Posts Tagged ‘Bill Pullman’

Theatre Is Easy: Celebs on Broadway, 2009-2010

It’s no surprise that Broadway producers like to cast celebrities in their shows. If your show, let’s say, is a dramatic British play about horses that wouldn’t attract the average tourist (ahem, Equus), throw a naked Harry Potter on the stage and voila, you just made additional millions. (And this is good because Harry Potter probably doesn’t get naked for cheap.) To no one’s surprise, the 2009-2010 Broadway season is stacked with celebrities. Here’s who you can expect to see, for better or for worse. Let the celeb worship/bashing begin! (And I suppose it’s only fair to remind you that many of these celebs are stage actors with credible resumes.)

John Stamos, Gina Gershon
Bye Bye Birdie (musical, revival)
Performances begin September 10, 2009
Henry Miller’s Theatre

Daniel Craig, Hugh Jackman
A Steady Rain (drama, new)
Performances begin September 10, 2009
Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre

Jude Law
Hamlet (Shakespearean classic)
Performances begin September 12, 2009
Broadhurst Theatre

Sienna Miller
After Miss Julie (drama, revival)
Performances begin September 18, 2009
American Airlines Theatre

Carrie Fisher
Wishful Drinking (one-woman show, new)
Performances begin September 22, 2009
Studio 54

Julia Stiles, Bill Pullman
Oleanna (drama, revival)
Performances begin September 29, 2009
John Golden Theatre

James Spader, Kerry Washington
Race (drama, new)
Performances begin November 17, 2009
Ethel Barrymore Theatre

Alicia Silverstone, Laura Linney
Time Stands Still (drama, new)
Performances begin January 5, 2010
Samuel J. Friedman Theatre

Evan Rachel Wood, Alan Cumming
Spider-man: Turn Off the Dark (musical, new)
Performances begin February 25, 2009
Hilton Theatre

Nathan Lane, Bebe Neuwirth
The Addams Family (musical, new)
Performances begin March 4, 2010
Lunt-Fontanne Theatre

DVD Review: “Phoebe in Wonderland”

3605_PHOEBE IN WONDERLANDPhoebe in Wonderland (2009, Image)
purchase from Amazon: DVD

Elle Fanning gives one of the most touching and heart breaking performances you will see this year in writer/director Daniel Barnz’s Phoebe in Wonderland. This little seen gem that received a limited theatrical release is now available on DVD. With a thought provoking story, exemplary performances by Fanning, Felicity Huffman and Patricia Clarkson, and imaginative, beautiful cinematography by Bobby Bukowski, Phoebe in Wonderland is a movie you’ll be thinking about weeks after watching it for the first time.

Fanning is Phoebe Lichten, the precocious daughter of two writers, Hillary (Huffman) and Peter (an understated Bill Pullman). Hillary is struggling to complete a book on Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland, while Peter has just learned that his new book is going to be published. This family of four also includes little sister, Olivia (Bailee Madison). As the film opens, Phoebe, a social outcast with seemingly one friend, has begun showing signs of obsessive compulsive disorder, in particular washing her hands until they’re raw, and having occasional outbursts in class. Rules bug Phoebe and she isn’t afraid to let her teachers know it. However, Barnz implies early on that there is something deeper going on with Phoebe and that this isn’t just some pre-teen rebelliousness. Thankfully, he takes his time in getting us to the answer, allowing the characters time to grow and the story to unfold at a pleasant pace. When an unconventional theater teacher (Clarkson) casts Phoebe as the lead in a production of Alice in Wonderland, Phoebe discovers that performing on stage allows her to calm down and escape her lonely childhood life. (more…)

DVD Review: “Nobel Son”

Nobel SonNobel Son (2009, Fox)
purchase from Amazon: DVD

Nobel Son, a new caper film on DVD, is a satisfying time if you happen to enjoy films with unexpected twists and turns. The film, written by Jody Savin and directed by Randall Miller (actually completed before his sleeper hit, Bottle Shock) stars Bryan Greenberg (of ABC’s October Road) as a Barkley Michaelson, a twenty-something grad student struggling to finish his PHD thesis on cannibalism. Barkley has had to live his entire life in the shadow of his father, world famous chemist, Eli Michaelson. As portrayed by the eternally entertaining Alan Rickman, Eli is… well, Eli is the world’s biggest asshole. Not only does Eli belittle his only son, but for years he’s been cheating on his lovely wife, Sarah, a forensic psychiatrist. Sarah is played by Academy Award winner Mary Steenburgen, who brings a grace and strength to each role she inhabits. I wish she wasn’t relegated to mostly “mother” roles (as in last years Four Christmases and the current The Proposal). However, in Nobel Son she gets to show some teeth and really makes the character interesting.

On the eve of Eli winning the Nobel Prize, Barkley has a one-night fling with a spacey poet named City Hall. Eliza Dushku (Fox’s Dollhouse) is game for the part and shows some flair in her otherwise small role. Berkeley wakes up the next morning, misses the family flight to Sweden for the award ceremony, and is then clocked over the head with a baseball bat and kidnapped by the deranged Thaddeus James (Shawn Hatosy- we don’t see enough of him these days). Thaddeus has a major grudge with Eli and he demands $2 million of the Nobel prize money. From there, Nobel Son begins throwing the kind of curveballs you only see with a whiffle ball and a plot of betrayal, lust and ultimately revenge play out. Along the way, there are some fancy flashbacks, a nifty car chase through a shopping mall that includes a great bait and switch gag, and some really fine music by Mark Adler and Paul Oakenfold that keeps the action propelling along, never letting up until the credits finally roll. (more…)