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Showing posts with label The Necessary Death of Charile Countryman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Necessary Death of Charile Countryman. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Review: 'The Necessary Death of Charlie Countryman'

{Vincent has a small role at the beginning of the film as the boyfriend of Charlie's mother}

By Justin Lowe


PARK CITY – Commercials director Fredrik Bond makes a promising feature debut with this fanciful crime-drama romance that gratifyingly eschews strict genre classification. The film’s frequent violence and occasional nudity will clearly assure an “R” rating, but within that limited audience there’s plenty here to appeal to both the date crowd and crime-movie adherents, as well as fans of the two appealing leads.
Introduced in voiceover by an unseen Narrator (John Hurt), Charlie Countryman (Shia LaBeouf) is a bit of a lost soul and the death of his mother Katie (Melissa Leo) leaves him completely adrift. After she passes, he sees her in a vision and asks her for guidance – she tells him to go visit Bucharest. Lacking any other direction in his life, Charlie boards a Chicago flight headed for Romania and meets Victor (Ion Caramitru), a Romanian taxi driver on his way home to visit his daughter.
Casual conversation reveals a shared love for the hapless Chicago Cubs baseball team, but their newfound friendship is cut short when Victor peacefully passes away on the flight and Charlie experiences another vision: Victor telling him to deliver a gift that he was carrying to his daughter Gabi (Evan Rachel Wood). Charlie agrees, tracking her down at the airport when he arrives and consoling her as best he can before offering to assist with the disposition of her father’s body.
Later at the opera house where he watches her play cello in the orchestra, Charlie meets Gabi’s menacing ex-husband Nigel (Mads Mikkelsen), who has unfinished business with Victor over a missing videocassette that he now plans to settle with Gabi, but she turns him away. Later that night on a circuitous wander around the city, Charlie’s convinced he’s falling in love with Gabi, but she remains aloof and mysterious about her relationship with Nigel.
By coincidence, Charlie learns more about Nigel and Gabi from Darko (Til Schweiger), another gangster and associate of Nigel’s who runs customer shakedowns at a local nightclub. Darko’s looking for the same videotape that Nigel is seeking, plunging Charlie into a standoff between Gabi and the two heavies, even as the young couple is discovering the first glimmers of romance. Charlie will clearly need to elevate his game if he’s going to help extract Gabi from her perilous situation – if in fact she even wants to be rescued.
Screenwriter Matt Drake reportedly based the script on his personal experiences in Romania, but introduces some fanciful elements to the gritty narrative, such as Charlie’s ability to converse with the recently deceased, as well as the somewhat problematic device of the Narrator’s voiceover. Many of the omniscient observations made by the unidentified character can be directly deduced from the film’s plot and theme, making his rather ponderous pronouncements about love and fate seem almost ridiculously grandiose. Overall, however, Drake manages a taut balance between action and romance that’s consistently engaging.
With a scruffy demeanor and wide-eyed enthusiasm, LaBeouf projects a degree of emotional recklessness that’s both disarming and disconcerting to watch. Woods blends so capably into the role, with her distinctly European bearing and Romanian-accented speech, that she easily conceals her American origins. As her violent and unpredictable ex, Mikkelsen is chillingly proficient and although she appears only briefly, Leo registers strongly.
Supported by a dream team of producers, including Bona Fide Productions’ Albert Berger and Ron Yerxa, as well as Voltage Pictures’ Nicolas Chartier, Bond effectively incorporates the script’s more eccentric elements while keeping them grounded in the principal narrative. Production values are top-shelf overall, supported by a propulsive score and  strategically incorporated special effects.
Venue: Sundance Film Festival, Premieres
Production companies: Voltage Pictures, Bona Fide Productions
Cast: Shia LaBeouf, Evan Rachel Wood, Mads Mikkelsen, Til Schweiger, Rupert Grint, James Buckley, Vincent D’Onofrio, Melissa Leo, Ion Caramitru, John Hurt
  
Director: Fredrik Bond
Screenwriter: Matt Drake
Producers: Albert Berger, Ron Yerxa, Craig J. Flores, William Horberg
Executive Producers: Nicolas Chartier, Patrick Newall, Dean Parisot
Director of photography: Roman Vasyanov
Production designer: Joel Collins
Costume designer: Jennifer Johnson
Music: Christophe Beck, Deadmono
Editor: Hughes Winborne
Sales: CAA
No rating, 107 minutes

Monday, October 8, 2012

Bit of info on 'The Necessary Death of Charlie Countryman'





Took me a couple go rounds to find out much about this movie and I found this information that actually lists Vincent and his character. I had previously posted that he was being considered and it looks as if he was a late addition. Completely under the radar on this. From what else I read, this is the movie where Shia Labeouf actually took acid in order to enhance his character.  Whether that's true or not, I don't know and maybe seeing the film will tell the tale.  Click here  It's slated to be released next year and I will update any further details when and if they become available.  For those who are on Facebook, there is a new page for this film although there is not much on it right now.  Click here  And, recently I posted an interview just below a few posts in which Vincent actually says he was in the film.  From the horse's mouth.

OVERVIEW

Brief Synopsis


Charlie Countryman is a normal guy with an abnormal problem--he's in love with a woman who might get him killed.

Cast & Crew

Fredrik BondDirector
Shia LabeoufCharlie Countryman
Evan Rachel WoodGabi Banyai
Roman VasyanovDirector Of Photography
Matt DrakeScreenwriter
Albert BergerProducer
Ron YerxaProducer
Nicolas ChartierExecutive Producer
Patrick NewallExecutive Producer
MobyComposer
Jennifer JohnsonCostume Designer
Joel CollinsProduction Designer
Daniel HubbardCasting Director
John HubbardCasting Director
Bona Fide ProductionsProduction Company
Voltage PicturesProduction Company
Voltage PicturesDistribution Sales (Foreign)
Belga FilmsForeign Theatrical Distributor
Voltage PicturesFilm Financier

I found this better synopsis on the TCM site and has more details.

The Necessary Death of Charlie Countryman is a romance set in Eastern Europe. Shia LaBeouf stars as a young man who takes a trip to Budapest after his mother dies of cancer. While on a train, his elderly neighbor also dies, but not before entrusting the young man with a gift for his daughter. The young man finds her and falls in love. However, she has a violent past which further complicates matters. Fredrik Bond directs from a script written by Matt Drake.

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

''Chained' Star Vincent D' Onofrio Talks Lynch, Kubrick And Playing Thor'

STAR PULSE
Chained
When it comes to quality and attention to detail in performance nobody comes to mind quicker then Vincent D’ Onofrio.  Having crafted long lasting memorable character work for well over two decades including his arresting debut as Private Leonard 'Gomer Pyle' Lawrence in Stanley Kubrick’s "Full Metal Jacket" and playing an alien with sass in Barry Sonnenfeld’s "Men in Black," D’ Onofrio is showing no signs of stopping.  His latest film is no different – a harrowing character study of a demented serial killer who chains one of his male victims and makes him a life long slave entitled "Chained."  (On DVD/Blu-ray Oct. 2 from Anchor Bay Home Entertainment)  The film is directed by "Surveillance" (a must see!) maestro and daughter of David Jennifer Lynch and is a film that certainly isn’t for the faint of heart.  We got the amazing opportunity to chat one-on-one with the iconic D’ Onofrio not only about working with the skilled Lynch on "Chained," but also for a very long (sorry Vincent!) and detailed career interview that includes some of my personal favorites moments - from playing Thor in "Adventures in Babysitting" to his turn as Pooh-Bear in "The Salton Sea."  All bow as a master thespian is in the house – welcome the legendary...

Vincent D' Onofrio

Having already played a seriously memorable serial killer in Tarsem Singh’s "The Cell" what made you want to take on the role of Bob in "Chained?"
Vincent D’ Onofrio: You’re right - it is a question.  To play these types of characters and why I would do it.  I guess the reason is that my first reaction is always not to do it and then you read a script and some are a repeat of what you’ve done already and others aren’t.  So when Jennifer sent me this I definitely had never played a part like this or helped to tell a story like this before.  That’s why and that makes the decision for you because of this challenge of how you get away with it, what you can bring to the character, what is that guy like - it convinces you to do it.    
There’s some sinister stuff that happens to and around the titular chained child Rabbit – what were those scenes like to shoot?
VD: Really good – Jennifer is an amazing director.  She’s very hands on and right there with you the whole time.  And Eamon (Farren) is a great actor.  He’s young and doesn't have a lot of experience, but you would never know it.  He’s totally committed and totally there hitting the ball back like a tennis match.  The whole art direction, the props, the whole crew was so involved – everyone was connected to it.

Chained
You’re very much known as a man who delves into all the details of the characters he plays, so I was curious did you have any input in terms of the look of the house Bob lived in?
VD: Only the bedroom – I had a couple of things about the bedroom and that was it.  It was not just me either, Jennifer planned the whole house out and when I arrived it was already being built and was perfect.  Then her and I took a walk into the bedroom and talked about the bedroom scenes and how things should be arranged, but nothing big.  I didn't alter the set in any way - that’s all Jennifer.
You seemed to have developed a good working relationship with Jennifer Lynch – what about her as a director has been most engaging to you?
VD: She’s just a pleasure to be with and work with.  There are a lot of good directors out there and they all have a different way of doing things and I liked her way of doing things.  It’s not difficult to bring a character in, not difficult to execute the character in front of her, it’s just a pleasure.  She has all the good ideas ring out on the set and whichever one rings the truest is the one we use.  It’s an open atmosphere and I like that.

Full Metal Jacket
Past Work – "Full Metal Jacket" was a real emotional rollercoaster for your character.  What was it like to work on that role and with the legendary Stanley Kubrick so early in your career?
VD: Yeah, it was my first feature.  Basically all I can really remember is not wanting to get fired.  Because there were people being fired and so I just wanted to do it right.  I was still studying method acting at the time, so I was in touch with my teacher about it when I was in England.  I would talk to her occasionally about what I was doing and she would just confirm things - that I was on the right track and stuff.  It was basically for me just about hanging in there and not getting fired by one of the best directors that we’ve ever had or will ever have, one of the best.  It was scary because of that and I hoped that if I just stuck with what I thought I knew best I would be okay...and it turned out alright.  
You appeared twice on the New York based TV show "The Equalizer" in two very different roles – what are your memories of working on that show with the late great Edward Woodward?
VD: He was really sweet and I knew his son, not well but a little bit too.  Edward was just awesome and really great and I think it’s because of him that I did that show a second time - he was very helpful.  I was a full on young method actor at the time and I just finished "Full Metal Jacket" and that hadn’t come out yet and I still had the weight on.  I didn’t want to do any films until I took the weight off, so it was during that period when I was losing the weight when I did those two shows.  One was when I still had the weight on and one was when I had most of it off and right after that I started doing films again.  "The Equalizer" helped me pay my rent and kept my ability to play characters vibrant and ready for when I took all the weight off and felt confident to start doing other parts in films.  But it was a really good experience to be on those shows and work with Edward because I think of my show and the ten years I had and how long he did his show.  I think of the young actors, and there are a lot of them, that are in movies now that came onto my show and did their characters.  We gave them time and allowed them to do these characters unlike themselves.  It just made me remember what Edward was like for me as this young actor coming in who was doing this full out character, something they probably weren’t used to doing on TV at the time.  How patient he was and how lovely he was as a peer with such a positive attitude.

Adventures in Babysitting   
I loved that you played Dawson aka Thor in "Adventures in Babysitting."  Was it cool playing an early version of the comic book character?
VD: Yeah, it was really cool.  It’s still one of the only films my kids, the young ones, can see that I’ve done.  The others ones are just too either violent or weird for them to watch at a young age.  Of course, my twenty year-old daughter she can see anything, but my twelve year-old I still won't let him see certain things that I’ve done.  And I have a four year-old, so that’s the only ones that the little ones can see – but it was great.
I somewhat remember hearing a story about your audition for Mystic Pizza from the casting director Jane Jenkins...
VD: What did I do?
Something about how you had bowled her over, had made some interesting choices, something about getting down on one knee...?
VD: I have no idea what I did – I would love to know!

Men in Black
You created one of the most memorable aliens ever in "Men In Black" – how much of that was on the page and how much did you bring to the part?
VD: None of the postures and voice and look was on the page.  The look was created by Rick Baker and we sat for hours and hours and hours and he would paint and re-paint and mold and re-mold.  And his guys would sculpt and re-sculpt – I was involved in that whole process with Rick at his shop in Los Angeles for the look of the character.  Then the posture, the way the character moved and the voices they really didn't know what I was going to do until I showed up.  I think everybody was a bit nervous about what I was doing until they saw it in the dailies.  But the great thing about Barry Sonnenfeld as a director is he gives his actors complete freedom and doesn’t get in the way of them.  So although I think I made him a little nervous, I think in the end he was extremely happy with it.  None of that was on the page – I had to be brave enough to bring it all in on my own.
You also played the iconic Orson Welles in Tim Burton’s "Ed Wood" – as an actor with a keen eye for attention to detail what kind of preparation did you do for that role?
VD: I didn't do enough.  I think I didn't have enough time to do it and I was doing another part while I was doing that.  So I made a short called "Five Minutes, Mr. Welles" and I’m happier with that version of Orson Welles then the one in Tim Burton’s film.  Although Tim put a Welles voice in there and made my performance even better then I actually executed it, so I thanked him for that.  But I’ve never been happy with my performance in that film and I made myself feel better about the whole Orson Welles trip by making a short on my own just to see that I could actually execute it correctly.  To prove it to myself – and I did.

The Cell
Can you talk about working with the previously mentioned Tarsem Singh on "The Cell" and some of the inspirations behinblackd that serial killer?
VD: There was a lot of talk we had about Carl Stargher.  Tarsem and I talked about the characters evolution and all these self-images of him in his own head and we made sense of it all in our heads so that we could be committed to it.  Whether it comes across in the film is another story, but so that we could be committed and know what direction we were going in we worked it out in our heads.  So I was involved in all that stuff with Tarsem and he’s such an amazing artist.  He steals a little from this, he steals a little from that and then creates his own thing.  He’s so amazing that way, so what you see in the film as far as my character is a mix of both Tarsem and my visions of why the character would look a certain way and behave a certain way.           
"The Salton Sea" - I have to know what inspired your crazed performance as Pooh-Bear?
VD: Just, you know, my head trying to think of things that could make the character more interesting.  D.J. Caruso directed it, who is another one of those directors that allows his actors a lot of freedom.  I talked to him beforehand and I told him my ideas and he loved them and he let me bring them in and do it.  Again, I didn't know it was going to work - you never know.  I guess I say this for younger actors out there, you have to be brave and you have to be ready to fail and that’s the only way you can be unqiue.  So when a director is confident enough in what they’re doing and they allow their actors to be brave and bring in stuff the more likely it’s going to work out okay.

Law & Order
I think it took people by surprise that you decided to do a TV series like "Law & Order: Criminal Intent" bringing a great character to life so frequently.  Was is at all difficult for you being an actor who is all about original work and characters to do a series with detailed work week after week?
VD: Yeah, but I think things are going to change in television.  I think with cable and everybody doing a lot less episodes then what we had to do, eventually network television is gonna have to get on board with everybody else.  Right now they’re still doing twenty-two, twenty-three episodes a season.  That would be the only thing negative about that show because working Dick Wolf was awesome.  Dick and Rene Balcer, the original showrunner on that show, the two of them gave me a lot of freedom to create this character and bring it in.  All of that was completely positive and we made the show what it was in those first four years and then it kind of rode this wave of what we made it after that until it petered out.  So the pro was Dick Wolf and working for him and the negative was the amount of episodes they expect you to do when you’re doing that kind of work is I think absurd.  I know that there are actors that are doing television now that are asking for less episodes and that’s why you see a lot of the best actors on cable.  It’s just too brutal to schedule – especially if you’re a family man or family woman.  If you’re family is as important to you as your career, there’s no way you can do that many episodes a season.  But having said that television is so great – it hones your chops as an actor.  I’m so much better an actor because of that show then I was before it.        
And finally what’s next that D’ Onofrio fans like myself can look forward to?
VD: A lot of the things I have coming up are gonna be pretty cool.  "The Tomb" and "Fire With Fire" and of course "Chained."  And I did this movie "The Necessary Death of Charlie Countryman" with Shia LaBeouf and I really think that’s gonna be good.  I had a really good time with him, he’s an awesome and really dedicated actor and I think it’s gonna be a really good movie.  I think they’re all pretty interesting – you never know.

Saturday, May 19, 2012

New film for Vincent D'Onofrio?

SCREENDAILY

Voltage sparks sales on Don Jon, Charlie Countryman


 (excerpted)

The Necessary Death Of Charlie Countryman will kick off on May 21 in Romania. Fredrik Bond will direct LaBeouf alongside Mads Mikkelsen, Melissa Leo, James Buckley, Rupert Grint, Vincent D’Onofrio and Evan Rachel Wood. Voltage is producing with Bona Fide Productions and Moby will score the film.

Deals have closed in Portugal (Lusomundo), Latin America (Imagem), Hong Kong (Deltamac), Singapore (Innoform), Middle East (Gulf), CIS (DT), South Africa (Ster Kinekor), Taiwan (SSG), China (HGC), Scandinavia (Scanbox), Eastern Europe (Mediapro), Benelux (Belga), Thailand (Dreams Vision), Israel (Forum), Greece, Turkey and India (Tanweer), Iceland (Samfilm) and Malaysia (13 Entertainment)

Here's what I could find out about the film... Charlie Countryman (LaBeouf) was just a normal guy…until he fell in love with the one girl who will probably get him killed. When Charlie meets the absolutely irresistible Gabi she’s already been claimed by Nigel, an insanely violent crime boss with a gang of thugs at his disposal. Armed with little more than his wit and naïve charm, Charlie endures one bruising beat down after another to woo Gabi and keep her out of harm’s way. Finally his exploits of blind valor create such a mess that he’s left with only one way out; to save the girl of his dreams, must Charlie Countryman die? .