Tag: Michelle Monaghan

  • TailSlate’s Top Ten Directorial Debuts (by actors)

    TailSlate’s Top Ten Directorial Debuts (by actors)

    TailSlate has been a fan of Greta Gerwig for a very long time, both as an actress and a writer.  Now her directorial debut film, Lady Bird is in theaters.  So TailSlate decided to take a look at what we consider our top ten directorial debut films from people who were actors before sitting in that big chair behind the cameras.  Here they are, in no particular order.

    Amy Ryan and Casey Affleck in ‘Gone Baby Gone’

    In 2007, Ben Affleck went behind the camera to direct the film adaptation of Gone Baby Gone.  His films immediately prior to his directorial debut had been hit and miss, but he nailed this one.  Starring Amy Ryan, Casey Affleck, Michelle Monaghan, Ed Harris and John Ashton, this noir thriller scored with critics and at the box office.  Ms Ryan was nominated for a Best Supporting Actress.

    Jessica Walter and Clint Eastwood in ‘Play Misty For Me’

    Clint Eastwood had a big year in 1971.  He starred in the first Dirty Harry movie, in The Beguiled and in his directorial debut, Play Misty For Me.  The story of a radio DJ working at a station in Carmel who meets one of his listeners.  “Evelyn” (Jessica Walter in her first big movie role) is obsessed with “Dave Garver” (Eastwood) and what starts off as a nice relationship goes very wrong.

    Christopher Guest, Michael McKean and Harry Shearer in ‘This is Spinal Tap’

    1984 found Rob Reiner in his post-“All in the Family” period and he took on the task of directing This is Spinal Tap.  With a script he co-wrote with his fellow stars, Christopher Guest, Michael McKean and Harry Shearer, this was one of the best early entries in the mockumentary genre.  Christopher Guest would go on to do more of these mockumentaries, Waiting for Guffman, Best in Show and A Mighty WindThis is Spinal Tap was modeled on serious documentaries about rock and roll and is a lot of fun to watch.

    Mary Tyler Moore and Timothy Hutton in ‘Ordinary People’

    When your first effort in the director’s chair wins Academy Awards for Best Picture, Best Director and wins two other Oscars, it belongs on this list.  We’re referring to 1980’s Ordinary People, directed by Robert Redford.  Having an incredible cast that included Donald Sutherland, Mary Tyler Moore, Judd Hirsch, M. Emmett Walsh and Timothy Hutton definitely helped.  Based on a novel by Judith Guest, this movie tells the story of a family that is shattered by the death of one son and the attempted suicide of the other son.

    Clem Caserta and Chazz Palminteri in ‘A Bronx Tale’

    Robert De Niro had two acting Oscars on his mantle at home when he took on the task of adapting Chazz Palminteri’s one-man play A Bronx Tale to the big screen.  As Sly Stallone had done with his script for Rocky, Palminteri refused to sell the rights to his play unless he was guaranteed the role of “Sonny” and to be the screenwriter on the project.  De Niro met both of those conditions and they made a handshake deal.  A Bronx Tale was nominated to be on the American Film Institute’s Top Ten U.S. Gangster Films list.

    Dennis Hopper, Toni Basil and Peter Fonda in ‘Easy Rider’

    1969’s Easy Rider was Dennis Hopper’s first outing behind the camera.  Jack Nicholson, Peter Fonda and Hopper starred in this counterculture picture about bikers heading from California to New Orleans for Mardi Gras, the proceeds from a drug deal hidden in one of the motorcycles.  In a 2009 interview, Peter Fonda confirmed the rumors that he had smoked real marijuana in scenes filmed for the movie.

    Kevin Costner and Graham Greene in ‘Dances With Wolves’

    Kevin Costner is another actor whose first turn behind the camera resulted in a movie that was awarded the Best Picture Oscar.  Dances With Wolves is the story of a Union soldier who is sent to the westernmost outpost at his own request, after being decorated for bravery in the Civil War.  He finds the post deserted and decides to restore it himself.  He befriends some of the Lakota Indians who live nearby.  Based on the novel of the same name by Michael Blake, Dances With Wolves won seven Academy Awards.

    Danny DeVito and Billy Crystal in ‘Throw Momma From the Train’

    Playing the ruthless dispatcher on the television series “Taxi” made Danny DeVito a star and led to feature film work.  Then in 1987 he went behind the camera to direct himself, Billy Crystal, Rob Reiner and Anne Ramsey in Throw Momma From the Train.  A black comedy about two men who strike a deal where they will each kill the woman that is driving the other crazy, it did well at the box office.

    Stanley Tucci, Marc Antony and Tony Shalhoub in ‘Big Night’

    Two actors combined to direct the next entry on this list, 1996’s Big Night.  Campbell Scott and Stanley Tucci collaborated on this tale of two brothers trying to make a go of a restaurant on the Jersey Shore in the 1950s.  Their uncle wants them to return to Rome to work with him in his restaurant, but they prefer to remain in America.  They plan an event around the promised appearance of singer Louis Prima in their restaurant, which they expect to make them a success.  Big Night is rated 96% fresh on Rottentomatoes.

    Nick Stahl and Mel Gibson in ‘The Man Without a Face’

    When most people think of Mel Gibson as a movie director, the films that come to mind are Braveheart,. Passion of the Christ and his most recent effort, Hacksaw Ridge.  But his first time out as a director was 1993’s The Man Without a Face.  Gibson stars in the title role, portraying a former teacher who was horribly disfigured in an automobile accident.  Now a recluse, he meets a young man who needs someone to tutor him in preparation for an entrance exam to a military academy.  This is yet another directorial debut involving the adaptation of a novel to the big screen.  There are some differences between the novel and the final version of the film.

    Caddyshack, directed by Harold Ramis and My Favorite Year, helmed by Richard Benjamin, earned Honorable Mention but didn’t quite crack our Top Ten.  Will Greta Gerwig’s Lady Bird wind up on this list at the next update?  Only time will tell.

  • ‘Mr. and Mrs. Smith’ tries to be too many things and fails at most of them

    ‘Mr. and Mrs. Smith’ tries to be too many things and fails at most of them

    Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie in ‘Mr. and Mrs. Smith’

    There are certain actors who are the Field of Dreams of movie making. If you cast them, the audience will come. Both Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie fit into this category. So when both were cast in Mr. and Mrs. Smith it was destined to do well at the box office. However, it is a sad thing that their presence didn’t guarantee or deliver a quality film to the screen that all those people pay to see.

    From a script penned by Simon Kinberg as his MFA thesis at Columbia University, and directed by Doug Liman, Mr. and Mrs. Smith is the story of a married couple who have managed to hide their true careers from each other for the five or six years that they have been married. Liman, who has demonstrated his strong skill at action and adventure in The Bourne Identity and his ability with comedy when he has the right script with Jon Favreau’s Swingers; is working with a vehicle that tries to mix the two. It can and has been done, and perhaps Mr. Liman would have done well to rent one or two of the examples of when it was well done before he began work on this project. A screening or two of True Lies certainly couldn’t have hurt his efforts here.

    In this story, Mr. and Mrs. Smith are both assassins, working for rival agencies and both completely unaware of the other’s true occupation. Then they are both contracted to kill the same “mark”, except that it is a trap and they are actually supposed to kill each other. Suddenly they are both on the run from both agencies and everyone is trying to kill both of them and I’m being deliberately vague and leaving out the pitiful details of this woefully inept tale because it fails any kind of logic or believability test.

    Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt in ‘Mr. and Mrs. Smith’

    Trying to buy not one but two, rival “black-ops” government agencies, operating without the knowledge of each other, each in the process of carrying out dozens and dozens of killings? This doesn’t require just some suspension of disbelief, it requires completely disconnecting your pleasure sensors from your logical thinking process. Vince Vaughn is funny as a sidekick to Brad Pitt’s “Mr. John Smith”, but he is completely unbelievable as a serious operative in the world of intelligence operations.

    Now, all of that having been said, if you can completely suspend disbelief for two full hours, at least twenty minutes of which could and should have been trimmed and left on the cutting room floor, then you will enjoy Mr. and Mrs. Smith. Buy a big box of popcorn and a large soda and hang on to your seat. It can be a fun ride if you can watch a movie while knowing that what you are seeing simply would not happen in the real world. The action sequences are packed with bullets, explosions and violence, along with plenty of the kind of tension that will make you hold your breath. Brad and Angelina are terrific eye candy and for once it was nice to see a character in a gunfight having to reload and picking up the weapons of their fallen victims along the way.

    I wouldn’t pay money to see this film again, but someday it will probably become much like Roadhouse. A fun, action-packed film that you watch late at night on cable, but don’t tell anyone you were watching.