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Sympathy for Delicious(SfD)影評集合貼

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Anniek 发表于 2010-1-22 21:36:56 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
本帖最后由 Anniek 于 2010-1-22 21:39 编辑

Sympathy for Delicious is the directorial debut of Mark Ruffalo from a script by the film’s star Christopher Thornton. (Full disclosure: I’ve worked with Mark and think he’s a terrific guy but that is emphatically NOT why I like this film as much as I do.)

Starting off with a convincing depiction of the homeless community in downtown LA and focusing on one particularly bitter guy (Thornton) whose poverty is compounded by his being confined to a wheelchair. We’re also introduced to a compassionate priest (played by Ruffalo) who tries to make sure the community gets fed. The story seems to be a pretty worthwhile, if familiar, piece of social realism for awhile. Then it makes a dangerous and difficult swerve you don’t see coming:

SPOILER ALERT

X displays healing powers. He fixes people, but not himself. The priest tries to get him to channel this gift in constructive ways, but X harbors a passion to make rock-and-roll music—and he’s not above using this new power in manipulative ways to advance his career.

SPOILER ALERT OVER


One of the many complicated ideas this film gets at is that having a gift doesn’t necessarily make it easier for you to be a better person.

The film makes a dizzying and largely successful turn toward social commentary and religious allegory, always done with a mixture of realism and dark humor worthy of some of the most interesting movies written by Paddy Chayefsky, like Network and Altered States.

What’s mainly amazing is how skillfully Ruffalo is able to represent rise to glory and fall from grace of this character on a tiny budget.

What’s not amazing perhaps, given Ruffalo’s background, is the uniform excellence of the cast. Thornton is restrained and persuasive in what is clearly the role of his life… Juliette Lewis is spunky and sad as the rock chick who reaches out to help him,…. Laura Linney, Ruffalo’s acting partner from the much-loved You Can Count on Me, is both funny and scary as a rapacious showbiz attorney…

But the real revelation is Orlando Bloom as a rock-and-roller with the ego to be Mick Jagger but not quite the talent. Bloom is so utterly into this part that for a long time I couldn’t recognize him. The talent that seemed exclusively limited to and defined by the Pirates of the Caribbean and Lord of the Rings movies flourishes again here in this completely fresh and unexpected setting and Ruffalo deserves great credit for seeing and believing that Bloom could do this.

The first step in Mark Ruffalo’s career as a movie director, and the artistic rebirth of Orlando Bloom’s acting career could make Sympathy for Delicious one of Sundance 2010’s upbeat stories.

總結一句是開花演得不錯啦。

source: http://moviecitynews.com/festiva ... 0/100121_gross.html
撒哈拉野驴 发表于 2010-1-23 00:26:55 | 显示全部楼层
又是华丽丽滴英文,晕头转向的读下来,发现千言万语化作一句话,小o演技又进步了,可喜可贺。
likeasong 发表于 2010-1-24 13:08:41 | 显示全部楼层
好啊好啊!开花选择独立电影展现自己的才华,是条正确的路子。
 楼主| Anniek 发表于 2010-1-25 21:36:02 | 显示全部楼层
轉自ic的貼:http://elflady.com/orlandolove/s ... 51&postcount=22

Not exactly official reviews but these six were posted on SFD Sundance page.
This was a wild ride. I'm dying to know how they made this on a small budget. The cinematography is outdone only by the brilliant performances, particularly Juliette Lewis and Christopher Thornton. They burn the screen together.
Originality is a hard thing to come by these days, and this film delivers it in spades. I have never seen this character or story before and I was completely riveted by it. Mark Ruffalo commands an extraordinary cast and wonderful story to amazing effect. Christopher Thornton is a truly brilliant actor. I want to see this again.
Amazing. Brilliant.. It had a profound effect on me and the audience around me. I cannot stop thinking about this movie. Mark Ruffalo has made a gut-wrenching yet beautifully uplifting film. Christopher Thornton is mesmerizing to watch onscreen. Everyone should see this movie.
love this film. Bravo Mark Ruffalo.
I was simply blown away by this film. So fresh, original, powerful, and deeply heartfelt. Christopher Thornton gives a phenomenal performance that will be remembered as one of the greats. Mark Ruffalo has outdone himself in his directorial debut. The best film at the festival so far.
horrid writing, unfocused, cliched, random, interesting characters and some interesting and entertaining though utterly ridiculous and pointless scenes/themes/ideas. never really comes together.

大部份反應正面,得四星評價。

http://www.filmmakermagazine.com ... ical-dispatch-1.php
In the US dramatic competition, actor turned director Mark Ruffalo’s Sympathy for Delicious has suffered from low expectations, at least among the members of the jaded New York P&I corp I pal around with. Despite its lame still photos and odd synopsis involving faith healing and hip-hop DJs, I’m happy to report that it’s an altogether winning confection. Screenwriter Christopher Thorton stars as the newly crippled but once prominent DJ Dean “Delicious” O’Dwyer, a hot tempered man of much self-pity and little humility despite his humble conditions, who discovers he is imbued with faith healing abilities and chooses to exploit them in all the wrong ways.

Grounded in the realities of the misbegotten and dispossessed of LA’s skid row as well as the excesses and superficiality of LA’s rock scene, Ruffalo provides us with a truly unlikable protagonist who only earns our sympathy after some hard won lessons in selflessness and grace. While juggling the metaphysical and realistic, Ruffalo manages to steer his high and easily derailed concept to a satisfying ending. Featuring terrific supporting work from a stable of veteran character actors (Noah Emmerich, John Carroll Lynch) and movie stars (Orlando Bloom, Laura Linney, Juliette Lewis), Mr. Ruffalo issues another one of his fantastic performances as a wearied Priest who runs a skid row soup kitchen and who first attempts to steer O’Dwyer’s miracle work toward the ecumenical instead of the capitalistic.


http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/ ... e-punk-saviors.html
Sharkey on Sundance: Punk saviors

If there is a collective vision emerging out of the films in the Sundance dramatic competition it is this: The punks will save you.

Profane, tattooed, with dark eyes and darker lives, all a little crazy, in some cases a lot crazy, living on society’s margins – in three of the festival’s contenders, these rebels come into the lives of ordinary folks and proceed to turn things upside down in ways that heal whatever ails them.

While the films work to greater and lesser degrees, it’s the narrative stream that makes it worth exploring since Sundance has a way of picking up on new creative thought streams bubbling up in the film world before they become widespread. So consider this a glimpse at the future.

<snip>

Meanwhile out west on the mean streets of L.A., Ruffalo is a priest ministering to the homeless and that includes a wheelchair-bound DJ dubbed Delicious, a scratcher extraordinaire now unemployed and living in his car after a freak accident left him paralyzed from the waist down.

Christopher Thornton, the film’s screenwriter and star who himself was paralyzed at 25 in a rock-climbing accident, is the film’s dark savior with Orlando Bloom and Juliette Lewis as the main rock star sinners. Turns out there’s nothing that will broaden the rocker crowds quite like spontaneous healing, even when the guy doing it looks like he could have played with Metallica. Like a lot of actors when they try their hand at directing, Ruffalo lets his actors, including himself, ramble on, but the underlying story of faith, hope and disillusionment is nevertheless a compelling one.
 楼主| Anniek 发表于 2010-1-25 21:39:27 | 显示全部楼层
關於在戲中的演唱,他慶幸自已不用真唱。可是…我想聽你的真唱啊,開花!
Can Orlando Bloom carry a tune?
Thank goodness he didn't have to. Orlando Bloom joked about his singing skills with reporters at the premiere of "Symphasy for Delicious."

As the lead of an up and coming rock band, most of the singing he does in the film is more like shouting. He does well at that. He was gracious to have gotten into the project at the last minute after James Franco couldn't do the role. He gave a shout out to Franco who was in the audience during the premiere.

"I've never been here. I'm so excited," a giddy Bloom said of Sundance.


http://blogs.sltrib.com/sundance ... 1&tb=1&pb=1
撒哈拉野驴 发表于 2010-1-26 09:31:49 | 显示全部楼层
我记得原来看过一个视频,小o就自己唱得,只唱了几句,对于非专业歌手来说,唱得相当不错了
 楼主| Anniek 发表于 2010-1-26 13:32:49 | 显示全部楼层
Bloom sings, Ruffalo directs in “Sympathy for Delicious”

PARK CITY, Utah–Orlando Bloom wants to make one thing perfectly clear: he will not be cutting an album even thumbs-up reviews for his pipes as the charismatic front man The Stain in director Mark Ruffalo’s edgy rock music-infused film “Sympathy for Delicious” premiering here at the Sundance Film Festival.

“I don’t think I’m going to be doing an album any time soon,” Bloom said Monday during a Q & A with the press at the Bing Bar on Main Street. “But I really enjoyed it. I really enjoyed wailing around, having a lot of fun.”

Bloom’s performance is only one element in the film’s appeal. The indie movie–actor Ruffalo’s first foray in directing–revolves around a script by Thornton, who based the story on his own life. Crippled in a motorcycle accident and left paralyzed in a wheelchair, Thornton sought out faith healers until he had to come to terms with his own humanity.

The film stars Thornton as Dean O’Dwyer, also known as “Delicious D,” an up-and-coming DJ on L.A.’s underground music scene. When he is crippled, he feels that his once-promising career is over. He ends up living out of his car, fighting depression, until he meets Father Joe Roselli (Ruffalo), who introduces him to the world of faith healing. While he discovers that he has he power to heal other people, Dean, through an odd twist of fate, can’t heal himself.

Using his newfound gift, he seeks fame and fortune by joining a rock band. Bloom is the charismatic leader of the band, Juliette Lewis plays bassist Ariel, and the manager is played by Laura Linney and Noah Emmerich.

Ruffalo said directing a film gave him an entirely different perspective than he has had acting in them.

“Those days were incredibly difficult,” Ruffalo said. “My experience in acting is totally the opposite head space than directing. In acting, you are totally focused on your character, what you want, where you’re headed in your story-line. As a director, you’re looking at the whole thing, how every little piece works. The acting is very myopic. Directing is a much greater scope, a vision that you’re attending to. AS an actor, I don’t know exactly how it changed me, but i do know that I put acting aside for awhile and would really like to focus on a career directing if I can cobble one together if anyone will let me do it….Acting to me is like being in love with a very beautiful woman who doesn’t really love you back.”

Lewis added: “I just want to say one thing about Mark, which was a discovery for me. I’ve worked with a few actors-turned-directors and he is so visual. It was so visually inspiring. That’s what makes him a revelation as a new director. There’s such a visual style of this movie that helps tell the story, as well as the characters and the dialogue. When you do low-budget movies–we were what, 23 days (shooting)–so you together make decisions on the fly….”

“…Cutting scenes, cutting pages,” Ruffalo interjected.

“…Yeah, and maybe not shoot it the way you intended.”

“…Move it to another location–I’m sick of this location, let’s move it around the corner.”

“…And we did this car scene and Mark would be all lit up and I loved it because half the screen is out of focus—you know, I’m out of focus and Chris is in focus. Do you know what I mean? Sort of breaking all these rules visually that you’re not supposed to do…I just love that kind of rule breaking in cinema.”

http://www.hollywoodnews.com/201 ... athy-for-delicious/
 楼主| Anniek 发表于 2010-1-26 13:34:12 | 显示全部楼层
A Sympathy for Delicious Review:

Movie City News loved the film, but singled out Orlando's performance!!:

"But the real revelation is Orlando Bloom as a rock-and-roller with the ego to be Mick Jagger but not quite the talent. Bloom is so utterly into this part that for a long time I couldn’t recognize him. The talent that seemed exclusively limited to and defined by the Pirates of the Caribbean and Lord of the Rings movies flourishes again here in this completely fresh and unexpected setting and Ruffalo deserves great credit for seeing and believing that Bloom could do this.

The first step in Mark Ruffalo’s career as a movie director, and the artistic rebirth of Orlando Bloom’s acting career could make Sympathy for Delicious one of Sundance 2010’s upbeat stories.
 楼主| Anniek 发表于 2010-1-26 13:35:24 | 显示全部楼层
Prime Focus Handles DI for Mark Ruffalo's Directorial Debut, "Sympathy for Delicious"
Feature to Premiere at Sundance Film Festival; Nominated for Grand Jury Prize
Prime Focus, a global visual entertainment services group, has completed digital intermediate work on "Sympathy For Delicious," the highly-anticipated directorial debut from actor Mark Ruffalo. Featuring a star-studded cast including Orlando Bloom, Juliette Lewis, Laura Linney, Ruffalo and writer/producer Chris Thornton, the film makes its world premiere January 23 at the Sundance Film Festival, where it is nominated for the Grand Jury Prize.

The film follows wheelchair bound DJ "Delicious" D (Thornton) as he fights to survive life on the mean streets of LA, makes his entree into the world of faith healing and navigates encounters with an unstable rock band. Shot on 35mm 2-perf film, "Sympathy" has a gritty, starkly realistic look. Prime Focus colorist Doug Delaney worked closely with Ruffalo and DP Chris Norr to preserve the edgy feel of the natural street photography.

"Our DI focused on making sure the film stayed true to Chris' original photography. It wasn't about creating something that wasn't there - it was more about reinforcing the image and supporting his gutsy style. He wasn't reluctant to take chances." Delaney said

Scanning the film in 4K on Northlight gave Prime Focus a sharp source with which to start the DI. They then conformed and color graded it using Baselight. As part of the DI process, Prime Focus also received a number of cuts for ending options from editor Pete Beaudreau in New York. The alternates were then conformed at 2K so Ruffalo could preview the various endings, fully color graded, on the big screen in Prime Focus' L.A. DI theater.

"Being able to see the alternate endings in full context was really useful," said Ruffalo. "The team at Prime Focus was willing to experiment with us; to use the DI technology to benefit the underlying story and not just the look. They created a very comfortable and confident environment to finish the film.

The Sundance Film Festival runs January 21-31, 2010, in Park City, Utah.

About Prime Focus

Prime Focus is a global Visual Entertainment Services group that provides creative and technical services to the film, broadcast, commercials, gaming, internet and media industries.

The group offers a genuine end-to-end solution from pre-production to final delivery - including previsualisation, equipment hire, visual effects, video and audio post-production, digital intermediate, digital asset management and distribution.

Prime Focus employs more than 1200 people with state-of-the-art facilities throughout the key markets of North America, the UK and India. Using its 'worldsourcing' business model, Prime Focus provides a network that combines global cost advantages, resources and talent pool with strong relationships and a deep understanding of the local markets.

Prime Focus is a public stock company with shares traded in the Mumbai and National Stock exchanges in India (Symbol - PRIMEFOCUS). Prime Focus also owns and operates Prime Focus London plc (Symbol - PFO), which is publicly traded in the LSE's AIM market. For more information, please visit www.primefocusworld.com.


http://videoediting.digitalmedia ... ticle.jsp?id=963060
 楼主| Anniek 发表于 2010-1-26 13:38:09 | 显示全部楼层
Writer turns the story of his paralyzing accident into 'Sympathy for Delicious'
Christopher Thornton's film, directed by fellow actor and friend Mark Ruffalo, is about faith.


There is faith, the showy display of religiosity that is the trick-of-the-trade of faith healers, and then there is faith, a kind of belief in a transcendent reality.

In a plain Hollywood church, both were on display last February, as actor-turned-director Mark Ruffalo finished filming on his directorial debut "Sympathy for Delicious," an unusual story about a jaded, homeless, paraplegic disc jockey, "Delicious" Dean O'Dwyer, who suddenly finds he has the power to heal, although he can't heal himself. On stage, John Carroll Lynch, playing a kind of cut-rate faith healer (in the mold of televangelist Benny Hinn) is exhorting "that the holy spirit is upon you" to a congregation of would-be believers, including several rows of men and women in wheelchairs. Among the handicapped is writer-star Christopher Thornton,with grimy dark hair, several days of stubble and an air of furious desperation.

The 41-year-old Thornton has been one of Ruffalo's best friends for the last 20 years. Unlike most actors who play the handicapped, like Daniel Day-Lewis in "My Left Foot" or Tom Cruise in "Born on the Fourth of July," Thornton can't just get up from his chair when Ruffalo calls cut; he has been a paraplegic since 1992, when he fell and fractured two vertebrae while rock climbing. In "Sympathy for Delicious," Thornton channels his complicated feelings about his accident. The film is also the fruit of his long friendship with Ruffalo, a tie that sustained them both through Thornton's accident, as well as Ruffalo's subsequent battle with a brain tumor, let alone the nine years it took to bring "Sympathy for Delicious" to the screen. The $3.3-million film, which also stars Orlando Bloom, Laura Linney and Juliette Lewis, as well as Ruffalo, was scheduled to debut Saturday at the Sundance Film Festival.

During a break, Ruffalo, who has appeared in such films as "Collateral," "Zodiac" and the upcoming "Shutter Island," explains that Thornton first told him of his movie idea as Ruffalo was wheeling him to a liquor store on the fifth anniversary of his accident. The two, then roommates, had met in the early '90s when both attended acting classes at the Stella Adler Conservatory in L.A. with such future stars as Benicio Del Toro and Salma Hayek.

After the accident, Ruffalo and other friends had coaxed Thornton back on stage for a part in "Waiting for Godot." Nonetheless, the fifth anniversary was a moody time for Thornton.

"He was upset and sad," says Ruffalo, a woolly, warm presence in jeans and beat-up blazer. "I said, 'Chris, I've known you before and after your accident, and God forbid, I'm telling you this. Maybe I'm the only one who could say something like this to you, but maybe this horrible tragedy is a blessing in disguise. I've seen you become like this amazing, totally inspirational guy over all these years from this thing, just as a human being. Maybe there's a gift in it somewhere.' "

Even today, Thornton gets "annoyed" when Ruffalo says things like that to him, as he explains when he rolls up and joins the interview. "You hate being told that. It's like, 'Why don't you be the big guy sitting in the chair? I'd rather be the shallow walking dude," he jokes.

Thornton explains that he'd been brooding about the script since he started going out for acting parts in his wheelchair. "I wanted to write a story about a man in a wheelchair that was believable and three-dimensional and flawed," he says, pointing out there have been movies that show the hospital and the first aftermath of a paralyzing accident, but "there's two tragedies that happen with an injury like this."

After a person has recovered, he must face the rest of his life. "You're not dying. That circle of friends that was visiting you all the time has gone back, and you're just, like, sitting in a chair. And then what? It's one thing to lose your ability to walk, but if you have a passion in life or an ability in life and you lost that, that's really hard, and even more damaging in a way."

Thornton had zeroed in on a stage that he went through about 18 months after his accident, when reckless hope trumped rational thought. "You're ready to believe in miracles," says Thornton, who was dragged to a number of holistic practitioners and faith healers by friends. He was often caught up in the frenzy, but "then you resent it later" and get mad at yourself "for having been duped."

On that fateful walk to a liquor store, Thornton told Ruffalo about his idea of a jerky, selfish guy in a wheelchair with magical faith-healing powers, and the actor perked up. "I was like, 'Oh, my God,' that's a story." In 1999, Ruffalo, who'd directed Thornton in a variety of plays, came on officially as the director and the pair began reworking Thornton's script. The hero evolved into a scratch DJ, and they moved the story to the world of rock 'n' roll, a chaotic arena of self-promoting tricksters who have a lot in common with faith-healers. In the film, Bloom and Lewis play druggy punk rockers who create an act featuring Delicious' healings and start a nationwide sensation.

Despite his handicap, Thornton continued to work in theater and TV and shot five pilots that didn't get picked up. After years of struggling, Ruffalo's big break turned out to be the 2000 Sundance hit "You Can Count on Me." In 2001, however, he was diagnosed with a brain tumor. "Chris was the only one I told," Ruffalo says. "I couldn't tell my wife because she was about to give birth" to their first child.

The tumor turned out to be benign, but Ruffalo underwent brain surgery to have it removed, surgery that initially left his face partly paralyzed.

Ultimately, however, Ruffalo made a complete recovery and returned to acting, starring in such films as "13 Going on 30" and "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind." He and Thornton returned to finessing the script and hunting for financing. "For years, we couldn't get it done. Everybody turned it down who was in a position to finance the film, all the independent houses," Thornton says. "Mark personally brought it to most of them, and they couldn't see the movie or they wanted a star to play Dean."

Along with producer Andrea Sperling, Ruffalo and Thornton cobbled together equity backing from various sources, including the new indie financiers Corner Store Entertainment. As they veered into pre-production at the end of 2007, Thornton and Ruffalo's relationship evolved again, from one of two guys in the trenches who do everything together to that of writer-star and director. "Mark stepped back and said, 'I'm going to separate myself and bring my own point of view to this,' " Sperling says. "There's a lot of love and friendship, mutual respect and admiration between them, and also some torture. They're almost like brothers."

Then another tragedy struck. Ruffalo's brother Scott was found in his Beverly Hills apartment with a fatal gunshot wound to his head, a homicide that hasn't yet produced an arrest. They pushed the start date of filming several weeks and as a result lost James Franco and another lead actor. Orlando Bloom and Laura Linney, who played Ruffalo's sister in "You Can Count on Me," were able to step in at the last minute to play the rock star and conniving music agent, respectively.

Not surprisingly, Ruffalo and Thornton related on a profound level to their hero's desire to be healed. Ruffalo says, "If you're going down in an airplane, everybody's all of a sudden like, 'Oh, God. Oh, God. Please, God.' "

This said, both take a dim view of the possibility of miracles. "That's all a crock," Ruffalo says. "I've never experienced a miraculous healing. For me, the theme of the movie is that you get the healing that you need. Not the healing that you want."


http://www.latimes.com/entertain ... ympathy24-2010jan24,0,906131.story
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