Sunday, July 11, 2010

Meeting Mark Borkowski, NYC Playwright


Mark Borkowski is the star and writer of The Perfect Witness (starring Wes Bentley: The Last Word, P2, Dolan's Cadillac, American Beauty) and writer of numerous plays: Box of Nails, Within the Skins of Saints, The Kids are Awake, etc. Prior to this interview, I had no idea this very established playwright I was recommeded to interview was the same guy who gave me nightmares when I watched him in his believable perfomance. The Perfect Witness is a movie you can never forget. Maybe because he was so charming and calm I didn't put two and two together....



When did you begin writing?

I began writing as a child when I was 11 or 12 years old. I wrote a lot of short stories…usually horror…as a kid, I identified with monsters. Especially the more sympathetic ones. I was a weird, lonely kid who felt like an outcast so they really helped me, I don’t know …I worked out a lot of stuff.

Your first play was produced when you were quite young.

Yeah, when I was about 18 years old I took a nervous breakdown… it was a manifestation of drug addiction and trauma I went through as a child. I was hearing voices and a doctor told me to write the voices down as part of my therapy. They came out in the form of dialogue—as voices would-- and after a while I realized I had a play. I had already been involved in theatre as an actor so I was more than familiar with the form. I called the play Saturday Mourn. I showed it to a friend of mine shortly after that and he gave it to the late great Albert Benzwie (artistic director of the legendary Theatre Center Philadelphia back in the 80s). The play went on to win his one-act play festival.

That’s an amazing story.

And when I went to see it something opened inside me and I realized I could help others. From there, I continued to write play after play because I realized I could work out my demons and give them a platform to maybe help others.

What was the response?

After that play people came up to me and said they were not only touched by it but felt comforted because they too felt so alone and really related to my characters. At a young age I realized I could be of service through my work by expelling and sharing my demons.

How long did it take after that to write your next play?

Oh I immediately went into my next play. I was driving a cab when I wrote, Suicide, Inc. It was a full length play, produced at the Walnut Street Theatre in Philadelphia.

How were the reviews?

The Philadelphia Daily News called it “a multi level masterpiece”.

Did you get paid well for your initial plays?

No, you’re lucky if you break even. It’s only in the past few years that I’ve done more than break even. People, especially in New York, know who I am.

What is your genre? Has it stayed the same or changed throughout the years?

Psychological drama seasoned with black comedy. My stuff can be pretty brutal. I push the envelope in order to get my point across. I tried to conform to the mainstream, writing “commercial” type stuff but I usually end up losing interest and shelving it. I have to really feel a direct, even soulful connection to my characters in order to live with them and tell their story. In reference to form, I started out writing realistic plays, then I took the reality into the absurd. I like to place characters in hardcore reality and then challenge them with ultimately absurd circumstances which shake and transform their reality or reality as we know it. Then I found myself slipping into hyper-realism. And now, while always keeping my work rooted in reality (so people can identify), I incorporate mystical, even spiritual layers. Metaphors and symbols. Shakespeare wrote on different levels; he had witches, dreams, ghosts… He had all kinds of stuff…you know? My writing has become much more of an exploration of not just reality but dreams, mysticism and spirituality…

Can you explain hyper realism, I’m not familiar.

It’s hysterical realism… much like what we find in dreams or in madhouses. Or, less dramatically, the average hysteria we might experience when we’re being tormented in, say, the throes of addiction or the loss of a lover… For a while there I loved writing about hysteria, you know?

Give me an example.

Well in one of my plays, Within the Skins of Saints, a girl is getting ready to jump off a subway platform and a guy enters and has until the subway comes to stop her. By the end, she almost succeeds in convincing him to jump with her. She shares her dreams of saintly mutilation and the hysteria that caused her to be institutionalized and medicated. She decided to stop taking the meds and escaped the madhouse and is now ready to die and be with her lover, God (a notion that many female Saints also shared at martyrdom). I know it sounds like a dark journey but there is a tinge of hope the end. A branch for the audience to grab onto. I feel it’s kinda my responsibility, after having taken an audience into a dark tunnel, to give them a tinge of light at the end. Or at least furnish road signs so they can get themselves out.

Wow, tell me about another play of this type.

Another dark play I recently wrote is called Painting Corpses. It’s about a painter who’s bottoming out on drugs and alcohol. He gets a call from an aristocrat who asks him to paint a picture of his dead wife. The money is too good to be true (100 grand) and he accepts the commission. The aristocrat delivers the body to the artist’s loft. When the artist begins to paint her…as the days pass…he starts to fall in love with her…

Whoa!

…and one night he’s very drunk and he’s imagining her lips saying beautiful things to him, her eyes looking at him, her ears listening… he imagines her the woman of his dreams.

And…eventually…he makes love to her… Oh My God!

…the next morning he wakes up and he comes to…he’s very hung over and… she’s sitting there. She’s alive! He thinks. He doesn’t know if she’s a supernatural phenomena or a psychotic delusion. One thing leads to another, and she tells him that she doesn’t want to be painted. She didn’t want it in life and she certainly doesn’t want it in death! BUT she’ll make a deal with him… He needs five primary colors to paint her… she says she will grant him the five colors if he does five favors for her. He finds himself bargaining with the dead. These five favors take him on a journey that ends up changing his life forever.

Wow! What happens in the end?

People have to see it to find out. We workshopped it at the Actor’s Studio and right now we’re trying to find finance for the production. The play is like a Charles Bukowski meets Sleeping Beauty… it’s actually a very beautiful play. One of the biggest qualms people, and some producers, have with this is the necrophilia. They don’t think he should molest the corpse. That the audience won’t forgive him. I think its bullshit. I mean, look at mythology—especially the Egyptians. Isis and Osiris. I mean, necrophilia takes on a whole different meaning when you look at it through those fucking glasses! So, okay, now I’m modifying, maybe… with extreme reluctance.

Any big actors in it?

Yeah… Elias Koteus played the lead and it was directed by Richard Masur.

How many of your plays have been on stage?

One acts, short plays, they’ve been done all over the world…too many to count. I also write screenplays.

Oh?

I wrote a film called The Perfect Witness.

I remember that movie, oh my god…that was you!?

With Wes Bentley (Ghost Rider, American Beauty). It was originally called “The Ungodly”. It’s still called that everywhere else except America. It’s being distributed in England this September.

That movie was so scary!

Oh you’re a chicken shit.

Tell them what it’s about.

It’s about a down and out film maker, he’s a newly recovered drug addict…he lives with his mom and he’s obsessed with a serial killer. Through months of research, he figures out where the killer might strike and, low and behold, he tracks him down.

You played the killer. You were great!

…. So he catches me murdering—or rather, he catches the killer murdering someone and videotapes it. He then blackmails him into being his documentary subject.

And he agrees to it.

… and as he gets to know the killer, the killer gets to know him and… well, again, I would rather our readers rent it. You can get it at Blockbuster or Netflix. It’s also on Showtime and The Movie Channel. It’s a film about addiction (to drugs or murder) and ambition. Also, personal accountability. Ultimately, it’s about a person taking responsibly for their part in something. His ambiton leads him to look the other way and allow haenous crimes to occur, similar to Nazi Germany. People do it all the time and it’s fucked.

That movie was intense. I can’t believe that was you and that you wrote it. Was that your first movie?

First major feature length movie...I’ve had a lot of short films produced. I’ve sold screenplays but they haven’t been made yet.

How long did that take to write?

About a year and a half and it took twenty four (or so) days to shoot. Editing took a while.

What? It only took twenty four days to shoot it? That’s so fast!

Yeah, well that’s independent filmmaking. It comes down to making it as quickly as possible because everyday costs thousands of dollars…. The editing took several months though.

What inspired you to write The Perfect Witness?

It started out as a play. I had a few scenes but it didn’t go anywhere. Wasn’t working. Tom Dunn, the director, and I had been wanting to write something together but we couldn’t figure out what. One day I told him about this play I couldn’t finish. He was amazed by the story and told me I couldn’t finish it as a play because the damn thing is a film! We locked ourselves up and wrote the screenplay. Within a year or two he made it into a film and cast me as the killer.

Bet it got all sorts of awards!

Yeah, I got best actor at the Portugal Film festival… We got into the Austin Film Festival. Brussels, Amsterdam, Sitges (Spain, it’s right on the coast), and a few others. Then First Look Studios swept it up, changed its name from The Ungodly to The Perfect Witness and… distributed it.

Do you consider that your biggest accomplishment so far?

Yeah, it’s one of them….it even got picked up by Showtime and—oh, I think I said that already.

Wow! If you could do something else? I mean, if you weren’t an actor or writer?

Oh I’m a carpenter. That’s sorta my survival job. I was very poor as a young man…

And now?

I get commissions to write screenplays…for example these Russians came to me with a short story called The Animals, and I adapted it into a screenplay. After I’m done, they translate it back and shoot it as a Russian language film. The money is okay. I also get royalties for my plays… right now three of my plays are being done…

Oh, where?

In Philadelphia TheWalking Fish Theatre is doing my play The Kids Are Awake. My two one acts, Don’t Listen to What it Sounds Like and I like to Watch ‘em Beg Ma are running at The Producers Club here in New York.

What’s that about?

Watch them all and find out.

Ok, I will and I'm going to tell my sisters I met that scary guy in A Perfect Witness, I can't believe it, that's one of my favorite movies!

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Gini Graham Scott, Ph.D.



GINI GRAHAM SCOTT, Ph.D., J.D., has taught at California State University, East Bay, Notre Dame de Namur University, and the Investigative Career Program in San Francisco. She writes nonfiction, scripts and has published over 50 books. Her latest books on business relationships and professional development include: WANT IT, SEE IT, GET IT; DISAGREEMENTS, DISPUTES AND ALL OUT WAR; 30 DAYS TO A MORE POWERFUL MEMORY; A SURVIVAL GUIDE TO MANAGING EMPLOYEES FROM HELL; A SURVIVAL GUIDE FOR WORKING WITH BAD BOSSES; and A SURVIVAL GUIDE FOR WORKING WITH HUMANS (all from AMACOM 2004-2009), AMERICAN MURDER (Greenwood 2007), others such as HOMICIDE BY THE RICH AND FAMOUS (Berkley 2006, Greenwood 2005); HOMICIDE: 100 YEARS OF MURDER IN AMERICA (Contemporary 1998), YOU THE JURY (Seven Locks 1997), CAN WE TALK? THE POWER AND INFLUENCE OF TALK SHOWS (Plenum 1996), MIND YOUR OWN BUSINESS: THE BATTLE FOR PERSONAL PRIVACY (Plenum 1995), THE TRUTH ABOUT LYING (Smart Books 1994), POWER OF FANTASY (Citadel 1994), and PRIVATE EYES (Paladin 1994, with Sam Brown).

She has received national media exposure for her books, has hosted a weekly radio talk show series, CHANGEMAKERS, featuring interviews on various topics, which aired from 1991 to 1993 to 2 million listeners in over 70 countries. Scott has written over 100 songs, featured at http://www.songworks.net/ , and has cuts on several records. She has won awards for her photography, featured at www.artsandphotos.com. She has designed several lines of dolls and character licenses and writes children's books....and this isn't all, check out her websites (she has many more accomplishments!!)

Let me start by stating when I ‘googled’ you, there were 36,000 results! I also discovered you have 4-5 separate websites on very diverse topics such as music-as you’ve written over one hundred songs, books-on almost every topic one could write on, AND you have a few consultant companies and not to mention you’ve taught at several universities all over the U.S! And…every book you’ve written has its own site! It must be REALLY good to be Gini Graham Scott.

Oh, thank you.

And….you’ve been on several talk shows like Montel Williams and Oprah…. And what other shows were you on?

I was also a guest on CNN, Good Morning America…The O’Reily Factor …to talk about topics I’m an expert on….

Which seems to be EVERYTHING...

…I could get calls on the topic of crime for example because I’m considered an expert…. I’ve written many books on crimes ….

Right now as you know I’m writing a blog. Most people blog for many reasons…one of the reasons I blog is because I’m a scatter brain and I just don’t want to lose what I’m writing. However, the overall goal for my blog is to write a book…do you think this is a good way to do that?

I think most definitely. I also started using a blog…I have this book called Playing the Lying Game and the original book, was from a blog…

Really? Christian Lander did that…wrote a blog as kind of like a joke and it became a huge success...the book is Stuff White People Like. That’s good to know it’s also worked for you. So what’s that book mostly about…about lying?

Well there are different categories of liars and….there’s this continuum. I had a lie quiz at the end of the blog and many people wanted to know about it so a lot of the information is the same in the book. And after the book came out, I started posting articles and posting them on EZINE an articles.com site where there are about 250,000 articles in return for links to their websites…

That’s a smart way to promote what you write!

And I also have a service that sends out quires and press releases so I have a data base and from time to time I will send out postings…it’s a PR and networking connection…

So, if someone wanted to consult with you…

Well, there’s a fee. I subscribe to a number of queries…I’ve used it for myself and the business which connects writers to publishers…then there are other categories like film festivals…I also tie into what I’m currently doing...

Which is?

The next thing is how to write and produce your own short film. It’s useful to people doing these short films…for someone who just wants to just take a camera out with them… that’s fine. But for someone who is really serious, this book is informative for them.

Wow, so it seems to me that whatever you’re doing in your life…becomes a book?

Yes! Thankfully whatever I do, I write about (it).

You’re a great promoter for all these projects. What’s a good tool one can use to self promote?

One is Linked-In to promote your business or yourself….

My boss uses that and it certainly has helped her obtain clients. I have to get an account now. What about for book promotions?

You know the book business have changed so much and it’s very much celebrity driven…

It really is!

The mainstream publishers have had these blockbusters, celebrity- books AND people are reading less or in different ways…so now there are e-books and packaging blogs into e-books…

Hmmm, I guess it’s true the ‘old way’ is no longer the most effective, it seems.

It’s something like 500,000 books getting published each year and 350,000 of them are self- published.

So you think that’s the way for writers to go then?

It certainly is one way, yes, that’s something I’m doing now for clients…

Can you give me an example of how that’s worked for one of them?

Well, for example I have a self-published client who’s published and has had great success. She’s managed to sell thousands of copies and that’s a lot even for books that have been published by reputable book companies!

That is! How long did that take for her to do?

Only about six months.

Wow! What are some difficulties people face when looking for a book company to publish their work?

Well, what publishers want these days is someone who already has a platform. Like I said before, books are more celebrity driven and if you aren’t famous or well-known they may not represent you and if they do, the advance for a book these days compared to in the past is about half. If a self published book becomes successful and I help my clients make this happen…then they can build a platform…

And then they can get bigger advances from those reputable book companies like Random House!

Exactly…things are vastly changing for ALL writers including those who have been represented and published by major book companies many times like myself. I’m doing other things to promote my work myself now.

Like what specifically?

Well one very basic and simple way to self promote your work is through FaceBook.

I’m doing that for this blog too. And I've seen musicians do this...and comics. One comic posted a link on my wall to promote himself. His name is Luke Francis actually and now I’m buying his DVD...he's very funny! So, that promotion strategy can work.

Yeah…I’ve been building up my face book account and I think at some point I’ll write a book about this process also…

Big surprise there (laughing).

Well, it’s whatever I’m doing, you know if I know a lot of these things it becomes possible…it’s just very easy to publish books these days….the average book is for people looking for quick reads.

And ‘Quick reads’ would be considered… how long exactly?

Oh, only about…50, 000 words and some publishes will only want to work with those types of books because they sell a lot quicker. I have a few books like this ….they’re substantially shorter…

Wow, I always thought the book writing process was LONG and it took years to publish a single book.

Everything in this business is changing…now I think you must have an ability to market your book where you have an audience for a particular niche like you have someone who’s looking to mortgage and you have some information on that…there’s a book for that purpose. So, for a lot of people with all these formats, you can cut out the’ middle man’ or if it’s not really for the purpose of making money although that’s also nice…you may just want to have more marketability… to get hired for companies….

The e-book and self publishing thing is starting to sound like a good idea to me now.

Print-on-demand is another way and I have a book on network marketing and another one on party planning…which at one point was published by The Idiots Guide for a few years and then I got the rights back.

You can get the rights back for books you’ve published for companies? I never knew that.

Yeah. I have 20 books that were published by major book companies and I got the rights back for them years later and by dividing them up into sections with let’s say 90 pages, it makes it easier so people can still buy the book but there are also ways they can just buy a section so that’s another way to sell it for much less…

That’s smart. I always wondered about that…what happens to books when they stop selling at stores?

I help my clients with all these things and I also tell clients how to pitch film rights for their scripts….there’s just a number of things I do consulting for with my PR firm.

And you have a …PHD in…

Sociology... I just found that there was less interest in that and there was a cut back in this at the time and so I sort of shifted myself and I ended up writing a lot of books about businesses.

So what was your first book then?

Well my first book was my dissertation for my doctorate but it was shortly after this I wrote Working with Humans and then I wrote Working with Bad Bosses as a follow up which I wrote next when I was commissioned by a book company to write it.

Where did you get your research? These must have been fun to write. I can’t think of anyone not having had a ‘bad boss’ it’s just such a common thing…unfortunately.

Yes, at one point I had one…and I’ve interviewed people and I did the same for the book on ethic s and lying…they’re based on interviewing… and some of these recent books are from PR and discovering what other people do.

What about that funny photo book I used to always see in Barnes and Noble…the dog one? That was a HUGE book, it was everywhere at one point….who published it?

Random House published that…it was Do You Look like your Dog

It was brilliant…what made you think of it?

I was just testing a data base and put up some pictures and little comments and I was contacted to make an entire book out of it so you just never know what people are finding interesting.

Is it still out there?

No, not in stores no...but you can still buy it of course. After a couple of years I got the rights back from Random House for that one also.

How can this happen? I should have asked you that before.

Oh, that's okay (laughing)...when the book goes off the market….after sales go below a certain number or point, you write a letter stating that you want the rights back and sometimes they’ll tell you to purchase the unsold books for a fee…..it’s not a big deal with most publishers.

Was that book your most money making book?

No, Want it ,See It, Get it...which uses manifesting techniques was more popular and sold more…and Playing the Lying Game was very big also a lot of people took an interest to it.

Wow, and how do you come up these ideas…how did you obtain the knowledge for the manifestation books which I mean are HUGE now, The Secret for example sold millions of copies.

It’s like The Secret in a way but…I think my book is more of a methodology that can be applied to any technique.

What kind of technique?

Well, I would consider it a compliment to this book…it’s how you can apply it… mine is more you want to express your gratitude; here are some ways you can do this...

So, what’ll your next book be about?

I think the Linked-in book that’s getting finalized as we speak, is going to be very popular….it’s a comprehensive guide and gets more involved with all the different capacities of this network strategy.

Oh, I see. So what else can you tell me about yourself?

Well, if anyone has a book, film, song or idea they’d like to promote, they can reach me at http://www.ginigrahamscott.com/ or changemakers@pacbell.net or http://www.publishersandagents.net/ or info@changemakerspublishandwriting.com or http://www.e-bookpublishing.com/ or http://www.changemakersproductions.com/ some of these are my own sites and others I sold but I still do consulting with them.

I was going to just ask you about that! That's a lot for one person...well, thank you so much Gini for sharing all your pearls of wisdom…I want to be like you when I grow up and publish fifty books and be a guest on Oprah and Montel Williams and Bill O’Reily …even though he can be mean…

And you can….and you will! (laughing).

Hope so! Think I’ll need to read Want it, See it, Get it to learn tips from you first...

It’ll help you manifest anything you want and bring it to life!

That's so awesome….I’m so excited…thanks again.

You are VERY welcome Phil!

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Mary Ann Johanson, TV and Film Critique

6

MaryAnn Johanson is a New York City-based writer whose writings on film, TV, DVD, and pop culture appear in a variety of US alternative weekly newspapers including Salt Lake City Weekly and Charleston City Paper, and in the UK’s Blockbuster Preview. Online, she contributes to Film.com and FlickFilosopher.com. She is the author of The Totally Geeky Guide to The Princess Bride, and is an award-winning screenwriter. Today she spoke with me about her job, writing, blogging, what it’s like to meet so many celebrities among other things.


What made you decide to do this…how did it all begin?

I went to film school in the late 80s because I wanted to direct. However I soon realized it wasn’t for me and I dropped out of film school. But I was writing more and more. So, basically the bell went off and I thought if I’m making movies how will I be a writer? So that’s how I began writing. Then in 1997 when the web became big I began a web site and then it started to get really big…

It is really big! And I must say you are very insightful not just with your reviews but also with your predictions.

Oh, thank you…

I was shocked and impressed by your accurate predictions for the 2009 Oscars. I saw you on that show, Grit TV with Laura Flanders...you predicted Sandra Bullock for The Blind Side AND you also predicted Kathryn Bigelow as best director for Hurt Locker and they both won!

I certainly wasn’t alone in making those predictions and I don’t think anyone was hugely surprised by those wins…

No?

…the academy is very sentimental in a lot of ways and Sandra Bullock’s win totally fit into that sentimental side. They’re not going to have another chance to honor her so they took this chance to do it.

What do you mean she won’t have another chance?

Oh, I could be wrong…she’s reached some sort of pinnacle in her career with this role and there aren’t a lot of roles for older actresses and they tend to go to better actresses but all that said… I would be delighted to be wrong about that. I would love for there to be more opportunities for any actress to have more opportunity. So, what I’m saying is unless something really changes…she’s not going to have another opportunity.

I see what you mean now. And sadly, I think you’re right. The age thing for woman in Hollywood is a major concern and that really upsets me. Anyway, back to your web site…how did it get so big?

At the time (1990s) no one had been doing this. A lot of mainstream press was noticing because there weren’t that many people doing this so I was able to capitalize on that. Lots of people were going on-line for independent movie reviews and my site always came up. It’s interesting to see that not too many people that started around the same time are around today. I mean there are two sites that are still huge Ain’t it Cool News which is run by Harry Knowles from Texas makes millions…

Millions?

Yes. Part of my plan this summer is to try to figure out how to increase the traffic to my website...it’s good but I think it can be better.

I wish you luck. I think it’s great…and it’s lead you to several television appearances…can we talk about that?

Sure. I’m not really a TV person per se but if it brings more exposure then I’ll put up with it. I’ve done radio a lot more than I’ve done television.

Like what?

There’re almost always local…I recently did an appearance on a rural radio show in Canada.

With radio you really don’t have to travel…

Oh no, we did it on the phone. They emailed me in the morning and asked me if I wanted to discuss Conan’s move to another show.

So you don’t just review but you also do commentary…that’s interesting. How does one make money in this?

First from advertising on the website which is based primarily on traffic and sometimes ‘click thru's’ and then also selling reprint rights to Newspapers.

What newspapers?

Salt Lake City Weekly, Folio Weekly…that’s in Jacksonville Fl, Charleston City Paper, Monterrey County Weekly, California…

And what about the web ads?

I use a network…Value Click…they use banner ads and square ads…they’re the ones for major corporations; we’re all in that network…they’re selling ads across a network of websites, not just my websites.

I see. You’re giving me a lot of ideas for my own blog. I love that. Tell me about the celebrities you’ve interviewed?

Well, sometimes it’s been in a round table situation like everyone is discussing something and in walks Meryl Streep or Samuel Jackson or Kiera Knightly or Colin Farrell…um, James Franco, I could go on and on.

Have you published something on all of them?

The reason why you don’t always publish a round table discussion is because you’re not the only writer there and so it’s not unique. Other journalists are getting the same material. But…if it’s one on one then I always publish that. But that’s always rare. However, there was once a situation where I had written something unique that a director had spoke on and for some reason, no other journalist had picked up on it but me.

What do you mean?

It was during a press conference for the film District 9. The star of the film who’s a film maker also who had never acted before…his name is Sharlto Copley http://awfj.org/2009/08/12/awfj-women-on-film-sharlto-copley-on-district-9-maryann-johanson/ …well, somebody asked him, “What does your name mean?” He went into this big explanation on it and then there was also a big discussion on the geeky sci-fi production stuff. I posted all of it on website because I thought my readers would appreciate it and for some unexplainable reason no other journalist published that tid-bit about his name! And then the movie ended up being HUGE and I ended up getting all the credit for the bit about his name and the sci-fi bits and it eventually got linked in People magazine!

With all those journalists there, not one wrote about it…that’s very strange. I feel like if I was there I would try to write about everything that (celebrity) is saying. So, tell me what it was like meeting James Franco, what sort of guy is he?

I went and did a round table for a movie called the Dead Girl with Marcia Gayharden and James Franco among other people and she brought her nieces with her because they wanted to meet James Franco and we met her first. We all sit in multiple rooms and they move the talent around and the nieces were so excited to tell us all about their meeting him and then when we talked to him about it he was totally laid back about it and it was very sweet.

Who else have you personally interviewed one on one?

I got to interview Ron Livingston from Sex and the City http://www.flickfilosopher.com/blog/2007/11/ron_livingston_on_holly_and_mu.html and most recently Rodrigo Garcia http://awfj.org/2010/05/06/awfj-women-on-film-rodrigo-garcia-on-making-movies-about-women-maryann-johanson-interviews/ he directed Mother and Child…

Yes, I know. I read a lot of great reviews about this film. His father is Gabriel Garcia Marquez…I had to read many of his books in college. How did you get chosen to interview him? This little indie is getting lots of good press!

The publicists connect to me. He’s totally done to earth which is true about most of the people…I mean take someone like Merryll Streep who was just like completely goofy and it just wasn’t what I expected…that’s how he was. If you ask most people about their job this is how they are about it. He was just a pleasure to talk to…he was intelligent…there’s intent behind his films and he’s able to articulate that in an interesting way.

Wow, I would be intrigued to meet him, the son of the great writer…I would be totally spellbound. Oh, and I remember you mentioned meeting Colin Farrell…

He was quiet, thoughtful, and introspective; shy even, totally not what I expected. He has this reputation of being a ‘lad’ as the Brits and Irish say like this bad-boy ‘ladies man’ but this totally didn’t come across when I met him…did not jibe with the shy thoughtful artist he came across as.

Wow, that is surprising! You consider him an artist…what movies of his would be considered artistic?

This round table was for the movie, In Bruges.

Wow, I am really surprised I never heard of this film until now!

The title is a city in Brussels. Brendan Gleeson played the other lead…it was like if Laurel and Hardy were hit-men and they were stuck in this quaint little city. It’s a hilarious movie and he’s such a moron in this movie and he’s not in real life…I really highlight what an excellent actor he is…which I always thought. I also thought he was great in Pride and Glory…he plays an NYC cop in that with a perfect American accent. In Miami Vice he was good also…and um, Cassandra’s Dream which he did with Ewan McGregor. They play brothers in London and one is confident/secure and the other is a mess and they play the opposite of what you’d expect and although it’s not a very good movie…they play very well together.

Oh, and I really love Amanda Segfried, what was she like?

That was a while ago….she was doing the film, Chloe but she’s been in all these movies since then so I think it’s worthwhile to go back and transcribe it all. I mean she was so fresh and spontaneous which is not like what a lot of much more experienced actors are like…

What do you mean?

They have their patter…

Patter?

You know like routine…they get the same questions all of the time.

Did you know about her before meeting her?

I had watched many of her films and I think she has a lot of screen presence...

What other female actresses?

Julianne Moore http://awfj.org/2010/04/03/awfj-women-on-film-julianne-moore-on-atom-egoyan-amanda-seyfried-and-choosing-chloe-maryann-johanson-interviews/ …she is so elegant…that’s the one word that comes to mind. I know I’ve saying a lot about this…I guess we only get the smart ones (laughing).

And you did get a one on one interview with Paul Schneider http://awfj.org/2009/09/17/3832/ ?

He’s on Parks and Recreation. I was interviewing him for an upcoming movie of John Keats...it came out last autumn, Bright Star. I hadn’t seen the show at the time. That interview went well and when an interview like that works whether one on one or round table you make someone laugh or you make them say, “wow I’ve never thought of that before” means you haven’t asked the same questions they get asked by all these other journalists.

Does this happen often?

It can. I made Sam Rockwell laugh once before at an interview session…I likened him to one character he played to another and he hadn’t thought of that before. And Paul and I just talked a lot about his acting and afterwards he joked with me and said, “I don’t think I need to see my therapist today.” I thought he was going to get nominated for that role…then my interviewing would have really taken off!

I think it already has…your content is great.

Another one and one I got to do was with Kirk Jones http://awfj.org/2009/11/29/4128/ he directed a movie last year with Robert Dinero and Drew Barrymore called Everybody’s fine.

Oh, I wanted to see that…thanks for reminding me.

He was great, he was so enthusiast about the move and so was I and this doesn’t always happen. It’s sort of like an on-the-road movie…so we talked about English film making verse American film making and how American landscapes inspire different kinds of films.

So what was the movie about? It seems like it’s like a self odyssey film from the way you describe it.

It’s a movie about family and how family members sometimes lie to keep the peace…

Can you give me an example?

Let’s just say there are four children that live in different places and everyone knows something is going on about the brother and they keep giving him (the father, Robert Deniro) excuses.

I think you did say you met him too!

Yes, never interviewed him though. Robert Deniro is very smart…he’s been in everything and he’s everywhere and it’s always difficult to get him to say even a monosyllable. He just doesn’t like to talk about himself.

Tell me something about your job that is surprising.

My job is not as glamorous as it sounds. First of all you cannot act like a fan. I’ve seen many journalists take pictures and ask for autographs. It is a job…yeah it’s awesome…I wouldn’t do it if I didn’t love it…you go and see the movie, then spend hours writing about it...

Can a review or something else you create about a movie be sold more than once?

Absolutely, I do that all the time…I’m selling (it) to several local newspapers. I mean I couldn’t sell it to Time Magazine and Newsweek but I could sell to two or more newspapers in different states because then there’s no competition.

I see…

I have written exclusive stuff once in awhile… for example I reviewed The Indian Jones Box Set for Archaeology Magazine and that was exclusive; they paid a lot more than $75.

And they commissioned you for that?

They did yeah.

Wow, that’s very cool. I recently read one of your reviews about Just Wright and it seemed like you were in love with this movie (laughing)?

Really? Did you read it?

Yes, I’m just joking. You couldn’t stand this movie. Was it really that bad?

I went to see it in this tiny little screening room...they are all over the city…you wouldn’t even know it. So it was me and a bunch of other journalists watching Queen Latifia in the middle of the afternoon…

And there’s nothing good you can say about it?

No. Queen Latifia is amazing…she’s fantastic, she just deserves better movies…one good thing is she didn’t have to loss forty pounds to get the guy…that’s a good thing. Too bad the guy is such a drip and the movie was so predictable.

What’s the most rewarding part?

Every once in a while I’ll get a letter from a movie director who will say something nice to me and that’s always nice. But the thing I find most rewarding is the site. A lot of sites suffer from span or junk comments but I’ve tried to foster a community that is intelligent and has something to say to each other even if we don’t always agree.

I have to say…you do get a lot of comments to your site…which isn’t common for any site….

I’ve managed to maintain that even as the site traffic has grown. So I also have this big master file, there’s one link on the front pages which has every review since I began…and the blogging software lets you tag your posts and that creates a kind of index which is very useful.

Let’s talk about your book!

Okay…it is a long deconstruction of the movie A Princess Bride...um…it’s a social cult favorite movie so I wanted to find out what was so appealing about it…how it falls into classical fairy tale structure and how it turns it upside down and plays with it.

So it is a fairytale then, she falls in love?

Yeah, but prince charming is a pirate and there’s an evil prince, a giant, a magician, it’s got everything…true love. It’s one of the first movies that weren’t very big in the theaters but when it got released on VHS and something happened…it became an instant cult.

Who did you interview for it?

I did interview some cast members and a couple of other film critics and one guy who is an expert in fairy tales but mostly it was my opinion…I just made it an e-book.

Is that cheaper?

Yes, the actual book to buy is about ten bucks and the e-book would be about two….but I think it could be easier to sell more that way…

For sure, I understand that…you could sell a few thousand copies if the price is right. I want to buy a copy now.

Let me know what you think.

Well Maryann, I’m glad I could let my readers know about your site so next time they decide whether or not to go and see a film or wait for the DVD they’ll check out your site first. Oh and I have two more questions…

Ask away.

Can I go with you to a round table sometime?

Sorry, it’s only for journalists…otherwise, yes.

Okay and what film have you been commissioned to see tonight?

McGruber…the release of this movie starts tomorrow and they’re only just premiering it tonight… which is never a good thing.

Enjoy!

Learn more about the ever insightful MaryAnn Johanson! She was a nominee: BEST ONLINE CRITIC, 2010 National Entertainment Journalism Award (Los Angeles Press Club) and check out her sites FlickFilosopher.com: http://www.flickfilosopher.com/ and MaryAnnJohanson.com: http://www.maryannjohanson.com/.
She is a member of the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences: http://www.iadas.net/
 Alliance of Women Film Journalists: http://www.awfj.org/ and a member, Online Film Critics Society: http://www.ofcs.org/ and here’s two more interviews you might want to read: Neill Blomkamp (DISTRICT 9 director):
http://www.flickfilosopher.com/blog/2009/08/082609more_from_neill_blomkamp_on_di.html



Shohreh Aghdashloo: http://www.flickfilosopher.com/blog/2009/06/i_interview_shohreh_aghdashloo.html