece of entertainment is so infectious, so original and so correct in its judgments that a viewer can sink into his seat — secure in the knowledge that you’re in good hands. Has there ever been a live concert film as vibrant or as brilliantly realized?”

In 1986 Demme perfectly paired Jeff Daniels and Melanie Griffiths in the offbeat, New Wave-flavored indie comedy “Something Wild” and drew an erotically anarchical performance from Griffiths — she quickly convinces Daniels’ ordinary business guy that she’s capable of anything. The first hour of the film is, as Roger Ebert suggested, “filled with such a headlong erotic charge that it’s hard to see how he can sustain it” — and Demme couldn’t, but even the second half wasn’t bad. The film featured an impressive debut from Ray Liotta as Griffiths’ lunatic ex-boyfriend as well as performances by John Waters, John Sayles and cult band the Feelies.

Film Quarterly declared in 1987 that Demme’s career in the 1980s “represents the interesting case of an American director experimenting with film-making at once trendy and radical.” This was exemplified by both “Stop Making Sense” and “Something Wild.”
Demme next shot brilliant monologuist Spalding Gray’s “Swimming to Cambodia” for the screen, with excellent results all around. The Austin Chronicle said, “Laurie Anderson’s tribal score and Demme’s perfectly executed direction take us right inside the mind of this eccentric genius.”

The director’s 1988 comedy “Married to the Mob,” starring Michelle Pfeiffer and Alec Baldwin, with excellent supporting performances by Dean Stockwell as the Mafia boss and Mercedes Ruehl as his far fiercer wife, was a critical and popular success. The New York Times said: “Jonathan Demme is the American cinema’s king of amusing artifacts: blinding bric-a-brac, the junkiest of jewelry, costumes so frightening they take your breath away. Mr. Demme may joke, but he’s also capable of suggesting that the very fabric of American life may be woven of such things, and that it takes a merry and adventurous spirit to make the most of them. In addition, Mr. Demme has an unusually fine ear for musical novelty, and the sounds that waft through his films heighten the visual impression of pure, freewheeling vitality. If making these films is half as much fun as watching them, Mr. Demme must be a happy man.”

The 2008 film “Rachel Getting Married,” which bore some similarities to Noah Baumbach’s 2007 effort “Margot at the Wedding,” starring Nicole Kidman, while prefiguring Demme’s own “Ricki and the Flash,” provided an excellent vehicle for Anne Hathaway to demonstrate acting ability in a largely unsympathetic but intriguing role of a young woman, out of rehab long enough to attend the wedding of the sister she’s jealous of.

Demme directed an adaptation of the Ibsen play “The Master Builder,” penned by and starring Wallace Shawn, in 2013. In 2015, in addition to “Ricki and the Flash,” he directed the docu-series “The New Yorker Presents,” bringing to life the iconic magazine.

Robert Jonathan Demme was born in Baldwin, Long Island, New York, and attended the University of Florida. Like John Sayles, he began his directing career in Roger Corman’s stable, helming women’s prison exploitation film “Caged Heat” in 1974; nostalgic road trip film “Crazy Mama,” starring Cloris Leachman, in 1975; and Peter Fonda action film “Fighting Mad” in 1976.

The Altman-esque look at small town residents who are CB radio users “Handle With Care” (aka “Citizens Band”) (1977), starring Paul Le Mat and Candy Clark, earned a review (albeit not a glowing one) in the New York Times: “Handle With Care” is “so clever that its seams show. Mr. Demme’s tidiest parallels and most purposeful compositions are such attention-getters that the film has a hard time turning serious for its finale, in which characters who couldn’t communicate directly come to understand one another at long last.”

He followed “Handle With Care” with the Hitchcockian thriller “Last Embrace,” starring Roy Scheider and Janet Margolin, but his next film, “Melvin and Howard” shared the sensibility of “Handle With Care” but showed an assured, mature director, and the acclaim it received firmly established Demme’s Hollywood career.

In 2006 Demme was presented with the National Board of Review’s Billy Wilder Award. Demme’s nephew, director Ted Demme, died in 2002 at age 38.

Demme was married to director-producer Evelyn Purcell. He is survived by second wife Joanne Howard and their three children: Ramona, Brooklyn and Jos.











Sunday, March 2, 2014

THE OSCARS: 7 THINGS TO LOOK FORWARD TO AT THE OSCARS, 2nd MARCH 2014


HIGHLIGHTS OF THE 84TH ACADEMY AWARDS

NUMBER 1 – ELLEN DEGENERES HOSTING THE OSCARS FOR A 2ND TIME

Ellen Degeneres hilarious opening monologue


Everyone has been looking forward to America’s daytime chat show hostess and comedienne Ellen Degeneres hosting the Academy Awards again. She is quick with the wit, there is no toilet humour, and has no fear, A-Listers be aware. Ellen also has class, unlike Seth McFarlane, we will not be hearing any toilet humour from his side kick “Ted”…nor will there be a song and dance number called “We saw your boobs”….the female celebrities can breathe a sigh of relief!

Who can forget when Ellen asked Steven Spielberg to take a photo of her and Clint Eastwood for Myspace and gave Martin Scorsese a script for a follow up to Goodfellas and Big Momma’s House called “Good Mamas”.



My favourite joke was about how nominees get their nominations, as America did not vote for Jennifer Hudson on American Idol and America voted for Al Gore in the presidential elections, both LOST but won their respective Oscars on the night!


Judy Garland, Liza Minnelli, Joey Luft, Lorna Luft
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Judy Garland receiving her juvenile Oscar for Wizard of Oz
 
 
 
NUMBER 2 – THE TRIBUTE TO THE WIZARD OF OZ

The Academy has confirmed that Judy Garland’s children, the legendary Liza Minnelli, Lorna Luft, and Joey Luft will pay tribute to their mum the epic that is the Wizard of Oz. I secretly hope that the last surviving Wizard of Oz Munchkin Jerry Maren, will make an appearance as a member of the Lollipop Guild. We are already humming the songs before the Oscars begin. We had also hoped Judy Garland’s best friend from the Golden Age of MGM, Mickey Rooney would host the tribute, but there has been no mention from Oscars HQ. It has been confirmed that movie star and blonde Bombshell Kim Novak will introduce the the tribute. Kim Novak became friends with Judy Garland and her then husband Sid Luft when they use to party and gamble with Frank Sinatra and the Rat Pack in L.A and Las Vegas.

 

NUMBER 3 – THE RETURN OF THE DIVINE MISS BETTE MIDLER

Songstress  and actress Bette Midler has not been to the Oscars for many years, she was last seen on the Oscar stage presenting with the her co-stars from The First Wives Club in 1997. Old timers and the new generation will be re-introduced to the sumptuous vocal acrobatics of Miss Midler, who is known to bring magic to the stage.

Bette Midler at the 1997 Oscars

 

Shirley Temple receiving her Juvenile Oscar 1935
NUMBER 4 – IN MEMORIUM

Get the tissues ready in 2013 and early 2014, we lost some amazing actors and executives. The most memorable being, America’s little sweetheart Shirley Temple, who was the most famous child star of all time. At the age of 5, Shirley Temple single handedly saved Fox studios from bankruptcy. She later landed some good adult film roles but never quite made the transition into grown up movies. She moved to Television where she landed a storybook series. She retired from show business in 1950 and then pursued a successful career in public service as an Ambassador and head of protocol. The little girl that the world fell in love with will be sorely missed….we hope she is resting in peace on the Good Ship Lollipop with “Uncle Billy”, the legendary Billy Bojangles Robinson.

Some other memorable stars that passed away in the past season are movie stars Peter O’toole, Joan Fontaine, Paul Walker, Philip Seymor Hoffman, Corey Monteith, James Gandolfini, Richard Griffiths, Eleonor Parker, Esther Williams, James Avery, Deanna Durbin, Richard Briers, Jean Stapleton, Sid Caesar , Harold Ramis, Juanita Moore, Maximilian Schell , Alicia Rhett   

 

NUMBER 5 – MANDELA TRIBUTE

Since Gandhi, there has never been a statesman and humanitarian that has been so globally respected, admired and written about. So it is a fitting tribute that the Academy Awards have chosen to remember the global statesman. Bono and U2 have been selected to perform at the Oscars as a tribute to the memory of Nelson Mandela.

 

NUMBER 5 – STEVE MCQUEEN AND 12 YEARS A SLAVE

The best Oscar moments are always when history is made, like when Kathryn Bigelow became the first woman director to win an Oscar and was given the Oscar by non less than Barbra Streisand! Tonite Oscar attendees might witness history in the making if Steve McQueen of Black British descent becomes the first black director to win an Oscar for 12 years a Slave. He has so far lost every time to Director Alfonso Cuarón (Gravity). However he has taken most of the “Best Film” and “ Best Producer” accolades during the award season. The predictions say that is so far a two man race for “best director” it could be Steve McQueen or Alfonso Cuarón, either of which will be a British win!

 


NUMBER 6 – AFRICAN NOMINATIONS AT THE OSCARS

We do love firsts. If either Lupita Nyong’o (Kenya) or Barkhad Abdi (Somalia) they will be become the first Africans to win an Oscar! Steve McQueen has called Lupita Nyong’o his muse and poured his admiration for how she carried the scenes. On the red carpet, Lupita has already made waves as a fashion icon. The likes of USA Vogue editor Anna Wintour and Victoria Beckham have been on the phone. She has already made the covers of various international magazines and possibly the envy of every supermodel alive. Lupita has a second movie out, “Non-Stop” starring Liam Neeson which grossed $10 million on its opening day, and was ranked #1. Barkhad Abdi has a BAFTA in the bag, although he lost most of the accolades to Jared Leto (The Dallas Buyer’s Club). Barkhadi is a novice having never studied acting, he was a limo driver and went to the casting call for Captain Phillips when they advertised for Somali citizens to play pirates. Good luck to both of them.

Pharrell performing "Happy" at the BRIT awards

 
 
NUMBER 7 –  THE PERFORMANCES

This year we have a treat as Oscars HQ have chosen 6 exquisite performances to cater to all tastes! We cannot wait for broadway legend and powerhouse Idina Menzel (Wicked, Glee) to perform “Let it Go” and Pharell’s feel good tune of the year “Happy”. I hope the Oscars have a 5 second delay as the rocktastic Pink will be in the house, we are hoping she will create some kind of controversy. Anything else would be boring from rocker Pink! Remember her half naked acrobatic act at the Grammy Awards?

 
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