Yes, well, if you want to take bets on which one more people will see that weekend, let me know. Unless my math(s) is off, it sounds like even your family will go with the trend (given your use of the plural kids, and assuming you don't own goats).MichaelB wrote:Although those of us who last saw a Star Wars film in 1983 and have no interest in repeating the experience might welcome an alternative viewing choice. In three weeks or so, I can easily see my mother-in-law taking the kids to Star Wars Whatever The Fuck It's Called (genuinely don't know, absolutely don't care) while my wife and I pop in to see All the Money in the World, which is now an easy sell to her because she adores Christopher Plummer.
All the Money in the World (Ridley Scott, 2017)
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Re: All the Money in the World (Ridley Scott, 2017)
- MichaelB
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Re: All the Money in the World (Ridley Scott, 2017)
I don't, because I'm not an idiot. But my point is that there are nonetheless quite a few people who would dearly love to see anything halfway intelligent in the run-up to Christmas (which in Britain is traditionally an absolute dead zone for quality programming), and so if this is even vaguely up to the mark it'll be a welcome distraction.McCrutchy wrote:Yes, well, if you want to take bets on which one more people will see that weekend, let me know.
See also the people who had the inspired idea of reviving The Third Man against a Star Wars film. It was the only other film opening that week, and they'd presumably guessed (entirely correctly) that critics would use the former as a club with which to beat the latter. Was it more successful at the box office? Clearly not - but £100,000 in just a tiny handful of cinemas is a phenomenal gross for a revival of a 50-year-old black-and-white film, and I doubt it would have done half as well if there hadn't been a demonstrable demand for something that didn't have George Lucas's name all over it.
- AidanKing
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Re: All the Money in the World (Ridley Scott, 2017)
If you live in the UK at least, there would also be the option of seeing Paddington 2 (again).
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Re: All the Money in the World (Ridley Scott, 2017)
Already scheduled. If the kids complain about seeing it again, fuck ‘em.AidanKing wrote:If you live in the UK at least, there would also be the option of seeing Paddington 2 (again).
- AidanKing
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Re: All the Money in the World (Ridley Scott, 2017)
To be fair, I suspect that the chances of anyone complaining about seeing Paddington 2 again would range from extremely slim to completely non-existent.
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Re: All the Money in the World (Ridley Scott, 2017)
Interesting to me that the advertising is actually leaning into the re-shoots.
- Ribs
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Re: All the Money in the World (Ridley Scott, 2017)
To some criticism - I think it's a vastly different thing to say "wow, Ridley Scott reshot half of this in ten days and it's almost seamless!" vs. the tone the new marketing has taken of "people can't stop talking about Christopher Plummer in this movie" - one's taking advantage of the situation and the other isn't.
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Re: All the Money in the World (Ridley Scott, 2017)
Even hinting at them at all is the surprise to me. Makes me wonder how this will be addressed in the special features on the Blu/DVD release.
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Re: All the Money in the World (Ridley Scott, 2017)
Having seen the film today, I feel pretty confident in saying that Spacey was replaced with good reason (beyond simply a PR move), and that the money was well-spent. There are significant scenes with Plummer that would have come off as absolutely cringe-worthy had Spacey remained in the film, and for this reason, I don't think we'll see the original version of the film, and we'll probably only see brief Spacey footage in a featurette on the re-shoots, if at all.flyonthewall2983 wrote:Even hinting at them at all is the surprise to me. Makes me wonder how this will be addressed in the special features on the Blu/DVD release.
As it is, Plummer does a terrific job, and he and Romain Duris are probably the best actors in the film. Michelle Williams was slightly less impressive to me, but she seems to have impressed others more. Mark Wahlberg was as good as Williams, but again, nothing really stood out for me.
The thing that keeps the film from being totally satisfying is that it
SpoilerShow
ends in a weird, and seemingly "inaccurate" way, where Abigail "takes over the family" in a sort of good-things-come-to-those-who-wait style of ending, and then the film ends, without revealing that Paul III subsequently became a drug addict, had a stroke and went blind, ended up in a wheelchair and died, aged 54. More frustratingly, the film never reveals how Paul III's father, Getty's son (the drug addict in the film) eventually cleaned up, got/stayed rich, and donated hundreds of millions to charity, while apparently refusing to pay to care for his son. And most frustratingly, we never learn what happened to Abigail, who seems to have retreated completely from public life, and may or may not be dead.
But as it is, the film is still very good, mostly because of Plummer and Duris. Charlie Plummer did a pretty excellent job as Paul III, too.
- hearthesilence
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Re: All the Money in the World (Ridley Scott, 2017)
New interview with Scott in the Guardian
Some excerpts:
One word recurs when talking to Scott: business. Sir Ridley, knighted in 2003, is an artist – in addition to making films, the Royal College of Art alumnus paints. But questions about ethics, acting and storytelling are redirected to the realm of budgets, profit and loss and bums on seats. “When you’re in film, it’s a lot of money to lose if it’s not working. Business is always highly linked with the creative process.”
I tell Scott the decision reminded me of Stalin airbrushing purged comrades from group photos. He doesn’t take offence, but it is not clear he agrees with the comparison because he goes on to say it was, of course, just business. “Whatever you do in private is not my business. It only becomes my business if it infects the business that I’m in. Then it’s my duty to do something about it.” In cold print that may sound like Michael Corleone, but Scott’s breezy cheer is closer to Del Boy.
Some excerpts:
One word recurs when talking to Scott: business. Sir Ridley, knighted in 2003, is an artist – in addition to making films, the Royal College of Art alumnus paints. But questions about ethics, acting and storytelling are redirected to the realm of budgets, profit and loss and bums on seats. “When you’re in film, it’s a lot of money to lose if it’s not working. Business is always highly linked with the creative process.”
I tell Scott the decision reminded me of Stalin airbrushing purged comrades from group photos. He doesn’t take offence, but it is not clear he agrees with the comparison because he goes on to say it was, of course, just business. “Whatever you do in private is not my business. It only becomes my business if it infects the business that I’m in. Then it’s my duty to do something about it.” In cold print that may sound like Michael Corleone, but Scott’s breezy cheer is closer to Del Boy.
- domino harvey
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Re: All the Money in the World (Ridley Scott, 2017)
I have to Google a lot of yours, so it’s only fair.domino harvey wrote:I had to Google that reference
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Re: All the Money in the World (Ridley Scott, 2017)
The film itself is fairly middling with Plummer's performance being the best thing about it. The suspense/thriller aspects are competent enough and there is enough time spent showing how the value of money differs between the various characters to suggest a subtext hovering below the expected kidnap plotting.
I was surprised at the amount of screen-time that Plummer has; it feels like his scenes take up nearly half the running time, although I suspect that's because his scenes are well-placed throughout and hold the greatest interest. The biggest continuity problem posed by the re-shoot is Mark Wahlberg's weight change: it looks like he lost between 10 and 15 pounds before re-shooting began in November so his appearance visibly fluctuates from scene-to-scene and he doesn't even properly fit in his costume during his scenes with Plummer.
I was surprised at the amount of screen-time that Plummer has; it feels like his scenes take up nearly half the running time, although I suspect that's because his scenes are well-placed throughout and hold the greatest interest. The biggest continuity problem posed by the re-shoot is Mark Wahlberg's weight change: it looks like he lost between 10 and 15 pounds before re-shooting began in November so his appearance visibly fluctuates from scene-to-scene and he doesn't even properly fit in his costume during his scenes with Plummer.
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Re: All the Money in the World (Ridley Scott, 2017)
I hope they will at least preserve the original version with Spacey. I think given enough time, it could be a fascinating, and unprecedented opportunity to compare two different performances of the same role in the same film. Perhaps not something to be publicly disseminated, but curated, such as a special double feature at MOMA.
- domino harvey
- Dot Com Dom
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Re: All the Money in the World (Ridley Scott, 2017)
Everyone seemingly agreed to do the reshoots for scale, only Wahlberg sneakily negotiated for $1.5 million. Williams wasn't told and was paid $80 a day. Unbelievably, both are repped by the same agency (or were...)
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Re: All the Money in the World (Ridley Scott, 2017)
That's pretty awful. I hope Wahlberg didn't know about it, and agrees to give the money back or donate it to charity. When you've made almost $70 million in one year, surely an extra $1.5 million isn't worth any kind of bad publicity, or worse, bad blood.domino harvey wrote:Everyone seemingly agreed to do the reshoots for scale, only Wahlberg sneakily negotiated for $1.5 million. Williams wasn't told and was paid $80 a day. Unbelievably, both are repped by the same agency (or were...)
Unless, of course, Ridley is full of shit, and everyone got paid big except Williams, which is entirely possible, and in which case, she needs to dump William Morris post haste.
- swo17
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Re: All the Money in the World (Ridley Scott, 2017)
$1.5 million is a pretty standard weight continuity fee
- thirtyframesasecond
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Re: All the Money in the World (Ridley Scott, 2017)
I wonder what Wahlberg was paid for the film to start with, given that it's a £50m film and he's in a supporting role. I can't imagine those costs are salary-driven. I'd have assumed Wahlberg would take this role for some acting cred, so would be working for less than his usual fee. Who knows what Scott knew, but his whole take on the film - "I always wanted to cast Plummer but the studio wouldn't let me" rings false with me.
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Re: All the Money in the World (Ridley Scott, 2017)
Not originally knowing the disparity I was going to make some defense about Wahlberg's box office draw vs. Williams' ...but that's fucking ridiculous
- hearthesilence
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- Fiery Angel
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Re: All the Money in the World (Ridley Scott, 2017)
At Nick's stupidity, I hopehearthesilence wrote:This made me laugh.
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Re: All the Money in the World (Ridley Scott, 2017)
More info from TMZ does not look good for Mark Wahlberg. The way it's being reported, it could still be entirely the fault of WME, but the fact that Wahlberg hasn't spoken out already is pretty damning.
- swo17
- Bloodthirsty Butcher
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Re: All the Money in the World (Ridley Scott, 2017)
At his careful choice and placement of words?Fiery Angel wrote:At Nick's stupidity, I hopehearthesilence wrote:This made me laugh.
- Fiery Angel
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Re: All the Money in the World (Ridley Scott, 2017)
if you say soswo17 wrote:At his careful choice and placement of words?Fiery Angel wrote:At Nick's stupidity, I hopehearthesilence wrote:This made me laugh.
- hearthesilence
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Re: All the Money in the World (Ridley Scott, 2017)
I haven't seen this movie yet, but is it inaccurate to describe the re-shoots as mainly shot-reverse shot scenes of boring conversations in large rooms?Fiery Angel wrote:At Nick's stupidity, I hopehearthesilence wrote:This made me laugh.