Showing posts with label John Cusack. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Cusack. Show all posts

Sunday, 1 November 2015

John Cusack & Paul Dano Embody Brian Wilson In LOVE & MERCY


Now playing at an indie art theater near me:

LOVE & MERCY (Dir. Bill Pohlad, 2015)



I was really skeptical of when I first heard about this project, a biopic of Brian Wilson in which he?s portrayed by Paul Dano when he?s young and all mixed up in the ?60s, and John Cusack when he?s middle-aged and all mixed-up in the late ?80s and early ?90s.

The stills and footage that were initially released showed that there was a lot of attention paid to Dano?s look via his hair and wardrobe made to make him look like prime period Wilson, but the pics of Cusack, well, they just looked like Cusack. No attempt to make him look like Wilson in his 40s with a salt-and-pepper pompadour or anything. It?s just Cusack with his jet black hair, wearing shirts he?d normally wear like he just walked on to the set and refused to take part in any hair and make-up nonsense.

It?s a lot like how Cusack appeared as Richard Nixon in Lee Daniels? THE BUTLER a few years back. Despite a little bit of a prosthetic to elongate his nose, Cusack still just looked, and mostly acted (he made a slight attempt at the disgraced President?s accent) like himself.

It?s odd as Cusack has had a rocky career of late, walking through a bunch of sad direct to VOD releases, and not even appearing in HOT TUB TIME MACHINE 2, the sequel to the last movie he made that could reasonably be called a hit, so you?d think he?d change his look a little here to play the iconic singer/songwriter/producer.

But maybe the point in producer turned first time director Pohlad?s adaptation of the life of Wilson is that he shouldn?t have to. It?s like Todd Haynes? I?M NOT THERE, the abstract 2007 biopic of Bob Dylan in which 7 different actors played Dylan at various points of his career. The themes, thoughts, and tones from the times that enhance the non-stop music are the focus, not whether whoever looks like the actual person.

That said, the most effective scenes in LOVE & MERCY, which takes its name from a track from Wilson?s 1988 self-titled solo album, are the ones in which the floppy haired Dano as the 20somethng Brian toils away in the studio making his ?60s pop masterpieces ?Pet Sounds? and SMiLE.?

The movie, which was co-scripted by Oren Moverman, who co-wrote I?M NOT THERE not coincidentally, moves back and forth from Dano?s Wilson in full genius mode to Cusack?s burned-out Wilson who?s under the control of corrupt psychotherapist Dr. Eugene Landy (Paul Giamatti chewing the scenery to bits).

Both versions of Brian (or ?Bri? as his fellow brothers and bandmates call him) have their villains. Dano has his father Murray Wilson (Bill Camp) and Mike Love (Jake Abel) on his back about making more conventional, commercial music (in protest Brian exclaims: ?We?re not surfers - we never have been - and real surfers don't dig our music!?) while Cusack has the evil, oppressive Landy thwarting his every move to have a normal life. 


And a normal love life via Elizabeth Banks in a warm, winning performance as Melinda Ledbetter, former model turned Cadillac saleswoman (they have a meet cute at her dealership), who sees pretty quickly that Giamatti?s Landy is a horrible influence on the beleaguered Beach Boy.

Melinda witnesses the creepy doctor?s methods ? made creepier by Giamatti?s bug-eyed intensity - under his oppressive 24-hour a day supervision. Landy, who we see in a pivotal scene berating his patient for eating a hamburger without permission, eventually forbids the budding relationship between Melinda and Brian. Melinda then starts phoning members of Wilson?s family, and doing what she can to rescue Brian from Landy?s clutches.

This is well-acted, well executed stuff, but the real heart of the film is in the recreations of the studio sessions in the ?60s. It?s apparent that filmmaker Pohlad, and screenwriters Moverman and Michael A. Lerner, have studied every bit of footage, noted every instance of studio chatter, and absorbed every bit of the multi-disc box sets, and bootlegs of ?Pet Sounds? and Smile? material. They also earn points for depicting and paying respect to ?The Wrecking Crew,? the group of top notch session musicians that took endless notes from Brian on how to arrange his ?teenage symphony to God,? but not calling them by that name as it was applied much later.

Dano and Cusack both do good work in embodying the tortured artist that has heard voices in his head in 1963, but it?s Dano who nails the young Brian?s angsty ambition. And, like I said before, it helps that he actually resembles Wilson. While Cusack puts in one of his most lived-in performance in ages, I still had to remind myself that he was playing the same person as Dano.

LOVE & MERCY is a much better than average musical biopic, because it?s more concerned with capturing the psychological essence of its subject than it is with a formulaic greatest hits approach ? although its soundtrack is prime period Beach Boys tracks blaring from start to finish. The casting may be a bit mismatched, but the vibrations it picks up, both good and bad, all resonate extremely deeply.

More later...

Brilliant Brian Wilson Biopic LOVE & MERCY Out Today On Blu Ray/DVD


Despite that I largely preferred the Paul Dano parts over the John Cusack ones, Bill Pohlad?s Brian Wilson biopic LOVE & MERCY is one of my favorite films of the last year. Out today on Blu ray and DVD, the movie features Dano as the young ?60s ?Pet Sounds?/?SMiLE?-era Brian, who?s trying to break free from the control of his abusive father (Murray Wilson played by Bill Camp); and Cusack as the middle-aged Brian who?s trying to break free from the control of his abusive therapist (Eugene Landy played by Paul Giamatti). 

I reviewed the film very favorably upon its theatrical release in my area last June, but I stressed that I was bothered that while Dano was appropriately outfitted and groomed, there was no attempt to make Cusack resemble Wilson. I wrote: ?It?s just Cusack with his jet black hair, wearing shirts he?d normally wear, like he just walked on to the set and refused to take part in any hair and make-up nonsense.?

So when I received a review copy of LOVE & MERCY on Blu ray, I was intrigued to dive into the Special Features, especially one entitled ?A California Story: Creating the Look of LOVE & MERCY,? to see if Cusack?s lack of proper aesthetic was addressed. The 10 minute featurette has director/producer Pohlad and the production designer Keith Cunningham discussing how they went about capturing three different eras ? the ?60s, ?70s, and ?80s - via sets and wardrobe, and using real locations such as the actual still-standing studios that Wilson recorded in,

Costume Designer Danny Glicker chimes in about the wardrobe worn by The Beach Boys, Elizabeth Banks, and Giamatti, but never comments on the choice of the fairly modern looking button down shirts Cusack wears, or anything about the man?s part of ?the look? of the film.

In another featurette, ?A-side/B-side: Portraying the Life of Brian Wilson,? which is much longer (25 min.), and mixes photos and footage of the real Wilson with interviews with cast and crew, and clips of the film, Cusack?s appearance is touched on by one of the producers, Claire Rudnick Polstein: ?We really weren?t that concerned with that they look alike, it really wasn?t about that, it was really more about having the essence of who Brian was.?

There are over seven minutes of Deleted Scenes, all of which are from the Dano sections of the film. Unlike many deleted scenes that are added to Blu ray and DVDs like this, these are actually worth watching. The first, ?Brian Meets His Idol,? has Brian fanboying out in the presence of Phil Spector (Jonathan Slavin), who?s an asshole in return (?I?m not much interested in surf bands?). The next, ?Brian Talks With His Family,? reveals how the Beach Boys leader broke the news that he wasn?t going to tour anymore. The brief ?Brian Looks For a Collaborator? isn?t much, but the last and best cut clip, ?Murray Interrupts The Recording Session,? has the blustery Camp doing his meddling thing while the Beach Boys are trying to lay the vocals down on ?I Get Around,? and, of course, upsetting Brian.

These deleted scenes reinforce my nagging feelings that maybe the film would?ve been better if it was just Dano as Brian, but I can?t completely discard the Cusack element. Especially when I hear Dano say in one of those featurettes, ?I think John did a beautiful job, and I think the juxtaposition is an important part of it too though, ?how did this person become that???



This leaves the film?s Commentary with Pohlad and Executive Producer/Co-Writer Oren Moverman. Pohlad and Moverman entertainingly talk about the process of cutting back and forth between the narratives, and how they worked with the actors, but halfway through I realized that they were never gonna say anything insightful about how odd it was that Dano was made to look like their subject and Cusack wasn?t. I just wanted a stray comment like about how Wilson never wore a leather jacket like the one Cusask wears on one of his dates with Banks ? you know, something like ?that was just what John was wearing that day,? but no such luck.

Anyway, LOVE & MERCY is now available on home video with some cool special features. It?s one of the best musical biodocs in many a moon, as long as the oddly mismatched Cusack factor is overlooked. I guess, that?s where the mercy comes in.


Final thought: It's kind of funny how Cusack's good pal, and co-star in six films, Tim Robbins, did a much more convincing Brian Wilson in a Saturday Night Live sketch back in 1992. You can watch the sketch, in which Robbin's Wilson is being interviewed by Kevin Nealon's Larry King, here.

More later...

Saturday, 31 October 2015

John Cusack & Paul Dano Embody Brian Wilson In LOVE & MERCY


Now playing at an indie art theater near me:

LOVE & MERCY (Dir. Bill Pohlad, 2015)



I was really skeptical of when I first heard about this project, a biopic of Brian Wilson in which he?s portrayed by Paul Dano when he?s young and all mixed up in the ?60s, and John Cusack when he?s middle-aged and all mixed-up in the late ?80s and early ?90s.

The stills and footage that were initially released showed that there was a lot of attention paid to Dano?s look via his hair and wardrobe made to make him look like prime period Wilson, but the pics of Cusack, well, they just looked like Cusack. No attempt to make him look like Wilson in his 40s with a salt-and-pepper pompadour or anything. It?s just Cusack with his jet black hair, wearing shirts he?d normally wear like he just walked on to the set and refused to take part in any hair and make-up nonsense.

It?s a lot like how Cusack appeared as Richard Nixon in Lee Daniels? THE BUTLER a few years back. Despite a little bit of a prosthetic to elongate his nose, Cusack still just looked, and mostly acted (he made a slight attempt at the disgraced President?s accent) like himself.

It?s odd as Cusack has had a rocky career of late, walking through a bunch of sad direct to VOD releases, and not even appearing in HOT TUB TIME MACHINE 2, the sequel to the last movie he made that could reasonably be called a hit, so you?d think he?d change his look a little here to play the iconic singer/songwriter/producer.

But maybe the point in producer turned first time director Pohlad?s adaptation of the life of Wilson is that he shouldn?t have to. It?s like Todd Haynes? I?M NOT THERE, the abstract 2007 biopic of Bob Dylan in which 7 different actors played Dylan at various points of his career. The themes, thoughts, and tones from the times that enhance the non-stop music are the focus, not whether whoever looks like the actual person.

That said, the most effective scenes in LOVE & MERCY, which takes its name from a track from Wilson?s 1988 self-titled solo album, are the ones in which the floppy haired Dano as the 20somethng Brian toils away in the studio making his ?60s pop masterpieces ?Pet Sounds? and SMiLE.?

The movie, which was co-scripted by Oren Moverman, who co-wrote I?M NOT THERE not coincidentally, moves back and forth from Dano?s Wilson in full genius mode to Cusack?s burned-out Wilson who?s under the control of corrupt psychotherapist Dr. Eugene Landy (Paul Giamatti chewing the scenery to bits).

Both versions of Brian (or ?Bri? as his fellow brothers and bandmates call him) have their villains. Dano has his father Murray Wilson (Bill Camp) and Mike Love (Jake Abel) on his back about making more conventional, commercial music (in protest Brian exclaims: ?We?re not surfers - we never have been - and real surfers don't dig our music!?) while Cusack has the evil, oppressive Landy thwarting his every move to have a normal life. 


And a normal love life via Elizabeth Banks in a warm, winning performance as Melinda Ledbetter, former model turned Cadillac saleswoman (they have a meet cute at her dealership), who sees pretty quickly that Giamatti?s Landy is a horrible influence on the beleaguered Beach Boy.

Melinda witnesses the creepy doctor?s methods ? made creepier by Giamatti?s bug-eyed intensity - under his oppressive 24-hour a day supervision. Landy, who we see in a pivotal scene berating his patient for eating a hamburger without permission, eventually forbids the budding relationship between Melinda and Brian. Melinda then starts phoning members of Wilson?s family, and doing what she can to rescue Brian from Landy?s clutches.

This is well-acted, well executed stuff, but the real heart of the film is in the recreations of the studio sessions in the ?60s. It?s apparent that filmmaker Pohlad, and screenwriters Moverman and Michael A. Lerner, have studied every bit of footage, noted every instance of studio chatter, and absorbed every bit of the multi-disc box sets, and bootlegs of ?Pet Sounds? and Smile? material. They also earn points for depicting and paying respect to ?The Wrecking Crew,? the group of top notch session musicians that took endless notes from Brian on how to arrange his ?teenage symphony to God,? but not calling them by that name as it was applied much later.

Dano and Cusack both do good work in embodying the tortured artist that has heard voices in his head in 1963, but it?s Dano who nails the young Brian?s angsty ambition. And, like I said before, it helps that he actually resembles Wilson. While Cusack puts in one of his most lived-in performance in ages, I still had to remind myself that he was playing the same person as Dano.

LOVE & MERCY is a much better than average musical biopic, because it?s more concerned with capturing the psychological essence of its subject than it is with a formulaic greatest hits approach ? although its soundtrack is prime period Beach Boys tracks blaring from start to finish. The casting may be a bit mismatched, but the vibrations it picks up, both good and bad, all resonate extremely deeply.

More later...

Brilliant Brian Wilson Biopic LOVE & MERCY Out Today On Blu Ray/DVD


Despite that I largely preferred the Paul Dano parts over the John Cusack ones, Bill Pohlad?s Brian Wilson biopic LOVE & MERCY is one of my favorite films of the last year. Out today on Blu ray and DVD, the movie features Dano as the young ?60s ?Pet Sounds?/?SMiLE?-era Brian, who?s trying to break free from the control of his abusive father (Murray Wilson played by Bill Camp); and Cusack as the middle-aged Brian who?s trying to break free from the control of his abusive therapist (Eugene Landy played by Paul Giamatti). 

I reviewed the film very favorably upon its theatrical release in my area last June, but I stressed that I was bothered that while Dano was appropriately outfitted and groomed, there was no attempt to make Cusack resemble Wilson. I wrote: ?It?s just Cusack with his jet black hair, wearing shirts he?d normally wear, like he just walked on to the set and refused to take part in any hair and make-up nonsense.?

So when I received a review copy of LOVE & MERCY on Blu ray, I was intrigued to dive into the Special Features, especially one entitled ?A California Story: Creating the Look of LOVE & MERCY,? to see if Cusack?s lack of proper aesthetic was addressed. The 10 minute featurette has director/producer Pohlad and the production designer Keith Cunningham discussing how they went about capturing three different eras ? the ?60s, ?70s, and ?80s - via sets and wardrobe, and using real locations such as the actual still-standing studios that Wilson recorded in,

Costume Designer Danny Glicker chimes in about the wardrobe worn by The Beach Boys, Elizabeth Banks, and Giamatti, but never comments on the choice of the fairly modern looking button down shirts Cusack wears, or anything about the man?s part of ?the look? of the film.

In another featurette, ?A-side/B-side: Portraying the Life of Brian Wilson,? which is much longer (25 min.), and mixes photos and footage of the real Wilson with interviews with cast and crew, and clips of the film, Cusack?s appearance is touched on by one of the producers, Claire Rudnick Polstein: ?We really weren?t that concerned with that they look alike, it really wasn?t about that, it was really more about having the essence of who Brian was.?

There are over seven minutes of Deleted Scenes, all of which are from the Dano sections of the film. Unlike many deleted scenes that are added to Blu ray and DVDs like this, these are actually worth watching. The first, ?Brian Meets His Idol,? has Brian fanboying out in the presence of Phil Spector (Jonathan Slavin), who?s an asshole in return (?I?m not much interested in surf bands?). The next, ?Brian Talks With His Family,? reveals how the Beach Boys leader broke the news that he wasn?t going to tour anymore. The brief ?Brian Looks For a Collaborator? isn?t much, but the last and best cut clip, ?Murray Interrupts The Recording Session,? has the blustery Camp doing his meddling thing while the Beach Boys are trying to lay the vocals down on ?I Get Around,? and, of course, upsetting Brian.

These deleted scenes reinforce my nagging feelings that maybe the film would?ve been better if it was just Dano as Brian, but I can?t completely discard the Cusack element. Especially when I hear Dano say in one of those featurettes, ?I think John did a beautiful job, and I think the juxtaposition is an important part of it too though, ?how did this person become that???



This leaves the film?s Commentary with Pohlad and Executive Producer/Co-Writer Oren Moverman. Pohlad and Moverman entertainingly talk about the process of cutting back and forth between the narratives, and how they worked with the actors, but halfway through I realized that they were never gonna say anything insightful about how odd it was that Dano was made to look like their subject and Cusack wasn?t. I just wanted a stray comment like about how Wilson never wore a leather jacket like the one Cusask wears on one of his dates with Banks ? you know, something like ?that was just what John was wearing that day,? but no such luck.

Anyway, LOVE & MERCY is now available on home video with some cool special features. It?s one of the best musical biodocs in many a moon, as long as the oddly mismatched Cusack factor is overlooked. I guess, that?s where the mercy comes in.


Final thought: It's kind of funny how Cusack's good pal, and co-star in six films, Tim Robbins, did a much more convincing Brian Wilson in a Saturday Night Live sketch back in 1992. You can watch the sketch, in which Robbin's Wilson is being interviewed by Kevin Nealon's Larry King, here.

More later...