DEAD MAN’S WIRE – Review

Dacre Montgomery as Richard and Bill Skarsgard as Tony, in Gus Van Sant’s DEAD MAN’S WIRE. Courtesy of Row K Entertainment

It has been seven years since we saw a film from Gus Van Sant but the director comes back strong with DEAD MAN’S WIRE, an impressive crime thriller/drama based on a bizarre real hostage incident in late 1970s Indianapolis. In 1977, an aspiring businessman, Tony Kiritsis (Bill Skarsgard), who felt cheated by his mortgage lender, took the company’s manager hostage, by attaching a shotgun to his neck with a looped wire, while the gun’s trigger was wired to the kidnapper’s body, so that if a sniper killed the kidnapper, the hostage would die too. The method has since called a dead man’s wire. Gus Van Sant uses this real event to craft a tense, thriller film, laced with a dark humor that built on the absurdity of the situation, but also human drama that touches on issues of despair and desperation, economic unfairness, and shady business dealings. DEAD MAN’S WIRE is a technically impressive film as well as working as both a gripping entertainment thriller and commentary on slanted economic system.

Much of this crazy real event was captured on film by news camera, which was shot continuously during the 63 hour standoff with the kidnapper. The engrossing historic thriller is given an authenticity by director Gus Van Sant who captures the feel of 1977, by carefully reproducing the 1970s styles and visual aesthetics of the time period, and most strikingly by recreating the look of TV news and shows of the era, in this film. The visuals so closely match the actual archival footage of the real event, snippets of which Van Sant inserts into his film. The event took place during a transitional moment in how news is covered, and the event is still taught in schools of journalism as an example of news reporting crossing a line to escalate a situation. It adds an eerie level to this already atmospheric, darkly comic thriller/drama.

The film does not condone the kidnapper’s actions but Bill Skarsgard’s masterful performance gives us insights on someone driven to the edge, after being taken advantage of by his unscrupulous, wealthy lender. Austin Kolodney’s script speaks to “Everyman” issues of economic inequality and an unfair system skewed to favor the already rich, a topic that particularly resonates today. There are echoes of DOG DAY AFTERNOON in this film, as well as other “little guy” against the system tales, of someone driven over the edge by circumstances. While DEAD MAN’S WIRE is based on a true story, the drama/thriller goes in unexpected directions, and leans into its dark, absurdist humor at times.

Bill Skarsgard gives a striking performance as the odd, even unbalanced Tony Kiritsis, a would-be real estate entrepreneur who relishes the spotlight, which is part of why this film is so involving.

Tony Kiritsis (Bill Skarsgard) has reached a desperate state with a mortgage he took out from local lender Meridian Mortgage. The mortgage was not for a home, but a business investment in real estate, property Tony Kiritsis hopes to develop as the location for a shopping mall. Tony had lined up plenty of would-be business tenants but he is puzzled as they fade away and he has trouble securing businesses to lease space. Without those funds, he falls behind on payments, and Tony has grown increasingly frustrated in trying to deal with his lender. When Meridian Mortage’s owner M. L. Hall (Al Pacino) offers to buy the property – for far less than Tony paid – Tony begins to suspect it is his own lender who is re-directing would-be leasers to other sites, sabotaging Tony’s business plan.

Tony’s anger and desperation leads to his plan with the dead man’s wire. The original target was Meridian’s M. L. Hall but instead, Tony ends up taking Hall’s son Richard, who also works for Meridian, hostage. Since this is based on a real event, that is not much of a spoiler, as the real big question is what happens next.

The police are alerted and are almost immediately on the scene, but there is little they can do, with Tony’s “dead man’s wire” shotgun apparatus pointed at Richard Hall’s head and the trigger wired to be pulled if Tony falls. Shooting Tony means killing his hostage too. Hence, Tony is able to take Richard to his apartment unimpeded, where he holds him for several days.

Meanwhile, ambitious young Black TV journalist Linda Page (Myha’la), who happens upon the scene, recruits her cameraman and starts filming the events, despite her boss’ efforts to hand off the assignment to a more experienced (and white, male) reporter. Events unfold that also involve at popular radio DJ, Fred Temple (Colman Domingo) known for his philosophical, Everyman musings on the radio. Tony Kiritsis is a fan, and the police try to use the DJ as a way to reach the kidnapper. Cary Elwes plays plainclothes detective Mike Grable, who was first on the scene, and who tries to be a calming figure to establish rapport with the kidnapper.

This bizarre crime and ensuing police standoff takes on a media circus-like air out in the Midwestern city streets, but the film also spends a lot of time inside Tony’s apartment, with just Tony and Richard, who goes by Dick. Holed up in Tony’s apartment, we get to know both oddball Tony and buttoned-down Richard. Dick is very much under the thumb of his wealthy father. M.L. knew Tony was on the edge, yet M. L. deliberately leaves his son to deal with the loaded situation, while M. L. heads out of town, becoming unavailable for any face-to-face. In truth, Richard is as much exploited by his father M. L. as his client Tony is.

As the hostage situation goes on, a kind of cat-and-mouse relationship evolves between the two men, with the more outgoing Tony even becoming rather friendly towards Richard, in a bit of reverse Stockholm Syndrome. But whether that does Richard any good is another matter. Eventually, Tony issues his demands, which include an apology from M. L. Hall personally.

Skarsgard’s outstanding performance is supported well by the rest of the cast, including particularly Dacre Montgomery, who plays the kidnapped banker Richard Hall. All the cast are good, with Colman Domingo another strong character as the DJ drawn into the situation. The wealthy M.L. Hall is played as distracted and distant by Al Pacino, in a strong performance, and there also is a little parallel to the real-life kidnapping of millionaire J. P. Getty’s grandson here, as negotiations begin.

That shotgun wired to hostage Richard’s neck ensures tensions are constantly high, but the quirkiness of the people involved, the unpredictability of both their nature, and the situation, make this a film where you never know what will happen next. None of this goes like the typical movie hostage situation. No character feels that strangeness more keenly that Coleman Domingo’s radio DJ, recruited as a sort of hostage negotiator, a role he’d rather not play. The ambitions of the young reporter, the determination of the cops, led by Cary Elwes’ Mike Grable, to find a way out, and the pressure on everyone of being on camera and in the public eye constantly adds fuel to the incendiary situation. And remember these are real people and real events, something that Van Sant reminds the audience about by inserting actual footage of the real events.

While some may see the film as anti-capitalist, that is not quite an accurate description, as the “common man” at its center is also a businessman, even if he is not too successful. Instead, DEAD MAN’S WIRE, in part, is more commentary on the warping of the American Dream and the old American free enterprise system, an aspirational ideal in a post-WWII world marked by the Marshall Plan, but which came to a crashing end in the “greed is good” 1980s. The old free enterprise system promised a level playing field for even small businesses to compete fairly, and succeed through hard work and good ideas, rather than through a “thumb on the scale” and unscrupulous, deceitful practices. Kiritsis’ his lack of success is not due, per se, to lack of skill in business, but by the tilted playing field upon which he treads, ironically being skewed by his own lender, who in a more ethical world be his ally. Instead, his banker is concealing that his thumb is on the scale, and has plans to turn his client’s misery to his advantage. The film’s themes are less anti-capitalist than anti-unscrupulous, a condemnation of predatory business practices, contrasting human dealings versus dehumanized practices, the latter style one which Al Pacino’s morality-free character represents well.

Gus Van Sant’s DEAD MAN’S WIRE is highly entertaining as a crime thriller, as well as a technically impressive film, and enhanced by first rate performances particularly by Bill Skarsgard in what may be a career best, as well as working as historical drama and commentary on a slanted economic system.

DEAD MAN’S WIRE opens in theaters on Friday, Jan. 9, 2026.

RATING: 4 out of 4 stars

DON’T WORRY, HE WON’T GET FAR ON FOOT – Review

Joaquin Phoenix as John Callahan and Jonah Hill as Donnie star in DON’T WORRY, HE WON’T GET FAR ON FOOT.

Gus Van Sant’s DON’T WORRY, HE WON’T GET FAR ON FOOT follows a man on a life-changing journey battling the alcoholism that led to an accident that puts him in a wheelchair, and along the way discovering a talent that gives him a direction in life. The film seems as much an admiration of Alcoholics Anonymous as anything but the man at the center of this darkly funny drama is not a fictional character. John Callahan was a counter-culture cartoonist who was a fixture of Portland, Oregon, until his death in 2010.  Callahan’s cartoons were noted for their irreverent dark-humor and were often compared to those of Gahan Wilson and Charles Addams. Callahan’s work won him a national following and loyal fans. But those fans expecting DON’T WORRY, HE WON’T GET FAR ON FOOT to be a biopic on the cartoonist likely will be frustrated, as this film focuses narrowly on a particular, albeit pivotal, point in Callahan’s life. The film feels like it is more about alcoholism than Callahan.

That said, DON’T WORRY, HE WON’T GET FAR ON FOOT does something to recommend it, which is the fine performance of Joaquin Phoenix as John Callahan. Actually, make that two fine performances, as Jonah Hill is outstanding (as well as nearly unrecognizable) as Donnie, Callahan’s AA sponsor. The film follows Callahan from his young adult drinking days, through his accident at age 21, and his recovery from the injury that left him a paraplegic and his adjustment to life in a wheelchair. The accident did not stop his drinking, and the film details that journey and his early days as a cartoonist.

Writer/director Gus Van Sant was once a cinematic shooting star, with films both popular and critically acclaimed like GOOD WILL HUNTING and ELEPHANT. In recent years, his reputation has fallen after a string of less effective indie films. DON’T WORRY, HE WON’T GET FAR ON FOOT is a step up, his strongest recent effort, although perhaps not strong enough to entirely reclaim his earlier standing. Still, it is a polished effort and a worthy film, if you let go of expectations of a biography, and a strong showcase for Joaquin Phoenix and Jonah Hill, who may get some attention come awards season.

The film’s title DON’T WORRY, HE WON’T GET FAR ON FOOT is the caption to one of Callahan’s cartoons, showing a stereotypical Western posse coming upon an empty wheelchair in the desert. The idea of being an outlaw evading authorities and also escaping his wheelchair are ideas that run through Callahan’s work, as well as the unexpected or startling. His unfiltered humor was often edgy and even sometimes offensive, which made his cartoons controversial even in his day but seems more so to modern eyes.

Phoenix plays Callahan with considerable charm and the cartoonist’s signature flaming red hair, speeding around the streets of Portland in his motorized wheelchair. He is hard to resist despite his self-destructive tendency, and it is easy to root for Callahan on his route to recovery and self-discovery. Phoenix captures both Callahan’s humor and his pain, the way he was haunted by being given up for adoption and his searing search for his birth mother, his lack of direction in life and his heavy drinking, and ultimately his unexpected discovery of his gift for cartooning and the redemption that brought.

Jonah Hill’s performance deserves attention, as the charismatic leader of the AA group. Donnie is wealthy, a hipster, blonde and gay. Hill, slimmer with long blonde hair and bearded, completely disappears into this character. Hill moves with a fluid grace and speaks with an ironic, knowing tone as the leader of this unlikely group. The strong supporting cast also includes Jack Black as drinking buddy Dexter, who was with Callahan when he had his accident, and Rooney Mara as Callahan’s Swedish girlfriend Annu. Jack Black is very good in his small role but Rooney Mara is largely wasted in the two-dimensional part of the girlfriend. Kim Gordon of Sonic Youth has a stronger presence as one of the people in Callahan’s AA group, playing an affluent country-club woman with a sometimes sharp tongue.

If one lets go of the idea of this being a biopic, the film is actually one of Gus Van Sant’s best recent efforts, well-constructed and perfectly paced, with an inspirational story that harkens back to his earlier GOOD WILL HUNTING. However, it is still a small film, a little gem, not a game-changing cinematic effort or a film likely to become a big popular hit. Still, Joaquin Phoenix’s performance, and Jonah Hill’s as well, are so good as to be awards-worthy, and should be remembered in the year-end award races, which alone makes the film worth seeing.

DON’T WORRY, HE WON’T GET FAR ON FOOT opens in St. Louis on Friday, July 27, at the Hi-Pointe and Plaza Frontenac theaters.

RATING: 31/2 out of 5 stars

Matthew McConaughey And Naomi Watts Star In First Trailer For Gus Van Sant’s THE SEA OF TREES

SoT-cover-copy-1400x480

Watch the trailer for THE SEA OF TREES. This first look at the film features a great cast which includes Matthew McConaughey, Ken Watanabe and Naomi Watts.

In this powerful story of love and redemption from director Gus Van Sant, Matthew McConaughey stars as Arthur Brennan, an American professor who travels to Japan in the midst of a personal crisis. As he wanders through a mysterious forest with a dark past, he experiences flashbacks of his fraught but loving relationship with his wife, Joan (Naomi Watts), and meets an enigmatic stranger, Takumi (Ken Watanabe), who is lost and injured.

Arthur devotes himself to saving Takumi and returning him home to safety, and the two embark on a spiritual, life-changing journey of friendship, discovery, and healing—one which may ultimately re-connect Arthur with his love for his wife.

THE SEA OF TREES is scheduled to be released on August 26, 2016.

Visit the official site: theseaoftrees-movie.com

Like the film on Facebook: facebook.com/TheSeaofTreesMovie

Gus Van Sant’s SEA OF TREES Begins Production – Stars Matthew McConaughey, Ken Watanabe, Naomi Watts

2013 Governors Awards

Gus Van Sant (Good Will Hunting, Milk) has begun principal photography on SEA OF TREES. The film stars Oscar winner Matthew McConaughey (Dallas Buyers Club, Interstellar), Oscar nominee Ken Watanabe (Inception, Memoirs of a Geisha, The Last Samurai) and two-time Oscar nominee Naomi Watts (The Impossible). Two-time Academy Award nominated producer Gil Netter (Life of Pi, The Blind Side), Ken Kao (Rampart, Knight of Cups, Silence) and Kevin Halloran (Million Dollar Arm, Parental Guidance, Water For Elephants) are producing, based on the Black List script by Chris Sparling (Buried). F. Gary Gray, Brian Dobbins and Allen Fischer are also producers. The film will shoot on location in Massachusetts and in Japan.

Arthur Brennan (McConaughey) treks into Aokigahara, known as the Sea of Trees, a mysterious dense forest at the base of Japan’s Mount Fuji where people go to contemplate life and death. Having found the perfect place to die, Arthur encounters Takumi Nakamura (Watanabe), a Japanese man who has also lost his way. The two men begin a journey of reflection and survival, which affirms Arthur’s will to live and reconnects him to his love with his wife (Watts).

Joining director Gus Van Sant, the creative team includes editor Pietro Scalia who won Oscars for his work on both JFK and Black Hawk Down and was Oscar nominated for Good Will Hunting and Gladiator, Emmy nominated production designer Alex DiGerlando (Beasts of the Southern Wild, HBO’s True Detective), director of photography Kasper Tuxen (Beginners), Oscar nominated costume designer Danny Glicker (Milk, Up In The Air) and make up department head Felicity Bowring (The Bourne Legacy, The Social Network).

Win Passes To The Advance Screening Of Focus Features PROMISED LAND In St. Louis

Focus Features offered film goers a great batch of movies in 2012. Among their fantastic lineup was SEEKING A FRIEND FOR THE END OF THE WORLD, PARANORMAN, HYDE PARK ON HUDSON and ANNA KARENINA. The studio has an interesting slate of films for 2013 that include Academy Award nominee Paul Weitz’s ADMISSION starring Tina Fey and Paul Rudd, the highly anticipated new drama from director Derek Cianfrance’s THE PLACE BEYOND THE PINES starring Academy Award nominee Ryan Gosling and PROMISED LAND – the new contemporary drama directed by Gus Van Sant. The film will be in select theaters December 28th and nationwide January 4, 2013.

To start off the new year right, Focus Features and WAMG invite you to enter to win a pass (good for 2) to the advance screening of PROMISED LAND on January 3rd at 7 pm in St. Louis.

OFFICIAL RULES:

1. YOU MUST BE IN THE ST. LOUIS AREA THE DAY OF THE SCREENING.
2. True or False:

    • Frances McDormand has won an Academy Award.
    • Matt Damon has won an Academy Award
    • Gus Van Sant has won an Academy Award

3. SEND YOUR NAME AND ANSWERS TO: michelle@wearemoviegeeks.com

WINNERS WILL BE CHOSEN THROUGH A RANDOM DRAWING OF QUALIFYING CONTESTANTS. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. PASSES WILL NOT BE SUBSTITUTED OR EXCHANGED. DUPLICATE TICKETS WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED.

This film has been rated R for Language

Matt Damon plays Steve Butler, an ace corporate salesman who is sent along with his partner, Sue Thomason (Frances McDormand), to close a key rural town in his company’s expansion plans.  With the town having been hit hard by the economic decline of recent years, the two outsiders see the local citizens as likely to accept their company’s offer, for drilling rights to their properties, as much-needed relief. What seems like an easy job for the duo becomes complicated by the objection of a respected schoolteacher (Hal Holbrook) with support from a grassroots campaign led by another man (John Krasinski), as well as the interest of a local woman (Rosemarie DeWitt). PROMISED LAND explores America at the crossroads where big business and the strength of small-town community converge.

Visit the official website
Like Promised Land on Facebook
Watch the trailer, clips, featurettes & TV Spots on YouTube
Tweet using #PromisedLand
Find out which theatres are playing Promised Land by you.

WAMG Talks PROMISED LAND With JOHN KRASINSKI

PROMISED LAND, the new film directed by Gus Van Sant, takes a hard, unbiased look at hydraulic fracking, and the effects it has on a small community. Written by Matt Damon and John Krasinski, the film sets out to unite communities, and show a real glimpse of life in a rural setting. WAMG recently got the chance to sit down with John Krasinski (in a round table) to discuss his experience writing his first screenplay, collaborating with Matt Damon, and his karaoke go-to jam!

Steve has been dispatched to the rural town of McKinley with his sales partner, Sue Thomason (Academy Award winner Frances McDormand). The town has been hit hard by the economic decline of recent years, and the two consummate sales executives see McKinley’s citizens as likely to accept their company’s offer – for drilling rights to their properties – as much-needed relief. What seems like an easy job and a short stay for the duo becomes complicated – professionally by calls for community-wide consideration of the offer by respected schoolteacher Frank Yates (Academy Award nominee Hal Holbrook) and personally by Steve’s encounter with Alice (Rosemarie DeWitt). When Dustin Noble (John Krasinski), a slick environmental activist, arrives, suddenly the stakes, both personal and professional, rise to the boiling point.

Check out the round table discussion below:

Does Fracking keep you up at night?

JK: Does Fracking keep me up at night? You know, what’s funny is I really started out the idea… I had the idea for the script about two years ago, and my dad grew up in a small town outside of Pittsburg, in Natrona Heights which was a steel mill town, and his dad worked three jobs, and they didn’t have very much. I remember when he was telling us when I was a little kid… I was an ignorant eight year old… and I said “So, was your childhood awful?” (Laughs) and he said “No, it was amazing! We had friends and family, and there was this sense of community, and the faith that tomorrow would be a better day.” That really stuck with me my whole life, and then I think the older I got, the more I realized the country was moving away from that sort of pure ideal of community. So, that’s where the idea came from, and that’s where I really started.

Natural gas came in as an issue later on in the project. Once we had started coming up with these characters, and this town, and these groups of people who were going to interact, it turned out to be the best backdrop for the story because it was basically, you know, like high stakes poker. There was so much to potentially gain, and so much potentially to lose. The really moving part was when we actually went to shoot in the town, they were so generous, and so open to have us… but at the same time people weren’t against coming up and telling you how they really felt, and there were people who came up and said “You know, you really shouldn’t be making this movie. This is really good for us.” and then five minutes later someone would come up and say “Thank you for making this movie!”. We never expected it to be the movie that deals with this issue. Our whole thing was, at the end, to start a conversation. Whether it’s fracking, or something else, these issues are something that should bring communities together, and (they should be) making decisions for themselves. Being together on this stuff is really the most important thing. Especially this day and age. Otherwise, our idea’s that if you don’t step up to it someone will step up and make the decision for you, as was evidence by this last election. We made so much noise about who was getting elected, and I feel like we really forgot about the people who were actually being affected by all of this. That was our idea, so we never set out to be like “This is it! We wanna do the biggest political movie of the year.”

How connected to that “small town” world were you guys, and how much did you discover as a part of making this movie? Coming from that kind of background, I found it to be very authentic.

JK: That’s awesome, by the way, and that’s a huge compliment. When we were writing it, the big things that we wanted to do, a couple of things… One is we needed humor, because I think anything that’s just dramatic is really boring. The other thing is that we wanted depth from the characters, and we wanted them to be multifaceted because any character, any one story, or one side of an issue was really, really boring. So, for us, the whole thing was to make these people , like when my dad spoke about his upbringing, to make them really intelligent people… really proud people who have opinions about things rather than, I think sometimes in movies just do this “small town America” as the people who just get bowled over by anyone who has an idea and then in comes innovators and creators who just push these people aside. That’s not the truth, at all. These people are very dedicated to their opinions, and very proud of where they’re from. That was the thing about getting there, and first of all seeing how gorgeous it was. I mean, it was beautiful. Weirdly, we shot ten miles away from where my dad grew up so, when he came to visit I had this existential moment where he was like “Oh, we use to apple pick over there.” and “I knew this area. You know, we came up here…” and I was like “Oh my god!” so I was having a father-son moment, this big moment, and I think everyone on the crew that day was like “What’s up with Krasinski?” because it felt like I was ready to cry at any moment, because I was going through something.

The truth is that you see what these people are fighting for… and when I say “what they’re fighting for” I don’t mean either side of the issue. What I am saying is they are fighting for what everybody else is fighting for… Their family, their friends, where they’re from, and where they’re going. It’s a self-protective survival mode, and that’s what’s so admirable about these people really digging in on these issues, and it’s happening all over the country.

One of the really great things that you do visually, and with the story and with the performance is that you simplify. You make it very easy. Especially your classroom sequence. You could lift that out and turn it into a short film for schools to educate kids. 

JK: On one side of the issue, you could. (Laughs) The other side wouldn’t be super psyched about that!

That also goes hand in hand with your character of Dustin, and your performance. What did you draw on to create him, because, for me, I felt this really wonderful Elmer Gantry like, environmental evangelism. 

JK: Yes! Exactly! You know what’s funny, is my whole idea for it was sort of the snake oil salesman, you know what I mean? I remember watching all of those great movies, or even Looney Tunes kind of cartoons. There’s always the guy who just rolls into town, gets everybody to buy this stuff, and then rolls out in that amazing carriage with the clinking bottles as it goes away. I just thought that that’s sort of what, really, everybody is doing on either side of the issue, or any type of corporation is doing. Everybody is just selling their wares, and trying to get these people to invest, but the thing I love, not just with this issue, but overall, is, I feel like the country is turning, especially with this fiscal eclipse stuff that’s happening. I remember the last time we were anywhere near a fiscal eclipse people were like “What is a fiscal eclipse?” and now you’re hearing people having really strong opinions. People are getting more and more educated, and have an idea of what they want from the situation. I think that’s what our movie is trying to do. That’s where we need to go. The days of just saying “Our elected people are angels.” and “They’re gonna take care of us.” and “Everything is going to be great.”… those days are over. We really need to, sort of, steer the ship with them, and for them. It’s really gotta be that old Lincoln quote of “For the people, by the people.”

How did you end up becoming writing partners with Matt Damon on this particular project?

JK: I met Matt when he was doing a movie with my wife, ADJUSTMENT BUREAU, and we became friendly right away… which is really nice because being from Boston, the guy from GOOD WILL HUNTING is pretty much the mayor of some fictitious town (Laughs), and so that was really awesome to meet him. One day we were on a double date, and he said “I’m actually thinking of directing. Is there anything you have in the works that you’d be willing to share with me?” and I said “Yeah.”. So, I brought him this idea, and he jumped on it right away… and we were writing within a week or two. It worked really, really well. He actually was shooting WE BOUGHT A ZOO in California at the time, and I was shooting my show, so we were kind of moonlighting. During the weekends I would show up around breakfast time on Saturday, and work all the way through dinner, both Saturday and Sunday. I don’t know how we got work done, because he has four beautiful girls. That’s why we always went to his house. He wins by default. Between throwing in THE LITTLE MERMAID seventeen times, lunch, and bath time, I don’t know how we got any work done, but we did.

We worked really well together. We worked really fast. We have similar sensibilities, and similar sense of humors, but, at the end of the day, I think we’re both eternal optimists, so we wanted the same thing. We wanted this to be an uplifting, kind of Frank Capra, kind of Kazan movie. Where we were headed was always the same, so getting there was a lot quicker.

Do you double date a lot?

JK: Yes we do. They are really fun double dating… You know, ironically, one of the things we’ve done a whole lot is karaoke. (Laughs) You wouldn’t know, because I didn’t get any better for the movie, but… That’s the best part about writing the script, or writing the stage directions is like “Dustin is horrible at karaoke.” and I was like “Now that that’s in there, I’m safe! I can do whatever I want”.

What’s your go-to? 

JK: My go-to is Enrique Iglesias’ “Hero”. (Laughs) You’re welcome America! Get ready to not be excited!

What about Emily (Blunt) and Matt (Damon)? 

 JK: Matt hits some Springstein… a lot of the time. Matt and I have also duetted with “The Gambler”. (Laughs) Yeah, Kenny Rogers “The Gambler”. Bet you didn’t know it was a duet? But we made it into a duet, and it was one of those things where it was like “Oh, you’re getting that? Ok, fine. You can have that verse and I’ll have the other one.” It’s like, you’re fighting for the better verse. Again, it’s so exciting because in the moment it’s like ” We sound amazing!”. Thank god those are tiny rooms in the basements of buildings in the East Village, otherwise it would be really embarrassing.

You know, you could take this on the road and make money… and finance your next film with it…

JK: I don’t think we could finance a lunch with it! (Laughs) But hell, I’d give it a shot!

What was Dave Eggers involvement in this?

JK: When I had the idea I brought the basic structure… what I was saying about how I felt about small town life, and sort of that pride. I brought it to Dave because a lot of those issues are obviously big for him too, and really important. I had worked with him on AWAY WE GO, and I had known him through a bunch of 826 events that I had done. He’s one of the smartest guys any of us will ever meet. I just went to him, kind of as  a guru in the oracle. He was writing his novel that summer, so he didn’t have so much time, but we had enough time to sit around and kick around ideas, and structure, and sort of the basic outlying ideas of what it would be, and that’s what I took to Matt.

How important is the writing aspect of your career to you? Are you trying to cultivate it further, or are you just going to write when passion hits you on a certain idea? 

JK: No, I’m definitely going to cultivate it further. This was an incredible learning experience for me, on every level, but I think if I’m honest… The truth is, this is really a big moment for me. This is a transition from the show that is meaning, to me, more than anyone knows. I think to have this show end is going to be an incredibly emotional moment for me, not only because of the show, and the cast, and the crew, and that family aspect, but it’s an era of my life that’s gonna be gone. It is my twenties, basically. It’s one of the most important decades of my life. It was spent with this show, and I owe it absolutely everything. No one would know my name if it wasn’t for this show, and I wouldn’t have any opportunity if it wasn’t for this show. To sort of grow up, and to have that show support, this is just sort of my… After a while if someone asked me “What would you do if we gave you the keys?” This is the movie that I’d do if you gave me the keys. To me, this is the sort of thing that I’ve always been interested in. These are the characters that I’ve always been interested in watching, or interested in playing. I really want to so it more. To have this team surrounding me… To write with Matt, and to have Gus onboard… it was so surreal, and so inspiring, but it also probably spoiled me because now I’m just like “All I have to do is write some sort of document. Then all of a sudden Matt Damon and Gus Van Sant will sign on! How hard is this folks?”. (Laughs) I don’t know how the next ones are going to turn out, but also at home my wife was hugely supportive. I had always heard that story that a blank white page is a pretty scary thing, and I was like “Come on! There are bigger things to be scared of.” Then you sit down and you realize “Wow! That is pretty scary!” so, she was the one who kept saying “You can do it!” and “Just go up there and give it a couple more hours.” and sure enough, it just clicked, and I really, really loved it. So, I’m going to give it a shot, and hopefully keep going as long as there are stories that I can tell well. Until then, I’ll at least give it a shot.

For More Info:

www.PromisedLandTheFilm.com

www.Facebook.com/PromisedLandMovie

PROMISED LAND opens in select theaters Friday, December 28 and opens everywhere January 4

Win A PROMISED LAND Prizepack From Focus Features!

PROMISED LAND is the new contemporary drama directed by Gus Van Sant (GOOD WILL HUNTING, MILK). Matt Damon plays Steve Butler, an ace corporate salesman who is sent along with his partner, Sue Thomason (Frances McDormand), to close a key rural town in his company’s expansion plans.  With the town having been hit hard by the economic decline of recent years, the two outsiders see the local citizens as likely to accept their company’s offer, for drilling rights to their properties, as much-needed relief. What seems like an easy job for the duo becomes complicated by the objection of a respected schoolteacher (Hal Holbrook) with support from a grassroots campaign led by another man (John Krasinski), as well as the interest of a local woman (Rosemarie DeWitt). PROMISED LAND explores America at the crossroads where big business and the strength of small-town community converge. The film will be in select theaters December 28th and nationwide January 4, 2013.

Enter for a chance to win a PROMISED LAND prizepack from Focus Features and WAMG.

One (1) winner will receive:

$25 Visa for a night out at the movies

Good Will Hunting on Blu-ray

Focus Features 10th Anniversary: A Collection of Film Score

Prizing provided by Focus Features

OFFICIAL RULES:

1. YOU MUST BE A US RESIDENT. PRIZE WILL ONLY BE SHIPPED TO US ADDRESSES.

2. SEND YOUR FULL NAME and ANSWER TO: michelle@wearemoviegeeks.com.

3. Gus Van Sant made his feature film directorial debut in 1985. Name this movie that went onto win the Los Angeles Film Critics Association award for Best Independent/Experimental Film.

WINNERS WILL BE CHOSEN FROM ALL QUALIFYING ENTRIES. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. PRIZES WILL NOT BE SUBSTITUTED OR EXCHANGED.

CONTEST WILL END ON MONDAY, January 7, 2013 at 11:59pm CST.

A Focus Features presentation in association with Participant Media and Image Nation Abu Dhabi of a Sunday Night, Pearl Street, Media Farm production. A Gus Van Sant Film. Matt Damon, John Krasinski, Frances McDormand. Rosemarie DeWitt, Scoot McNairy, Titus Welliver, and Hal Holbrook. Casting by Francine Maisler, CSA. Music Supervisor, Brian Reitzell. Music by Danny Elfman. Costume Designer, Juliet Polcsa. Production Designer, Daniel B. Clancy. Editor, Billy Rich. Director of Photography, Linus Sandgren, FSF. Executive Producers, Gus Van Sant, Ron Schmidt, Jeff Skoll, Jonathan King. Produced by Matt Damon, John Krasinski, Chris Moore. Story by Dave Eggers. Screenplay by John Krasinski & Matt Damon. Directed by Gus Van Sant. A Focus Features Release.

What does Focus Features sound like? Find out with the “Focus Features 10th Anniversary: A Collection of Film Score” with music from your favorite films by their best composers.

1. The Wings (from Brokeback Mountain) by Gustavo Santaolalla
2. Theme (from Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind) by Jon Brion
3. Roadblock I (from The Constant Gardener) by Alberto Iglesias
4. Briony (from Atonement) by Dario Marianelli
5. Wong Chia Chi’s Theme (from Lust, Caution) by Alexandre Desplat
6. Eastern Promises (from Eastern Promises) by Howard Shore
7. Ted and Marion (from The Door in the Floor) by Marcelo Zarvos
8. The Kiss (from Milk) by Danny Elfman
9. La Marche des Bébés (from Babies) by Bruno Coulais
10. Delysia LaFosse (from Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day) by Paul Englishby
11. Autumn in Connecticut (from Far From Heaven) by Elmer Bernstein
12. Emily’s Theme (from Brick) by Nathan Johnson
13. George Smiley (from Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy) by Alberto Iglesias
14. Yes! (from Jane Eyre) by Dario Marianelli
15. Exploration (from Coraline) by Bruno Coulais
16. Ride Into the Storm (from Sin Nombre) by Marcelo Zarvos
17. The Sun Also Rises (from The Kid Stays in the Picture) by Jeff Danna
18. Container Park (from Hanna) by The Chemical Brothers

Link Up!

Visit the official website
Like Promised Land on Facebook
Watch the trailer, clips, featurettes & TV Spots on YouTube
Tweet using #PromisedLand
Find out which theatres are playing Promised Land by you.

PROMISED LAND Gets A First Trailer

Here’s the brand new trailer for PROMISED LANDFocus Features’ contemporary drama from two-time Academy Award-nominated director Gus Van Sant (GOOD WILL HUNTING). Starring Matt Damon, John Krasinski and Oscar-winner Frances McDormand (FARGO), the film is based on a story by Dave Eggers (AWAY WE GO), with an original screenplay by Krasinski and Damon.

Matt Damon plays Steve Butler, a corporate salesman who arrives in a rural town with his sales partner, Sue Thomason (Frances McDormand). With the town having been hit hard by the economic decline of recent years, the two outsiders see the local citizens as likely to accept their company’s offer, for drilling rights to their properties, as much-needed relief. What seems like an easy job for the duo becomes complicated by the objection of a respected schoolteacher (Hal Holbrook) with support from a grassroots campaign led by another man (John Krasinski) who counters Steve both personally and professionally.

Last we saw of Krasinski was alongside Drew Barrymore in BIG MIRACLEHe graduated from Brown University in 2001 as an honors playwright with a B.A. in English literature, so I’ll be interested to see how the script turns out. His first screenplay, as well as assuming the director’s chair, was for  2009’s BRIEF INTERVIEWS WITH HIDEOUS MEN. As for Oscar winner Damon, he previously starred in Steven Soderbergh’s CONTAGION and Cameron Crowe’s WE BOUGHT A ZOO. His next film is one I can’t wait to see – ELYSIUM (March 2013) – from director Neill Blomkamp (DISTRICT 9).


ELYSIUM. © 2012 Columbia TriStar Marketing Group, Inc. All rights reserved.

PROMISED LAND also stars Rosemarie DeWitt (Rachel Getting Married), Scoot McNairy (of this October’s Killing Them Softly), Titus Welliver (The Town) and Academy Award nominee Hal Holbrook (Into the Wild).

PROMISED LAND will be released in exclusive engagements in New York and Los Angeles on Friday, December 28th, 2012, prior to an expansion in January 2013.

Gus Van Sant’s PROMISED LAND, Written By & Starring Matt Damon And John Krasinski, To Begin Theatrical Run December 28th, 2012

PROMISED LAND, Focus Features’ contemporary drama from two-time Academy Award-nominated director Gus Van Sant, will be released in exclusive engagements in New York and Los Angeles on Friday, December 28th, 2012, prior to an expansion in January 2013. The film’s original screenplay was written by John Krasinski and Matt Damon, based on a story by Dave Eggers. Participant Media co-financed the movie, for which Focus holds worldwide rights.

Participant’s Jeff Skoll (The Help) and Jonathan King (The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel) executive-produced PROMISED LAND with Mr. Van Sant and Ron Schmidt (Won’t Back Down). Mr. Damon and Mr. Krasinski produced the movie with Chris Moore. Mr. Moore co-produced Good Will Hunting, which brought its stars and co-writers, Mr. Damon and Ben Affleck, the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay. Mr. Van Sant earned his first Oscar nomination for directing Good Will Hunting; his second came for directing Focus’Milk, which won two Academy Awards. Mr. Krasinski previously starred for Focus in Away We Go, which was co-written by Mr. Eggers. Mr. Damon previously starred for Participant in Contagion.

In addition to Mr. Damon and Mr. Krasinski, the cast of PROMISED LAND includes Rosemarie DeWitt (Rachel Getting Married), Academy Award nominee Hal Holbrook (Into the Wild), Scoot McNairy (of this October’s Killing Them Softly), Titus Welliver (The Town), and, in her fourth film for Focus, Academy Award winner Frances McDormand.

Mr. Damon plays Steve Butler, a corporate salesman who arrives in a rural town with his sales partner, Sue Thomason (Ms. McDormand). With the town having been hit hard by the economic decline of recent years, the two outsiders see the local citizens as likely to accept their company’s offer, for drilling rights to their properties, as much-needed relief. What seems like an easy job for the duo becomes complicated by the objection of a respected schoolteacher (Mr. Holbrook) with support from a grassroots campaign led by another man (Mr. Krasinski) who counters Steve both personally and professionally.

RESTLESS – The Review

Pack your rain gear and we’ll take a trip to the Northeast, Seattle to be exact. It’s the home of alternative culture and mecca of most quirkiness. And our guide is one of the most off-beat film directors, Gus Van Zant of MY OWN PRIVATE IDAHO fame. For a bit of a change of pace he’s presenting a boy-meets-girl story. They do meet “cute”, but these two young people in RESTLESS are far from the typical movie couple.

We first meet the shy, sullen teenage boy Enoch ( Henry Hopper ) as he “crashes” the memorial service of a complete stranger. He sits quietly in the back and after the service, he returns to the big, gloomy house he shares with his aunt ( Jane Adams ). His only friend is the ghost of a WWII kamikaze pilot, Hiroshi ( Ryo Kase ), that only Enoch can see. At the next service Enoch catches the eye of a teenage girl, Annabel ( Mia Wasikowska ). She too has crashed the service and explains that she works at a nearby hospital. She soon returns to the home she shares with her boozy mother and very protective older sister ( Schuyler Fisk ). When she takes Annabel to the hospital we find that she doesn’t work there, but is a frequent patient. A new test reveals that a cancerous growth on the brain is spreading and Annabel has only three months to live. At the next service that Enoch attends, it seems his luck has run out- the cemetery director recognizes him from the two recent services. Before Enoch is ejected Annabelle steps in and covers for him. The pair soon begin a friendship and, after Annabel shares the news of her condition, they begin to fall in love. The stoic Enoch finally lets down his defences and shares his family tragedy. These two free spirits have found each other, but what will happen as they near her final days?

For fans of 70’s cinema the comparisons to Hal Ashby’s classic HAROLD AND MAUDE are too great to ignore. Like Bud Cort’s Harold, Enoch is somber, quiet and obsessed with death although he doesn’t stage elaborate mock suicides as in the former film. Hopper reminds one of Cort in many scenes along with his father Dennis, his dad’s contemporary James Dean and a younger James Franco. Instead of the sprightly septenagerian Ruth Gordon as Maude RESTLESS has a sprightly terminally ill pixie in Wasikowska. With her short cropped blonde hair she’s close to the great movie gamine Audrey Hepburn and free spirits Kirsten Dunst and Michelle Williams. This is a very different side of Wasikowska from her other film roles and solidifies her status as a young actress ro watch. These two do their best with a script that’s cloyingly precious most of the time. The injection of a whimsical invisible pal detracts from the tenderness of the couple’s growing affection for each other. I guess a ghost pilot’s better than a tall invisible rabbit ( sorry Pooka fans). I must single out Ms Fisk for her portrait of an older sister who’s had to step up and be the head of the family. She projects a no-nonsense tough, protective exterior while her heart is breaking over the prospect of losing her sibling. The slow pacing, turgid soundtrack songs, and dark, dreary cinematography don’t service the actors properly. If you can handle some of the forced whimsy, RESTLESS may be worth your time. But the definitive love amongst death comedy is that gem from over 40 years ago.

Overall Rating: Two and a Half Out of Five Stars