Saturday, August 13, 2005

Hollywood Debut

Only in Hollywood : Hollywood co-stars, director, producer praise Cesar Montano

Ruben V. Nepales
Inquirer News Service

LOS ANGELES -- We've read Cesar Montano's interesting accounts of his experience while filming "The Great Raid."

Last Monday, I grabbed the chance to get a different perspective: I asked Cesar's "Raid" co-stars, director and producer to talk about him, for a change. In our separate press cons with Joseph Fiennes and Connie Nielsen and later, lunch talks with director John Dahl and producer Marty Katz, I asked (and asked some more) about Cesar, Filipino-Australian actress Natalie Mendoza and Paolo Montalban, who are also in the movie, and other Philippines-specific topics.

I would have preferred to see Cesar himself sitting there at Four Seasons and making history as the first Filipino actor interviewed by our press group (that will be the day!). In the meantime, I did the next best thing and peppered the morning's subjects with questions about the Boholano actor.

Benjamin Bratt and James Franco were tied up elsewhere and could not join us.

Joseph's large brown eyes (appearing yellow-green up close, by a window bathed in morning sunlight) and long eyelashes are as remarkable in person as they are onscreen. Connie is a statuesque stunner. In researching her role as a foreigner helping the Manila underground movement, she learned, and is still appalled, by the Japanese army's use of Filipino and Korean women as sex slaves.

John is a serious, reflective man who chooses his words carefully while Marty, in a Hawaiian shirt, is a true-blue producer—he is assertive. Marty surprised me by telling me that Susan Barlin, a realtor and a Fil-Am community leader, is his sister-in-law. "That's partly why I'm close to Filipinos," he told me as a parting shot.

Below are excerpts of my not-as-usual Hollywood interviews:

On Cesar

Joseph: He's a wonderful actor. He really became like a brother to me while we were filming. Cesar truly evokes all the heroic qualities and sentiments of the Filipino resistance during that war. He's a warm and generous spirit.

I saw the warmth and generosity among the Filipino actors—Cesar and the whole group. They kept telling me, 'You've got to come to the Philippines, man.' I'd love to go as Cesar's guest because I know he would look after me.

Connie: I just had a meet and greet with Cesar at a dinner toward the end of shooting. But I can tell you that he is a cool guy. He is very…hot, actually.

John: When we were looking for an actor to play the lead part of Captain Pajota, we got Cesar's film—I am trying to think of that movie he did where he was on a ship, like a fishing vessel—I thought he was fantastic in that movie ("Muro-Ami"—Ed). I sent parts of the film to Miramax. We brought him over from Manila and met him. I thought he was terrific for the part.

Marty: He is, as you know, a bigger star in the Philippines than he is here now, but he will be a star here—although it all depends on his first opportunity here. That first part is crucial. He has an option with Miramax for two more pictures. Hopefully we will find it for him. He is a real talent.

On Natalie

Joseph: As an actress, Natalie is luminous, formidable and incredibly talented. On film, she comes across in a beautiful way. She is also a wonderful singer. (When I asked this brother of Ralph Fiennes to confirm reports that he dated Natalie, he laughed and said, "I won't answer that.")

Connie: Natalie is an amazing young woman. She is Filipina but she grew up in Australia and is now working and studying in London. We became very good friends while working on the movie.

John: In casting for this movie, I found that a lot of Filipino actors and actresses did musical theater. We liked Natalie the best. The only problem was, we had to try to get her to speak Tagalog.

On Paolo

John: We liked Paolo and wanted to use him as one of the Alamo scouts. It was a small role, but he wanted to be in the movie.

Connie Nielsen on the Manila underground: There were a lot of amazingly brave people, both men and women who worked in the underground. I learned how much the underground and guerilla forces played a big part in the liberation of the Philippines.

John Dahl, solo

On his father serving in the Philippines: My father ended up joining the service like a lot of guys did during his time. He will be 82 in September. He landed in Luzon and he was with this unit that went through the mountains with a couple of infantry riflemen. He has seen the movie. For 60 years, he hadn't spoken to anybody from his unit. As a result of my working on this movie, he thought he should try to find one of his friends. That friend visited him last year in Montana. A couple of weeks ago, he went to South Carolina and, for the first time since the war, he spent more time with the guys from his unit.

On changes he made to address the apprehension that the movie would downplay the Filipinos' role in the rescue of over 500 American POWs: In the original script, Captain Pajota was American. I had to convince Miramax to make [the character] a Filipino. Also, when I started reading about the Filipino resistance, I realized that many of them were leading citizens of Manila, wealthy people who had a lot to lose. I thought it was a much more interesting story. I would have liked to see more of that, but there is only so much that you can squeeze into a movie."

On the film's premiere in Washington, DC and some Filipino vets' reaction: A few days before the premiere, I met these two men in Chicago. This guy in his 80s was crying by the end of the film. I turned around when the movie was over and there was another 87-year-old survivor of the Bataan death march, a Filipino. He was one of the first Filipinos that I had met who survived that march. It was an extremely emotional story for him. It has always been great screening the movie for veteran groups and survivors because it is a very powerful story for them.

So ultimately, going to Washington, DC for the premiere and having a four-star general introduce the movie and having two senators, Hillary Clinton and John McCain, make you realize that it has been a privilege to work on something that is so much larger than the movie business. You realize how many people's lives have been affected by this event. And to go to the World War II museum and see that Cabanatuan and Bataan etched in marble, that is pretty powerful.

On whether Japanese moviegoers will see the film soon: Japan is probably the last place where the movie will be released. But it will be released there eventually. The plan is to show the movie in other parts of the world and then ultimately, based on recognition from other parts of the world, bring the movie to Japan. It would be hard for me to imagine that Japan would jump right up and embrace this movie.

When we were [shooting in Australia], a lot of the kids we hired to play Japanese soldiers were on surfing holidays. We gave them materials translated from our history books into Japanese because they knew nothing of the story. Japan is a place that needs to see this movie.

Wednesday, August 10, 2005

Nora's Trophy

Did Nora really beat Hillary for a trophy?

Inquirer News Service

DID Nora Aunor really win the Best Actress Award for "Naglalayag" at the 2005 Provincetown International Film Festival in Massachusetts?

This piece of news was relayed to media organizations on Saturday by a Filipino who supposedly attended the festival.

Jojo de Vera, an officer of an Aunor fan club, reported that Nora beat Gong Li ("2046"), Zhang Ziyi ("Mo Li Hua Kai" or "Jasmine Women") and Oscar winner Hilary Swank ("Million Dollar Baby") for the trophy.

The story was carried in GMA 7's show biz talk show "S Files" on Sunday, and included a phone interview with the actress from her current residence in San Bruno, California.

Aunor said she didn't know her movie had competed, but that she was happy. A quick visit to the festival website, www.ptownfilmfest.com, however, revealed there was no entry this year titled "Naglalayag." Or "Million Dollar Baby," for that matter.

Tuesday, August 09, 2005

Bribe

Dollywood : Bribing janitor to pass exams

Dolly Anne Carvajal entertainment@inq7.net
Inquirer News Service

GUESS who this young actor is? He has been in cahoots with the janitor of the university where he is now a junior. The teen idol asks the janitor to steal test papers for him. In return, he promises to pay him a hefty amount. The young star is desperate to pass all his exams because he wants to take up further studies abroad. The janitor has kept his end of the deal for the past two semesters but the actor hasn't paid him in full. He is in dire financial straits since his home studio has not given him any project for quite some time now. When the janitor nags about the balance, the actor threatens to ask the campus frats to gang up on him. Wonder if the university has any inkling that the person assigned to keep the campus clean has to clean up his act as well? Imagine the janitor having access to the test papers before exam time? As for the young actor's case, it's good that he is bent on finishing his studies. But he should not treat it like some movie plot where the end justifies the means.

* * *

Guess who this TV host/actor is? The staff of a show where he was a guest was peeved because of his demands. Prior to taping, he agreed to the fixed talent fee. But when he found out that the episode was going to be aired in two parts, he started badgering the executive producer for additional talent fee. One of the staff lamented: "He was paid for one taping day, which was finished in one day. Why is he charging extra? Besides, he's difficult. He refused to deliver some lines for fear that they might irk his home studio—where he has no projects, by the way."

It reminds me of one of the many show biz lessons from my mom: "Do not mind working more even if you are paid less. The experience will help you get to the day when you will be working less and paid more." Ara's not looking

ARA Mina is not out to replace Jomari Yllana in her life. So even if she has hordes of suitors, Ara is weighing things carefully. I heard that Polo Ravales is the most ardent of her admirers and that Ara is on the verge of falling for him. If it's for the long haul, Polo should also be consistent and not just persistent.

Nora Shines

Nora beats Gong Li, Swank, Zhang Ziyi

Inquirer News Service

SUPERSTAR Nora Aunor added another feather to her acting cap last week by winning the Best Actress Award for "Naglalayag" at the 2005 Provincetown International Film Festival in Massachusetts.

Nora beat Gong Li ("2046"), Zhang Ziyi ("Mo Li Hua Kai" or "Jasmine Women") and Oscar winner Hilary Swank ("Million Dollar Baby") for the trophy.

Currently residing in San Bruno, California, Nora was not around to receive her award on Tuesday night (Wednesday morning in Manila) at the Cape Tip Estates in Provincetown Massachusetts, according to her manager Norie Sayo.

"We first heard of the news via a text message from Manila. We got it at about midnight," Norie told Inquirer Entertainment via e-mail on Monday. "Guy (Nora's nickname) was already asleep."

The Best Actor's award went to Spain's Raul Cortez for "O Outro Lado da Rua (The Other Side Of The Street)."

Bruce's Home

Bruce Willis makes surprise visit to German birthplace

Agence France-Presse

BERLIN -- Hollywood star Bruce Willis appeared unannounced on the doorstep of a German family asking to see the house where he was born 50 years ago, according to a report published Monday.

Accompanied by his father and youngest brother, both named David, Willis rang the doorbell of the home in the southwestern town of Idar-Oberstein, the daily Nahe Zeitung reported.

"We were sitting in the garden and didn't even hear that someone was there. My mother still had her curlers in her hair," said Doris Busch, who lives in the house with her husband.

Busch said that Willis had explained in shaky German that he wanted to see the house, in particular a basement bedroom where he spent the first two years of his life.

The action star ("Die Hard") took a few pictures but declined to be photographed himself, the newspaper said.

Willis, who was named a "special ambassador" for Idar-Oberstein on his 50th birthday March 19, then visited the nearby Strassburg army barracks, where his father was stationed as a GI.

Monday, August 08, 2005

Media Notes

Katie Couric: "Everybody needs recharging"


Katie Couric says she'll decide this fall whether to continue her long-running morning television partnership with Matt Lauer. The "Today" show co-anchor faces the question because her contract expires next May. "I have, when it's operating on all four cylinders, one of the best jobs in television," she told The New Yorker magazine. "At the same time, everybody needs recharging." Couric, 48, has been approached by CBS News about its evening news anchor job. NBC Universal executive Jeff Zucker said last month that he hoped Couric was at the network "for many, many years to come."

Thornton happy for Jolie

Billy Bob Thornton is happy for his ex-wife Angelina Jolie, who adopted an orphaned baby girl, Zahara Marley, in Ethiopia last month. "I love it. I knew for a while that she was going to adopt," Thornton tells People magazine in its Aug. 8 issue. "She cares so much for kids who don't have anything." Before their split in 2002, Jolie and Thornton adopted a baby boy, Maddox, from Cambodia.

Bacall: Cruise's behavior 'shocking'

Lauren Bacall has a few unkind words to say about Tom Cruise. In an interview in the Aug. 8 issue of Time magazine, now on newsstands, the 80-year-old actress says, "When you talk about a great actor, you're not talking about Tom Cruise. His whole behavior is so shocking," she says. "It's inappropriate and vulgar and absolutely unacceptable to use your private life to sell anything commercially, but I think it's kind of a sickness." Bacall was alluding to Cruise's displays of emotion and public courting of Katie Holmes in the weeks leading up to the release of his new film, "War of the Worlds." Cruise and Holmes became engaged in June after he proposed at the Eiffel Tower in Paris.

Luke Skywalker's light saber sells for $200,600

It didn't come cheap, but an anonymous bidder now owns a piece of Jedi history. A light saber used by Mark Hamill when he played Luke Skywalker in the original "Star Wars" sold for $200,600 Friday in an auction of movie props and costumes, said Joe Maddalena, president of Profiles in History, which held the auction. Other items included a light saber used by the character Darth Vader in "Star Wars," which fetched $118,000; a leather jacket worn by Harrison Ford in "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade," which brought in $94,400; and a leather jacket worn by Arnold Schwarzenegger in "The Terminator," which went for $41,300.

Columbia polishing Diamond release

Neil Diamond's highly anticipated new Columbia album, which pairs the singer/songwriter with producer Rick Rubin, has been pushed back to Nov. 8. The project was originally slated to come out this summer, in conjunction with Diamond's U.S. tour, which includes shows at the Target Center Aug. 31 and Sept. 1. The album release move to Sept. 6, according to a source, was made to give Columbia more time to set up the album, as it is now considered one of the label's top holiday projects. — From wire services

Seann William Scott OK with image

Seann William Scott has made peace with the notion that he may be dolt on screen forever. Cottage Grove native Scott, who embodied the blockhead jock Steve Stifler in the "American Pie" movies, the nitwit in 2000's "Dude, Where's My Car?" and the sex crazed buffoon in "Road Trip," is now in the "Dukes of Hazzard" movie, playing Bo Duke. "Most of the comedies will have some similarity because most comedy roles are about guys that aren't that bright," Scott told the San Francisco Chronicle in Sunday's editions. "Every once in a while you'll get a 'Sideways,' not that I'm doing it." Scott, 28, was still working at Home Depot in Los Angeles when he was cast as Stifler, the Neanderthal hedonist with the horny mom in "American Pie."

Haley Joel Osment back in movies

Haley Joel Osment is making a return to movies, taking a starring role in the indie coming-of-age feature "Home of the Giants." Set in an Indiana town that lives for basketball, the story follows a teenager (Osment) who idolizes one of the town's basketball stars. The teen and his best pal are befriended by the player, who ends up being anything but the hero they thought he was. The movie goes into production early next month in North Carolina. Osment rose to international fame through his Oscar-nominated performance in "The Sixth Sense." He followed that with starring turns in "Pay It Forward" and Steven Spielberg's "A.I. Artificial Intelligence." His most recent role was in 2003's "Secondhand Lions," opposite Robert Duvall and Michael Caine.

La Rue joins 'CSI: Miami'

Eva La Rue has been cast as a lab specialist in CBS' "CSI: Miami." La Rue will portray Natalia Boa Vista, who focuses on unsolved cases, in the forensic drama series. The series, a spinoff of CBS' "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation," stars David Caruso and is headed into its fourth season. La Rue is best known for her Daytime Emmy-nominated role as Dr. Maria Santos on ABC's "All My Children." She also had a recurring role last season on ABC's "George Lopez" as George's sister Linda.