
Amanda Seyfried
Image by: Myles Aronowitz
It takes a village to tell
the story of ’70s porn sensation Linda "Lovelace" Boreman, and acclaimed
filmmaking team Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman, the guys behind The
Celluloid Closet and the James Franco-starring Howl, are quickly putting the
finishing touches on the cast list for their upcoming biopic, Lovelace. The
project already has its lead in Amanda Seyfried as the world’s first erotic
superstar and her troubled rise to fame in the crossover porn hit Deep
Throat. And Peter Sarsgaard, Sharon Stone, Wes Bentley and Juno Temple have
also signed on. But now comes a wave of men to flesh out the roster, including
Hank Azaria, Bobby Cannavale, Chris Noth and Robert Patrick as members of the
porn world, so all systems are go. Lava lamp mood lighting is set and the
cameras are rolling right. More more more to follow.
The Help’s Viola Davis
helps Pariah’s Dee Rees
Currently in theaters and
generating a lot of critical praise is Dee Rees’s debut feature, Pariah.
Featuring rising star Adepero Oduye, it’s the moving story of a teenage lesbian
struggling to bridge her family life with the one she secretly shares with a
group of new lesbian friends. This kind of worthwhile debut often generates
Hollywood interest and Rees’s next project will probably raise her profile even
more. Viola Davis, herself receiving Oscar buzz for her role in last summer’s
The Help, is in talks to work with Rees on an HBO series she’ll produce and
probably star in through her own newly formed production company. The untitled
project will focus on the morally ambiguous headmaster of a private school and the
corruption that follows her. Sounds intriguing and, best of all, a great step
for both Davis – who, up until The Help, was often the best minor
character in mediocre films – and for Rees. May the resulting series,
whatever it becomes, catapult them both to even greater success.
Zachary Quinto: Mogul
Branching out from acting and
turning producer might not possess the same cool-factor as, say, investing in a
hot new restaurant or joining an indie band, but it keeps you busy and ratchets
up your power quotient in Hollywood. That’s why it’s good news to see Zachary
Quinto cashing in on his newfound industry mojo by helping J.C. Chandor,
director of last year’s Wall Street meltdown drama Margin Call (in which
Quinto co-starred), get his next project off the ground. Titled All Is Lost,
it’s an environmental-themed drama written by Chandor with one actor in mind,
Robert Redford. The director is currently in talks with the 75-year-old film
legend to take the lead role and given Redford’s well-documented environmental
activism over the course of his life, it seems like a perfect fit. It’ll also
probably wind up having a negative carbon footprint.
Queer now, what next?
The multiplex is extra gay at
the moment as a trio of high profile actors – Glenn Close, Rooney Mara and
Michael Fassbender – are busy captivating audiences in the films Albert
Nobbs (where Close plays a transsexual man), The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
(with Mara as a tough, brilliant bisexual computer hacker) and Shame (starring
Fassbender as a bisexual sex addict). Coming off these acclaimed roles, look
for the legendary Close next in the ghostly drama Therese Raquin, alongside
Martha Marcy May Marlene star Elizabeth Olsen. Meanwhile, Next Big Thing Fassbender will make his third
film with British art-film sensation Steve Mcqueen (he also directed Shame)
and co-star with Brad Pitt in Twelve Years a Slave, a period film about a man
(Chiwetel Ejiofor) kidnapped in the northern United States and sold into
slavery in the south. Finally, Mara, whose transformation into cult heroine
Lisbeth Salander was so chameleon-like as to render the actress unrecognizable,
will appear in Tree of Life director Terence Malick’s latest film,Lawless,
with Ryan Gosling. In other words, don’t worry about any careers around these
parts.
Romeo San Vicente is generally law-abiding, depending on which state he’s visiting.