
“I did want it to be emotional, not just facts like Court TV. But I wasn’t interested in spending time to tell the back story of any of these characters,” explained David Fincher. “I just wanted to know what they did in regards to the case.” Actor Mark Ruffalo (You Can Count on Me) plays San Francisco Detective Dave Toschi who along with his partner Detective Bill Armstrong (Anthony Edwards) led the police investigation. “Dave was somebody who was not afraid of the camera, and so there was just a lot of material available on what he looked like and how he sounded,” said Ruffalo. “It was such an enormous part of his life – his career, his life, his family, everything was caught up in it. He was being groomed to be Chief of Police. He was on the rise. To have it go down the way it did, in such an ignoble way, I don’t think you recover.” Gone are flashy camera movements which were featured prominently in Panic Room (2002). “[David Fincher] said he wanted to do a piece that was in the vein of All The President’s Men [1976], that had been all about acting.” The filmmaker wanted to make sure there were no unnecessary distractions. “How do we remind people at all times that what they’re seeing is true?” asked Fincher. “We decided, rightly or wrongly, to present it in the simplest conceivable way. The actors would walk into a room with a Styrofoam cup, deliver their four pages of dialogue, and that would be it. We were going to make the information king and the movie would live or die by the believability of the performances.”

“One of the things the movie is talking about is, ‘What is closure?’” said David Fincher of the picture which ended up with a runtime of two hours and forty-five minutes. “We screened the movie many times. We tried to make the movie as short as we could. But we also made promises to people that we were going to tell their story and they would not be turned into plot devices—Nameless Victim No. 1.” The cast in the $65 million production are actors Robert Downey Jr. (Chaplin), Brian Cox (Manhunter), John Carroll Lynch (Shutter Island), Dermont Mulroney (My Best Friend’s Wedding), Chloë Sevigny (Boys Don’t Cry), Elias Koteas (Shooter), and Candy Clark (Blue Thunder). Reacting to the film, about the “ultimate boogeyman”, earning $85 million worldwide, David Fincher remarked, "I guess people just don't like irresolution. But, that's what I thought was interesting about it.” At the Cannes Film Festival the mystery-thriller contended for the Palme d’Or while screenwriter James Vanderbilt (Basic) received a Writers Guild of America nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay. The Online Film Critics Society Awards nominated the non-fiction movie for Best Director, Best Editing, Best Picture and Best Adapted Screenplay; it also received nominations from the Empire Awards for Best Director, Best Film, and Best Thriller.

On the creative challenge of developing the cinematic personas portrayed by Brad Pitt (Burn After Reading), Cate Blanchett (Elizabeth), Julia Ormond (Smilla’s Sense of Snow), Elias Koteas, Taraji P. Henson (Hurricane Season), Earl Maddox (Little Chenier), Jacob Tolano (Guy in the Trunk), Donna DuPlantier (The Roe Effect), Jason Flemyng (Clash of the Titans), David Jensen (The Mist), Ed Metzger (Dog Day Afternoon) and Joeanna Sayler (Trust Me), the screenwriter stated, “Whether you like them or not you have to give them some reality, some history, some psychological traits that would be accurate for that personality.” The biggest complication was in the depiction of the title character over the various stages of his life. “There was some talk for a while of having four or five actors playing Benjamin at different ages, but I had faith that David could figure it out.” Playing the role of Button is an actor working on his third project with David Fincher. “For Brad Pitt, it's harder acting than other roles that are so huge, because to be quiet is the hardest thing.” Eric Roth recalled a conversation with an Oscar-winning performer. “I remember Bob DeNiro telling me that the hardest thing to do as an actor is to listen. He said most actors are planning what to say next, and if you watch really good actors, they're listening.” Pitt laments the lack of respect the elderly receive from the younger members of society. “I wouldn't say our culture leans toward respecting the wisdom of age and those who've been around a lot. It's Beavis and Butt-head, 'You're old!’”

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button earned $334 million worldwide and won Oscars for Best Art Direction and Best Visual Effects while contending for Best Cinematography, Best Costume Design, Best Director, Best Editing, Best Original Score, Best Sound, Best Picture, Best Actor (Brad Pitt), Best Supporting Actress (Taraji P. Henson) and Best Adapted Screenplay (Eric Roth and Robin Swicord). At the BAFTAs the epic fantasy tale won Best Makeup, Best Production Design, Best Special Visual Effects along with receiving nominations for Best Cinematography, Best Costume Design, Best Director, Best Editing Best Film, Best Actor (Brad Pitt), Best Music, Best Adapted Screenplay. The Golden Globes nominated The Curious Case of Benjamin Button for Best Director, Best Picture – Drama, Best Original Score, Best Actor (Brad Pitt), and Best Screenplay. David Fincher was honoured with a nomination by the Directors Guild of America. The film was nominated at the Screen Actors Guild Awards for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture, Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role (Taraji P. Henson), and Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role (Brad Pitt). At the Young Artist Awards, Madisen Beaty competed for Best Young Supporting Actress in a Motion Picture.

Facebook spokesman Larry Yu is less than pleased with the project. “It's a sign of Facebook's impact that we're the subject of a movie — even one that's fiction,” remarked Yu. “What matters more to us is staying focused on what we're building to continue to offer a useful, innovative service that makes it easy for people to connect and share.” Asked to react to the Hollywood production, Mark Zuckerberg responded, “The real story of Facebook is just that we've worked so hard for all this time… we just sat at our computers for six years and coded.” Chris Hughes, a Facebook co-founder who left in 2007 to join the Obama presidential campaign, supports Zuckerberg’s opinion. “It’s crazy because all of a sudden Mark becomes this person who created Facebook to get girls or to gain power,” stated Hughes. “That’s not what was going on. It was a little more boring and quotidian than that.” Cathy Anderson, the CEO of the San Diego Film Commission is not a big fan of Hollywood depictions of the computer industry. “Technology is a backdrop for many movies,” explained Anderson, “but producers often opt for fictionalized companies so they can take artistic liberties and make their stories more entertaining with sex and violence. Documentaries lend themselves more to real companies, like Super Size Me [about McDonald’s] and Michael Moore's work.” Jonathan Salem Baskin, the author of Branding Only Works on Cattle remains skeptical about the social impact of the picture. “If Michael Moore can't blow up a company [General Motors in Roger & Me] or industry [health care, in Sicko] in documentaries,” stated Baskin, “what can a biopic, slightly imagined, on Zuckerberg, do? Few, if any, of [Facebook's] customers will care. No one will stop using Facebook. Privacy [the revelation that consumer companies had access to user’s personal information] can hurt, but a movie? Please. It can only help them.”


There is no shortage of potential projects on the production slate for the filmmaker. A couple of remakes being considered by the Denver native are The Reincarnation of Peter Proud (1975), Heavy Metal (1981), and 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954). “[Ness] is so not a serial-killer movie,” stated Fincher of the story based on the graphic novel Torso. “It's about the deconstruction of the myth of [Untouchables leader] Eliot Ness. It has way more to do with Citizen Kane [1941] than it has to do with Se7en [1995]. Ehren Kruger [Arlington Road] wrote a script that's pretty great.” Other graphic novel adaptations that the director has in mind are the plague-infested Black Hole and the hired gun The Killer. “It's that thing we always love from contract-killer movies: the existential assassin,” enthused David Fincher who has also been linked to Rendezvous with Rama. “It's a project I've always loved,” admitted the moviemaker of the science fiction tale written by Arthur C. Clarke. “It's probably technologically within striking distance right now. That was always the thing: You couldn't afford to build these things as sets. It's just too huge.” Two scripts composed by Steven Knight (Dirty Pretty Things) have also captured the attention of the director; the biopic Pawn Sacrifice about the unconventional chess genius Bobby Fischer and the culinary-themed Chef which Fincher describes as being a “celibate sex comedy.” Moving beyond the big screen to TV, David Fincher is looking at collaborating with Oscar-winning actress Charlize Theron (Monster) to produce an HBO adaptation of the book Mind Hunter: Inside the FBI’s Elite Serial Crime Unit by John E. Douglas and Mark Olshaker.
“Editing David's film is like putting together a Swiss watch,” revealed Angus Wall who was the film editor for Zodiac. “All the pieces are so beautifully machined. He's incredibly specific. He never settles. And there's a purity that shows in his work.” Counting Chinatown [1974] and All the President’s Men amongst his favourite movies, David Fincher stated, “Entertainment has to come hand in hand with a little bit of medicine. Some people go to the movies to be reminded that everything's okay. I don't make those kinds of movies. That, to me, is a lie. Everything's not okay.” Pondering his cinematic catalogue of eight pictures, Fincher remarked, “You can either look at your career as the things that you're going to leave behind… Or you can be realistic about the fact that you're going to learn as you practice what you do.”
For more on the director be sure to visit The Works and Genius of David Fincher.
You can also check out the official webite for The Social Network and read the screenplay by Aaron Sorkin here.
Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.
No comments:
Post a Comment