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FilmCouch #53

Kevin Buist
By Kevin Buist posted 1 year ago
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sff 08

As you may well know, the Spout team is knee-deep in Sundance, that juggernaut of American film festivals. For this episode of FilmCouch we present a conversation between the regulars (Paul, Kevin, Karina) and Filmspotting’s Adam Kempenaar about what we’re up to at the festival this year. Adam is looking forward to a pair of docs about legendary artists, Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired and Gonzo: The Life and Work of Hunter S. Thompson. Among the many film’s on Karina’s to-see list are two movies by pairs of brothers: the Zellner brothers’ Goliath and the Duplass brothers’ Baghead. Kevin is hoping the Mexican near-future dystopian sci-fi film Sleep Dealer can live up to the expectations set by CuarĂ³n’s Children of Men.

 
 filmcouch 53 [16:53m]: Play Now | Download

FilmCouch 53

Discussion with John Cusack

Paul Moore
By Paul Moore posted 2 years ago
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Grace is Gone

Adam Kempenaar from Filmspotting sent us excerpts from a roundtable discussion with John Cusack at the Chicago International Film Festival. Cusack discusses Grace is Gone, a new movie where he plays a widower taking his daughters on a road trip after learning his wife was killed in Iraq. If it sounds like this role is off-type for him, it is. Especially when you consider that the 80’s most swooned over slacker’s main draw was to “get into the head of a real believer, someone who has put a lot of his energy and time and faith into needing to believe that the country has a righteous purpose…”

Thanks to Adam Kempenaar for the coverage. His highlights with John Cusack follow after the jump.

…Read more

Werner Herzog on Rescue Dawn “Libel”

Karina Longworth
By Karina Longworth posted 2 years ago
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Last week, I wrote about Rescue Dawn: The Truth, a website where friends and family of Gene DeBruin, the character played by Jeremy Davies in Werner Herzog’s film, make the case that the director distorted the real life events at the Laotian prison camp in order to puff up the heroism of Dieter Dengler. Conservative bloggers and critics, who had initially praised the film for upholding American patriotic values, immediately turned on Herzog. They were particularly fired up by the claim that Herzog had been contacted by people close to DeBruin but had ignored their pleas to make changes to the film. In response to charges that DeBruin’s defenders were “blown off” by Herzog, Debbie Schlussel wrote, “Since Mr. Herzog would not tell the truth, I will.”

But over the weekend, I was listening to the August 3rd episode of Filmspotting, which features an interview with Herzog. This interview must have been recorded at least two weeks before Schlussel started the blog firestorm with her post, and in it Herzog voluntarily acknowledges the DeBruin camp’s unhappiness with his version of the story. Herzog concedes the discrepancy between his version and the family’s version, but says the Gene seen in Rescue is basically an exaggeration of certain character flaws related by Dengler to Herzog before Dengler’s death. Herzog’s basic attitude is, “I understand that they love Gene and want to think the best of him, but sometimes when men are put in extraordinary situations, they behave in ways that even the people closest to them wouldn’t expect.” You can listen to the podcast here.

This would seem to absolve Herzog of the charges of libel that were recklessly flying around the blogosphere last week. It’s not that he willfully mischaracterized DeBruin; the Herzog and the DeBruin camps simply have two different takes on the truth.