• The Hype Report: The X File on Winona Ryder

    [Being the latest in an infrequent series devoted to movie-related puff pieces so over the top that they're a show all by themselves..]

    So it turns out that Winona Ryder is in the new Star Trek movie, where she plays the Vulcan ambassador Sarek's baby mama, and Vanessa Thorpe's profile of Ryder and the current state of her career has kind of science-fiction vibe to it itself. Did you know that Ryder was once "acclaimed as the most promising, most beautiful and most fashionable star of her generation - the generation, that is, that had become known as 'X'?" It's news to me, and I think I'm of the generation that had become known as 'X' myself, so long as we're all committed to writing in the style that has become known as "funny-looking'." Thorpe must have worried that we'd think it was just her, so she cites a back-up source: Ryder's father, who says that twenty or so years ago, his daughter and Johnny Depp were "the hottest couple in the United States." All together now--ewwwwww!! Is it possible that when all those folks at the red carpet premieres leaned across the police barricades and screamed, "You're the most promising, most beautiful, and most fashionable star of your generation," they were talking to Johnny? Thorpe herself undercuts her argument by describing Ryder's features as "elfin", a term I've always associated more with the likes of Michael J. Pollard or the guy on Two and a Half Men who isn't Charlie Sheen than anyone who might qualify as the most beautiful anything. It's possible that Cate Blanchett and Orlando Bloom in The Lord of the Rings have forever rewritten the rule book on this one, but not in my apartment.

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  • Michelle Pfeiffer, "Dangerous Liasons" Director Reteam for Colette's "Cheri"

    Michelle Pfeiffer turned 50 last year, and though the years haven't been that bad on her, her screen image has definitely cooled a bit. Her last couple of movies went straight to DVD, and her few other screen performances since 2001 have been in supporting performances (White Oleander, Hairspray, Stardust). Now she's starring as an aging French courtesan in Cheri, directed by Stephen Frears and adapted from the Colette novel. The movie is having its premiere at the Berlin Film Festival, and Mick Brown's timely profile of Pfeiffer will do until somebody publishes her biography. The title character of Cheri is the son (Rupert Friend) of a colleague (Kathy Bates) who Pfeiffer's character, Léa de Lonval, agrees to educate in the ways of sex and love, with predictably bittersweet results. "Being in that stage of life wasn't something I really had to do a lot of research for,' Pfeiffer told Brown, "because I'm already there. Although in some ways it's a little bit harder to really understand and articulate to yourself, because you're right in the middle of it. Probably 10 years from now I'll be able to look at this phase of my life and be able to understand her journey more. But I think for a lot of women 50 is a very particular age. I'm not one that's ever really thought about birthdays, but this was a big one and I was not looking forward to it. But surprisingly it has left me feeling liberated in a strange kind of way. Sort of, the pressure's off."

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  • English Storyteller, American Stories

    The hook in this interview in London's Telegraph magazine is Daniel Day-Lewis' meticulous, detail-oriented approach to acting, and indeed, there's plenty of that for those looking for such a thing.  He talks at length of his immersive, Method-based approach (he built a tent of skins, paddled a canoe, and learned to handle a flintlock rifle while filming The Last of the Mohicans), compares his art to the craft of woodworking, and dismisses the many obvious tics of his characters -- being in jail or paralyzed in a wheelchair -- as surface fripperies, with the real heart of the character coming from making the lives of someone utterly different from them seem immediate and real.  But much more interesting is the fact that the London-born actor, currently starring in P.T. Anderson's There Will Be Blood,  spends much of the interview (which is, after all, with a British newspaper) trashing the opportunities of British cinema.  From an early age, he says, "I wanted to tell American stories."  He articulates his near-contempt for the strict class structure of his homeland, and thinks of the tradition of honing your craft in theatrical classics as little more than an obstacle.  "My love of American movies was like a secret that I carried around with me," he says, and admits that if it hadn't been Martin Scorsese who approached him about playing Newland Archer in The Age of Innocence, he would have turned it down as "too English".


  • That Gal!: Miriam Margolyes

    If Miriam Margolyes had never appeared in a single film, she would still have a special place in the history of British television. While attending Oxford University, she appeared on the game show University Challenge, and, after getting a question wrong during a live broadcast, had the dubious distinction of being the first person to say "fuck" on the British airwaves. Luckily for filmgoers, though, she didn't let the shame destroy her career, and has gone on to become one of the most sought-after character actresses in the English film industry. A veteran of a number of television gigs, like former That Gal! Natasha Richardson, she was a regular on The Black Adder (including a memorable portrayal of Queen Victoria), but it's on film where she's shone the brightest.

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