On one hand, that's nowhere near as good as Kaufman's "Adaptation" did on its 2002 release, but given the overtly challenging nature of "Synecdoche," it's more than enough to warrant wider release. Good-looking guy, though, isn't he?Ĭharlie Kaufman's "Synecdoche, New York," despite (or because of) its divided reviews, also opened strongly, with $172,000 from just nine big-city screens. Simply in search of a timely news hook, I was going to try to work Barack Obama into this item. And for the love of God, why not? If that isn't a demographic that has earned the right to be temporarily pandered to in our glorious consumer democracy, then nobody has. Expect a marketing scrum to erupt over the black gay entertainment audience, and no, I'm not kidding. Or any name recognition among heteros or whites. OK, that's a notch lower than the limited release of Clint Eastwood's "Changeling," but "Noah's Arc" doesn't have Angelina Jolie, or 1/100th of Universal's marketing budget.
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"Noah's Arc: Jumping the Broom," a big-screen adaptation of the cable-TV series about a group of young gay African-American men in Los Angeles, virtually sold out its New York, Atlanta and Washington venues and grossed a flat-out amazing $30,000 per screen. This weekend, per IndieWIRE, was a strikingly strong and instructive one, with the top-ranked independent release a film virtually unreviewed and unnoticed by mainstream media (including, ahem, this representative thereof). Bush - what's that you say? That woman's not the Republican candidate? Coulda fooled me - we're evidently all going to see lots of odd little niche-market movies. While we await the verdict between "the hot lady and the Tiger Woods guy," in the phrase of Will Ferrell-as-George W. (In quasi-related news, the Christian Science Monitor, a bastion of newspaperly integrity I grew up reading, is abandoning daily print journalism in favor of weekly publication and the Web.) ( Anne Thompson of Variety offers a pithy appreciation.) I could insert the usual moaning here about how real criticism, ethical arts reporting and the rest of journalism is in deep trouble, but something tells me your sympathy for that stuff is kind of limited right now.
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She's a terrific talent with a rapier wit and of course she'll be fine, but losing your job is never any fun.
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I was Carina's editor at Salon during the period when she pioneered, for better or worse, the Internet tradition of snarky overnight coverage of "Survivor" and other first-generation reality shows.
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I only knew Johnston by sight and didn't realize he was ill, so this news is especially upsetting and shocking.įrom a far less dire division of the bell-tolling department comes the news that Los Angeles Times film critic (and former Salon TV critic) Carina Chocano has been laid off, part of a 10 percent editorial staff reduction as that once-proud temple of West Coast journalism goes into a deepening death spiral. New York film and TV critic Andrew Johnston, an intelligent and versatile writer whose weekly deep-think analyses of each new episode of "Mad Men" had attracted a loyal following over at the House Next Door, has died at age 40 after a long battle with cancer. Before I move on to nibbly bits of news from the film world in a week when almost everyone's attention is on weightier matters, here's the casualty report, both metaphorical and, I am sorry to say, literal.