Wednesday, 8 July 2009

Casting a spell - Jake and Harry

Yesterday in London, in the kind of rain one can do without, and reminiscent of a certain Baftas that also took place in a sodden Leicester Square, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince premiered. Potter fans have had to endure a delay similar to the one we're having to suffer for another type of Prince (the Persian variety), but, in the end it made it to the big screen and the heavens opened.


Anyone from Oxford, like myself, may well have come across Harry Potter movie sets, extras and crew over the years - I've seen a quidditch camp take over the centre of town. And Hermione is a local girl. Daniel Radcliffe, continues in my good books since telling Film 2007 that Zodiac was his film of the year, while Rupert Grint (Ron) gets my vote for his enjoyment of Jake Gyllenhaal's BAFTA win in 2006. Let's take another look.



Back in 2001, Jake attended the Hollywood premiere of Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone (or Sorcerer's Stone as it is known elsewhere in Muggledom) wearing an ensemble dubious even for 2001.


Jake could be seen at a number of public events in 2001 sporting a look that shows how Jake has changed, just as Daniel Radcliffe has transformed over the last 7 years of Harry Potters.



How Jake has grown over the years - and the magic grows.









Includes pictures from IHJ.

Tuesday, 7 July 2009

A wet summer interlude - 'I got poked by a lot of umbrellas' says Jake

Well, we can't say that Jake didn't warn us... As the rain cascaded today, with the ferocity of a Niagran water feature, I was given a timely reminder of the lesson of The Day After Tomorrow. Not the lesson that when stuck in an instant Ice Age you'd be better off burning furniture than tax laws, but that on certain days there's nothing you can do about it - the rain will pour, the floods will deluge and hail the size of cricket balls will smash your hybrid. And all I had was a brolly.


With the realisation that the Day After Tomorrow is, in fact, Today, and before the twisters devastate the coffee houses of the northern hemisphere and we are driven south to idyllic beaches, I thought I'd be wise to take a quick look at the significance of this film for our times. The potential imminence of its subject was brought home by NASA's denial that the film existed: '"No one from NASA is to do interviews or otherwise comment on anything having to do with" the film, the message read, according to the Times. "Any news media wanting to discuss science fiction vs. science fact about climate change will need to seek comment from individuals or organizations not associated with NASA."' Al Gore did not have such doubts.


Time to find out what Jake Gyllenhaal thinks: '"Dennis Quaid plays [my] father and ... he has to find me in Manhattan and all this crazy sh-- happens... But more than that, he's trying to warn the government about the environment and what's happening, but they're not listening. And tornadoes hit California, and tidal waves sweep over Manhattan, and that's what happens when the government doesn't listen." To research the role, Gyllenhaal met with scientists to discuss the potential effects of global warming. "I learned that these things could actually happen... I learned that cars and power plants are the biggest things that are destroying the environment. If we could all just drive hybrid cars — I just drove one the other day and it ... looks kind of pimpin' — we could make progress and change a lot in a short amount of time."'


'Having learned so much about the environment in preparing for "The Day After Tomorrow," Gyllenhaal was frustrated to learn that recent polls indicate kids are not concerned with global warming. "I think that we take it for granted," he said. "When I grew up we had Earth Day at my school. I feel that I was pretty aware of what was going on. And we had recycling bins. I know that Manhattan has stopped recycling for a while and I know that they plan on bringing it back, but I think that they're just not aware of it because there are so many things that are being invented right now. Cars having [automatic] air-conditioning when it gets too hot or central heating when it gets too cold. It's continually destroying things that we don't recognize. We're kind of blind to it, but it's not our fault."'


Several lessons here - hybrid cars are 'pimpin' and some cars have air conditioning that doesn't just involve winding down a window, or, as I witnessed last week, driving while holding the driver's door slightly ajar.


At the NYC premiere, fake snow fell on the crowds, which then melted leading to its own set of problems: 'How about this snow, Mr. Quaid? ''This is, uh, something,'' he replies. He looks down at his soaked feet and lifts one foot. ''You can't get a cab in weather like this, either. It's just too bad.'' You said it. Our new sandals are ruined. ''Incoming!'' hollers JAKE GYLLENHAAL, who plays the scientist's son, as he lobs a snowball down the aisle. ''What do you think about being a hunk?'' a reporter from US Weekly asks him. ''The real question is, a hunk of what?'' Mr. Gyllenhaal says, as he reaches forward and gently touches her face. ''You have a little soap on your chin,'' he says.'


Of course there's rain and then there's British rain, as all will remember from the sodden Baftas of 2006: 'And Jake Gyllenhaal said: "The rain adds a personal British flair. I got poked by a lot of umbrellas - an experience I've not had on a carpet before."' People, resist the urge to poke Jake with your brolly!


Includes pictures from IHJ.

Monday, 6 July 2009

Life and laughs in a bubble: the sun 'nearly burned a hole in my head'

After all this talk and excitement over the newly unveiled Tommy Cahill, I thought I'd go back and look at an earlier Jake Gyllenhaal incarnation, the one in the bubble. It might have been controversial, it might have offended almost everybody on the planet, including six-armed goddesses and the whore next door, it might have been disowned by Disney, but nothing makes me laugh outloud like Jimmy Livingston (and his mother).


'"It's a wonderful love story -- a freaky, awesome ride with crazy characters," said Gyllenhaal, who starred in 1999's "October Sky." What was it like in the bubble? "I got really hot and then really cold in there," he tells Seventeen magazine in its July issue. "The sun worked like a magnifying glass; it nearly burned a hole in my head." It was also difficult to hear inside the bubble. "I learned how to read lips pretty well -- and to yell," he said.'



Jake's childhood had prepared him for life in a bubble and the need to give it a good squeeze: 'The only problem is that growing up in Hollywood is not necessarily that close to any normal reality. It's a curse in the sense that you're trapped in a bubble that you have to become aware of in order to pop. Which is what I'm trying to do.'


Bubble Boy helped Jake pop that one bubble while arguably helping to inflate another. It enabled him to break free of college: 'But my sophomore year was a tough year for me, both intellectually and emotionally. I felt slightly schizophrenic because I was trying to live a regular college life, but I also wanted to be creative. I had no creative outlet at school, so I was thinking a lot about acting. It was difficult to juggle classes with the constant phone calls from agents offering me film roles. I was so confused, but eventually I knew I had to make a decision. And I believe I made the right choice.'


'I laughed out loud at the perversity of the script... It's funny but it's also touching and warm. It's a beautiful love story, and it's a story about a boy finding himself.' Both Jake and the director Blair Hayes defended the film's innocence against those who took offence, repeatedly repeating the metaphor of the bubble. Although not to everybody's taste, it had some killer lines in it, not to mention scenarios (I'm thinking bus stops here and the shop robbery). 'Have you ever been karmically bitch-slapped by a six-armed goddess?', 'and the prince climbed up Rapunzel's hair to the top of the tower and said, "Come with me, and we'll live happily ever after." Then Rapunzel left her plastic bubble and died. The end.', 'Supper time was the best! Nothing could beat Mom's homemade, vitamin-rich, soy-based, germ-free, fat-free fiber cookies.' These are some of the bubble cherries.


Jake drew inspiration for his portrayal of Jimmy from a series of films Blair made him watch: 'I used Peter Sellers in Being There, Johnny Depp in Edward Scissorhands, Tom Hanks in Forrest Gump and Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton. Buster, with his face, in silent films, says so much. Charlie, through his movement. The running in the bubble at the beginning was all Chaplin stuff. The voice came out of watching and thinking what a child would do.'


This interview also contains one of my favourite anecdotes from Jake - about the stunts and his very own Backdraft spectacular: 'They made me do a lot. I'm just a naive little boy. We did this one stunt where I come in and the building is on fire. There's a huge wall of fire and the guys who did the effects did in Backdraft. I'd say, "What is that?" and they'd say "It's gasoline. It's fine." They'd spray it on my feet. "It's fine. Trust us." Everyone is getting their fire suits on and, hey, I'm in a plastic bubble. They asked me to go in and shake the door handles. I go in with "I'm gonna be a stunt man. I'm gonna do this. I've got it." I get to that wall and I'm like "Oooh this is hot!" I put my hands out and grab the handles and I look at the bubble and it starts expanding. And then it goes whoosh.. and then flat all around me and I see the steadycam guy going "Run!." They are spraying me and they cut me out of it like an embryonic sack. I don't touch plastic anymore.'


Maggie also stuck up for Bubble Boy: 'The siblings are close, and Maggie even defends "Bubble Boy,'' the film often labeled Jake's worst. "I thought Jake was great in it," Maggie said, "and I actually thought 'Bubble Boy' was a subversive, smart film, not just another stupid comedy."'


More worrying, however, was the conversion of Bubble Boy into Bubble Boy The Musical. Written by the writers of the movie, the musical was laced with 'sweet songs' and seating was limited.


Includes pictures from IHJ.

Sunday, 5 July 2009

Get me Jake Gyllenhaal

I haven't had enough of the Brothers trailer, or talking about it, so you'll find it again at the bottom of this post. Short though the trailer is, its intensity suggests that Jake Gyllenhaal and his co-stars have every emotion wrung from them through the course of this story. Tommy Cahill is no passive observer.


It seems hard to believe now, after seeing this trailer, that James Cameron almost selected Jake for the lead in Avatar but Cameron had this to say of Jake and his competitors '"I didn't think they were tough enough for what I wanted them to do. [I kept thinking] 'Where are the men? Show me the men.'' That man turned out to be Sam Worthington.


Other directors, of course, have been just as keen to work with Jake as he may have been to work with them. Robert Altman, for instance, was one of these and Jake was at one point or another associated with two of Altman's projects. '...the young Hollywood star he most wants to rope into his new feature, "Hands on a Hard Body," filming in September, is Jake Gyllenhaal. The name of the movie may sound tantalizing, but cool your jets, "Brokeback" fans. The flick is about folks keeping their hands on a car to try to win it in a shopping mall contest. Altman told us he has been in talks with Jake but hasn't gotten a final answer from him yet.' That project sounded... curious.


The Widow Claire was another on. 'Written by Horton Foote, [it] is set against the backdrop of World War II. [Winona] Ryder stars as a young widow with two children who is caught between the affections of two men -- a sweet young soldier about to go to war and the town's most sought-after playboy. Jake Gyllenhaal and Matthew McConaughey have met with Altman about possibly starring opposite Ryder in "Claire." Robert Levy is producing the project.' Now which would have played the 'sweet young soldier'?


Nigel Coles, the director of Calender Girls, had wanted Jake and Alison Lohman to star in his A Lot Like Love. Alison had been in another of the casts of This is Our Youth in London and she also featured with Jake in Teen Vogue in December of 2003. The director of This Is Our Youth, Laurence Boswell, had hoped to launch his new theatre company with Jake as Romeo. Boswell listed Jake as one of his favourite actors and he enthused about working with Hollywood actors:


'Treat them like anybody else. You have to be aware with some people that they may be putting themselves under a lot of pressure because they have a huge reputation, and being exposed on a stage can be a quite anxious thing. You have to relax them. If they don't have a lot of stage experience, you've also got to find a way of teaching within the process of directing. The real trick is just to get on with the job because that's what gives people confidence. Americans are no strangers to work. Their approach is: get in, let's do it, let's work. That's great.'


How I would have liked to have seen Jake as Romeo. Here is some more information and initial doubt that it would happen after all: 'To that end, Variety has recently reported that, for the project, Shakespeare's tale of star-crossed lovers would be reset in modern Manhattan and given a rock-n-roll backing track. The US industry newspaper also tipped Hollywood's Lynn Collins to play Juliet to Gyllenhaal's Romeo in a co-production between Boswell and the Chicago Shakespeare Theater, with seasons in Chicago and possibly New York after London. However, today's edition of the Daily Mail suggests the project may not be quite so straightforward, or immediate. Gyllenhaal, who's currently filming the screen version of Proof in London (See The Goss, 20 Oct 2003), told columnist Baz Bamigboye that, although he wants to work with Boswell again and they have indeed been talking about R & J, "we may do another play in London before we get to the Shakespeare".'

I need to see this again...



Includes pictures from IHJ.

Friday, 3 July 2009

[Update] HQ Brothers trailer!

Jake Gyllenhaal on a big screen at last - I knew the day would come. And it comes with the prospect of Jake on Ice... Edited to add a different - and working - version.



Kate Bosworth on Twitter: 'Public Enemies was alright but the trailer for a film called 'Brothers' w/ Jake Gyllenhaal, Tobey Maguire & Natalie Portman looks FANTASTIC!'


For the moment (and this is also updated), the Brothers film link takes you to a page being built, so keep watching.


And because I can't get enough of Brothers Jake, here are some more caps:















Happy 4 July to all those who celebrate it!

Thursday, 2 July 2009

[Updated] Something old(ish), something new(ish) - and get that hair out of your face...

If you want as many people as possible to see your movie, it doesn't hurt to appeal to more than one audience because, believe it or not, not everyone goes to the cinema just to see Jake Gyllenhaal. In past days, a director or producer would pair Jake (and other young actors) with big names and that way everyone would be happy, more people would see Jake and, hopefully, he wouldn't be bossed about too much.


Dennis Quaid was a fine and believable choice for Jake's father in The Day After Tomorrow. 'Producer Mark Gordon (The Patriot) knows that when it comes to big-budget effects spectaculars, it doesn't hurt to showcase two leads who appeal to different audience segments. "We had Dennis in mind because he is strong, smart, likable, fatherly and tough," Gordon says. As for Gyllenhaal... "you could believe Jake is Dennis' son, and not just physically. Together, they are charming, funny and warm."' The charming, funny and warm, combined with extraordinary dimples, was a winner.


Dustin Hoffman was another big name father figure for Jake and accounts of Dustin's vigorous charm on set are numerous. Here is the story of the dog handler who worked with Dustin, Jake and their four-legged friend(s) on the set of Moonlight Mile.


But, Jake hasn't just played against older men, there have been some older women too... 'Jake Gyllenhaal, 21, spent his summer as a boy-toy object of desire for older women in the praised art-house releases The Good Girl, with Jennifer Aniston, and Lovely & Amazing, with Catherine Keener. But he says women of a certain age aren't putting the moves on him off-screen as a result. Not that he's likely to notice. "I would think older women are more nonchalant than that. They've played that game before. I wouldn't know they were doing it."' - Lesson number 1, there is such a thing as being too subtle.


Jake does not only look like a younger Dennis Quaid when he needs too, Brad Silberling picked him to play a version of himself partly because 'an agent friend alerted Silberling to Gyllenhaal, declaring, "You guys scare me by how much alike you are." Silberling beat the rush to hire the actor he now calls "the ubiquitous Jake Gyllenhaal. His stock is going up."'


In the same article we learn that we are not alone in our feelings for Jake's Moonlight Mile 'hairstyle' - 'Gyllenhaal had no problems with the 1973 setting of Mile— except for his retro bangs. He says his mom, screenwriter Naomi Foner (Running on Empty), griped, "Why did they put that hairdo on you? You look so good when your hair is out of your face."'


Update: Jake spotted (today?) in Intelligitsa in Venice...


... and Kate Bosworth on Twitter: 'Public Enemies was alright but the trailer for a film called 'Brothers' w/ Jake Gyllenhaal, Tobey Maguire & Natalie Portman looks FANTASTIC!'

Includes pictures from links and IHJ.