Whatever Works (Woody Allen, 2009)
- Antoine Doinel
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Whatever Works (Woody Allen, 2009)
Starring Larry David, Evan Rachel Wood and Woody Allen himself, it has begun filming and here are some, uh, colorful pics.
Last edited by Antoine Doinel on Thu Jul 31, 2008 1:01 am, edited 1 time in total.
- AWA
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- Location: Windsor, Ontario, Canada
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Even better photos here of Woody directing Larry on the street.
- Zumpano
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 3:43 pm
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This is Larry's second Woody movie. He has a (very) small role in "Radio Days" as the family's neighbor. I believe he pops up in one scene, you can't really make him out visually, but you can her him ranting (maybe the scene about the family not celebrating Passover(?)) and can tell right away (if you're at all familiar with Curb).
Its nice to see him, now a big star, with the lead in a Woody movie now. He's come a long way since the eighties.
Its nice to see him, now a big star, with the lead in a Woody movie now. He's come a long way since the eighties.
- denti alligator
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- Highway 61
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David's also in "Oedipus Wrecks," Allen's part of New York Stories. It's a small role, but bigger than his bit in Radio Days, and he does get to share the screen with Woody. It's interesting that their careers collided years earlier. I wonder if Allen had any inkling that David would become his successor.Zumpano wrote:This is Larry's second Woody movie. He has a (very) small role in "Radio Days" as the family's neighbor.
- domino harvey
- Dot Com Dom
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- Highway 61
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As a comic persona, Larry's act is lifted straight from Woody's playbook. Of course, David hasn't even attempted the kind of artistry that Allen has accomplished dozens of times over, so perhaps successor is too strong a word. Yet, I think it's not unreasonable to say that in the tradition of Jewish humor, David is the clearest example of Allen's influence. In fact, I've introduced a number of friends to Allen's films after hearing of their love for Curb and recommending to them that they give Woody Allen a try.
- AWA
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According to Woody in an interview with the Hollywood Reporter at Cannes, Woody is not acting in this film.
Also - a very brief video clip of Woody working on the streets of NYC (and Henry Cavill asking him a question, I believe?).
New photos from the set, available in high resolution.
Also - a very brief video clip of Woody working on the streets of NYC (and Henry Cavill asking him a question, I believe?).
New photos from the set, available in high resolution.
- domino harvey
- Dot Com Dom
- Joined: Wed Jan 11, 2006 6:42 pm
- tavernier
- Joined: Sat Apr 02, 2005 11:18 pm
The posts after the photos are priceless.domino harvey wrote:More set pics and a revelation about Wood and David's roles
- AWA
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- Antoine Doinel
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- Location: Montreal, Quebec
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Yes, the film now has a title. Allen says it's a "blackish" comedy and heaps praise upon his new young thing, Evan Rachel Wood.
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Fielding
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Whatever Works (Woody Allen, 2009)
Wild Bunch has just released its first synopsis of and images from Whatever Works.
- emcflat
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Re: Whatever Works (Woody Allen, 2009)
The behind-the-scenes footage just makes me wish for special features on WA DVDs.
I'm probably the only person in America who actually enjoyed Wild Man Blues.
I'm probably the only person in America who actually enjoyed Wild Man Blues.
- knives
- Joined: Sat Sep 06, 2008 10:49 pm
Re: Whatever Works (Woody Allen, 2009)
Aren't some people getting overexcited? What if it turns into another mediocre outing. Hopefully not, but you never know.
- Abulafia
- Joined: Thu Nov 11, 2004 4:44 am
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Re: Whatever Works (Woody Allen, 2009)
There was a mediocre outing? [-XWhat if it turns into another mediocre outing.
- Abulafia
- Joined: Thu Nov 11, 2004 4:44 am
- Location: The Banana Republic
Re: Whatever Works (Woody Allen, 2009)
Scoop was a riot. If Woody had made that film 20 years ago with Diane Keaton (or the like) we'd all be sitting around musing about how great it was. I mean the fact alone that he is still able to go away and make a film every year largely on his terms is an effort in and of itself.
Why is it that in many cases the old films of long working filmmakers are always great, but all the new films are usually considered poor, or at the very least not as good? It seems to me the very elements that viewers previously loved come to be the elements that they eventually despise.
Honestly, how is Scoop really any different than any other Allen comedy?
Why is it that in many cases the old films of long working filmmakers are always great, but all the new films are usually considered poor, or at the very least not as good? It seems to me the very elements that viewers previously loved come to be the elements that they eventually despise.
Honestly, how is Scoop really any different than any other Allen comedy?
- Highway 61
- Joined: Mon Nov 08, 2004 8:40 pm
Re: Whatever Works (Woody Allen, 2009)
I loved Scoop. Seriously loved it. It was Woody unplugged, as though he knew this would be his last acting turn, so he packed the movie with a ton of great lines that he'd saved up for himself over the years. I also think it's Johansson's best performance, mostly because she plays her role goofy rather than doing her pouty and sexy routine. That said if you aren't head over heals for Woody's comic persona like I am, the movie is very lightweight, even more so than 'the early, funny ones.' His first five films--ludicrous as they are--all featured witty satire of high brow literature and cinema. Scoop has none of that; it's merely a paper-thin British mystery starring Woody Allen. For a director famous for his intellectual films, I understand why many find it trivial.
