Showing posts with label carlos jacott. Show all posts
Showing posts with label carlos jacott. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
Highball
Directed by Noah Baumbach and written by Baumbach, Carlos Jacott, and Christopher Reed, Highball is the story about a newlywed couple who decide to throw parties in order to improve their social lives in the course of an entire year. The film is a look into the world of marriage and friendships as they‘re tested in a trio of parties where things happen in weird ways. Starring Justine Bateman, Peter Bogdanovich, Dean Cameron, Chris Eigeman, Eric Stoltz, Annabella Sciorra, and Christopher Reed. Highball is a messy and incomprehensible film from Noah Baumbach.
The film revolves around the lives of a newlywed couple in Travis (Christopher Reed) and Diane (Lauren Katz) as they decide to throw parties in the course of a year in order to improve their social life with their friends. Instead, things go wrong in a trio of parties where there’s some spats, misunderstandings, discussions that go horrible wrong, and all sorts of confusion while one of the guests in Darien (Eric Stoltz) is always bringing a date who is a famous actress. The screenplay that Noah Baumbach, Christopher Reed, and Carlos Jacott explore the idea of these parties where everyone is eager to have a good time but something always go wrong. Things get messier and weirder where couples break up, a guest always instigate things, and there’s always something to make things even worse.
Baumbach’s direction is very intimate as he sets the film entirely in an apartment in Brooklyn where people are always gathering around to socialize and do things. Shot in six days with leftover film stock, the direction is quite loose while Baumbach would insert scenes of the New York City streets in between each segment of the film that is wonderfully edited with dissolves and such. The rest of the film itself unfortunately meanders where there’s gags involving a record company employee named Miles (John Lehr) and his boss (Chris Eigeman) while a guest named Felix (Carlos Jacott) spars with another guest (Noah Baumbach). There are moments that are funny including a guest (Peter Bogdanovich) making various impressions but it starts to lose its luster by the third act and things get more ridiculous as things wore on. Overall, Baumbach creates a very troubled and often dull micro budget film that really isn’t sure what it wants to be.
Cinematographer Steven Bernstein does nice work with the cinematography where it does have some grainy camera work for many of the film‘s interior settings to capture the mood of the parties. Production designer Shanya Tsao does terrific work with the design of the parties to play up the holiday or theme of the parties. Costume designer Katherine Jane Bryant does wonderful work with the costumes including the designs of the Halloween costumes the guests wear at the party. Sound editor Jason Kaplan does excellent work with the sound to capture the atmosphere of the parties as well as some of the backdrops of conversations heard in the background. Music supervisor Dean Wareham creates a fine soundtrack that features some of his own music plus some dreamy folk songs of his own including a few stuff played in the parties.
The film’s cast is a highlight of the film as it features appearances from Ally Sheedy and Rae Dawn Chong as themselves who are dates of Darien, Louise Stratten as a woman dressed up as a subway train, Catherine Kellner as a party guest dressed up as Dorothy from The Wizard of Oz, Dean Cameron as a magician in the first party, Dean Wareham as a guest in the New Year’s Eve party, and Peter Bogdanovich as a guest who dresses up as a director in the Halloween party while doing many impressions of famous actors from the past.
Other small roles include Justine Bateman as the guest Sandy who is a friend of Diane, Annabella Sciorra as another friend of Diane in Molly, John Lehr as the somewhat dim-witted Miles, Noah Baumbach as the low-key yet smart-ass Philip, Chris Eigeman as Miles’ annoyed boss Fletcher, and Carlos Jacott as the very brash and pushy Felix. Lauren Katz is very good as Diane as a woman trying to get the party right while being frustrated by Felix while Christopher Reed is excellent as Travis who is a friend of Felix but couldn’t get anything through to Diane because he never tells her anything.
Highball is a drab yet disappointing film from Noah Baumbach. While it features themes about adulthood that he’s known for, it’s a film that gets bogged down by too many things happening where not much makes sense. Though it does have moments that are funny and is a bit impressive in terms of the small budget it has. It’s a film that really doesn’t offer much as it gets too repetitious at times while some of the characters don’t become interesting anymore. In the end, Highball is a disappointing yet dull film from Noah Baumbach.
Noah Baumbach Films: Kicking and Screaming - Mr. Jealousy - The Squid & the Whale - Margot at the Wedding - Greenberg - Frances Ha - While We’re Young - Mistress America - De Palma - The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected) - Marriage Story - (White Noise (2022 film)) - The Auteurs #41: Noah Baumbach
© thevoid99 2013
Tuesday, September 18, 2012
Kicking and Screaming (1995 film)
Written and directed by Noah Baumbach and from a story by Baumbach and Oliver Berkman, Kicking and Screaming is the story of a group of young people who deal with post-college life as they are unsure of what to do afterwards. The film explores several characters who are on the verge of adulthood as they also deal with life without education and college parties. Starring Josh Hamilton, Carlos Jacott, Chris Eigeman, Olivia d’Abo, Parker Posey, Elliott Gould, and Eric Stoltz. Kicking and Screaming is a delightful yet engaging film from Noah Baumbach.
The film is essentially the story of a group of post-college graduates dealing with life after college as they all figure out what to do while reminiscing their life as students. Leading the pack is Grover (Josh Hamilton) who had just broken up with his girlfriend Jane (Olivia d’Abo) after she decides to take post-graduate study to Prague. Grover spends most of his time with his friends Max (Chris Eigeman), Otis (Carlos Jacott), Skippy (Jason Wiles), and a bartender/student named Chet (Eric Stoltz) as they all go through their own personal odyssey into finding life after school. While Skippy chooses to remain a student with his girlfriend Miami (Parker Posey), Otis becomes unsure of what to do as he eventually takes a job at a video store. Max meanwhile, comments on everything as he is the most unsure of what to do as he and Grover hang around the campus.
Noah Baumbach’s screenplay explores the fear of emerging into adulthood as well as the fear of failure as many of the characters in the film have no idea where they’re going. Throughout the film, Grover reflects on his relationship with Jane as he deals with her phone messages where he would fill his heartbreak by having sex with younger students. Whenever Grover is with his buddies, they do trivia and such while discussing about what to do next in life as Otis is anxious about failure as he forms a friendship with Chet. Chet is a man in his early 30s who often hangs around campus as he is also a bartender where he reveals why he’s still a student in a notable scene between him and Grover. The script also explores the world of relationships as it involves Max dealing with loneliness as he would eventually hook up with an underage student in Kate (Cara Buono).
The script features a unique structure that begins on graduation day and then ends the film during finals. The structure helps unveil how these characters deal with their sense of no direction as it progresses to the point where they begin to learn more about each other and what they really at this stage in life. While there’s a looseness to the story, it still plays to the fact that these people are wandering around just trying to see where they can go or what they need to do to fill their time.
Baumbach’s direction is quite straightforward in terms of the compositions that Baumbach creates as he doesn’t aim for any sense of style. Instead, he chooses to focus on the world of college life as realistic as it is through the perspective of this small ensemble. Not wanting to make something that reveled in sentimentality, Baumbach wanted to make sure that film felt loose in the way he has his actors be present at a location. Whether it’s in the campus, a club, or in the dorms, Baumbach find ways to create some sense of atmosphere in the film where the characters would comment on something or ponder what are they doing here. Baumbach also uses flashback to help tell Grover’s storyline as he pines for Jane by creating scenes where it’s shot in monochrome colors to introduce the flashback. Overall, Baumbach creates a very compelling yet witty film about the world of post-college life.
Cinematographer Steven Bernstein does nice work with the film‘s cinematography to display the colorful world of the college campus along with some stylish lights for some of the film‘s club scenes. Editor J. Kathleen Gibson does excellent work with the editing to create some rhythmic cuts for the conversations including a scene where Kate berates a truck driver. Production designer Dan Whifler and set decorator Gail Bennett do wonderful work with the set pieces such as the house that the guys live in to some of the dorms that Grover visits.
Costume designer Mary Jane Fort does terrific work with the costumes to play out the slacker look of some of the characters along with the more stylish clothes that Miami wears. Sound mixer Ed White does superb work with the sound to capture the atmosphere of the parties as well as the scenes in the bar. The film’s music by Phil Marshall is very good for its electronic score to play out Grover’s flashbacks with Jane. The soundtrack features a wide mix of music that includes Pixies, Blondie, Bob Marley, Jimmie Dale Gilmore, Nick Drake, They Might Be Giants, Alex Chilton, and Freedy Johnston.
The casting by Ellie Kanner is brilliant for the ensemble that is created as it features appearances from Perrey Reeves and Marissa Ribisi as a couple of students Grover sleeps with, Dean Cameron as a video store manager, Noah Baumbach as a student who asks a very provocative question, Christopher Reed as the Euro-trash student Friedrich, and Elliott Gould in a small but funny role as Grover’s dad. Cara Buono is a delight as the underage student Kate who deals with Parker Posey is wonderful as the outgoing Miami who deals with Skippy’s slacker lifestyle as well as the changing times of the parties. Olivia d’Abo is excellent as the aspiring writer Jane who leaves Grover as she is seen in flashback as someone who confides in Grover over their love of writing.
Jason Wile is very good as the directionless Skippy who decides to enroll again as away to figure out his life. Eric Stolz is great as the very witty and philosophical bartender/student Chet who revels in his experience as a student while basking in the fact that there’s still a lot of things to learn. Carlos Jacott is amazing as the neurotic Otis who deals with the idea that he might face rejection as well as musing on his insecurities as it’s a very funny performance. Chris Eigeman is incredible as the talkative Max who deals with his own lack of direction and social life as he ponders about what to do. Finally, there’s Josh Hamilton in a remarkable performance as Grover who deals with his break-up with Jane as well as his own lack of direction as he tries to finish his own work as a writer.
***Additional DVD Material Written from 1/6/15-1/16/15***
The 2006 Region 1 DVD from the Criterion Collection presents the film in a newly restored high-definition digital transfer under the supervision of its writer/director Noah Baumbach with a new Dolby Digital 5.1 audio remix as the film is given a richer look as well as a broader sound. The special features of the DVD all relates to its production as the first of these supplements is a 12-minute interview with Noah Baumbach. Baumbach discusses the genesis of the script as well as what he wanted to say. He also talked about how it got passed through while discussing how the script would change over the years into the final version of the film. The interview also has Baumbach talking about its production as well as some of the aspects of the marketing which he didn’t like but it did end up helping the film into becoming the cult classic that it is.
The 26-minute conversation between Baumbach and actors Josh Hamilton, Chris Eigeman, and Carlos Jacott has the four talking about the film and the production. Even as they all talk about the characters and the story itself while Baumbach also revealed some of the difficulties that went on in pre-production. The actors talk about their approach to improvisation which added to the film’s comedy as well as their experience in the New York Film Festival in 1995 where it premiered and the film’s difficulty to be marketed to a wide audience. They also talk about its cult and how it managed to endure over the years as the four men are surprised by how good it still is.
One major special feature in the DVD is a 2000 short film entitled Conrad and Butler in “Conrad and Butler Take a Vacation” that stars Carlos Jacott and John Lehr who both wrote the short with Baumbach as it included notes about the short which Baumbach made on digital video in the spring of 2000 as a part of something in the hopes that it would be a TV show and a film that never materialized. It revolves around two guys who had nothing to do as they both take a vacation in the home one of the guys’ grandparents where everything they had planned to do doesn’t happen. It’s a very funny 30-minute short due to the sense of improvisational humor and banter between Jacott and Lehr.
There’s nine minutes of three deleted scenes that is featured where Baumbach explains through text into why they got cut out. The first is a scene between Grover and Jane where Jane revealed she went out with Chet. The second scene involving Grover and Marisa Ribisi’s Charlotte character at a club as it plays to Grover’s aimlessness in sleeping with freshmen college girls as he later meets one of her roommates who is with another guy which becomes awkward. The third and final scene involve Skippy and John Lehr’s Louis character where the latter was supposed to be a bigger character but it got cut as Baumbach created Chet as it plays to Skippy meeting Louis and see what he’s become. The nine-minute brief interview segments with Baumbach and cast members Cara Buono, Chris Eigeman, Olivia d’Abo, Josh Hamilton, and Carlos Jacott for a special on the Independent Film Channel in 1995 basically has everyone talking about the film and their own interpretations of the story as well as their own experiences. The special features also include a theatrical trailer for the film.
The DVD set also features an essay from the famed Chicago-based film critic Jonathan Rosenbaum entitled Reasons for Kicking and Screaming. The essay talks about the film and Baumbach’s approach to humor as well as create something that is real about post-graduate life. Especially as it plays to the world of characters who are overly-intellectual as they would often embark on the realization that they don’t have the answers for everything as well as the fact that they say they’ve read this but haven’t. Rosenbaum talks about the connections Baumbach would have with filmmakers like Whit Stillman and Wes Anderson as the latter is a collaborator of Baumbach. Even as Rosenbaum believes that Baumbach’s greatest influence in the film is Jean Renoir in terms of creating long takes to get the actors comfortable and talk through dialogue easily. It’s a wonderful essay that really gets the film in every way and form.
***End of DVD Tidbits***
Kicking and Screaming is an extraordinary film from Noah Baumbach. Armed with an amazing ensemble cast, witty dialogue, and engaging views on post-college life. It’s a film that revels into the world of pre-adulthood that is filled with great realism and humor as it follows a group of people unsure of where to go. In the end, Kicking and Screaming is an outstanding film from Noah Baumbach.
Noah Baumbach Films: Highball - Mr. Jealousy - The Squid & the Whale - Margot at the Wedding - Greenberg - Frances Ha - While We're Young - Mistress America - De Palma - The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected) - Marriage Story - (White Noise (2022 film)) - The Auteurs #41: Noah Baumbach
© thevoid99 2012
Monday, March 26, 2012
Mr. Jealousy
Written and directed by Noah Baumbach, Mr. Jealousy is the story of a writer whose new relationship with a woman is shaken when he learns that her old boyfriend is a famous writer. Filled with jealousy, he follows the man as he pretends to be another person as part of a therapy group. The film explores a man whose insecurities try to have him be compared to his girlfriend’s ex-boyfriend. Starring Eric Stoltz, Annabella Sciorra, Chris Eigeman, Carlos Jacott, Marianne Jean-Baptiste, Brian Kerwin, Bridget Fonda, and Peter Bogdanovich. Mr. Jealousy is a witty adult-comedy from Noah Baumbach.
Aspiring writer/part-time teacher Lester Grimm (Eric Stoltz) has just been introduced to Ramona Ray (Annabella Sciorra) by their friends Vince (Carlos Jacott) and Lucretia (Marianne Jean-Baptiste). After a few successful dates, Lester and Ramona have become a couple as they’re both excited for Vince and Lucretia’s upcoming nuptials. When Ramona divulges her own life to Lester that included a brief affair with a newly-famous writer named Dashiell Frank (Chris Eigeman) during her days in college. Lester reluctantly reads Frank’s new book as he later spots him walking into a group therapy session where Lester accidentally walks into the building as he becomes part of the group therapy under Vince’s name.
Headed by Dr. Poke (Peter Bogdanovich), Lester and Dashiell are among the people in the group of Lester pretends to be Vince as he takes shot at Dashiell’s insecurities while Lester discusses some of Vince’s problems. Though Vince was reluctant to have Lester divulge information, the two do trade secrets about what is happening although nothing secretive is revealed in the therapy sessions. Suddenly, Lester and Dashiell become friends as they discuss their own issues to each other though Lester remains under the name of Vince. After Ramona revealed to Lester about meeting a former boyfriend named Stephen (Brian Kerwin), Lester becomes confused on whether that the woman Dashiell wrote about is Ramona. Vince decides to join the group therapy as a British man named Leo revealing Lester’s jealousy issues to the group making Lester feeling very uncomfortable.
When Ramona becomes suspicious about Lester’s therapy sessions and why he lied about missing a date. She and Lucretia starts to follow Lester and Vince in the therapy sessions where Ramona meets Dashiell as Dashiell later talks about meeting Ramona at a group session leading to a major blow-up for all involved.
The film is about a man with jealousy issues after learning about his new girlfriend’s former relationship with a man that is now a famous writer. Wanting to know this man and see how he can better himself for this woman, he takes part in a group therapy session where things become complicated as his best friend suddenly gets involved to further complicate things. It’s a film where Noah Baumbach explores the world of jealousy as he follows Lester Grimm in this journey as the story is told by a narrator (Noah Baumbach) who divulges into Lester’s past as well as Ramona’s own quirks. The screenplay features characters that all seem to have it together while Lester is the one trying to get past his jealousy issues only to go back into old habits. Largely because he’s faced moments in his young life where he’s been dumped or been unable to express his feelings towards another girl.
In Ramona, she becomes this ideal woman that Lester might feel that she is the one until she reveals all of these lovers she had including Dashiell. This would prompt him to find out about Dashiell where he accidentally follows him as he learns about this man while pretending to be someone else. Yet, Dashiell is revealed to be someone who is having his own issues about himself and admitting that he wasn’t a great person in the past. This would lead to Lester to finally open a bit as he gets to know Dashiell as it would only complicate his jealousy issues and his relationship with Ramaona. It’s a script that is a comedy of manners though at times, it does play off as a bit pompous as the characters are quite high-brow.
Baumbach’s direction is straightforward in terms of its compositions as a lot of is shot in New York City. Many of the compositions in the way Baumbach directs his actors in a frame and have the camera move around to be in the center of these group therapy sessions. The film opens with a prologue of sorts about Lester’s life as the scenes are repeated frame for frame but played by Vince when he plays Leo for the therapy session. Baumbach’s approach to humor is more about the situation and character rather than gags. While the film has a lot of references to films and high art, there is an element of pretentiousness to it that makes the film feel a bit smug at times. Despite the few flaws it has, Baumbach does create a very compelling romantic comedy-drama.
Cinematographer Steven Bernstein does some pretty good work with the photography that is very straightforward for a lot of the interior and exterior shots of NYC and the apartments that the characters live in. Editor J. Kathleen Gibson does some excellent work with the film‘s stylish cutting employing lots of rhythmic cuts, montages, and jump-cuts to play with the film‘s easy-going pacing. Production designer Anne Stuhler, along with set decorator Candis Heiland and art director Roswell Hamrick, does some nice work with the apartments to contrast the different worlds of the more middle-class Lester and the more posh Dashiell.
Costume designer Katherine Jean Bryant does some wonderful work with the costumes that includes some very stylish clothing for Ramona. Sound mixer Jeff Pullman does terrific work with the sound from the intimate moments of the therapy sessions to more raucous moments in a dinner scene. The film’s score by Robert Een is a wonderful mixture of jazz and reggae to play up the humor of the film while the score features some folk-driven pieces performed by the dream-pop band Luna. Assembling the film’s soundtrack is music supervisor William Ewart as he creates a soundtrack that features Georges Delerue, Harry Chapin, and Leonard Cohen.
The casting by Todd M. Thaler is excellent for the ensemble that is created as it includes Eddie Kaye Thomas as a Spanish-language student, Noah and Nico Baumbach as a couple of former dates of Ramona, John Lehr as a friend of Vince and Lester, Brian Kerwin as an ex-boyfriend of Ramona in Stephen, and Bridget Fonda as Dashiell’s stammering girlfriend Irene. Legendary filmmaker Peter Bogdanovich is superb as the very helpful Dr. Poke who leads the group therapy sessions that Lester, Dashiell, and Vince attend. Marianne-Jean Baptiste is very good as Vince’s fiancĂ©e Lucretia who wonders about Vince’s comments about therapy. Carlos Jacott is great as Lester’s friend Vince who is interested about Lester’s portrayal for the therapy sessions while he would sport a wonderful British accent as Lester’s doppelganger Leo.
Chris Eigeman is excellent as Dashiell, Ramona’s ex-boyfriend who tries to deal with his own issues as a writer while befriending Lester in the group therapy. Annabella Sciorra is lovely as the superstitious Ramona who tries to deal with Lester’s behavior as their relationship starts to progress. Finally, there’s Eric Stoltz in a remarkable performance as the confused Lester whose jealousy issues have him questioning himself while befriending Dashiell that would further his anxiety over his relationship with Ramona.
Mr. Jealousy is a very good film from Noah Baumbach that features stellar performances from Eric Stoltz, Annabella Sciorra, and Chris Eigeman. While it’s an imperfect film that might be too-high brow for some viewers. It is still a quite engaging comedy that is very smart in its portrayal of young 30-something dealing with love. In the end, Mr. Jealousy is a charming romantic-comedy from Noah Baumbach.
Noah Baumbach Films: Kicking & Screaming - Highball - The Squid & the Whale - Margot at the Wedding - Greenberg - Frances Ha - While We're Young - Mistress America - De Palma - The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected) - Marriage Story - (White Noise (2022 film)) - The Auteurs #41: Noah Baumbach
© thevoid99 2012
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