As always, Michael is doing some special work – can’t wait to see these and  
’til Oscars in March!

From: Winedale-l 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
 on behalf of James Ayres <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Date: Monday, September 21, 2015 at 8:26 PM
To: 
"[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>"
 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>,
 "[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>" 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: [Winedale-l] Michael and Sony Pictures Classics

Here it is.  Sorry not the first time.

Doc


Link to your HR Video:
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/video/tiff-sony-pictures-classics-presidents-823444

DEADLINE - Sony Pictures Classics Comes Out Swinging With Three World Premieres 
– Toronto Film Festival
by Pete Hammond

Sony Pictures Classics literally has taken the 40th Toronto International Film 
Festival by storm in the past 24 hours.  Not even a steady downpour could 
dampen the spirits of SPC as they threw their annual Saturday night dinner at 
Creme Brasserie here to celebrate no less than three major world premiere Oscar 
contenders unveiled in less than a day.  Co-Presidents Michael Barker and Tom 
Bernard have been busy to say the least.  On top of that their Cannes Grand 
Prize winner, Son Of Saul , continues its festival march to the Dolby as one of 
the favorites to land a Best Foreign Pete Hammond badgeLanguage Movie Oscar.  
But it was the triple header I saw yesterday that grabbed my attention at this 
Canadian feast of cinema that is almost impossible to navigate with so many 
movies competing for attention. In consecutive order I saw first-ever public 
screenings of director Marc Abraham’s Hank Williams biopic I Saw The Light, 
then a transcendent performance by the great Dame Maggie Smith in director 
Nicholas Hytner’s The Lady In The Van, and capped off by the terrific 
directorial debut of James Vanderbilt with Truth.

The latter  tells the story of the CBS 60 Minutes 2004  scandal about the 
investigation of  President George W. Bush’s  National Guard record that almost 
took CBS News down with it, ended Dan Rather’s career with the network, and 
forced the firing of star news producer Mary Mapes who sadly hasn’t worked in 
television news since.  Writer/Director Vanderbilt has crafted a true 
eye-opener and a hell of a journalistic thriller that will be a must-see for 
serious moviegoers when it opens October 16.  I am told that getting it 
finished in time for Saturday’s 5 pm premiere was nearly as nail-biting as 
what’s on screen, but Vanderbilt has really pulled it off. Although neither 
star, Cate Blanchett, who brilliantly plays Mapes, and Robert Redford who is 
terrific as Rather, made the trip to TIFF,  there is no question that their 
performances have thrust them into the awards conversation with Blanchett 
turning in another remarkable lead performance this year, and Redford, who 
despite directing and Honorary Oscars has only been nominated once for acting 
(1973’s The Sting, which was the same year Bush joined up with the Guard 
possibly in order to avoid Vietnam). He  should definitely be a contender for 
Best Supporting Actor.  He’s that good. Even Dan Rather himself, who was in 
attendance for the screening and party, told me he was impressed. “It wasn’t an 
impersonation, but a real attempt to get at the essence,” he told me about the 
performance. Rather gave a ringing endorsement of the film itself. You can’t do 
better than that, and now over a decade later this film (based on Mapes’ book) 
75aims to get at the “truth” whatever that might be.

Redford still looks like Redford but you really feel like you are watching 
Rather. Not an easy trick for someone so famous playing another person equally 
famous. The entire cast is excellent and two of them were at TIFF, Topher Grace 
and Elisabeth Moss, who play members of the 60 Minutes investigative unit.   
Grace compares the movie to 70’s classics like All The Presidents Men and The 
Parallax View  and said working with Redford was a highlight in his career so 
far. He also mentioned that it really has something to say about the declining 
state of TV news pointing to inane questions he was asked  just while doing the 
TIFF red carpet for the film. He’s excited about working now on Brad Pitt’s 
Netflix project War Machine, which he describes as in the spirit of Dr. 
Strangelove. Emmy nominee Moss spent much of the evening deep in conversation 
with her tablemate – Rather – who seemed to be enjoying this foray into the 
world of film festivals.

As for Blanchett who already has the highly praised Cannes entry Carol (The 
Weinstein Company, November 20) firmly planting her in the running for Best 
Actress, this riveting turn as Mapes could thicken the plot. There is no way 
either role could be shoehorned into supporting nods which is often the case  
when an actor has two competing leading roles in the same year, so what 
happens? “I thought she was great in both so that’s up for all of you to 
decide, ” Barker diplomatically answered when I asked about the campaign 
tactics that might be employed here.  My personal opinion is that the Mapes 
role is just so overwhelmingly powerful that it would be hard to deny her a 
nod. This is going to be a real Solomon’s choice for the actors branch. Of 
course there is also the factor that Blanchett won two years ago for another 
Sony Classics film Blue Jasmine, so voters may not want to go back to this well 
so quickly, but hey when a star is on this kind of roll just go with it.

And speaking of the Best Actress race, whatever happens in the case of 
Blanchett, I do not see how the legendary 80 year old Dame Maggie Smith can be 
denied yet another nomination for her hilarious, heartbreaking, cranky, wry and 
winning performance as a homeless woman who parked her van in a tony British 
neighborhood and ended up living in the driveway of playwright Alan Bennetts 
for 15 years. She’s magnificent in a full-blooded leading role in Hytner’s very 
fine adaptation of Bennett’s 1999 stage play in which Smith starred. Like 
Blanchett, Smith already has a leading and a supporting Oscar on her mantle but 
hasn’t won since 1976’s California Suite (her first came in 1969 for Best 
Actress in The Prime Of Miss Jean Brodie), so they both may be going head to 
head for a third. This film was not developed by SPC, but rather Sony’s Tri 
Star label shortly after new Sony chief Tom Rothman took over that division. He 
was at last night’s SPC party and told me he decided to turn it over to Barker 
and Bernard. “They are the experts at releasing this kind of movie,” he said. 
“We made it because I really believe in the international aspect of the 
business. That’s where everything is headed now and I think it’s important to 
make movies for the international market.” He added this film will be very big 
in the UK and those territories when it opens in November.  It hits the U.S.  
in December in time to qualify for the Oscars. If Dame Maggie isn’t one of the 
five there should be a 60 Minutes-style investigation.  Although only Hytner 
made the trip to Canada I am told Smith is understandably very proud of this 
film.  The Best Actress race is really heating up this year.

Of course the Best Actor contest is always competitive and it looks like that 
again. British star, Tom Hiddleston could well be a contender there  for his 
powerful interpretation of country singing legend Hank Williams who died at age 
29  and had a troubled, dark life in the limelight that is depicted in a no 
holds-barred way in SPC’s other TIFF World Premiere I Saw 
elizabeth-olsen-tom-hiddleston-isawthelight5The Light. Hiddleston, who does all 
his own singing, really inhabits this man who had an everlasting impact on 
country music. Elizabeth Olsen plays his first wife and delivers her finest 
work to date. Although it will inevitably be compared to the Johnny Cash 
biopic, Walk The Line, this one dares to go into much darker places, enriched 
by that unforgettable music.   George Hamilton made a corny Hollywood style 
biopic Your Cheatin’ Heart  in 1964, but this one should stand the test of time.

Quite a day in Toronto for Sony Pictures Classics, as always a real player in 
awards season.

________________________________

UT Southwestern


Medical Center



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