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DAILY CELEB DOSE

Filmmaker Darabont Takes on `The Shield'

Monday, May 7, 2007

Filmmaker Darabont


Filmmaker Frank Darabont of "The Shawshank Redemption" fame has been dazzled by "The Shield" since it began in 2002. He finally took action or more specifically, he shouted "Action!"

Invited by series creator Shawn Ryan to direct an episode of the dark and wrenching police drama, Darabont jumped in. His work on Tuesday's episode, "Chasing Ghosts," cemented Darabont's admiration for TV in general and "The Shield" in particular.

"It starts with the writing," Darabont said. "I've never seen a show that takes the kind of chances this one does. It's swinging for the fences all the time, and there's not been one iota of slacking in the tension and quality of the stories they're telling."

No big-screen snobbery here. As Darabont sees it, "some of the best stuff is being done on TV these days."

But the reality is that television and film production are vastly different.

A series can't offer an impressive budget or the kind of leisurely, 120-day shoot Darabont enjoyed on "The Green Mile." An episode of "The Shield" usually is allowed about seven days of filming.

And instead of realizing a personal vision, as he did directing his Academy Award-nominated adaptation of Stephen King's novella for "Shawshank," he has a series template for tone and character to follow.

Darabont, making a rare foray into TV, was fine with it all during his work late last summer on the FX series. He's downright enthusiastic about the relative lack of control.

"Coming in and putting myself at the service of somebody else's creative vision is wild and liberating. ... This is play time for me. And working with a unit this talented, this cast and this script, wow, talk about a safety net."

"I love playing in their sandbox and not trying to turn it into my sandbox," he said.

On a sweltering Los Angeles day, with Darabont and the cast and crew camped out in front of an apartment building for a scene in "Chasing Ghosts," the filmmaker was clearly in charge but far from overbearing.

"I seem to recall that on those lines you were off the curb, but maybe I'm losing it," he counsels series star Michael Chiklis. "Where it lands naturally is better. Let's do it one more time. .... And action! Please!"

The episode is pivotal in the story line unfolding this season.

"The Shield" is immersed in the aftermath of police Detective Curtis Lemansky's death and Strike Team leader Vic Mackey's (Chiklis) determined effort to find and destroy his killer who viewers know is fellow lawman Shane Vendrell.

There was a deliberate effort to give Darabont a particularly juicy script, said Adam E. Fierro, who co-wrote it with creator and executive producer Ryan.

The hour "includes a huge emotional payoff, something that has been building since last season, and we held it specifically" for Darabont, Fierro said, adding: "He's a great writer, and when you have a great writer reading your stuff you feel extra pressure."

Darabont slipped easily into the series' rapid-fire production rhythm, according to an admiring Chiklis.

"This is not a conventional shoot," Chiklis said. "It's really shot in a docudrama style oftentimes, we don't even lay marks (for the actors). It's raw and ugly. We do it fast and furious."

The nine to 10 script pages covered in a single day of shooting on "The Shield" represent at least a week's production on a film, the actor said. Darabont embraced the rush.

"He's been passionate since the moment he walked on the set, like a 15-year-old kid at a rock concert," Chiklis said. "He's been on fire the whole time. ... He's moved faster than anybody else. He's so definitive. He knows exactly what he wants."

Besides directing the pilot for the new Jeff Goldblum series "Raines," Darabont's TV experience includes a 1990 cable TV movie, "Buried Alive," and scripts for George Lucas' "The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles."

The first two features he wrote and directed, 1994's "Shawshank" and 1999's "The Green Mile" (also a King adaptation) received Oscar best-picture nods. He knows what he wants to pursue artistically "good, character-driven stuff" but worries about whether it's possible.

"Truth is, it's getting harder and harder in my line to get movies made. The studios are getting so ...." he searches for a word, then settles on "blockbusterish," a reference to big-budget movies that play it safe.

"Do I want to spend two years of my life making something I wouldn't want to spend two hours of my life watching? The answer is no," he said, adding, "I am convinced I couldn't make a `Shawshank' today."

The independent film route is a possibility, Darabont said. And he's adamant about directing his own screenplays; his latest projects include "The Mist," another King-based film that is planned for fall release, and "Fahrenheit 451."

"I just ran out of gas wanting to ever type `Fade in' for somebody else again. I decided to write for me. ... After 20 years of primarily being a screenwriter and having 20 years go by in a blur of deadlines, enough of that."

"I'm going to some fun with it."

___

On the Net:

http://www.fxnetwork.com
posted by WHOSANE, 1:08 PM | link | 0 comments |

McCartney scoops Classical Brit

Friday, May 4, 2007

Sir Paul McCartney has won the best album award at the Classical Brits for his fourth classical album Ecce Cor Meum (Behold My Heart).


Sir Paul McCartney


The former Beatle saw off competition from artists including Sting, Katherine Jenkins, Alfie Boe and Bryn Terfel.
The award was voted for by Classic FM listeners and readers of its magazine.
"If you'd told me when I was a little boy growing up in Liverpool I'd be at the Albert Hall receiving this, I wouldn't have believed you," he said.

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posted by WHOSANE, 9:49 AM | link | 0 comments |

300 battles Pirates at MTV Awards

Tuesday, May 1, 2007

Sword and sandals epic 300 will go head to head with Pirates of the Caribbean sequel, Dead Man's Chest, at this year's MTV Movie Awards.


300Pirates

300 has earned five nominations to Pirates' four, with both films vying in the best movie, best villain and best performance categories.

Other contenders for best movie include ice skating comedy Blades of Glory, Little Miss Sunshine and Borat.

Comedian Sarah Silverman will host the annual awards in Los Angeles on 3 June.

It will be the first time the awards ceremony, which includes categories for best kiss and best fight, is broadcast live. Silverman, famous for her irreverent style, hosted the Independent Spirit Awards earlier this year.

Pirates stars Johnny Depp and Keira Knightley are both nominated in the best performance category, vying against 300's Gerard Butler, Will Smith for his role in The Pursuit of Happyness and Dreamgirls' Beyonce Knowles and Jennifer Hudson.

Potential award-winning villains include Pirates star Bill Nighy, 300's Rodrigo Santoro, Tobin Bell in Saw III, Jack Nicholson in The Departed and Meryl Streep in The Devil Wears Prada.

British success

British comedian Sacha Baron Cohen, whose hit film Borat earned three nominations, has been shortlisted in both the best kiss and the best fight categories.

The Borat creator is nominated for Borat's naked wrestling match with co-star Ken Davitian, and his kiss with Will Ferrell in Talledega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby.

Baron Cohen is also nominated for best comedic performance, against Ferrell, Adam Sandler, Ben Stiller and fellow Briton Emily Blunt.

Blunt, who was in The Devil Wears Prada, is also nominated in the best breakthrough performance category, but will face stiff competition from Little Miss Sunshine's Abigail Breslin and Jaden Smith in The Pursuit of Happyness.

They are joined on the shortlist by British actress Lena Headey, in 300, Stomp the Yard's Columbus Short and singer Justin Timberlake, in Alpha Dog.

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posted by WHOSANE, 4:26 AM | link | 0 comments |