Archive for April, 2009


Tyson

 

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The first time I recall scaring my mother I was still in elementary school.  I was straight A student, running for class president, pegged as ‘one of the good ones’ by church and family.  Anyway, I remember making a comment along the lines of “being on top of the world and still having nothing.”  All of us experience loneliness, and we all learn to handle it and cope with it in different ways.  James Toback’s new film Tyson isn’t a great documentary, a great sports movie, or a great biography.  If you have had any interest in Mike Tyson in the past 20 years, I don’t think there’s anything here you haven’t seen or heard before.  But what this movie does a GREAT job of doing is, through Mike’s telling of his own story, get you to understand that this man has always been lonely.  Not just now that he’s broke, not just from his time in prison.  When he was the Champ, when he was married, when he was running through God only knows how many women over the years, Mike has always been lonely.  It’s something I picked up many years ago; being surrounded by people isn’t automatically the same thing as being part of a group.

Every sports fan definitely knows Mike’s story, but it’s hard for me to simplify what he symbolized to kids of my generation.  We didn’t really grow up with Ali, so Mike was our Superman.  To see him shadowbox at 19, it was still scary but exciting how fast and powerful he was.  When Buster Douglas knocked him out, I relived the heartbreak I felt that night.  As the movie went on, I was making a mental checklist of some of the young brothers I looked up to as a kid: Michael Jackson became Wacko Jacko, Magic got HIV and had to quit the NBA, 2Pac got killed, Biggie got killed, and Mike Tyson went to prison.  As far as brothers my age goes, Kobe had his rape trial, Mike Vick went to prison…I’ve had other guys I looked up to of course, but I think you see my point.  It’s the dirty little joke I have with some of my Hollywood buddies; if I become big-time, how are they going to destroy me?  How will I destroy myself?

At the end of the film, reliving his own ups and downs, Mike comes off as spiritually happy as he’s ever been.  At 40, there’s a decent chance he may not have lived half his life yet.  Tyson will be the first one to tell you he’s not anybody’s hero, but he talks about looking forward to living the rest of his days as a decent father and human being.

We should all be so lucky. 

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More than once, I’ve been asked by people ‘outside the target audience’ to explain the phenomenon of Madea and the Tyler Perry brand.  My standard answer usually revolves around the fact that, while I don’t consider myself part of the target audience personally, Tyler Perry movies are the only films that come out that my mother and sister are guaranteed to show up for on opening weekend.  That’s an answer, but still leaves the ‘why’ question somewhat unanswered.

The debate goes on about the ‘artistry’ of these movies (you notice no one claims Tyler Perry is a fad anymore), so instead I’ll try to explain, not as a filmmaker, but as a black man, why these movies are so important.

First let me go back to the statement I made about my mother and sister.  There’s more than a few black actresses working steady now, there are a few shows on television that feature black characters exclusively.  What Tyler has mastered is what Mel Gibson nailed (no pun intended) with The Passion of the Christ.  Namely, if you cater a project to the ‘faith’ crowd, and word of mouth spreads about your project being good, it’s a virtual can’t miss.  Nearly all the Madea projects began as successful stage plays, running primarily in the South.  It’s no coincidence his base remains in Atlanta; black folks have known for years that Atlanta is ‘the black capital of the South’.  The ‘pop stars’ who have longevity have to do it by constantly reinventing their image: people’s tastes naturally change over time.  Conversely, the ‘artists’ who have the longest careers understand that people’s tastes change, so they never stray too far from their core audience.  Tyler Perry understood this from the beginning.

At least in terms of the film I’m reviewing here, part of the appeal for his audience is the catharsis of hearing the main characters go through situations that rarely get addressed openly in the black community.  I learned this setting up panel discussions in college, but to this day, there is NO subject matter that puts butts in seats like ‘Black Male-Female Relationships.’  I could make light of this, but there’s so many dynamics at play here (class issues, color complexes, dating outside the race), there have been best selling books written just on that subject.  Literally.

The other major issue that the film brings up is abuse.  There’s a long standing joke that black people don’t do therapy, but there’s also some truth to that.  From my own personal experience, the number of ex-girlfriends, homegirls, and friends who have confided in me to being abused sexually, emotionally, or in some other matter is too numerous to mention.  The even sadder truth is I stop being surprised by these confessions before I was out of my mid-20s.  Of course, every community has these issues to different degrees, all I’m saying is that black people seem to have mastered hiding or disguising them (Chris Brown and Rihanna excluded of course).  So to have someone, anyone air the ‘dirty laundry’ as these movies do, is naturally going to get people talking (a good thing in my humble opinion).

This entry might not have been as entertaining to you as some others, but hopefully I gave you a little insight into why these movies are so successful.

Back to the funny next month…

 

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Enough people have picked up on this one both off screen (see the Photos section) and on screen (the short and some of my past roles) that I might as well acknowledge it.  While I’m just another branch off Stella Adler’s ‘Method’ tree, and my social consciousness started with Malcolm, there are also multiple direct and indirect ways I can point to my respect of George Clooney.

  • The Actor

He’s played Batman, shall we start there?  And wasn’t the reason that film nearly killed off the franchise, he just couldn’t save it.  He co-starred with J.Lo at her absolute APEX (I knew more than a few of my college buddies are nodding their heads right now, remembering Out of Sight).  And he walked into a personal irritant of mine (trying to remake an already good movie) and nailed it.  Ocean’s 11, anyone?

This also falls under the overall concept of image, but Clooney is also a throwback style wise.  He was never a thirtysomething (now a fortysomething) trying to pass himself off as a 20 year old cool kid.  He found his cool as a grown ass man, and man did he run with it!  Part of being self-assured, he doesn’t seem to take himself too seriously.  Especially in comedies, there’s always that vibe of “I’m not the guy curing cancer or AIDS, I’m not bringing peace to the Middle East.  I’m an actor, and I’m having fun doing it.”

  • The Writer/Director

Two films as a director: Confessions of a Dangerous Mind is based on the autobiography of Chuck Barris.  The same Chuck Barris who hosted The Gong Show and created The Newlywed Game and The Dating Game claims to have been a covert assassin for the CIA in his spare time.  Well, OK.  Clooney takes on a supporting role in this good, not great film.  It wasn’t a blockbuster at the box office, but most critics agreed he did fine for his directorial debut.

His second film was Good Night and Good Luck, a look at Edward R. Murrow’s televised attacks on Senator Joseph McCarthy.  Clooney once again took a supporting role in another film based at least in part on television in the 50s, 60s, and 70s.  Coincidence?  Hardly.  Clooney’s aunt is Rosemary Clooney, a popular singer in her day; his father’s career was in television also.  The lesson: choose material you’re comfortable with.  Good Night and Good Luck become one of the year’s critical hits, and Clooney became the first person to be nominated for directing one film and acting in another (his win for Syriana).

  • The Activist

Clooney was a low key celeb supporter in Obama’s presidential run; the cause he’s most known for is Darfur.  Along with Don Cheadle, his vocal support for the region has helped shine a spotlight on a part of Africa that I’ll be the first to admit I didn’t know about.  Their efforts have been recognized by both the United Nations and the Nobel Peace Prize committee.

  • The Brand

Intelligent without being overly preachy.  Stylish without being a complete fashion snob.  A serious artist with a rep for not taking himself too seriously.  A public figure willing to use his spotlight to draw attention to a cause he believes in.

I’ve followed in worse footsteps…

 

My 1st Sports Entry

 

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A quick primer for those of you who are unfamiliar with where my loyalties lie…

College Basketball: the Jayhawks.  Do I enjoy playing the ‘sellout’ role a little too much for my KU friends?  Probably.  My first sports event ever, my father took me to Kemper Arena to watch the Final Four practice in 1988.  Before last year, that also happened to be the last time the Jayhawks won the title.  Very good memory.

MLB: The Royals, with a little love for the Dodgers since they’re in the National League.  The 1985 World Series I remember in bits and pieces; for better or worse my favorite Royals memory is still Hal McRae losing it, throwing a phone out of his office, then telling the cat he hit over the head ‘stick that in your pipe and smoke it!’  But they’re in first place right now so I’m enjoying it while it lasts.

NBA: the Lakers.  My first book report was on Magic Johnson.  If Michael Jackson was my first idol, Magic was 1A.  Magic was on that very, very short list of people who as I approached him I heard myself saying, “Please don’t be an a-hole, please don’t be an a-hole…”  So when I told him he was one of my childhood idols, you know what he did?  He shook my hand, thanked me, and said he was glad he made a positive influence on my life.  And by the time I met Magic, I was a grown man.  Note to all celebrities/public figures, THAT’S HOW IT’S DONE!  I digress…  As far as today’s Lakers go, they’ve definitely got a shot to bring another parade to downtown.  I was at the last one; crazy.  And we already have plans to be there again this June, if a freak of nature based out of Cleveland doesn’t get in our way.

College Football:  the Trojans, naturally.  Saturday evenings in the fall, you know where to find me.  As big of a sports fan as I am, it’s become a pleasant surprise that my first “LA Season Ticket Holder” experience would be with the football fans from SC.  My old man has expressed interest in coming out for a game at some point; it’d be great if these fools made it back to the Rose Bowl this year.  Probably wishful thinking though. 

NFL:  Chiefs.  The team I grew up with in the league I love the most.  Hosted many a Super Bowl party, but as of yet not for my own team.  I’ve watched the Arizona Cardinals, Cincinnati Bengals, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Seattle Seahawks, St. Louis Rams, Carolina Panthers, Oakland Raiders, Denver Broncos, and San Diego Chargers in the big game.  But not my team yet.  And last season, don’t get me started.

Excuse me while I put ice on my knuckles…

For those of you who are regular readers of this blog, most of this entry will be repetitive to you.  As I make the transition from making a short film to making a feature film, I’ve already found that I’m frequently asked the two vital questions: Who are you and Why do you want to make this film?  The following is a ‘mission statement’ if you will, at this very early stage of that process:

To come from the position I’m coming from, as both an African-American and a Muslim-American, I’ve experienced the stigmas and stereotypes that come from being associated with each community.  I’ve watched many of my peers become jaded and bitter, but I’ve chosen to live my life in a different manner.  As the Marvin Gaye song goes, “War is not the answer, for only love can conquer hate.”  Being a minority filmmaker, I’m acutely aware of the power of my chosen medium.  The images that appear on screen can shape a culture; the storytellers who bring us these images can inspire the next generation to tell their own stories.

                I can’t point toward any single event that inspired me to write Lady in My Life.  Knock on wood, but there have been no major births or deaths since I wrote this story.  Even though this film is not my literal autobiography, it is certainly a spiritual one.  The main character, Jamal Ali, and his turbulent relationships with the black women in his life; this concept cuts to the core of who I am, even if the specifics have been fictionalized.  I recently shot a prologue to this film, where I played the main character.  Jumping all the way into the backstory of the character I created, I realized that how personal the film truly was to me.  It’s the type of film I grew up wanting to make, a film like Boyz N Da Hood or Do the Right Thing. I’m excited at the prospect of bringing the feature version to life.

                I aim to put the feature film together using many of the elements I used in my recently completed short.  I returned to my hometown, Kansas City, which also serves as one of the main locales of the narrative.  Working with cinematographer Jeremy Osbern and Through A Glass Productions was one of the most productive experiences I’ve had to this point in my career.  I was impressed by the ease of working with the RED ONE camera, but would love for Lady in My Life to be shot on film.

The structure of the story I’ve written will make this an ensemble film; my dream would be to mix the cast with ‘known’ and unknown actors for some of the major roles.  Ideally, I’d want my cast to be a mix of the minority actors working in both Hollywood and on Broadway.

Thank you for taking the time to read this, and for having interest in my project.  I learned a long time ago that while films like mine come from a singular vision, the process is extremely collaborative.  With your help, I’m positive I can turn this particular ‘dream’ into a reality.

State of Play

 

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Thrillers are one of my favorite genres, bar none. The ‘newsroom thriller’ has provided some great films over the years (most notably All The President’s Men).  I read Roger Ebert’s review of this film; he thinks newspaper thrillers will continue, even if the newspaper itself dies off in the next couple of years.  I disagree on both points, but I’m guessing you want my opinion of this movie, so away we go…

The setup for this story is a pretty girl who just happened to work in the office of a young and upcoming Senator (played well by Ben Affleck) is murdered in the DC subway system.  It’s soon revealed the Senator was having an affair with the girl, and his best friend Cal (played by Russell Crowe) is constantly dancing on the line between being the Senator’s friend, and a top notch investigative reporter for the Washington Globe.  The cast is filled out by Robin Wright Penn as the Senator’s wife, Rachel McAdams as the cute blogger who represents the next wave of journalism, and Helen Mirren as the editor of the newspaper.

I’ll spare you more of the plot for two reasons.  One, it’s a thriller, and the who/what/why is the reason you go to see movies like this.  Secondly though, in my opinion, this is one of those movies that had one twist too many, so by the end, while the story was well told and I had all the facts, I was still trying to piece together who was playing who.  The easy answer is, well that’s DC politics (and it is I’m sure), but for entertainment purposes I think they could have simplified it a little.

The casting was solid from top on down.  I heard Brad Pitt was the original lead; it’s hard for me to imagine him in this role (and I’m a Pitt fan for the most part).  One person I didn’t mention in my cast rundown: Jason Bateman.  It gives none of the story away to say that, again, he steals scenes like he was born to do it.  Dodgeball, Hancock, and I’m sure I’m leaving more films out, but you want to talk about carving a niche for yourself and running with it.  I think Fred Willard is the only one who does it better than him.

Anyway, don’t let my complaints turn you completely off.  Overall I thought it was a pretty solid flick.  Not a bad way at all to kick off what’s looking like a busy summer for your neighborhood film geek…

Smelling the Roses

My official vacation started mid week, making my way to the Big Apple.  The film is done, the script is not quite ‘done’ but in a draft I could live with; my normal distractions weren’t around.  It was more than a little scary to me to acknowledge how much stress I put on myself on a daily, sometimes hourly basis.  Enjoy doesn’t cover how good last weekend was; it’s just not a strong enough word.  I spent the past few days with old and new friends from my time at the University of Kansas.  Being reminded of things I genuinely forgot I did, cracking up about how trifling I was as a teenager.  I wouldn’t do anything differently, I have a lot of good memories from that time in my life.  College was…college.  At the same time…

What drove this particular New York trip to happen at this particular time was my desire to go to the opera.  You read that right.  The operas we saw, Cavalleria Rusticana and Pagliacci, were both on my radar in the KU days, because their music influences some of my favorite films (I’ll let you do the research on which films if you’re interested).  Outside of the financial impossibility of it though, let’s be honest, going to the opera just wasn’t ‘cool’ for someone of my background to even have an interest in.  It probably still isn’t!  But for me personally, college was the ‘figure things out/be cool’ phase; now (even in the city/industry I’ve chosen), I’ve lost a lot of the desire to be cool.  Now, it’s very important to me to be the best version of ‘Malik Aziz’ I can be, but a lot of the peripheral stuff doesn’t interest me anymore.  Anyway, I asked the people who I thought would be down to go to the opera (they all said yes), and away we went. 

The opera was better than expected, and we still had a day to do something else.  What ended up happening was (literally) a day long discussion about relationships, past, present and future.  Honestly, I don’t go into ‘hypothetical/what if’ mode as often as I used to.  (Hopefully) I’ve learned from my mistakes, and continue to learn from the women in my life, in whatever direction our relationships are meant to take.  Frankly my approach to my love life is similar to my approach to my career: don’t take the negative experiences too personally, stay optimistic and persistent when necessary, be ready for anything, and take advantage when a good ‘opportunity’ is staring you in the face.  And the rest will work itself out.

The definition of a life experience trip.  This whole week has been great for putting perspective back into my life.  Pushing the reset button if you will.  Not counting various family functions, I haven’t taken a true vacation in almost three years.  So maybe I need to ‘get out more.’

This past week has been one of the most fulfilling of my life.  I left ‘the new hometown’ to go to ‘the original hometown’ to finish the short.  As much as anything else, it was a major learning experience for me.  First thing we did was ‘picture lock.’  I reviewed a couple of cuts from Los Angeles (the beauty of the technology we have now), but for the final edit, which at that point meant mostly trimming half seconds here and there, yeah I had to do that in person. 

Next a few hours went into the sound mix.  Adding sound effects we didn’t have on set, picking the right music for the score (in this case a song composed by a good friend of mine), and making sure the music blended well into the story of the film.  That turned out to take a LOT longer than I was expecting.  I liked the music we had, but it kept overpowering what was happening visually.  I really love the solution we came up with, ideally that’s one of a number of things you (the audience) won’t even notice.

The next day we nailed down color correction (which is what it sounds like, getting the most out of what the camera captured).  Finally a little CGI work (which I personally guarantee you won’t notice unless you were on set and recognize what we changed), and you put all the pieces together.  As I think about it, it reminds me a lot of cooking.  Too much or too little of any single element, and you have a piece of trash.  When I saw the finished product for the first time, I’ll tell you, it was very, very gratifying. 

The last ‘test’ is how you, the audience, react to it.  In one regard, it doesn’t matter since I’ve made the film I set out to make.  I have tremendous faith that it will help in setting up ‘the next step.’  Maybe a little, maybe a lot, that I do not know just yet.  There’s also the purely business aspect of it all.  Can the project make back the money that’s been invested into it?  In a direct way (competition), I think it’s got a shot (which is the most anyone who’s a professional in this thing can ask for.)  In an indirect way (creating other opportunities),  I think the odds are even higher.  Maybe it’s pure optimism at this point; we’ll find out soon enough.

Next step for the project: distribution and getting it to the audience…

Hey gang,

I’m leaving L.A. for a week so no blogging til the middle of the month.  Going to approve the final cut of the short in KC, and make an overdue trip to the East Coast.  I’m sure I’ll be full of stories when I get back.  A few random notes in the meantime…

I’m BEYOND delighted Friday Night Lights got picked up for two more seasons.  My favorite show on the air right now, with no real competitors.  I’ll be occupied next Friday night, so I’ll do my best to avoid spoilers until I get back.  But if you’ve caught every episode of the show like I have, this season has been beyond great in paying off some of the relationships/characters we’ve invested in the past few years.

Looks like Fast and Furious is going to set records.  Never got into the franchise, so I’m non-committal on that one.  I am getting hyped for the summer though: Public Enemies, Terminator, Transformers, Star Trek…those four came off the top of my head, I know there’s a lot more.

For some reason I picked Villanova to win the NCAA Tournament this year.  As of the time I write this, they’re still in it.  Of course, the year I had no money tied into my picks.  Go figure.

That said, you know that feeling you get when you know something really, really good is going to happen, but you don’t know what it is yet?  I have that right now.  I’ll let you know if I’m pleasantly surprised.

Back in a week!

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