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A little bacon, a little rose with Killer Films’ Christine Vachon at Le Petit Lardon

June 3, 2015 By Thelma Leave a Comment

Christine Vachon became the queen of Cannes with the success of "Carol"

Christine Vachon became the queen of Cannes with the success of ‘Carol’

Up a narrow pedestrian walkway off the Croisette at 3 Rue Bateguier sits the unassuming Le Petit Lardon, or “the little bacon.” The restaurant seats twenty and serves traditional French fare as delicious as it is unassuming, while offering a friendly service uncommon in Cannes. This culinary gem is where you are likely to find Killer Films co-founder Christine Vachon, returning to the festival with Todd Haynes’ competition film, Carol, a lesbian romance starring Oscar-winner Cate Blanchett.

Vachon, a brilliant woman as bold as she is intimidating, will likely be drinking rose and holding forth on the challenges and joys of producing. Only last year she and partner Pamela Koffler celebrated the 20th anniversary of their fiercely independent company. Whether it’s food or film, you can depending on Vachon’s expertise in getting value for her money.

“It’s tiny,” Vachon says of Le Petit Lardon via phone before dashing to attend Variety‘s Power of Women in New York luncheon, “It’s where we went to celebrate after Velvet Goldmine won a special jury prize almost 18 years ago. We left the Palais after the ceremony – Todd, Toni Collette, Jonathan Rhys Meyers and the producers. I think we stayed until about six AM.”

le petit lardon

“Todd’s movies haven’t been in competition for a while. This is almost a homecoming,” Vachon says. “”We’re really proud of Carol,” which she co-produced with Elizabeth Karlsen.

Vachon continues: “Todd and I have had the great good fortune to have a collaboration that works for both of us based on trust. We enjoy each other. We went to Brown together but afterwards our relationship began in earnest. When I worked on his short feature Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story, and saw how funny it was, how provocative, and ultimately how emotional, I thought, wow, I want to make sure he never makes another movie without my name on it. And, so far, he hasn’t.”

[Related: ‘Carol’ Producer Christine Vachon Talks Being Queen of the Croisette]

Coming to Cannes represents both an artistic and personal homecoming for Vachon, who has dual citizenship. Her late mother, Francoise Fourestier, was French, while her father was the American photographer John Vachon. According to the Manhattan native, “My fluency leaves much to be desired. I have a lot of family in France that I’m very close to. I enjoy they’re being able to celebrate with me while I’m there.”

Dinner table conversation at Le Petit Lardon will likely touch on two Killer Films projects that are about to start shooting: Goat starring Nick Jonas and Ben Schnetzer, and Todd Solondz’s Weiner-Dog with Annapurna Pictures. Haynes’ next film, the Peggy Lee biopic for Reese Witherspoon’s Pacific Standard, is still in development.

“The last time we had a film in competition was Velvet Goldmine,” concludes Vachon. “I was a lot younger. An early night was going to bed at 4 AM. Times have changed…a little.”

(This article was originally written for Variety‘s Cannes daily before Carol premiered and before co-star Rooney Mara eventually shared the Best Actress prize. )

 

Filed Under: Celebrity, Movies & TV Tagged With: Cannes, Carol, Cate Blanchett, Christine Vachon, Elizabeth Karlsen, Le Petit Lardon, Rooney Mara, Todd Haynes

Cannes 2015: More Must-See Films From the Festival

May 17, 2015 By Thelma Leave a Comment

A Todd Haynes sandwich with Rooney Mara on the left, Cate Blanchett on the right

A Todd Haynes sandwich with Rooney Mara on the left, Cate Blanchett on the right

It’s never been easier to follow the Cannes Film Festival from the comfort of one’s couch. You can debate about whether that’s a good thing or not — but it’s certainly frugal. And, since I wrote a fun feature for Variety editor Carole Horst from this very well-worn spot in which I talked to Christine Vachon, who produced Carol with Elizabeth Karlsen about Vachon’s favorite Cannes eatery, I have skin in the game. About as much skin as can be found on the underside of a Barbie Band-Aid given to a child for dramatic effect for a skinned knee. Anyway, here are more films that have broken out, including Todd Haynes’ Carol.
Macbeth: Ever since I heard from Oscar-winner Marion Cotillard that she was starring in this William Shakespeare tragedy opposite Michael Fassbender — and directed by Justin Kurzel (Snowtown) — I’ve been desperate to see it. Now it’s out. Cotillard’s one of my favorite actresses and Fassbender’s easy on the eyes.

#Macbeth review: Marion Cotillard, Michael Fassbender are impeccable in this bracing update http://t.co/he4Y6I1NJ2 pic.twitter.com/W1ZyzZVEQG

— Variety (@Variety) May 23, 2015

The Lobster: In a dystopian future beyond Match.com, singletons have 45 days to reconnect — or they are turned into animals. Greek Director Yorgos (Dogtooth) Lanthimos’ star-studded exploration of future love features Rachel Weisz, Colin Farrell, Lea Seydoux and John C. Reilly that was just picked up by Alchemy.  

Colin Farrell’s #TheLobster is “funny, unexpectedly moving satire of couple-fixated society” http://t.co/NR23eOpLFG pic.twitter.com/TZDgskAQXh

— Variety (@Variety) May 15, 2015

Youth: Boos and bravos met Italian Director Paolo Sorrentino’s (2013’s La Grande Belleza) gorgeous English-language entry for the Palme d’Or. Michael Caine stars as a famous orchestra conductor contemplating aging in a posh mountain resort. Snapped up by Fox Searchlight for U.S. distribution, the drama also stars Harvey Keitel, Jane Fonda, Rachel Weisz and Paul Dano.

Based on vocal mix of applause & boos, Paolo Sorrentino’s YOUTH looks to be the most divisive (& most worthy?) film in #Cannes competition.

— Peter Debruge (@AskDebruge) May 20, 2015

Paolo Sorrentino’s Youth is a minor indulgence, tweaked with funny ideas and images, beset with a heavy sentimentality. Review later #Cannes — Peter Bradshaw (@PeterBradshaw1) May 20, 2015

Disorder (Maryland): Matthias Schoenaerts (Rust & Bone) stars as a French special forces operative with PTSD hired to protect a Lebanese businessman’s wife (Diane Kruger). Alice Winocour (Augustine) directs this home invasion thriller that has been picked up by Sundance Selects.

Hot bodies in motion: Kruger seeks Schoenaerts' protection

Hot bodies in motion: Kruger seeks Schoenaerts’ protection

Mon Roi: The great Vincent Cassel (Black Swan, A Dangerous Method), who I interviewed for Huffington Post in 2010, and Emmanuelle Bercot (Polisse, Carlos) chart the doomed path of their relationship and marriage without succumbing to good guy/bad guy tropes. (The one you love; the one you cannot keep.) What excites me is that it is directed and co-written by Maiwenn, who directed Polisse, in which she fully submerged herself in the muck of the Paris Child Protection Unit (and won a Cannes jury prize). If you’re curious about that film, check out my late column, Adams on Reel Women, with the editor Nina Hammerling Smith about that French procedural perfect for Law & Order junkies who love subtitles like I do. The You Tube trailer is in French but the charisma is universal:

Sicario: French Canadian director Denise Villeneuve (Incendies) returns with a drug cartel drama pairing Josh Brolin and Emily Blunt. (When Villeneuve’s last film, Prisoners, came out I talked to Jake Gyllenhaal about his role as a detective-with-demons for Yahoo Movies.) THR‘s Todd McCarthy wrote: “The violence of the inter-American drug trade has served as the backdrop for any number of films for more than three decades, but few have been as powerful and superbly made as Sicario.” The title means “hitman” in Cartel slang (and you’d have to kill me for me to reveal how I know that).

Blunt, Brolin, bullets

Blunt, Brolin, bullets

  Cemetery of Splendour: Already being hailed as a masterpiece by no less than the Film Society’s Dennis Lim, this is the first feature from the unspellable Thai Director Apitchatpong Weerasethakul. He won the Palmes d’Or in 2010 for Uncle Boommee Who Can Recall His Past Lives. That movie, which I caught up with at the Dubai International Film Festival, felt like being charmed by a snake out of The Jungle Book, a fantastic out-of-body experience wedded to the completely ordinary. This film, just acquired by Strand Releasing, is about — as much as his films are “about” anything — nurses tending to soldiers with a mysterious sleeping sickness and the dreams, phantoms and spirits this kicks up in a swirl around them at the clinic.     Inside Out: Swimming against my own biases (and those warning voices in my head), I can’t ignore the mad praise for Pixar’s latest from Pete Docter (Up), which premiered at Cannes to, yes, cheers. According to The Wrap’s Steve Pond: “[Docter] has figured out how to pull off a daunting concept, and in the process made a movie as thematically daring as it is emotionally moving.” With Amy Poehler, Mindy Kalling and Bill Hader among the vocal talent, this story of a young woman jousting with her (very vocal) emotions following a move from the Midwest to San Francisco lacks a single Kraft-cheese colored Minion. And for that I’m thankful.   [Read more…]

Filed Under: Movies & TV Tagged With: Cannes, Carol, Cate Blanchett, Cemetery of Splendour, Christine Vachon, Emily Blunt, Jake Gyllenhaal, Josh Brolin, Maiwenn, Mon Roi, Polisse, Rooney Mara, Sicario, Vincent Cassel

Critic’s Pick: ‘Ain’t Them Bodies Saints’

August 27, 2013 By Thelma Leave a Comment

Mara, Affleck: they're no superheroes

Mara, Affleck: they’re no superheroes

Must-See Movies Beyond the Blockbusters

Like a bastard love child of Terrence Malick and Robert Altman, David Lowery’s crime drama shuffles to its own drummer. Either you dance to it or you can skip away, but the latter would be a mistake in an era of cookie cutter genre pics.

The story could easily be framed in a Country ballad or a Bruce Springsteen song: Ruth (Rooney Mara) and Bob (Casey Affleck) have known each other since their youth, and loved each other for nearly ever. When their armed robbery gets messy, Bob takes the rap, goes to prison and misses their first child’s birth. Now he’ll do anything to reunite – even break out of prison – but there’s a soft-spoken sheriff, Patrick (Ben Foster), sitting lovelorn at Ruth’s front door to keep that from happening.

RELATED: Ben Foster, David Lowery Balltle Mustaches for ‘Ain’t Them Bodies Saints’

A love triangle wrapped in a backwoods thriller set in 1970’s Texas, “Ain’t Them Bodies Saints” is beautiful to look at in every frame (that’s the Malick golden light, swaying grain influence). The characters are American iconoclasts (cue Altman) chewing their way toward a fate that’s nearly predestined. And, combining both, “Saints” takes its sweet time to hits its genre beats because getting there is everything the movie is about.

Until “Saints,” I never understood Mara. Everything about her was miscast for “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo” except for her slim form. Here, she has the beauty of Ali McGraw, and a stubborn shyness that pulls away from the camera, forcing it to follow her. She’s almost always looking down, away, out of the frame, something that makes her both ethereal and at odds with contemporary look-at-me reality show culture. We want to see more because she shows so little.

RELATED: Mara: I want ‘Dragon Tattoo’ sequel

On the other hand, I’ve always gotten Casey Affleck with his little brother bad boy act and he keeps the faith here. Between himself and Ben, Casey never had the matinee idol looks or the need to carry a tent pole. And so he’s spent his career seeking out some very interesting material: “Gone Baby Gone” with Ben directing, and the epic “The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford.” Affleck is wiry, and his voice squeaks and tightens with emotions, but he’s completely convincing.

Foster brings a burning intensity to everything he does, but the standout, we-could-watch-him forever is lanky Altman alum Keith Carradine (“Nashville”). The taut scene between Carradine’s foster father figure and jail-breaker Bob, where the older man warns the younger to stay away from Ruth has a standalone quality. Both actors are so in the moment that the world outside the theater falls away.

Sure, the title is just awful and should have been tossed – it has a pretentious, twangy sound that just doesn’t stick. But what’s memorable is the movie’s sense of grace for its star-crossed characters scratching the dirt for a bit of redemption, and shelter from the brewing storm.

Bottom Line: ‘Ain’t Them Bodies Saints?’ Yes!
Watch the trailer:

Filed Under: Movies & TV Tagged With: Ain't Them Bodies Saints, Casey Affleck, Critic's Pick, Robert Altman, Rooney Mara, Terrence Malick, Yahoo! Movies

Viola Davis? Meryl Streep? And What Ever Happened to Kirsten Dunst? The Yahoo! Best Actress Roundtable Dishes

February 5, 2012 By Thelma Leave a Comment

Viola Davis,The Help,Bestseller,Kathryn Stockett,Best Actress,Oscars 2012,Best Supporting Actress

Davis has a lot to smile about

I enjoy sitting around with my friends and chatting about Oscars — the discussions tend to be knowledgeable and irreverent. For our first Yahoo! roundtable I welcome my colleagues Jonathan Crow and Matt Whitfield, as well as actress-director Jordan Bayne, “Movie Mom” Nell Minow, IndieWire blogger Melissa Silverstein, Oscar obsessive Nathaniel Rogers, and the Hot Pink Pen blogger Jan Lisa Huttner. Now that the Oscar nominees have been announced, we unscrewed the top off our virtual bottle of Chardonnay and began…

Thelma Adams: When I first looked at this race last September, I wondered whether Viola Davis was going to be considered as a leading role for “The Help,” and now she’s the front-runner after taking the SAG award last Sunday night. As for me, I adore Meryl — 29 years since her last Oscar win! I also feel that if she can live with Viola Davis winning, so can I. One of them will come out on top next month, but I’m really mourning Kirsten Dunst getting completely shut out. Could that be why she was canoodling with Chris Hemsworth last week at Sundance?

Jordan Bayne: Streep deserves to win for this performance in “The Iron Lady.” Taking nothing away from any of her other remarkable performances, even I had to struggle to remember this was Streep and not Margaret Thatcher in front of me. Not even an Oscar can hold a candle to her talent.

Matt Whitfield: A few weeks ago, I was convinced Michelle [Williams] had it in the bag. Then I boarded the Meryl train. Now, I’m thinking Rooney [Mara] has a legit shot. The academy loves an ingénue.

Learn the latest about movies >>

Thelma: Rooney Mara? I know the academy loves an ingénue, and Mara looks terrific in black on the red carpet, but in my mind she makes Kristen Stewart look expressive as Bella in the “Twilight” series. I feel like Rooney is constantly looking out from under her lashes for the approval of some Daddy at the corner of the screen and, in the case of “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo,” that Daddy is David Fincher.

Matt: We should be talking about Kirsten Dunst vs. Charlize Theron because they delivered the two best performances of the year. Both were robbed.

Thelma: I’m totally with you there, Matt.

Nathaniel Rogers: Thelma, I’m wearing black all this week as I’m also in Kiki mourning. The way she let her innate dreaminess as an actress curdle and sour for [Lars] von Trier’s vision in “Melancholia” Is amazing! But, happy thoughts. “Momentum” is powerful in the awards games, and two straight years of acclaimed performances for Dunst should help her next time. I mean, look what three straight years of acclaimed work did for Tilda Swin … oh, wait! [Read more…]

Filed Under: Celebrity, Oscar Race Tagged With: Jonathan Crow, Jordan Bayne, Kirsten Dunst, Matt Whitfield, Meryl Streep, Nathaniel Rogers, Nell Minow, Oscar Roundtable, Rooney Mara, The Help, The Iron Lady, Thelma Adams, Viola Davis, Yahoo! Movies

DVD Cover: “The Stieg Larsson Trilogy/The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo”

December 3, 2011 By Thelma 1 Comment

Stieg Larsson, The Girl with the Dragon Tatto, Noomi Rapaci

The GIRL with the Dragon Tattoo

I am so beating a dead horse here, but this is what the ad for The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo should look like. It should be dominated by THE GIRL. Not that the story doesn’t interlace men and women, good and bad and mixed.

Daniel Craig, David Fincher, Rooney Mara, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo

The boy who rescued the girl with the dragon tattoo

Filed Under: Books, Movies & TV Tagged With: Daniel Craig, David Fincher, Noomi Rapaci, Remakes, Rooney Mara, Stieg Larsson, The Dragon Tattoo

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