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TIFF11: George Clooney, A Man in Full

September 13, 2011 By Thelma 2 Comments

George Clooney,Ides of March,The Descendants,Alexander Payne,Best Actor Oscar, Up in the Air

Clooney on the red carpet for Ides of March

 

For a star with two rival movies at TIFF, George Clooney is not a man at war with himself. While hanging with George at The Soho House in Toronto the other night, he was the picture of grace and generosity, as proud as a parent with two successful children. In this case, the kids happen to be a pair of Oscar-bound multimillion dollar movies: The Ides of March, which he also directed, and Alexander Payne’s The Descendants.

Clooney, a Clark Gable-Cary Grant cocktail, has been down the red carpet before. Only two years ago Up in the Air rose out of Toronto as the Oscar front-runner. It appeared unbeatable. And then, months later, Clooney lost to Jeff Bridges, and The Hurt Locker pulled ahead as best picture. At Soho House, Clooney acknowledged the difficulty of maintaining momentum in the front-runner spot. the danger of what I call “red carpet rash.”

Holding an old-fashioned glass and encircled by admirers, young gorgeous women, and seasoned film journalists, he told me — and Baz Bamigboye of the Daily Mail, Roger Friedman of Showbiz411 and Manhattan salonista Peggy Siegel — that The Descendants had received the warmer reception at Telluride the week before, but the pendulum had appeared to swing in Toronto. Here, March was receiving the better buzz.  The mercurail element of audience response bemused him, bringing out the dimples and those crinkly laugh lines by his eyes — and a shrug.

Clooney talked generously about his brilliant director, Alexander Payne, who had hugged well-wishers on his way out of the party nucleus, bound for a quieter floor, plugs conspicuous in his ears. Clearly, not the social animal George is, or as capable of grace under pressure. Clooney praised his young co-star Shailene Woodley, who plays his candid teen daughter. He admired how together and mature Woodley was at nineteen, some thing that came across when I interviewed her recently for an upcoming Marie Claire profile. He praised the actress that played his wife in the film, who spends most of the movie in a coma, which is apparently harder than it looks.

It’s definitely a trip to stand in that golden circle around Clooney, knowing that I’ve arrived at the epicenter of the party, and the epicenter of the film festival social scene at that moment. Not the least of it is that the actor is genuinely charming. He creates a glow of fun and convivial conversation around him. He wants to talk and engage, not parrot, not platitude. He appears completely in the moment, showing no fatigue or anxiety, unencumbered by a Blackberry. He’s also quick with a barb. We shared a laugh about a New York Film Critic Circle colleague who got up his nose two years ago at the NYFCC awards that we both attended. (At the cocktail party that night, Clooney had asked me if it would be OK to rib Rex Reed on stage about a pissy comment the critic had published about the actor; I assured George he wouldn’t lose the sympathy of the room.)

Standing in that inner circle is like being one of the boys in the best boys club around. And, as we paid court, stars sifted forward to pay their respects: Alexander Sarsgaard of TV’s True Blood and the controversial film Melancholia — tall, blonde and handsome — extended his hand for a shake. Even he was a bit awed to have stepped up into the light. After Sarsgaard turns away, Clooney cracks some thing like: does he have to be so tall? It’s a jest that playfully acknowledges a human jealousy. (Or that handsome, I could have added.) Shame director Steve McQueen approaches, introduces himself, and then retreats, with a gravity antithetical to the circle.

Then, it’s time to cede my spot in the George oasis. His beautiful blond handler suggests he migrate up to a new level of the party, another floor that’s currently empty with a pool table, where co-star Ryan Gosling awaits. George says goodbye warmly, taking my hand, and I touch his arm with my other hand and say, “I’ll see you in New York at the critics circle.”  I have not belabored the point that his performance in The Descendants, my favorite of his two movies at the festival,  touched me deeply. I’m confident it’s put him in the Oscar race and I murmur, “best actor.” He crinkles a smile.

On the way out, I see Keira Knightley in a different frock from the Elie Saab she was wearing when we chatted at the Sony Pictures Classic dinner for A Dangerous Method  only a few hours before. (I’ll tell you what we talked about in a later post). Then I floated downstairs, passing Jimmy Kimmel on his way up. I stepped out on Duncan Street, past the bouncers and the crowds of locals restrained by velvet ropes. They were hoping for a celebrity sighting, but got me, a woman in a white dress from Anthropologie and discount shoes, a happy woman, but no celebrity. I leave that to George.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Celebrity, Movies & TV, Oscar Race Tagged With: Alexander Payne, Alexander Sarsgaard, best actor, Best Director, George Clooney, Jimmy Kimmel, Keira Knightly, Oscar Race, Ryant Gosling, Shailene Woodley, Shame, Steve McQueen, The Descendants, The Ides of March, TIFF11, Toronto International Film Festival

TIFF11 Day One: Beware the Ides of March

September 8, 2011 By Thelma Leave a Comment

George Clooney,Ryan Gosling,George Clooney Director,Political Drama,Evan Rachel Wood,Oscar,Farragut North

Gosling-Clooney have Time on their hands

There’s a reason that the initial reaction to the George Clooney directed and co-written political drama has been so subdued. Clooney is so damn likeable, and charming, and affable, and amiable, that we don’t want him to feel bad. I certainly don’t. Ides of March isn’t bad. Not at all. It just isn’t Oscar-worthy. It’s flat and safe. It resembles The West Wing without the adrenaline and walk and talk. And it’s no In the Loop, and far from the political sophistication and savage wit of that movie’s blistering BBC TV predecessor The Thick of It.

No one’s bad in March: not Clooney in a key but supporting role as the Governor running for President, not Philip Seymour Hoffman as his fixer or Ryan Gosling as the idealistic staffer whose character is forged in a contested Ohio Democratic primary.

It’s just that when it comes to Oscar contenders, we’ll have to wait for that other Clooney movie, the one he didn’t direct, the one he stars in: Alexander Payne’s The Descendants. I’ll be there to see it Saturday morning — and can’t wait to fall in love again.

Filed Under: Celebrity, Criticism, Movies & TV, Oscar Race Tagged With: best actor, Best Director, best picture, Best Supporting Actor, Evan Rachel Wood, George Clooney, Jennifer Ehle, Oscar, Paul Giamatti, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Toronto International Film Festival

Toronto International Film Festival Oscar Preview

September 7, 2011 By Thelma Leave a Comment

George Clooney, Fatherhood,Alexander Payne,The Descendants,Oscar Race,Best Actor,Best Director,Best Pictures

Clooney on the horizon

Clooney vs. Fassbender: Old Guard vs. New

I’m off to the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) today and by the time it’s over a week from Sunday — the night of the Emmy broadcast — roughly eighty percent of the Oscar contenders will have screened. Staggering!

Here’s a short list of sure things that will either prove themselves or fall by the wayside.

The Descendants: George Clooney’s lock for a best actor shot. In Alexander Payne’s first movie since Sideways, Clooney touches-and-charms as a Hawaiian father who becomes his daughters’ primary caregiver when his wife has an accident. It debuted at the elite Telluride Film Festival last week to tears, laughter and accolades. Expect there to be more nominations and it’s looking like a sure thing for the Best Picture short list.

The Ides of March: Clooneymania continues with the drama he directed with his version of The Candidate, in which he plays a governor running for president. Dirty politics ensue and Ryan Gosling has the starring role as the idealistic staffer who gets a wake-up call about backroom business. Response so far has been positive respectful, if not rapturous. Maybe supporting nods for Clooney or co-star Paul Giamatti, or Philip Seymour Hoffman, maybe a best actor nom for Gosling, and there’s even some potential for a Clooney directing nomination – my gut is that the actor has his eye on that prize. Once I set my eyes on it this week I’ll have a clearer idea of where I stand on March.

A Dangerous Method: Here’s the movie I’ve most anticipated: David Cronenberg’s period adaptation of the novel about mind games between colleagues Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung, with Viggo Mortensen, Michael Fassbender, Vincent Cassel and Keira Knightley. Early response about the messy birth of psychoanalysis has been mixed – brilliant but chilly – but no one has been mixed about the performances with Cassel, Fassbinder and Knightley generally earning raves.

Shame: Last year it was ‘Michael Fassbender, who?’ This year, he’s going to rival Clooney for attention, particularly when he goes full frontal as a Manhattan sex addict who has no, well, shame. Carey Mulligan plays his sister. They have issues. Fassbender who, like Clooney has two films in the fest, will definitely get buzz – but will it be Oscar-style?

Albert Nobbs: Glenn Close has a lock on a best actress Oscar nomination in her labor of love – she co-wrote the script – about the complicated social life of a 19th century woman who dresses as a man in order to work as a butler in a tony Dublin hotel. Early response has been respectful, but it wouldn’t hurt to have a strong woman’s take on this story.

The Artist: This hugely entertaining, black-and-white film about a Hollywood silent movie star who nearly becomes obsolete with the advent of the talkies was a splash last spring at Cannes. French star Jean Dujardin, who says two words in the film but could have a charm-off with Clooney – is a front-runner for Best Actor. The romantic comedy could easily become a sentimental favorite and crack the top ten best picture nominations.

Melancholia: After this movie screened at Cannes, Kirsten Dunst seemed a shoe-in for a much deserved best actress nod as a stressed sister whose life becomes even more fraught when a planet threatens to crash into earth. Then Director Lars von Trier opened his mouth and inserted his foot discussing his Nazi past. Can the movie survive the director? Or, at least, can Dunst prevail?

So, away I go to Toronto….let the red carpet unfurl.

 

Filed Under: Celebrity, Movies & TV, Oscar Race Tagged With: A Dangerous Method, Academy Awards, Albert Nobbs, Alexander Payne, best actor, best actress, Best Director, best picture, George Clooney, Glenn Close, Ides of March, Keira Knightley, Michael Fassbender, Oscar Race, Ryan Gosling, TIFF, Toronto International Film Festival, Vincent Cassel

George Clooney & me

April 4, 2011 By Thelma Leave a Comment

George Clooney,Thelma Adams,Film Society of Lincoln Center,Opening Night

Clooney is the most charming actor that I've ever met. Bar none. He's the real deal.

Filed Under: Celebrity Tagged With: Film Society of Lincoln Center, Gala, George Clooney, Manhattan, Opening Night, Tavern on the Green, Thelma Adams

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