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  #101  
Old Posted Nov 16, 2007, 3:30 PM
JackStraw JackStraw is offline
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I thought the kill point was just a mini movie series, and that was it. I didn't know it was suppose to keep going.
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  #102  
Old Posted Nov 17, 2007, 12:41 PM
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http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/07321/834730-254.stm

City doesn't blush at making of this 'Porno' movie

Saturday, November 17, 2007
By Timothy McNulty, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pittsburgh will host another member of the "Superbad" troupe when director Kevin Smith's latest movie starts filming in the city in January.

The filmmaker announced that Seth Rogen, the writer and co-star of the hit, R-rated summer comedy, will play the lead in Mr. Smith's film "Zack & Miri Make A Porno," alongside Elizabeth Banks of "The 40-Year-Old Virgin."

The announcement follows the filming of "Adventureland," the movie shot the last several weeks by "Superbad" director Greg Mottola at Kennywood Park and other Pittsburgh-area sites. Its last day of shooting was yesterday.

The arrival of "Zack and Miri" and the filming of "Adventureland" mark the latest in several, mainly small-budget films to make their way to the region in the past few years.

Others include "Mysteries of Pittsburgh," based on the Michael Chabon novel and (memorably for Pittsburghers) starring Sienna Miller; "Smart People," with Dennis Quaid and Sarah Jessica Parker; and "The Bridge to Nowhere," Blair Underwood's directorial debut. "Smart People" has a tentative April 2008 release date.

Television made a short splash in Pittsburgh this year, too. The Spike TV series "The Kill Point" was filmed here, though it won't be picked up for a second season.

Local film industry boosters hope to build on the movie momentum, aided by last summer's passage of film tax credits by the General Assembly, a growing pool of local actors and film crews, and the efforts of such groups as the publicly funded Pittsburgh Film Office and the private Pittsburgh Filmmakers and Steeltown Entertainment.

In addition to "Superbad," Mr. Rogen, 25, also has appeared in "Virgin" and "Knocked Up,'' another hit comedy from this summer. Combined, the three movies have grossed almost $500 million, and all are affiliated with producer/director Judd Apatow.

Mr. Smith -- best-known for his debut film "Clerks" and as Silent Bob with partner Jay (Jason Mewes, also cast in "Zack and Miri") -- will be filming his second movie in Pittsburgh, following 1999's "Dogma."

"We're very, very excited to have Kevin back," said Pittsburgh Film Office director Dawn Keezer, who credited the state's new $75 million tax incentive program for landing the film.

Only a skeleton crew for "Zack and Miri" is in town now, with more expected to arrive after Thanksgiving. Principal photography is not expected until mid-January, Ms. Keezer said, and shooting locations are still being scouted.

In the film, Mr. Rogen and Ms. Banks play two friends who try to solve their financial problems by filming an X-rated movie. Mr. Mewes, of "Clerks," has a supporting role.

The filmmaker wrote the Zack role in the raunchily titled film specifically for Mr. Rogen.

"It's very much a love story," Mr. Smith told USA Today. " 'Zack and Miri' just want to make a good old-fashioned dirty movie."

Tim McNulty can be reached at tmcnulty@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1581.


Seth Rogen


Elizabeth Banks

Last edited by Evergrey; Jan 16, 2008 at 7:24 PM.
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  #103  
Old Posted Dec 1, 2007, 7:30 PM
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"Mysteries" is finally happening!

http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/07333/837783-100.stm

Quote:
'Mysteries' to debut at Sundance
Thursday, November 29, 2007
By Timothy McNulty, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

"The Mysteries of Pittsburgh" will have its world premiere at the prestigious Sundance Film Festival in Utah in January.

"Mysteries," from the 1988 novel by University of Pittsburgh graduate Michael Chabon and starring Peter Sarsgaard, Sienna Miller and Nick Nolte, filmed around the city for more than two months last year. It was directed by Rawson Marshall Thurber ("Dodgeball").

It will be one of 16 American fictional films in competition during the nation's top independent film showcase, being held Jan. 17-27 in Park City, Utah.
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  #104  
Old Posted Dec 2, 2007, 12:18 AM
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cool.. can't wait to see Sienna make the rounds on Leno, Letterman, Regis, etc. explaining her Shitsburgh remark
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  #105  
Old Posted Dec 2, 2007, 8:30 PM
themaguffin themaguffin is offline
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Let's just hope her interviews are on topic or that the host tries to discuss typical celebrity bullshit like who she's fucking right now.

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  #106  
Old Posted Jan 16, 2008, 1:09 PM
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http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/08016/849427-42.stm

Filming of 'The Road' leads to Pittsburgh

Wednesday, January 16, 2008
By Barbara Vancheri, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette



Carolyn Kaster/Associated Press
Viggo Mortensen will star with Charlize Theron, Guy Pearce and Kodi Smit-McPhee in "The Road," which will be filmed in Pittsburgh.Apocalypse, here we come.


Pittsburgh has landed "The Road," a big-screen adaptation of the Cormac McCarthy best-seller of the same name that will star Viggo Mortensen, Charlize Theron, Guy Pearce and a young Australian actor named Kodi Smit-McPhee.

2929 Entertainment, which is producing the movie, and the Pittsburgh Film Office yesterday confirmed rumors "The Road" will shoot in Southwestern Pennsylvania for eight weeks starting in late February to take advantage of the cold and snow. The film also will spend a week in Louisiana and a week in Oregon.

The movie is budgeted at under $30 million and will feature 15 or so speaking roles along with background players. It is set to arrive in theaters at the end of the year.

Marc Butan, president of 2929 Productions, said yesterday that the film will follow the book closely, opening in a post-apocalyptic world and using flashbacks to illuminate the characters.

He said the production looked at states with tax incentive programs and the director did a tour of Louisiana, Pennsylvania, Oregon and Connecticut -- "all the places that have the really aggressive incentive programs."

"What we found was Pennsylvania, and the Pittsburgh area in particular, offered the most diverse set of looks," Butan said. It's a road movie, with characters walking for days on end, and filming will take place in suburban areas along with coal mines, forests and an unused freeway a couple of hours away.

"We're going to be working in and around the city. We're able to accomplish a lot of different looks."

"The Road" was given the stamp of approval by both the Pulitzer Prize selection committee and Oprah Winfrey, who made it a book club selection. It's from the novelist whose "No Country for Old Men" has been turned into one of the most acclaimed films of 2007.

By most accounts, it's a depressing but haunting story of a father and son in a post-apocalyptic America. A catastrophe has ruined the land, killed millions and left the survivors to scavenge for food and shelter, cope with a steady fall of ash and -- more alarmingly -- try to avoid cannibals.

Mortensen will play the unnamed father, young Smit-McPhee ("Romulus, My Father") his son and Theron his late wife. Pearce will factor into scenes near the end of the movie.

Mortensen is a possible Best Actor Oscar contender for his tattooed turn as a Russian mobster in "Eastern Promises," while Academy Award winner Theron ("Monster") recently played a beleaguered detective and single mother in Paul Haggis' "In the Valley of Elah." She helps a grieving father learn the ugly truth about his dead soldier son.

"The Road" will reunite Pearce with Australian John Hillcoat, who directed him in "The Proposition." Joe Penhall will adapt the novel.

"Hillcoat is going to be one of the great ones," Butan said, with an ability to create tension, extract great performances and make the most of minimalist landscapes.

Dimension Films will distribute the movie in the United States. 2929 is co-owned by Todd Wagner and Mt. Lebanon native Mark Cuban.

Asked if Cuban steered the movie to his hometown, Butan said, "Anytime there's a chance of doing something in Pittsburgh, he's all for it. He loves Pittsburgh."

The movie will crown a busy winter in Pittsburgh, with "Homecoming" starring Mischa Barton, Kevin Smith's "Zack and Miri Make a Porno" and Bob Tinnell's "Feast of the Seven Fishes" all finishing or starting production.

A production office for "The Road" is expected to open later this week, and the Pittsburgh Film Office's hotline will provide hiring information, once it's available.

"We have been working with them since late last year," Dawn Keezer, director of the Pittsburgh Film Office, said yesterday of the production. She credited incentives new and old for luring the movie to the region.

"The governor and our legislators put into place one of the most lucrative film incentive programs in the country in Pennsylvania in July," she said yesterday of the expanded film tax credits.

That started filmmakers looking at Pennsylvania, and Pittsburgh stands out because of its excellent crew base, diversity of locations and the fact it's more economical than its competition, including Philadelphia.

Keezer said this is the beginning, not the end, of work for 2008. "There's a lot more to come. Prior to June, we will be seeing a huge influx of film work in the region."

Production everywhere is bending to strikes or threats of strikes, as the writers' walkout may be followed by work stoppages involving directors and actors this year.

Post-Gazette movie editor Barbara Vancheri can be reached at bvancheri@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1632.

...

Charlize Theron


Guy Pearce

Last edited by Evergrey; Jan 16, 2008 at 1:20 PM.
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  #107  
Old Posted Jan 16, 2008, 1:35 PM
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I hadn't heard about "Homecoming" starring Mischa Barton. Here's an article from a few weeks ago:

http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pitt.../s_544503.html

Shady Side Academy to be scene of movie

By Misty Chybrzynski
TRIBUNE-REVIEW NEWS SERVICE
Wednesday, December 26, 2007


A state tax incentive passed earlier this year keeps reeling in the filmmakers -- landing the prestigious Shady Side Academy campus a star role in an upcoming independent production.
"Homecoming," starring Matt Long, Mischa Barton and Jessica Stroup, set up production for a day of shooting earlier this month at Shady Side Academy in Fox Chapel, drawing a throng of students to witness the Hollywood action.

While the young starlets Long and Stroup drew the students to the scene, a $75 million annual tax incentive passed by state lawmakers in July attracted the New York-based Paper Street Films production company to Pittsburgh.

"It always is ideal to film in a city that is production-friendly," Morgan J. Freeman, the director, said. "Of course, the combination of the incentives and crews here make it very attractive, and any kind of relief gets to go back into production."

Freeman also directed "American Psycho II" and "Hurricane Streets." As a producer, he worked on series popular with the teen set, including "Laguna Beach: The Real O.C." and "Dawson's Creek." He has won numerous awards at film festivals and received many nominations.
Bill Papariella, one of the producers, grew up in Wexford, and enthusiastically agreed that Pittsburgh would be a great area to shoot the film. The crew also sets up scenes at his alma mater, North Allegheny High School.

"I moved from here about 14 years ago," Papariella, of Los Angeles, said. "But it's a great city to film in and I'm glad we're here."

Other locales include the community center (which doubles as a police station) in McDonald and a farm in Bell Township. Papariella said SSA's notoriety drew the production there.

"It's like it was built for our script," Freeman agreed. "We needed something that represented a higher end Ivy League campus and that's something Shady Side Academy delivers."

Movie-goers may begin to recognize more and more of their hometowns on the big screens beginning next year, as productions like "Homecoming" join others, such as "AdventureLand," a movie shot in Kennywood, directed by Greg Mottola of "SuperBad" fame and starring Ryan Reynolds. "Trapped," a small production film produced by local talent Gavin Rapp, also filmed this year, uses Pittsburgh locales in its storyline, featuring an Aspinwall boutique and the borough police station, among other city sights.

The tax incentive gives productions that spend at least 60 percent of their budget in the state a 25 percent refund of their eligible expenses in the form of a transferable tax credit.

Since July, there have been 80 applications for the aid, and 10 films are in production in Pennsylvania, said Jane Saul, director of the Pennsylvania Film Office.

"We did have a Western Pennsylvania scene for the movie," producer Jim Young said. "But the tax incentive is the big thing that actually brought us here."

The thriller movie follows small town athletic star Mike (Long) and his new girlfriend Elizabeth (Stroup) as they return to Mike's hometown during Christmas break from college.

His family and friends are surprised about his new wealthy city girl companion, and a twisted love triangle ensues when Shelby (Barton), Mike's ex-girlfriend, meets the new woman in his life.

Fans of Barton may be shocked to see the sadistic side of the actress, who has become popular as the caring, innocent Marissa Cooper on Fox's show, "The O.C."

"It's going to be a stretch, but it will be something new and unique for her," Young says. "Mischa will definitely surprise a lot of her fans."

Barton also has appeared in "The Sixth Sense" and has several projects under way set to be released next year. Stroup had a role in "The Hills Have Eyes II" and several television series guest roles.

Long, a hit on campus, consistently had crowds of students surrounding him, asking for photos, autographs and advice on breaking into the industry. Long this year appeared in films "Sidney White" and "Ghost Rider."

"The students absolutely love it," says David Liebmann, director of The Hillman Center for the Arts at SSA. "Many of them recognize Matt Long and want to ask him about making movies. He's been very nice to them, talking when he can. We're honored they chose our campus to film, of course."

Long enjoys chatting with the students in between takes.

"Its beautiful here," Long said. "These kids really are lucky. It's really cool that they want to talk to me. That's what makes this job so much fun."

The film is slated to hit independent film festivals, such as Sundance ("Morgan's won there, so he's like the festival's darling," Young says) or Toronto, after production wraps up in fall next year or in 2009.

Misty Chybrzynski is a staff writer for The Herald in Aspinwall.

...

Matt Long


Jessica Stroup


Mischa Barton


photos from the set here:
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/07349/841787-42.stm
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  #108  
Old Posted Jan 16, 2008, 7:09 PM
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more on "The Road"

http://pittsburgh.bizjournals.com/pi...ml?t=printable

'The Road' leads to Pittsburgh

Pittsburgh Business Times - by Tim Schooley

"The Road" will lead into Pittsburgh next month, bringing four major movie stars to town for a film production of the bleak, Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by Cormac McCarthy.

Both Dallas-based 2929 Entertainment, the project's production company, and the Pittsburgh Film Office confirmed the plans to begin production in Pittsburgh in late February for an eight-week shoot.

The story of a father leading his son through a post-apocalyptic America, "The Road" is slated to star Viggo Mortensen, Charlize Theron, Guy Pearce and Robert Duvall working under the direction of Australian John Hillcoat. The production crew expects to open an office in Pittsburgh soon, said Dawn Keezer, executive director of the Pittsburgh Film Office.

The Business Times reported in mid-December that representatives for the "The Road" were scouting for locations and soundstage space in Pittsburgh. With Mount Lebanon native Mark Cuban as part owner, 2929 Entertainment is growing a roster of critically acclaimed films that includes George Clooney's "Good Night and Good Luck" and "Akeelah and the Bee."

Production of "The Road" joins a host of others flocking to Pittsburgh, including Kevin Smith's "Zack & Miri Make a Porno", which starts production Wednesday, as well as a smaller production expected to shoot in Monessen called "The Feast of Seven Fishes".

With at least four film productions under way here at one time, Keezer said the region is seeing more activity than at any time since the early 1990s, when unions boycotted film production in New York, bringing numerous projects to western Pennsylvania.

While film productions in Philadelphia tend to be larger, Keezer sees more activity in western Pennsylvania right now.

"We're really busy and Philly isn't," she said. "We have four films and they have one prepping."

Keezer expects for another new film to be announced next week.

tschooley@bizjournals.com | (412) 208-3826



All contents of this site © American City Business Journals Inc. All rights reserved.

...

Robert Duvall
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  #109  
Old Posted Jan 17, 2008, 2:13 PM
PittPenn 03 PittPenn 03 is offline
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Two Pittsburgh projects menitioned in USAToday:

First, a list of movies to watch for from Sundance. Mysteries of Pittsburgh made the list and there is a clip from the movie:

http://www.usatoday.com/life/movies/...ance-index.htm

Second, The Road - not much here, but it is nice for Pittsburgh to get the national press:

http://www.usatoday.com/life/movies/...the-road_N.htm
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  #110  
Old Posted Jan 18, 2008, 2:45 PM
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http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/08018/850168-28.stm

'The Road,' starring Mortensen and Theron, will film in city

By William Loeffler
TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Friday, January 18, 2008


At last, news about a road that doesn't involve orange barrels and traffic tie-ups.
"The Road," a film adaptation of Cormac McCarthy's grim post-apocalyptic novel, will begin filming in Pittsburgh in late February.

Produced by 2929 Entertainment, the film stars Viggo Mortensen, Charlize Theron, Guy Pearce and Kodi Smit-McPhee.

Bleak and unsparing, "The Road," depicts a father's efforts to keep his young son alive while they travel on foot from the East to West Coast through an America that's been decimated by an unnamed cataclysm.

Plant and animal life has disappeared, ash falls like black snow, and most of humanity has reverted to savagery. Mortensen, who plays the father, must protect his son from marauding bands of cannibals, among other things.
McCarthy's novel won the 2007 Pulitzer Prize for fiction.

"When I first read the script, I thought, 'How are they ever going to do this in Pittsburgh? I don't think Pittsburgh looks post-apocalyptic,'" says Pittsburgh Film Office Director Dawn Keezer. "It's one more production we keep getting because of the tax credit and our great crew."

She says the location scouts looked at strip mines, limestone quarries and other sites in the area.

Mortensen played a reformed mobster in "A History of Violence" and a driver for the Russian mafia in "Eastern Promises," which opened last year and has generated Oscar buzz for the actor.

Theron won an Oscar for her portrayal of female serial killer Aileen Wuornos in the 2003 film "Monster."

She will play Mortensen's deceased wife in flashbacks.

2929 Entertainment is owned by Todd Wagner and Mt. Lebanon native Mark Cuban.


William Loeffler can be reached at wloeffler@tribweb.com or 412-320-7986.
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  #111  
Old Posted Jan 19, 2008, 8:04 PM
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I've heard of a few sightings recently. My sister saw Kevin Smith filming at the Monroeville mall this week. Apparently he's always at the Waterfront target and whole foods too.
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  #112  
Old Posted Jan 20, 2008, 1:00 AM
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yeah... my friend who works at Monroeville Mall saw Kevin Smith a few weeks ago
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  #113  
Old Posted Jan 22, 2008, 5:32 AM
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http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pitt.../s_548557.html

'Mysteries' impresses Sundance audience

By William Loeffler
TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Tuesday, January 22, 2008


The Pitt hit the fan here in 2006 when actress Sienna Miller, filming "The Mysteries of Pittsburgh," disparaged the city with a scatological rhyming of its name.
But the finished product, which premiered Sunday at the Sundance Film Festival in Utah, could make Miller eat her words.

Dawn Keezer, director of the Pittsburgh Film Office, who attended the sold-out premiere, said the film got a warm reception. And the 'Burgh seldom has looked better on-screen, she said.

"It's absolutely amazing. Pittsburgh looks stunning. It's literally a picture-postcard to the city of Pittsburgh."

Not only that, but the inclusion of another locally shot film, "Smart People," marks the first time two major films made here have premiered at the same Sundance festival, Keezer said.
"Mysteries" cast members Mena Suvari, Jon Foster and Omid Abtahi attended the screening, Keezer said. She said she didn't see Miller.

Based on Michael Chabon's best-selling novel, "Mysteries" chronicles a transformative summer in the life of Art Bechstein, an economics graduate from the University of Pittsburgh. He defies his gangster father, played by Nick Nolte, and becomes involved in a love triangle with a couple played by Miller and Peter Sarsgaard. The film was shot in the Strip District and Tarentum, as well as other locations

Produced by Groundswell Productions and directed by Rawson Thurber, "Mysteries" is seeking a distributor, Keezer said.

The film is entered in the Dramatic competition category at Sundance.

"The buzz is really good about it," she said.

"Smart People," shot here in 2006, stars Dennis Quaid as a Carnegie Mellon University professor who falls in love with a student, played by "Sex and the City's" Sarah Jessica Parker.

It's set for release April 11.

Keezer said she planned to see "Smart People" Monday evening.



William Loeffler can be reached at wloeffler@tribweb.com or 412-320-7986.
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  #114  
Old Posted Jan 23, 2008, 2:57 PM
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http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/sund...ies-of-pi.html

'Mysteries of Pittsburgh' no longer a secret



Following the premiere of writer-director Rawson Marshall Thurber's "The Mysteries of Pittsburgh" on Sunday, the only mystery now is who will buy and distribute the coming-of-age story set in a lusciously photographed Steel City.

Thurber's careful adaptation of Michael Chabon's illustrious novel coupled with rooted performances he elicits from Jon Foster (Art Beckstein), Mena Suvari (Phlox) Sienna Miller (Jane) and Peter Saarsgard (Cleveland) caused one acquisition executive to phone a colleague after the screening with the word that "Mysteries" is a "real director's movie."

Before the screening, we talked with Groundswell's Michael London -- who brought "Smart People," "The Visitor" and "Mysteries" to Sundance this year. He describes what differentiates the 2008 festival from prior years.

We also spoke with Thurber who said Chabon had already seen the film and given it his seal of approval. (The author declined to be interviewed in a Los Angeles Times story about Thurber earlier this week.) And, we spoke with Suvari who clearly has a great time performing the role of randy Book Barn manager Phlox in the film. -- Sheigh Crabtree
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  #115  
Old Posted Jan 23, 2008, 3:45 PM
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http://www.latimes.com/entertainment...ck=1&cset=true

'Dodgeball' writer-director takes his next step seriously

Rawson Marshall Thurber moves from mainstream success to the indie unknown with 'The Mysteries of Pittsburgh.'

By Chris Lee, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
January 20, 2008

Afunny thing happened to Rawson Marshall Thurber en route to becoming just another film school-educated, underemployed Hollywood hopeful no one ever heard of.

In 2003, the self-described "sports nerd" and "comedy dork" wrote a winking, shaggy dog sports comedy called "Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story" with lead roles written with Vince Vaughn and Ben Stiller in mind. By Thurber's recollection, every studio in town "passed on it twice." But he somehow sold "Dodgeball" to Fox with himself attached as director and landed his dream cast. Upon release, the movie stunned industry observers by besting Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks' "The Terminal" during the films' opening weekend in 2004 before going on to take in $114 million domestically.

Suddenly, the San Francisco-born writer-director went from zero to hero (well, sort of). "There were all these offers for me to do romantic comedies about competitive darts players. Or curling," he recalled. "I got seven competitive eating scripts."

But then another funny thing happened to Thurber en route to becoming the next Judd Apatow -- or at least, the next auteur of blow-Pepsi-out-your-nose-inducing, below-the-belt comedy. Against the advice of his agent ("He said: 'Capture the bouquet of this moment' -- do something that's very similar"), the 32-year-old followed up his "Dodgeball" success by making . . . a low-budget, independently financed art house drama.

His adaptation of Pulitzer-winning author Michael Chabon's first novel, "The Mysteries of Pittsburgh," will premiere in competition tonight at the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah. "I guess it's the anti-follow-up," Thurber shrugged, biting into a croissandwich at a Hollywood diner days before leaving for North America's preeminent indie film fest. "It's a novel I have loved since I read it in '95. And I wanted to use whatever momentum, whatever juice I had, to make something that wouldn't have gotten made otherwise."



'Mysteries' casts a spell

IN "Mysteries," protagonist Art Bechstein (played by Jon Foster) is the son of a mob money launderer who's confused about his family and his sexuality. The 23-year-old gets caught up in a love triangle with highly literate biker come jewelry thief Cleveland (Peter Sarsgaard) and his "splendid" girlfriend Jane Bellwether (Sienna Miller). Much of the action takes place in the main character's head and a handful of gay sex scenes are key plot points.

"Mysteries" producer Michael London (of "Sideways" fame) agreed to back the film on the strength of Thurber's "moving and original" adaptation of the book, banishing notions of him as "the 'Dodgeball' guy." Still, he put the writer-director's professional choices in perspective.

"So many other people in his position would just cash in," London said. "But the material meant so much to him, it tells you a lot about his character that he chose to do it."

Screenwriter John August ("Go," "Charlie's Angels") is no stranger to the boom and bust vagaries of Hollywood and tried his best to counsel Thurber -- who worked as his assistant for three years -- against adapting "Mysteries." "I probably actively dissuaded him four times," August said. "A script is a year of your life, and there's no guarantee it will become a movie.

"Rawson has always come to me for advice and rarely taken it. He understood the risk but was completely undeterred. That's how somebody gets a career in this business."

Viewed in terms of other self-made Hollywood successes, Thurber's career ascent seems more Brett Ratner than Paul Haggis -- a series of charmed, interlinked professional advancements kissed with randomness rather than the long, hard slog out of obscurity punctuated by hack jobs and false starts.

The short film Thurber wrote and directed while at USC, "Terry Tate: Office Linebacker" (about an over-ampled football player who tackles, trash-talks and generally terrorizes a group of office workers into increased productivity), was accepted at Sundance in 2000. But the short was pulled from the festival before it could screen -- Reebok bought the license to use "Terry Tate" as a TV commercial, and it was later shown during Super Bowl XXXVII.



Earning author's trust

TO even be able to adapt "Mysteries," Thurber had to persuade his literary hero Chabon to hand over the rights to his bestselling 1988 debut novel -- no small leap of faith considering that Thurber had never so much as written a dramatic scene and his highlight reel includes footage of a grizzled dodgeball coach throwing wrenches at his players' genitals.

"It's insane," Thurber said. "To this day, I do not know why he said yes. Give your book to the guy that made 'Dodgeball'? It truly does not make any sense."

In 2005, the filmmaker wrote Chabon a "fan letter" and invited the author to breakfast where Thurber outlined his adaptation ideas. "The novel has what I was calling 'a four-pointed love rhombus,' " Thurber said. "It's beautiful in a novel but inefficient in a film. My radical plan was to re-create it as a triangle. That would give it its energy."

From there, Thurber spent nearly six months pulling together a "spec" script -- that is, one written without any commitment from Chabon. "I said, 'If you dig that, let's go do it,' " said Thurber, an easygoing guy with the kind of square jaw associated with lumberjacks and Canadian mounted policemen. " 'If you don't dig it, please say so. I'm a big fan, and I can't wait for whatever you write next.' I wasn't trying to get the job."

Chabon (who declined to be interviewed for this story) ultimately gave Thurber the option with no strings attached. Screenwriter August may have been one of the only people in town who wasn't surprised to discover that Thurber -- the guy who used to retype his screenplays and care for his elderly dog -- had won over the Pulitzer winner. He pointed out that Thurber's father is professional lecturer Marshall Thurber, a kind of motivational speaker's motivational speaker who counts Tony Robbins among his students.

"Rawson's a closer," August said. "He's persistent. Not in a scary way. But he's going to stick it out for 100 rounds."



The festival effect

POSTPRODUCTION on the modestly budgeted film ("It cost less than the catering on 'Transformers,' " is all Thurber will let on) wasn't finished in time for last year's Sundance deadline, and it had to sit, color-completed and yet unseen, for the better part of a year before it could try to get accepted to this year's festival. Still, its inclusion will play an important part in "Mysteries' " acquisition and commercial prospects. "The blessing of a festival can be the difference between a movie getting shown in the world or not," London said. "We held out for a long time to get in. It's a huge stroke of luck."

The filmmakers also hope that "Mysteries' " Sundance pedigree will ameliorate its current renown as the film responsible for pitting the outraged citizenry of Pennsylvania's second-biggest city against Miller, Britain's hottest ingénue export. Angry locals and newspaper editorials rebuked the actress and paparazzi invaded the movie's location shoots after she complained about the city's lack of glamour and jokingly changed the first part of "Pittsburgh" to a rhyming four-letter word in an interview with Rolling Stone.

Although Thurber hasn't been writing lately -- he's been a regular presence on the picket line in front of Paramount studios in Hollywood -- the writer-director is amped up for his next gig. And come the resolution of the writers strike, he's ready to cast the central role for his new project, an adaptation of the '80s TV show "Magnum, P.I." for Universal.

Thurber, however, is already advising Tom Selleck fans to adjust their expectations: "At the first meeting I had, I said, 'Here are the rules: no cameos, no short shorts, no mustaches. The aloha shirt thing for sure. It's not ironic "Starsky & Hutch," and it's not self-serious like "Miami Vice." ' "

Reminded that "Magnum" would have been the more logical follow-up to "Dodgeball," Thurber struck an appropriately indie maverick tone, placing his moviemaking ambitions within a kind of "I'm going to see if this works until I find out it can't" intellectual framework.

"I love a lot of different genres," Thurber said. "And when it comes down to it, I just want to do what I want to do. I imagine that if 'Mysteries of Pittsburgh' is received warmly and 'Magnum' does what it should do, that all doors will be open.

"That's not to say I will begin a reign of enlightened world domination. But rather, that I will less often have to explain why I do something. I'll just do it."

chris.lee@latimes.com
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  #116  
Old Posted Jan 23, 2008, 7:22 PM
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I'm looking forward to seeing Mysteries, Smart People, and the Road... all because they are good stories, but just as much to see how much of a "starring role" the city plays in the films.
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  #117  
Old Posted Jan 29, 2008, 2:41 PM
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http://www.reuters.com/article/revie...53690920080128

Well-cast drama translates "Mysteries"

The Mysteries of Pittsburgh

By Duane Byrge

PARK CITY, Utah (Hollywood Reporter) - Michael Chabon's novel "The Mysteries of Pittsburgh" has baffled filmmakers and confounded producers since its publication in 1988. It's particularly difficult to adapt a novel where the main character is foremost an observer, an attendant knight who by nature generally avoids action.

In this reverential and smart distillation, filmmaker Rawson Marshall Thurber has captured the essence of the coming-of-age novel. Undoubtedly, literal-minded readers of the novel will be disturbed by the film's shrewd condensation of characters, but select audiences will warm to the craftsmanship and storytelling.

Unfortunately, the film's glossy sheen and artful compositions are often distracting. Bracketed by calendar shots for a Pennsylvania tourism office, the romantic framings seem contrived at times, and upset the story's many layers.

The story revolves around '80s college graduate Art Beckstein (Jon Foster), who faces a graduation dilemma similar to the one Benjamin Braddock faced in the '60s in "The Graduate." But Art is funneled toward brokerage houses rather than plastics. A cum laude graduate, Art is the prized only child of a gangster father (Nick Nolte) who demands that Art follow a straight-and-narrow path.

Naturally passive, Art is nonetheless determined to find his own way. He rationalizes that he has one summer to prolong the inevitable, when he is expected to take a cushy job orchestrated by his father. In quiet desperation, he embarks on a last summer of sloth, subverting his father by intentionally taking a low-level job and half-heartedly studying for his brokerage exam. He lets himself get drawn in by dangerous dalliances, sexual and social. In short, Art consorts with all the wrong sorts, subconsciously hoping that others will force him to do what he can't do: defy his father.

It's the players who invigorate "Pittsburgh" and keenly flesh out its emotional dimensions. Foster is superb as the conflicted Art, evincing mettle as a young man overcome with a sense of doom. In the film's most flamboyant role, Peter Sarsgaard's devilish charisma and cold bluster is frightening. He truly hypnotizes those around him, including his upper-class girlfriend (Sienna Miller) who is destructively entranced by his bad-boy wiles.

Other performances are consistently on-target: Mena Suvari is sympathetic as a book store manager with low self-esteem, while Nolte is aptly intimidating as Art's carnivorous father.

The technical contributions are well realized, albeit overly romanticized. Save for the distracting pictorials, the film's luminous, Norman Rockwell look is a strong credit for director of photography Michael Barrett and production designer Maher Ahmad.

Cast:

Art Bechstein: Jon Foster

Cleveland Arning: Peter Sarsgaard

Jane Bellweather: Sienna Miller

Phlox: Mena Suvari

Joe Beckstein: Nick Nolte

Director-screenwriter: Rawson Marshall Thurber; Based on the novel by Michael Chabon; Producers: Michael London, Jason Mercer, Thor Benander; Executive producers: Bruna Papandrea, Peter Chiarelli; Director of photography: Michael Barrett; Production designer: Maher Ahmad; Editor: Babara Tulliver.

Reuters/Hollywood Reporter
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  #118  
Old Posted Jan 29, 2008, 3:22 PM
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I've not read the book, so it was interesting to learn that the "bad guy" is named 'Cleveland.'
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  #119  
Old Posted Feb 9, 2008, 10:08 PM
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The Pittsburgh Business Times reports two more feature films coming to Pittsburgh.

A supernatural thriller titled "Shelter", sarring Julianne Moore ("Hannibal", "Next") will begin shooting in late March. The shoot will take 6 weeks and the film has a budget of $20-$25 million. President of NALA Films ("In the Valley of Ellah") says "We're excited to be coming to Pittsburgh. We think it's an interesting city with a lot of great diverse looks." British screenwriter Michael Cooney set the film in Pittsburgh.

...

Lionsgate says they will likely come to Pittsburgh in late March to film a remake of the 1981 horror film "My Bloody Valentine". Lionsgate produced last year's "The Kill Point" mini-series, which was filmed in Pittsburgh and generated more than $20 million in local investment. Lionsgate producer John Dellaverson says his company has a couple of projects in development that might be considered for Pittsburgh and Philadelphia.

...

These two projects follow two features currently underway in Pittsburgh: Kevin Smith-directed "Zack and Miri make a Porno" and the post-apocalyptic thriller "The Road".

...

"Freedom House", a film based on the true story of the country's first paramedic company, launched 40 years ago in the Hill District, is still to be confirmed here. It has a $18.4 million budget.

...

Pittsburgh is surpassing the film boom it experienced in the early 1990s, which was partly due to a union boycott in NYC. 1991 was the busiest year ever for Pittsburgh films, and 2008 is already about to top that. Pennsylvania's $75 million tax credit program, passed last year, is credited with spurring interest in Pittsburgh and other locations in the commonwealth.

...


Julianne Moore... starring in "Shelter"

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  #120  
Old Posted Feb 11, 2008, 3:46 PM
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Those shots would have to be pretty distracting to warrant such a comment. Every romantic comedy (and cop movie) shot in NYC or SF has obligatory skyline shots etc. I don’t see how it’s a distraction. In many movies the city is as much as star, as the characters. One would think that when the city’s name is in the title, that would likely be the case.
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