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November 29, 2018

Director Jason Reitman on THE FRONT RUNNER and SLIFF award – Interview

Filed under: Movies — Tags: , , , , , — Cate Marquis @ 8:36 am

 

Hugh Jackman and director Jason Reitman on the set of Columbia Pictures’ THE FRONT RUNNER. Photo courtesy of Columbia Pictures

Director Jason Reitman, whose new film, THE FRONT RUNNER, about Gary Hart’s 1987 presidential run, was recently released, was honored at the 2018 St. Louis International Film Festival. Reitman attended SLIFF to receive the Contemporary Cinema Award. He spoke to a round table of film journalists the day after receiving the award. All questions have been combined and the interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Questioner: “How was last night for you (when Reitman received the award and his new film THE FRONT RUNNER was previewed)?”

Jason Reitman: “It was great! I love flying into St. Louis. It brings back this kind of flood of memories from shooting UP IN THE AIR. Literally from the moment I step off the plane, I always wind up, you know, walking out of a gate that we literally just filmed right by. While they’ve renovated (the airport), I still recognize the architecture, the lamps, and I pass this security where we did the whole big security scene, and then the moment I’m driving out, I’m seeing a Hilton we shot at, and the parking spot that used to be the Hertz. And then I start driving through town, and I say, ‘You know, that’s the apartment building where George (Clooney) lived, and it’s just …(laughter)”

Q: “That was one of the best scenes, where he (Clooney) goes on a rant with Anna Kendrick, defending Lambert airport.”

JR: “Oh, thank you. And then of course, we’re here. We shot a really lovely scene here at the Cheshire, and so, it brings back a lot of memories. And I really love the Tivoli here, it’s a gorgeous theater and where we had the screening last night.”

Q: “Congratulations on the award!”

JR: “Yeah, that was really cool.”

Q: “We’re ready for you to write another one, to come to St. Louis to shoot.”

JR: “I’d love to come back here and shoot a movie! Although I’m not sure how it could be the experience I had on UP IN THE AIR. That was just kinda dreamy, and you could also just feel it from the locals who were working on the film, which is not always the case. I’ve shot – this is my eighth movie I just made, and you kind of get a different sense of the city you’re in by the people who are working on it. And particularly even the background extras in UP IN THE AIR, cared so much about the movie we were making. Obviously, they became very integral in the firing scenes, you know, they would. St. Louis had just gone through a ton of lay-offs, particularly at Anheuser-Busch. In those sequences where George was firing people, we ended up using real people from St. Louis and Detroit, where we also shot, who had lost their job and shared their stories, and that became a real part of the film.

Here at the Cheshire, I remember we were shooting the rehearsal dinner and we had this kind of wedding sequence and we had these young gals who were playing the bridesmaids roles who were local. I remember they really fell in love with the whole process of making the movie here, and they loved the film and liked what were making. And I remember they got the sides (lines) for the next day’s shoot, and the next day we were shoot the scene where George arrives at Vera’s, and finds out she’s married, and I just sort of remember that these young girls in their bridesmaid dresses looking at the sides, heartbroken, and coming up to me and saying ‘What? They’re not going to be together?’ They were heartbroken. It was really lovely.”

Q: “About THE FRONT RUNNER, it interesting how you didn’t necessarily paint him, Gary Hart, as a villain but you didn’t, you know… you really left it up to the audience. I wanted to know what the thought process was, you know, you told the story, put the information out there, but you didn’t really spin it, at least in my opinion, either way, as either bad guy or good guy.”

JR: “Certainly. I mean I don’t believe in heroes or villains in real life. I do enjoy movies that have heroes and villains, I like STAR WARS, but for this kind of movie, a movie about real life, I don’t think you can have heroes and villains, I think people are more complicated than that. Certainly Gary Hart is more complicated than that , I mean, he is this really interesting litmus test on how we view flaws in our leaders, because he was such a compelling candidate for the presidency. Kennedy-esque, handsome, charming, well-spoken, brilliant and prescient – kind of beyond all imagination. At the same time, he’s a human being who made human mistakes. And they were private ones, so it really kind of begs the question of our curiosity, and where a private life really kind of meets a public life.”

Q: “Hugh Jackman was this incredible choice for this role. Was he your first choice, did you have to have him in this role?”

JR: “Yeah, I mean, beyond the kind of cosmetic similarities between Hugh and Gary, he’s an actor I’ve been wanting to work with for a long time. Particularly in these last five years or so, with this run of Les Miz and LOGAN and THE GREATEST SHOWMAN, he’s just kind of taken it up a notch. I thought LOGAN was kind of exceptional performance, to take a character over the course of nine movies and stick the landing with such an emotional closing film, [it] blew me away.

I was familiar with the stories of his decency, stories of his work ethic, and those all came true. It’s not an easy role [Gary Hart]. Acting is kind of built upon…the first thing you learn as an actor is you kind of need to identify your character’s goals and their choices, and here was a character where you were never going to understand that. It became his job to protect those ideas and let the audience peek in but never actually walk in the door. It’s a very tricky thing to do. And never judge your character, which is particularly tricky in this movie as well.”

Q: “He can do so much. A performance I liked, that doesn’t get a lot of credit, is PRISONERS.”

JR: “Oh, yeah, he’s great.”

Q: “He takes that role to a new level, while making you draw your own conclusions about being a parent.”

JR: “Yeah, yeah, and knows how to keep it at a slow boil. It’s really hard.”

Q: “I think that’s what I liked about this performance too, you don’t necessarily love him by the end of the movie but you don’t hate him either…. I also wonder, did Gary and Lee [Hart] watch it?”

JR: “Yeah, you know, they did. I had spoken to everyone before we started making the movie, just out of decency, you know, ‘hey, I’m Jason, I’m the one making the movie, here’s my phone number,’ but yeah, when we finished the film, the first one we showed the movie to was Donna [Rice], then Gary and Lee Hart, their kids, the campaign, Tom Fielder from the [Miami] Herald. They all saw the movie, I just kind of flew around showing it to them. As you can imagine, it’s terrifying to turn the movie, walk out of the theater and let them sit there. It was really scary for me, You know, if I told you I was going to make a movie about your life, [and] let me pick the worst week. (everyone laughs)

So, however, what kind of happened with each of the screenings is we’ve approached this story that has historically kind of been thought of as a joke – you know, a short joke with a punchline of the name of a boat – and everyone who worked on the movie approached it with empathy. I feel like the real people can feel the sensitivity of the actors, and Gary and Lee Hart particularly felt that for Hugh Jackman and Vera Farmiga, as did Donna Rice from Sarah Paxton. And I think they felt my empathy, in opening up a really harrowing time they have not been able to live down for decades, and treat it with the seriousness that we did.”

Q: “In the beginning, you did not use that photo – I was in the news room and that photo came over – but you did not use that photo.”

JR: “Yeah, and I can tell you why – the photo came out later. This is one of the interesting things about Gary Hart’s story. The Gary Hart story plays with how we remember things, and if you ask people who know the story, they will tell you a couple of things. They will tell you ‘well, he told the press to follow him around,’ which was not the case. And then they’ll say ‘he left the presidency [race] because of a photograph, and that’s all.’ That’s not the case. He left politics and weeks later, the National Enquirer bought this photo and published it. At that point, he was back in Denver, out of the race and has already made this speech we show at the end of the film. But we don;t remember that.

What I find interesting about that is way our curiosity works, and the way we sum up stories in our head. And there is something complicated about that, there’s something to the fact that we take this moment, which is kind of a groundbreaking moment as far as the relationship between “celebrity-facation” and politics, and instead of thinking about what changed in that moment and how that put us on a road to today, we think of it as a name of a boat and a photograph., because we enjoy the humor of it, and we enjoy the curiosity of it. Look, I wake up every morning and check out my phone app, the news app, and often there is a story about the midterms and right next to it, there is a story about Ariana Grande and Pete Davidson breaking up. And they’re from the same source, they’re both from the Post, and they are given equal weight. I don’t blame them, it’s not their fault,we’re the ones clicking it. And so I’m kind of asking the audience, what is it that our curiosity allows us to gloss over something important because we enjoy the sordid details.”

November 21, 2018

THE FRONT RUNNER – Review

Filed under: Review — Tags: , , , , , , — Cate Marquis @ 7:20 am

Hugh Jackman stars as Gary Hart in Columbia Pictures’ THE FRONT RUNNER.

Hugh Jackman gives a powerful, complex performance as Gary Hart, an idealistic and charismatic presidential candidate who seemed a shoo-in for the 1988 Democratic nomination until media frenzy over a rumor of an extramarital affair brought his campaign to an abrupt halt. If one-time presidential candidate Gary Hart is recalled at all now, it is as the politician who was so confident of his position as front-runner, that he invited the media to follow him around, which led to the discovery of an affair. That story isn’t exactly true, something Jason Reitman’s political thriller/drama THE FRONT RUNNER corrects, but Gary Hart is not the real subject of this gripping political thriller. THE FRONT RUNNER is really about the media, particularly the sudden historical point at which the way the media covered politicians changed, and what that meant for both campaign coverage and the kind of person willing to run for office,and repercussions into the present day.

Hart might be a little known figure to younger generations or only remembered as historical footnote by others but as Reitman’s thrilling film brings out, this event actually marked the moment when the ground moved, suddenly and permanently, in American politics,the turning point when tabloid media merged with mainstream journalism, a shift then further accelerated and contorted by the internet. That change impacted political campaigns and the kind of person willing to run for office, the results of which we are facing today. It makes for an astonishingly powerful and timely film and, that rarest of birds, one that speaks to both sides of the current political divide.

In 1987, the Colorado senator brought a Western freshness and a mix of bold new ideas, intelligence and youthful energy that particularly inspired young voters, and seemed to make him a lock for the Democratic nomination as well as a strong contender for the presidency. Hart’s meteoric rise and youthful appeal seemed to make him unstoppable but it all came crashing down after reports that the married senator might be having an affair, with a beautiful model named Donna Rice (Sara Paxton), whom he met aboard a campaign donor’s yacht named Monkey Business. The report sparked a news frenzy that brought down Hart’s campaign and ended his political ambitions forever.

Now it seems mindbogglingly dumb that any politician, much less a presidential hopeful, would set foot on a yacht named Monkey Business but the way the media covered politicians was far different in those days, as we learn in this insightful film. Director Jason Reitman tells this story like a thriller, with all the tension that implies, spooling out the facts step-wise and looking behind the curtain of both the campaign and the media. The script was co-written by Reitman, political journalist Matt Bai and former political consultant Jay Carson, based on Matt Bai’s book “All the Truth is Out.” Jay Carson was a creative consultant on “House of Cards,” and might know a thing or two about creating gripping political drama. The Oscar-nominated Reitman has tackled big subjects impacting society before, in THANK YOU FOR SMOKING, JUNO, and UP IN THE AIR. He immediately saw the larger significance of Gary Hart’s story after hearing Matt Bai discussing his book on the podcast Radiolab.

Although there is a serious story underneath, this is an entertaining, engrossing film to watch. Jackman is outstanding in this dramatic role, playing Hart as a gifted candidate who was inspiring to young voters in particular but a personal enigma. Jackman’s Hart is an idealistic, even brilliant man who is eager to discuss new solutions to difficult problems but was more reticent about his personal life. JK Simmons plays Bill Dixon, Gary Hart’s campaign manager, while Alfred Molina plays Washington Post editor Ben Bradlee. Vera Farmiga gives a nearly show-stealing turn as Hart’s wife Lee, a smart, no-nonsense woman with a complicated marriage who preferred to avoid the spotlight.

The film mostly runs on two tracks, the Hart campaign and the media covering him, and periodically a third one of Hart’s family. Each has an ensemble of characters that explore this story and its significant turning point in history. Reitman is less concerned about whether there was an actual affair or not rather and more with the media response to rumors of one. Jackman’s very private Hart does not respond well to prying personal questions and a momentary flash of temper with an off-hand remark to one set of journalists seems to have given an opening to media intrusion into his private life by others. Hart remains focused on policy ideas, unaware of how the rules of the American political world have just shifted, changing even as he speaks.

Reitman often uses a hand-held camera to create of sense of intimacy in both the campaign and new media camps. He also uses overlapping dialog and a kinetic pace to create a sense of realism. The film makes no judgments, remaining neutral, and the point of view shifts throughout. The style of the film at times suggests the dark humor of the 1972 political satire THE CANDIDATE and also Robert Altman’s ensemble social commentary films, in which the viewer must decide which speaker is important in a scene.

This film is less about this one candidate than about the seismic shift in the media echoes into today. That change was brought on by the growth of the 24-hour news cycle, started by the debut of cable news, followed by the breakdown of the hard lines that once separated serious journalism and its policy-focused coverage of public affairs, from tabloid journalism and its gossipy coverage of celebrities. The Gary Hart campaign represented the first major breach in that dam.

The focus on the change in media coverage of politics makes this drama surprisingly contemporary, and more surprisingly, a rare topic on which people on both sides of the current political divide can agree – the toxic shift from issues to personality, from in-depth coverage to chasing the latest shiny object, the pressure to be first to break a story overwhelming the journalistic command to be certain to get the facts right first A quote from Hart used in the film sums up the shift: “Politics in this country – take it from me – is on the verge of becoming another form of athletic competition or sporting match.”

Not that scandals about politician’s extra-marital affairs were never covered, just that the rules about reporting them were different prior to Gary Hart. Politicians used to have to pretty much carry on in public, or fall into the Potomac River with a stripper, to get in the papers. Discreet private behavior was not reported, and presidents especially were give a wide aisle of privacy, with few photos of FDR in his wheelchair and turning a blind eye to affairs of Kennedy and LBJ. In the case of Hart, it wasn’t even clear there was an affair, just the suggestion of one. It didn’t matter though, because times had changed and Hart was caught in the tidal wave as tabloid entertainment merged with mainstream political journalism, in the same year that saw the emergence of mobile new trucks, satellite broadcasting and the debut of TV’s gossip show “A Current Affair.”

This gripping thriller/drama should garner some Oscar buzz for Hugh Jackman, and perhaps finally win Jason Reitman an Oscar. THE FRONT RUNNER opens Wednesday, Nov. 21, at Landmark’s Tivoli Theater and other theaters.

RATING: 5 out of 5 stars

November 11, 2018

Win Passes to the Advance St. Louis Screening of THE FRONT RUNNER Starring Hugh Jackman

Filed under: Free Passes,Movies — Tags: , , , , — Tom Stockman @ 5:25 pm


THE FRONT RUNNER tells the true story of American Senator Gary Hart’s presidential campaign in 1988, when it was derailed when he was caught in a scandalous love affair.


Director Jason Reitman’s THE FRONT RUNNER opens November 21st, but We Are Movie Geeks would like to give St. Louis-area  a chance to see it early! There’s a screening Thursday, November 15th at  at 7pm at the Creve Coeur  Theater. Just leave your name in the comments section below, and we’ll contact you how to redeem your free passes (each good for two people). 


THE FRONT RUNNER stars Hugh Jackman, Vera Farmiga, and J.K. Simmons

August 31, 2018

Hugh Jackman Is Gary Hart In New Trailer For Jason Reitman’s THE FRONT RUNNER

Filed under: Movies — Tags: , — Melissa Thompson @ 7:58 am

Oscar® nominee Hugh Jackman stars as the charismatic politician Gary Hart for Academy Award®-nominated director Jason Reitman in the new thrilling drama THE FRONT RUNNER.

The film opens on November 16, 2018 (Select Cities) and November 21, 2018 (Wide).

The film, director and stars, could all see Oscar nominations – based on the trailer, this meaty film looks fantastic.

The film follows the rise and fall of Senator Hart, who captured the imagination of young voters and was considered the overwhelming front runner for the 1988 Democratic presidential nomination when his campaign was sidelined by the story of an extramarital relationship with Donna Rice. As tabloid journalism and political journalism merged for the first time, Senator Hart was forced to drop out of the race – events that left a profound and lasting impact on American politics and the world stage.

Also starring Vera Farmiga, J.K. Simmons and Alfred Molina, THE FRONT RUNNER is written by Matt Bai & Jay Carson & Jason Reitman, based on the book All the Truth is Out by Matt Bai, and produced by Jason Reitman and Helen Estabrook of Right of Way Films and Aaron L. Gilbert of BRON Studios.

Photo Credit: Frank Masi SMPSP ©2018 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

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