Sunday, 30 September 2012

Cigs & Vines Discusses ‘The Master' With The Auteurcast; More Podcasts


Chances are, if you've seen "The Master" by now you've done a fair bit of reading about the film as well. From the reviews to the interviews to the 'what-does-it-all-mean' pieces (like this excellent one from Vulture), the film has become a hot topic of conversation and should prove to be for some time to come. We've read probably 50+ reviews of the film and continue to check them out on Twitter as our readers send them in. We've also been enjoying listening to a few podcasts for more in-depth analysis. We recommend checking out Slate's Spoiler Special for a great hour-long discussion of the film and Grantland's Hollywood Prospectus podcast as well. Our friends over at The Auteurcast have been doing a series on the films of Paul Thomas Anderson and were kind enough to invite 1/2 of the Cigs & Vines team (me) on to discuss "The Master." The 90 minute conversation was barely enough time to scratch the surface of the film but hopefully will be an entertaining listen nonetheless.*

You can download The Auteurcast podcast on "The Master" here.
Subscribe to The Auteurcast on iTunes.

#THEMASTER70MM

Enter our Gone To China Contest to win a copy of the soundtrack!

Stay tuned to Twitter and Facebook for the latest news and updates.

*Please excuse the trailing off, 'ummm's and describing everything as 'great.' I missed my podcast training class.

Friday, 28 September 2012

Interview: Toronto Star



Paul Thomas Anderson, director of The Master, an accidental auteur: Howell
Source: The Toronto Star
September 28, 2012 | Peter Howell

I was starting to think Paul Thomas Anderson was “processing” me, much the way cult inductees are in The Master, his cerebral workout of a new film.

Having played the “maybe” game for an in-person interview all during TIFF, which eventually became “maybe not,” word was that the elusive Anderson was suddenly available for a telephone chat.

Then the appointed hour comes and goes, and there’s no call from PTA and no immediate explanation from either his Canadian or U.S. publicists for his absence.

Ninety minutes later, a misdialed telephone is blamed and a contrite Anderson is on the line: “Hey Peter, it’s Paul. Sorry about everything.”

Apology accepted. And it immediately occurs to me that much about Anderson is open to wild interpretation in the wake of The Master, a film that resists easy analysis.

The story of an uncommon bond between a feral sailor (Joaquin Phoenix) and a cerebral cult guru (Philip Seymour Hoffman) has a father-figure dynamic common to Anderson’s work, right back to his 1996 debut Hard Eight (a.k.a. Sydney).

But the nut of The Master, his sixth feature, doesn’t crack open as easily as Anderson’s earlier films, which also include There Will Be Blood, Magnolia, Punch-Drunk Love and Boogie Nights. There are long passages that don’t necessarily lead anywhere, the female characters are blurred, (especially Amy Adams’ whore/Madonna figure), and the resolution is unconventional, to say the least.

It’s consequently been hailed as a masterpiece by some critics (me among them), a misfire by others (Roger Ebert for one) and a vexing puzzle by still others (see Jim Emerson, Scanners blogger).

One thing is for certain: The Master is the most-discussed film of 2012.

Which leads me to my first question for Anderson: Is there anything he would consider as an incorrect interpretation of his film?

“No!” he answers. “You can’t tell someone that their opinion is wrong.”

Well, you certainly could. It happens all the time on the Internet. But Anderson acknowledges that he’s “heard the chatter” that The Master requires more than one viewing to really get, and it pleases him.

“I love it; it’s exciting. I’ve seen films that I absolutely could not stand when I saw it. Or I just thought, ‘I don’t know what is going on here.’ Then five years later, you see it and you can’t believe you missed something or what were you thinking? Or the opposite: You see a film, and you think the heavens have opened up. Then a couple of years later, you’re not quite sure what the hell’s going on, what were you thinking?

“Films should be like that. That’s great. They’re moving, living things. In different situations they’re different, you know? You walk into the theatre expecting something, or you’re in a bad mood, or you’re in a good mood — you’re open to anything. There are just too many issues going into a film to strike everybody as a (immediate) win, you know?”

Anderson is equally open-minded about such technical issues as screen size and celluloid-vs.-digital, despite being widely depicted of late as an industry throwback at the tender age of 42. He chose to film The Master in 70 mm celluloid, which in the advancing digital world is like shooting still photos with old Polaroid stock.

But to Anderson going 70mm was just a simple esthetic choice, one he thought fit the inner grandeur of The Master. He clearly loves 70mm, but he also sounds as if he could just as easily have shot The Master on an iPhone.

“Do you like a movie more if you see it on your phone or you saw it in a big theatre in 70mm?” he asks.

“I don’t know. You see something on an airplane, some small story, and it just connects to you. You’re in a mood where you feel lonely or happy or whatever. (The Master) has had such an odd thing with people. They love it, they don’t like it, they like it better a second time, they see it a third time and they reverse their opinion.”

He’s bemused by all the discussion of what appear to be magic-realist elements in the film, such as the sudden appearance in a movie theatre of a telephone brought to Freddie by a theatre employee. This film is set in 1950, long before cellphones and era when most phones were confined to a wall or desk.

“I think it’s a very long cord,”Anderson says, and the smile is almost audible. “They called their local home depot in 1950 and got an extra long cord.”

OK, then, but what of the film’s recurring water imagery, the shot of a ship’s wake that keeps repeating?

“Ha, ha! Those water shots are just nice. Sometimes you do things that you think are a good idea. Other times, you just hope that some feeling hits you when you’re putting the film together. You have to follow that.

“Sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn’t. I don’t know where it comes from. And you’ve got to listen to it.”

He doesn’t see himself as an auteur, a term critics often use to describe a director who possesses not only a distinct style, but also a challenging one. His personal touchstone when making The Master was the films of Raoul Walsh, the journeyman maker of hundreds of films in many genres from 1912-63.

“You know, I got into Raoul Walsh a lot. His style, which is a very straight forward nuts-and-bolts director. I mean that as a high compliment, just the directness of his stories. I read his biography and his biography is just as nuts and bolts as his directing. It’s pretty great.”

If there’s anything of the auteur with Anderson, he would regard it as accidental. I remind him of the dictum, often attributed to Sigmund Freud, that “sometimes a cigar is just a cigar.”

“Sometimes, but a bunch of different cigars could add up to a tree, you know what I mean?” he replies.

“I’m not trying to be arty or elusive or anything. Where we come from in the editing room can sometimes be intellectual, but more often it’s pretty instinctual. More often, if you looked under the hood, you’d see how amazingly disorganized and confused we all were.”

He talks about what happened when he tried to get arty while making There Will Be Blood, his 2007 oilpatch epic. The film garnered eight Oscar nominations (including Best Director and Best Adapted Screenplay for Anderson), eventually winning two, including Best Actor for Daniel Day-Lewis.

“We didn’t have that much money for effects and stuff, and we talked about doing some crazy things like a lot of different digital paintings like cities and towns off in the background and stuff.

“And (art director) Jack Fisk said something that was so on the nose. He said, ‘We don’t need that. We have Daniel Day-Lewis. He’s the best special effect you can have.’

“That really stuck with me. It’s true. Whatever style is there is about whatever is going on with the characters. Those are my favourite things.”

Thursday, 27 September 2012

Watch The Final ‘The Master' Teaser Trailer ‘Last One / Thank You'



"The Master" is already in theatres but PTA decided to drop us one last trailer entitled "Last One / Thank You" which is an epic 4 1/2 minutes and features a ton of previously unseen footage (screened only for select journalists at Cannes). And to help you out, we've already updated our guide to the film's Deleted Scenes & Alternate Takes with all the new material. Enjoy.

#THEMASTER70MM

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‘The Master' Cinematographer Mihai Malaimare Confirms 85% Of The Film Was Shot On 65mm


Ever since the news first broke that "The Master" would be shooting in 65mm, questions have lingered about exactly how much of the film would be shot in the large-format. We knew before the film's release that the number was definitely over 50% but Kodak sat down with cinematographer Mihai Malaimare who confirmed that the number is closer to 85%.
Anderson and Malaimare initially planned to shoot mainly portraits with 65 mm, about 20% of the movie. Even in situations where audiences are not seeing a 70mm print, the 65mm-originated scenes deliver breathtaking images that draw viewers into the story.
“As we were looking at dailies, we saw that every 65mm shot was so amazing,” says Malaimare. “After a week or two of shooting, we switched, and ended up shooting something like 85% of the movie on 5-perf 65mm.”
The 35mm cameras – Panavision Millennium XL2s – were brought out for handheld scenes, or other shots that required a dirtier look. “When your eyes are accustomed to what 65mm looks like in terms of grain and depth of field, with these amazing landscapes, switching over to a smaller negative area, you perceive the difference immediately,” says Malaimare.

He also discussed the quality of 65mm saying that it would give you roughly 8k resolution -- Our Guide pegged it between 8k-10k -- which is twice the resolution of even the best digital 4k projectors.
“Paul really believes in the photochemical process,” says Malaimare. “It delivers better quality. If you scan a 65mm negative, it will give you at least 8K resolution for the DI, but that is definitely expensive. Maybe it’s a matter of respect for the format. It’s about the approach you take. If you know from the beginning that you don’t want to scan, you’re more careful with the lighting and everything. With a DI, you tend to be sloppier because you know you can fix and hide things later. By using the large, low speed negative, not using any filters in from of the lens, and using these very sharp lenses, you get extremely high image quality – and you don’t want to ruin that with a scanner.” 
If you want to get really in-depth, "The Master" cinematographer also discusses lenses, aspect ratios, cameras, and film stocks in the full interview over at Kodak. (thanks Fernando!) And if you're unclear as to the difference between 65mm and 70mm, now would be a great opportunity for you to check out our Guide To 70mm.

#THEMASTER70MM

Enter our Gone To China Contest to win a copy of the soundtrack!

Stay tuned to Twitter and Facebook for the latest news and updates.

Sunday, 23 September 2012

‘The Master' Opens Strong In Wide Release With $5 Million


Box Office Mojo reports that "The Master" continued to perform strongly in wide release collecting an estimated $5 million this weekend from 788 theatres. That puts the film in 7th place for the weekend just behind "Dredd" which opened in around 1800 more theatres and gives it the highest per screen average of any film in the Top 15 this weekend. (For comparison, this opening is a little higher than "There Will Be Blood"'s $4.8 million back in 2007 during its second week expansion.) Congrats to Annapurna Pictures & Weinstein Co. on the film's success so far and let's hope that the desire for repeat viewings keeps the film doing well in the coming weeks.

Speaking of repeat viewings, Slate critic Dana Stevens wrote up a magnificent piece where she re-reviewed the film after watching it a 2nd and 3rd time.
"There’s something deeply and irreplaceably pleasurable about revisiting a complex, ambitious film a few times in close succession on the big screen if possible, and letting each iteration inform and expand on the last. Having gotten the chance to do so this week not only deepened and transformed my experience of this particular film, it reminded me why I started wanting to think and write about film in the first place."
Read the entire thing over at Slate. Two new TV spots featuring some new footage (though not new if you've seen the film by now) are up at Fandango. (They also feature some inadvisable narration so perhaps worth watching just for that.)

If you haven't already you should check out our Deleted Scenes guide to look at all the material that made it into the teasers and trailers but not the final cut. And be sure to enter our Gone To China Contest to win Jonny Greenwood's soundtrack and perhaps some other things we may decide to throw in.

I caught the film for a 5th viewing over the weekend at the grand old Ziegfeld Theatre just to continue my tour of seeing it across all of NYC's 70mm venues. How about you? Did you see the film more than once? How was your first/second/third viewing? Sound off in the comments.

#THEMASTER70MM 

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Friday, 21 September 2012

‘The Master' Is Now Playing In Theatres Everywhere


Last week, Paul Thomas Anderson's "The Master" opened in limited release and shattered attendance records playing to packed houses all weekend long in New York and Los Angeles. Today the film expands to nearly 800 locations across the U.S. and Canada including 70mm presentations in Seattle, Boston, Washington DC, Austin, Toronto, Oakland as well as NYC and LA. For those of you outside of North America, your patience will be rewarded soon with a film that is absolutely worth the wait but for many readers, today is the day you've been waiting for.

Lucky for you, we've been preparing for today too. Last week we recalled the films' long and winding road to the screen and today we'd like to celebrate in a different way, by introducing you to our "The Master" page. There you'll find a treasure trove of behind-the-scenes info we've been collecting on the film these past few months including interviews, production notes, deleted scenes and more. For those of you have been avidly avoiding spoilers until after you've seen the film, this is the time to dive in. Here's a user's guide:
Read our brief history of the project and then relive that initial excitement by revisiting the film's teasers, trailers and posters featuring a wealth of material not seen in the finished film.

Dive into our brand new Deleted Scenes section to track all of the alternate takes, deleted and extended scenes from those clips that didn't make it into the final cut.

Read the film's Production Notes to dig deep into The Story, The Cast, The Photography, The Design and The Music, featuring quotes from Paul, producers JoAnne Sellar and Daniel Lupi, production designer Jack Fisk and composer Jonny Greenwood.

Read every interview with Paul Thomas Anderson since "The Master" debuted at Venice -- including Filmmaker Magazine, Huffington Post, Newsweek, Screen Daily, SF Gate, Vancouver Sun and the excellent must-read Village Voice profile -- or watch Paul speak at the TIFF & Venice Press Conferences or at Academy Conversations

Check out glowing reviews from Variety, NY Times, LA Times, Rolling Stone, The New Yorker, The Village Voice, The Hollywood Reporter and countless other critics who are still struggling to unlock its mysteries.
Watch Amy Adams and Philip Seymour Hoffman discuss their roles in the film or read the LA Times excellent profile of Joaquin Phoenix.

Buy Jonny Greenwood's "The Master" soundtrack on Amazon or stream it on Spotify.

Enter our Gone To China Contest to win a copy of the soundtrack.

If you think you plan on seeing the film more than a few times, hold onto your stubs. Personally I'm going to be rounding viewing #5 later this weekend but we have some teaser posters to give away courtesy of The Weinstein Company and we'd like to reward those hardcore fans who keep going back. (Contest details TBD.) 
But most importantly, enjoy this moment. If you've been reading the site for a while, remember the long road it took to get here and how special it is to be able to see a new Paul Thomas Anderson film in theatres. As we said last week, "See the film, see it more than once, take your friends and remember that we're lucky to live in a world where 'The Master' exists." The next few weeks will be important in proving to studios that getting behind a visionary filmmaker like PTA is a risk worth taking.

And if you feel so inclined, please spread the word about Cigarettes & Red Vines. Thanks for reading, everyone.

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‘The Master' Deleted Scenes


One of the first things you may notice about "The Master" is that many, many of the scenes present in the film's marketing did not make it into the finished film. An LA Times article cites Joaquin Phoenix as saying that PTA doesn't worry about continuity, he's open to improvisation and often scenes that might take up one-eighth of a page can shoot for a day and a half. The actor told Time, "Paul will write many, many scenes that won’t make it into the movie." In some cases entire scenes have been left unused, while in other cases the scene in the trailer is an alternate (and sometimes substantially different) take of the one in the film (ie: the "Just tell me something that's true!" is not present during the finished jail sequence). To make note these changes, we've compiled a list of the deleted scenes as well as extended and alternate takes from the various marketing materials that don't appear in the final cut.

ALTERNATE TAKES & EXTENDED SCENES

Scenes From The Beach
Phoenix told Time, "There were a lot of scenes where we saw what Freddie had experienced in the war, and a lot of the physical damage that had occurred. There is reference to some of that in the beginning of the film." These snapshots of Freddie on the beach were seen in teaser #1 and the full-length trailer.



"Was There A Fight?" - Alternate Interview Scene
An army doctor questions Freddie. Seen in its entirety in teaser #1. Full dialogue below.


Doctor: Are you mixed up?
Freddie: No, sir.
Doctor: Are you more jumpy than you were before?
Freddie: No, sir.
Doctor: And how's your sleeping?
Freddie: I sleep just fine sir.
Doctor: When you sleep, do you have nightmares?
Freddie: Not as much as before.
Doctor: You've had violent episodes.
Freddie: [laughing] Yes, sir. We all did.
Doctor: You pulled a knife to the throat of an officer.
Freddie: [laughing] But we boxed that out.
Doctor: How would you yourself rank your overall health?
Freddie: Strong.
Doctor: And what about this last episode on the way home?
Freddie: What episode sir?
Doctor: The episode you had on the way home, here.
Freddie: I don't remember an episode
Doctor: You have no memory of what happened?
Freddie: We were celebrating. We were drinking and dancing but I don't remember an episode. Was there a fight? What happened?
Doctor: Let's just see if we can't help you remember what happened.
Freddie: [laughing] Okay.
Debriefing Scene Added Bits
During the debriefing scene in the film we're never shown Freddie in the room with the other soliders but both shots here show Freddie in the room in close up and wide angle. Seen in the trailer.


Inkblot Test Alternate Take 
Alternate camera angles and even filthier (and completely hilarious) dialogue for the inkblot test scene. Seen in its entirety in teaser #6.


Meeting Peggy - Additional "Time Holes" Dialogue
Freddie sits down with Peggy and she explains Time Holes in an extended version of this scene from teaser #3.
Freddie: What's this "time hole" business?
Peggy: It means going back to a place and realizing you're on the wrong track. And getting ready to start life over from the ground floor so that you can get out of your hole.

Peggy Close-Up - Additional Dialogue
During Peggy's mental exercise with Freddie where she instructs him to turn her eyes black, she also offers the following excised instructions in teaser #7. "I want you to place something in the future for yourself that you would like to have.  It's there, waiting for you."


Alternate Jail Scene
Probably the most iconic dialogue in any of the trailers - "I know you're trying to calm me down but just tell me something that's true!" - is not used in the actual film. The take used in the film features Freddie with his shirt torn off as he and Dodd yell at one another.


Window To The Wall - Extended
This outtake was utilized excellently in trailer #2. Freddie banging on the window is likely a longer/alternate take during his 'window to the wall' exercise. In the film he completes the task and it's still daytime but here it's night which wouldn't fit in the continuity.


Processing - Alternate Dialogue
After Freddie is asked if he is unpredictable and farts during processing, The Master chides him by saying, ""What a horrible young man you are. You're a dirty animal who eats its own feces when it's hungry," instead of the much more playful version in the film where he says it's good to laugh. Seen in teaser #7.


Arizona Convention Extra Bit
In these shots, Freddie enters the room at the Arizona convention while The Master looks on from the crowd. From trailer #2.


Freddie Walks Away
These shots feature Freddie walking around the corner possibly either before he enters the convention or after he beats up Bill for insulting book #2. Seen in teaser #2.


Motorcycle Sequence - Extra Bit
After Freddie rides off on his motorcycle, it The Master, Elizabeth and Clark wait for his return in this production still.


DELETED SCENES

The Master's Speech
In this deleted scene, The Master approaches a microphone with determination and addresses a crowd with the following dialogue, "I'd like to talk to you today about cold feet and narrow minds.  People who have cold feet cannot move forward. People who have narrow minds cannot move side to side. They both take courage.  This is what I'd like to talk about."


Freddie's Pistol
This scene glimpsed in the full trailer shows Freddie waving a pistol around inside of a house. Seen in the trailer.


Jumping Off The Ship
Presumably Freddie and another sailor (it doesn't appear to be The Master) jump off a Navy ship. Seen in the trailer.


Freddie Heads To England
One of the most beautiful/iconic shots from the trailer features Freddie leaning over the side of a ship extending his arms outwards. From his pea coat we can assume this scene takes place when Freddie is on his way to England to meet Lancaster at the end of the film.


Freddie Runs
Freddie runs in this shot reminiscent of Barry Egan in "Punch-Drunk Love." From his suit we can assume this takes place on the same night he pays a late-night visit to John Moore. Seen in the trailer.


Elizabeth Goes Shooting
It's unclear where this scene of Elizabeth shooting a rifle would have taken place. The desert setting suggests that it could take place when The Master and Freddie are out digging up the manuscript. Seen in trailer #2.


Elizabeth Close-Up
In this provocative closeup during trailer #2, Elizabeth sticks her tongue out and waves it around in a deleted sequence one can only imagine was due to fit into the window-to-the-wall montage (featuring Peggy speaking directly to camera/Freddie).


The Master Hugs Melora
Melora Walters is credited in the film as being in the "Voice" in the band of during the Philadelphia section of the credits but is unseen in the film. She's shown briefly being embraced by The Master during trailer #2.


Freddie Makes Out In The Car
Freddie makes out with an unnamed woman in the backseat of a car in trailer #2


Gone To China
Freddie leaves a note that he's heading to China. Seen in its entirety in teaser #5.


"I Lost My Ship"
Freddie runs across the dock and tells some other sailors that he's lost his ship. Seen in its entirety in teaser #4.


Freddie & Doris
Freddie visits Doris presumably in a flashback seen during teaser #3.


Freddie & Doris 2
Freddie visits Doris presumably in a flashback also during teaser #3.


Freddie Retraces The Past
Freddie lays on a bench outside Doris' house in teaser #7. According to the Guardian:
PTA explains that there was a scene near the end of the film that he eventually cut out, which showed Quell retracing his steps to a park bench where he had once been happy. Quell lies down on the bench, trying to travel in time; to cast himself back to a golden moment before the war. Damn it, says Anderson. He should never have cut that scene.

Freddie In The Master's Office
Freddie opens the crate supposedly containing Book #2 that he & The Master dug up and its contents burst into flames. Seen in teaser #7.


Clark Carries Freddie
Clark carries a limp Freddie in teaser #7. This scene looks like it takes place just after the duo attack John More.


Dodd Family Dinner Scene
The Dodd's eat dinner together in a scene whose place in the film is unclear, revealed during teaser #2 and an accompanying production still.


Freddie In The Woods
Freddie crosses the river to the approaching cars on the road. Possibly from his post-army, pre-The Cause travels. Seen in teaser #2.


Freddie Sees The Master
These shots appear to show Freddie's POV "skulking and sneaking" to observe The Master and his family when first onboard the ship. Seen in the trailer.



DELETED SCENES FROM THE SCRIPT

Coming Soon.