On Movies: Macy movie on moviemaking
April 5th, 2008
‘It was bizarre making The Deal," says William H. Macy. "There I was a producer, playing a producer, being the producer."
Indeed, a movie that almost didn’t get made about making a movie that almost falls apart several times over, The Deal not only was produced by the prolific character actor, who stars as a cynical, broke Hollywood producer opposite a snappy Meg Ryan. Macy and his director buddy, Steven Schachter, also went around soliciting financing for the film, which eventually got made in Cape Town, South Africa. And Macy even did some second-unit directing (a very funny film-within-the-film sequence involving a British starlet in a brassiere, lobbing a hand grenade).
The Deal is one of the centerpiece shows for the 17th Philadelphia Film Festival, which gets under way Thursday. Macy will be in town, and will present his flick, for its East Coast premiere, Saturday night at the Prince Music Theater. It will screen again next Sunday at the Ritz East.
First screened at Sundance in January, The Deal is based on the Peter Lefcourt novel of the same name, and follows the development of a script about 19th-century British prime minister Benjamin Disraeli as it goes from being a classy period-piece drama to, yes, a modern-day action flick starring a black martial arts master (LL Cool J) who’s recently converted to Judaism. Ryan plays a studio exec, Elliott Gould is a learned rabbi who signs on as the movie’s technical adviser, and Jason Ritter and Fiona Glascott (the starlet in the bra) also star.
It’s a fast-paced, larky affair, full of funny, knowing but affectionate barbs aimed at the Biz. And it was royally panned by the two industry trades, the Hollywood Reporter and Daily Variety.
"There is a sort of unwritten law in Hollywood that you can’t make movies about Hollywood, that Hollywood hates movies about itself," says Macy, on the phone from the home in Aspen, Colo., that he shares with his wife, Desperate Housewives’ Felicity Huffman, and their two kids.
Tags: park, south, stars, youtube
April 5th, 2008 at 2:29 am
Name me a Somali who’s attacked America. Moreover, we showed not long ago that we’re able to exert pressure through Ethiopia easier than we could through direct action.
April 5th, 2008 at 3:19 am
JFK and LBJ (who precipitated the fake ‘Gulf of Tonkin incident) were Democrats.I’m against ALL warmongers, regardless of party.
April 5th, 2008 at 4:10 am
I didn’t hear anything about 1:1…in fact, the impression I got was more about combo’s and memorized gestures than just sheer movement.
April 5th, 2008 at 5:00 am
Why arn’t there large amount of Vietnamese that attack us? We certainly left that country in a clusterfuck.Peoples anger are always going to be aimed at local problems, America is accross the ocean, its distant, they’ll rather kill their neighbor who killed their brother.
April 5th, 2008 at 5:51 am
Based on the angle of your arguments, in this case we fully deserve to be attacked by Iraqis after we leave, if they chose so. So ANY argument that we shouldn’t leave is nil, they will attack us while we’re there at all costs.In reality, they have much more pressing issues after we leave, like not getting killed by the rival militias, oh, and most importantly, food water and electricity. By the time any of this is sorted out, we will probably have our own internalized American-based strife to deal with.
April 5th, 2008 at 6:41 am
9/11 changed everything </sarcasm>
April 5th, 2008 at 7:32 am
I have no faith in this being anything other than utter rubbish.
April 5th, 2008 at 8:23 am
Well, have a look at their "Position Papers" page, specifically their position on secession:We believe secession is the best way to restore good government to the South.The one on race seemed to subtly contradict itself in a few places too.
April 5th, 2008 at 9:13 am
This would be a problem with both sides. If a democrat had started the war, every single democratic candidate would be for the war, while all of the republicans would be against it.Loyalty to party > Lives