Todd Haynes Hub
10/19/2007
Todd Haynes: Still a Feminino; Dispatches from LA & Brazil.
Still playing with dolls, superstar filmmaker Todd Haynes just won't play it safe. His self-spoof is not far from heaven. (Dan, thx for tip to Film Experience)
Brazilian Senator Magno Malta makes a televised speech against the proposed hate crimes legislation says, "allowing gays to manifest affection in public would be the equivalent
of giving pedophiles (or even necrophiles) a seal of approval." Made in Brazil has video and translates a few excerpts.
Sadly, AIDS walks have provided essential funding for so long that they have lost much of their energy and are part of the annual change in seasons. This Sunday's for AIDS Project Los Angeles has some renewed energy from a group started after last years walk by local nightlife producer Tom Whitman. The Gang of 100 is invite-only with the stated aim of trying to "engage an entire group of 25-45 year old guys and girls who aren't necessarily used to getting involved." Members each agree to raise $2000 for different charities and 100% of the proceeds from every even go to charity. I'm not sure about the the site's promise that if you see the Gang of 100 name on an invite "you will know that the event will be filled with fun, sexy, gregarious people that you will want to hang out with." but i am impressed that they're close to hitting their $100,000 goal for Sunday's walk. It could be the promised "half-time cocktail hour" (Disclosure: i just donated.)
Posted by Michael Goff in AIDS/HIV, Brazil, Film, Film & TV, Todd Haynes | Permalink | Comments (1)
10/10/2007
News: Al Gore, Arctic, Todd Haynes, Wide Stance, J Lo
Maryland House Speaker Michael E. Busch says he believes in civil unions: "I think people should have the same rights as far as probate is concerned, as far as health care is considered, as far as visitation and all those things."

The New York Times looks at Todd Haynes' Bob Dylan film I'm Not There: "Todd Haynes’s Dylan film isn’t about Dylan. That’s what’s going to be so difficult for people to understand. That’s what’s going to make “I’m Not There” so trying for the really diehard Dylanists. That’s what might upset the non-Dylanists, who may find it hard to figure out why he bothered to make it at all. And that’s why it took Haynes so long to get it made. Haynes was trying to make a Dylan film that is, instead, what Dylan is all about, as he sees it, which is changing, transforming, killing off one Dylan and moving to the next, shedding his artistic skin to stay alive. The twist is that to not be about Dylan can also be said to be true to the subject Dylan."
Al Gore frontrunner for Nobel Peace Prize "in a controversial move that could place saving the planet above saving people from war and conflict."
An animated study of the melting of the Arctic ice pack.
Ugly Betty's subversive flamboyance.
Alabama minister dies during autoerotic undertaking. Gary Aldridge "was found hogtied and wearing two complete wet suits, including a face mask, diving gloves and slippers, rubberized underwear, and a head mask." There was also another detail that the Montogomery Advertiser failed to mention in their story on the late pastor.
J Lo is assembling a lovely collection of body tents but still hasn't announced that she's pregnant.

I Love New York 2 contestant "Unsure" is sure of one thing: he enjoys showing his naughty bits off to the gays.
"Wide stance" enters the lexicon.
The Daily Show's Samantha Bee: "It's been months since the Minneapolis High Court found Larry Craig gay. Now that his petition of 'not gay' has been thrown out, it's official: Larry Craig is gay in the eyes of the law."
Gawker heads inside NYC's "Slingback" party.
Lesbian who was thrown out of New York restaurant women's room by bouncer because she looked like a man, files civil rights lawsuit: "He began pounding on the stall door saying someone had complained that there was a man inside the women’s bathroom, that I had to leave the bathroom and the restaurant. Inside the stall door, I could see him. That horrified me, and it made me feel extremely uncomfortable. I said to him, 'I’m a female, and I’m supposed to be in here.' After I came out of the bathroom stall, I attempted to show him my ID to show him that I was in the right place, and he just refused to look at my identification. His exact words were, 'Your ID is neither here nor there.'"
Posted by Andy in Al Gore, Alabama, Bob Dylan, Film, Gay Marriage, Global Warming, Larry Craig, Maryland, New York, News, Todd Haynes | Permalink | Comments (21)
09/21/2007
Towleroad Guide to the Tube #176
PATTI LABELLE: Goes off on fan at concert.
THE FONZ: Yesterday, was the 30th anniversary of the moment when Happy Days officially "jumped the shark."
TOM VILSACK: Former Iowa governor rips Giuliani's marriage record.
I'M NOT THERE: A report from Venice on the Todd Haynes Bob Dylan film we posted about here.
Check out our previous guides to the Tube here!
Sphere: Related ContentPosted by Andy in Bob Dylan, Heath Ledger, News, Rudy Giuliani, Todd Haynes, Towleroad Guide to the Tube | Permalink | Comments (16)
08/23/2007
Todd Haynes' Dylan Biopic I'm Not There Stirs Up Buzz
Over the last day or so the internet has been abuzz about Cate Blanchett's portrayal of Bob Dylan in gay filmmaker Todd Haynes' (Far from Heaven, Velvet Goldmine, Poison) upcoming experimental biopic I'm Not There.
As a Haynes fan I'm really looking forward to this film, not only for Blanchett, who features prominently in a scene leaked yesterday in which Dylan converses with beat poet Allen Ginsburg (played by David Cross), but for the unusual approach Haynes has taken, enlisting five additional actors who also play Dylan at various stages of his life.
Haynes is at ease with experimentation (his breakthrough film, Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story, was a biopic of the singer's life made entirely with Barbie Dolls) and has proven he can do Oscar-caliber drama, so hopefully I'm Not There will be a treat.
Each actor's portrayal, at different stages of Dylan's growth, is shot in a different style meant to showcase various moments on the folk singer-turned-rock star's journey.
Harvey Weinstein told the New York Times on Tuesday that the film is being given a "rolling release": "With a movie like this you have to build it. I don’t think you can go out on 500 screens. The reason for Film Forum is you go where the best word of mouth is on the movie. I like the movie; I think it’s adventurous. The audience is going to have to work — work in a good way."
He also singles out one actor: "I may be jumping the gun, but if Cate Blanchett doesn’t get nominated, I’ll shoot myself."
And here's the leaked scene with Allen Ginsburg:
The film is the first biopic on the legendary folk icon to get the approval of Dylan himself.
Here's Ledger as the singer (his wife Michelle Williams also has a role):

Shots of the other four actors — Christian Bale, Richard Gere, Marcus Carl Franklin, and Ben Whishaw, after the jump...




I'm Not There is out in New York and L.A. on November 21st.
Sphere: Related ContentPosted by Andy in Allen Ginsburg, Ben Whishaw, Bob Dylan, Cate Blanchett, Christian Bale, Film, Heath Ledger, Marcus Carl Franklin, Music, News, Richard Gere, Todd Haynes | Permalink | Comments (10)



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