Showing posts with label screenplay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label screenplay. Show all posts

Thursday, 20 October 2011

AUSTIN 2011: TREATMENT

Leonard (Joshua Leonard) in Treatment.
Abusing the systems


Leonard (Joshua Leonard) has a pitch for a new screenplay, but Nelson (Sean Nelson) -- the trust fund roommate from whom Leonard parasitically freeloads -- wants nothing to do with his genius zeitgeist ideas. Leonard insists that his financially-focused idea is especially meaningful at this particular juncture in time; but still, Nelson does not want to listen. Then, on one fateful night, Leonard is hanging out at a dive bar when Gregg D (Ross Partridge) -- a narcissistic (“You say narcissist, I say carbon-based life form”) A-list action film star who Leonard wants to play the lead in the new script -- stumbles in the front door. Leonard follows Gregg D into the men’s restroom, Gregg D pisses on his leg, and the rest is history… Well, not really. Though Gregg D promises some face-time with Leonard (that is, after he washes the piss from his pant leg), Gregg D vanishes from the premises by the time Leonard emerges from the restroom cocksure and piss-free.

It turns out that Gregg D left the bar in order to check himself into Wingspan -- a $10,000 per week drug and alcohol rehabilitation center that looks and acts like a luxury spa and resort. Leonard refuses to believe that his encounter with Gregg D was anything less than the hands of fate instructing him that he must work with Gregg D on this project, so he develops the bright idea to fake drug addiction in order to be admitted to Wingspan. Now if Leonard can just convince Nelson of his genius plan, because Nelson is going to have to con the executor of his trust fund -- his snooty older brother (John Hodgman) -- into giving him an advance payout in order to fund Wingspan’s hefty weekly fee.

It is almost as easy as flashing ten thousand buckaroos at the front door and Leonard successfully checks himself into Wingspan. Leonard might not have any real addictions when he enters the facility, but soon he is all hopped up on pills that are sold to him in bulk by a fellow patient, Franny (Brie Larson). Franny, a teenage daughter of “industry types” on her sixth return visit to rehab, is quite possibly modeled after Lindsay Lohan as much as Gregg D seems to be a fictional representation of Charlie Sheen

To say this film touches the zeitgeist is an understatement. In this capacity, Treatment functions as a diatribe about the sheer preponderance of reasons why many celebrities cannot recover from addiction in luxury facilities. For one, Wingspan is a pampering vacation resort that cares about profitability above all else; they benefit from repeat and long-term customers, therefore quick and permanent recovery does not factor into their equation. The blame is not one-sided however, the patients at Wingspan are much more interested in the comfort of extravagances than recovery. Leonard soon finds himself facing the legitimacy of “The Beast” as well as the age-old existential dilemma of whether to choose art or money (or as Gregg D so eloquently puts it: “Do you feel it in your heart or in your sack?”). Sadly enough, Leonard is probably better at making excuses than creating art.

Thursday, 17 March 2011

FILM REVIEW: WIN WIN

Michael (Paul Giamatti) and Kyle (Alex Shaffer) in Win Win. 
Wrestling with fate

By John Esther

Powered by the best screenplay in an American film so far this year, the latest film by writer-director Tom McCarthy (Station Agent; The Visitor) tells the story of Mike Flaherty (Paul Giamatti), a family man trying to keep his life from crumbling.

A lawyer in a small New Jersey town, business has been very slow for Michael lately. Unfortunately that will not stop the bills from coming in. Backed into a corner, Michael comes across a scam that takes one his clients, Leo Poplar (Burt Young), out of Leo's house and into an old folk's home. It seems to be a rather safe gamble, but then Leo's grandson, Kyle (Alex Shaffer), unexpectedly shows up, threatening to unravel the plan, the extra money for Michael, and maybe even Michael's license to practice law.

Alex is a troubled child who does not want to go home. As opportunities to send him back are repeatedly thwarted, he slowly becomes more and more a part of Michael's family. Not only does that help Michael's plan out, Kyle is also particularly skilled in an area that may give Michael a win in another part of his life. But then Cindy (Melanie Lynskey) shows up and now Michael could lose everything.

Extremely well-crafted, what makes Win Win a champ of sorts is how it maintains the right tempo throughout the film. Gliding from one scene to the next, there is not a superfluous moment in the entire film.

Moreover, in the right hands, a script like this leads to some golden acting. Not only are the aforementioned actors wonderful, Bobby Cannavale's performance as Michael's best friend, Terry, who has an axe to grind with love, and Amy Ryan's performance as Michael's headstrong wife, Jackie, are superb. Kudos goes to the editor, Tom McArdle, as well.

A crowd pleaser of a higher order, Win Win will not be number one at the box office any weekend or galvanize anyone into political action, but it sure does make for a fine time at the movies.