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    Sundance Film Festival 2013

    Reel life: Steve Jobs, Linda Lovelace and next year's Oscar winner meet at Sundance

    Jane Howze
    Jan 26, 2013 | 8:38 am

    PARK CITY, Utah — In the closing days of the Sundance Film Festival, several films with big names and big themes based on real-life individuals captured the attention of filmgoers and critics. Some are sure to be among the favorites at next year's Oscars. Let the race begin.

    Lovelace

    Earlier this week an excited crowd gathered at the 1,270-seat Eccles Theatre (the largest venue at Sundance) for the first viewing of Lovelace, starring Amanda Seyfried as Linda Borman and Peter Sarsgaard as her abusive husband, Chuck Trayor.

    Seyfried is supported by an excellent cast that includes Hank Azaria as her porn director, James Franco as Hugh Hefner and Sharon Stone, unrecognizable as her religious mother.

    The film tracks Lovelace’s unlikely rise from all-American girl to America’s most famous porn star, thanks to her role in 1972’s seminal hardcore pornographic film, Deep Throat, which also starred already famous porn star Harry Reems. The film cleverly switches between news clips of her stardom, including jokes by Johnny Carson, and the beatings and prostitution Traynor forced her into.

    Those expecting pornography or deeper insight into Lovelace’s motivations will be disappointed. Seyfried appears topless a couple of times, but that is as titillating as it gets. Also, Lovelace’s drug use is downplayed and her prior porn career is not mentioned.

    But it's an entertaining film that offers a stylish depiction of the 1970s, with vintage songs and fashion. Seyfried shines as Lovelace and is supported by an excellent cast that includes Hank Azaria as her porn director, James Franco as Hugh Hefner, Sharon Stone, unrecognizable as her religious mother, and Robert Patrick as her ex-military father.

    The Weinstein Company's RADiUS has acquired Lovelace, which it will release in theaters and on-demand later this year.

    Fruitvale

    Ryan Coogler’s debut film Fruitvale has been the talk of Sundance. And rightly so.

    It tells the true story of 22-year-old Oscar Grant, a Bay Area resident who was shot and killed by a police officer at the Fruitvale BART station on New Year’s Day in 2009 in Oakland. Grant was unarmed, handcuffed and face down on the ground when a police officer shot him in the back. The incident was captured on numerous cell phones and went viral online, sparking protests and riots throughout the city.

    Although the audience learns in the first 30 seconds how the film will end, it is nonetheless a riveting and powerful film which will be talked about long after Sundance ends.

    Fruitvale begins with footage showing the shooting and then flashes back to the last day in Grant's life. Part con artist, devoted father and son, and loving (if philandering) boyfriend, he is basically a kid from the poor side of Oakland with limited resources and opportunities.

    The film features a stunning cast including Michael B. Jordan (The Wire, Friday Night Lights) as Grant, Oscar-winner Octavia Spencer as Grant’s mother Wanda, and Melonie Diaz as Sophina, Grant’s girlfriend.

    Although the audience learns in the first 30 seconds how the film will end, it is nonetheless a riveting and powerful film which will be talked about long after Sundance ends. It is already getting buzz as an Oscar favorite a year from now.

    Director Coogler, only 26 years old, is a resident of Oakland and a graduate of the University of Southern California’s Filmmaking School. After directing a short film, he came to the attention of Oscar-winner Forest Whitaker who agreed to produce the film.

    Interestingly enough, BART authorities allowed him to shoot the film at the Fruitvale station. It was the subject of a heated bidding war among studios with The Weinstein Co. prevailing. No release date has been announced.

    jOBS

    The long awaited biopic on Apple founder Steve Jobs drew a lot of attention as the closing film of The Sundance Film Festival Friday night to a sellout, waiting list crowd. Directed by Joshua Michael Stern, jOBS follows the Apple founder from 1971 (the year he met Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak) through 2001 (the year the iPod was released).

    The film opens as Jobs introduces the iPod and then flashes back to his college days — and off we go.

    Jobs is painted as a jerk whose anger is bubbling just beneath the surface. He yells. A lot.

    Ashton Kutcher, who plays the title character, looks eerily similar to the early pictures of Steve Jobs and the set-designs are spot on for authenticity of that era. It is a big role for Kutcher who appears in every scene of the film.

    The rest of the cast, Dermot Mulroney, Matthew Modine, Lukas Haas and J.K. Simmons are one-dimensional with the exception of Josh Gad, as Wozniak, who gives his character some emotional depth.

    Unfortunately jOBS tries to do too much and cover too many events without giving them much context. The film provides a light history of the personal computer and contains a lot of computer jargon. Jobs is painted as a jerk whose anger is bubbling just beneath the surface. He yells. A lot. And when he yells it made me realize that Kutcher is not that great of an actor because it seems like Ashton Kutcher is yelling rather than Steve Jobs.

    Along with the yelling comes incessant, loud and annoying music. Surely they aren’t releasing a CD to go with the movie? If so, it is not very good.

    If you look at jOBS as entertainment, it will satisfy. But my guess is that Apple fans will be disappointed. (Wozniak has already told The Huffington Post that the movie is "embarrassing" and not accurate.)

    In the Q&A Kutcher was asked how he related to the character. “We both believe we can sell anything," he replied. "He failed and got back on the horse. I think we can all relate to that.”

    Kutcher seemed emotional when he said that taking this role was the most terrifying thing he has ever done because he admired Jobs so much.

    Director Joshua Michael Stern said, "This was a hard movie to make. Our job was not to answer every question but to portray the essence of the man. Ashton did that.”

    You can judge for yourself as jOBs opens nationwide on April 19.

    Amanda Seyfried portrays porn star Linda Lovelace in the film Lovelace.

    Photo by Dale Robinette
    Amanda Seyfried portrays porn star Linda Lovelace in the film Lovelace.
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    Movie Review

    Michelle Pfeiffer visits Houston in new Christmas movie Oh. What. Fun.

    Alex Bentley
    Dec 5, 2025 | 3:30 pm
    Michelle Pfeiffer in Oh. What. Fun.
    Photo courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios
    Michelle Pfeiffer in Oh. What. Fun.

    Of all the formulaic movie genres, Christmas/holiday movies are among the most predictable. No matter what the problem is that arises between family members, friends, or potential romantic partners, the stories in holiday movies are designed to give viewers a feel-good ending even if the majority of the movie makes you feel pretty bad.

    That’s certainly the case in Oh. What. Fun., in which Michelle Pfeiffer plays Claire, an underappreciated mom living in Houston with her inattentive husband, Nick (Denis Leary). As the film begins, her three children are arriving back home for Christmas: The high-strung Channing (Felicity Jones) is married to the milquetoast Doug (Jason Schwartzman); the aloof Taylor (Chloë Grace Moretz) brings home yet another new girlfriend; and the perpetual child Sammy (Dominic Sessa) has just broken up with his girlfriend.

    Each of the family members seems to be oblivious to everything Claire does for them, especially when it comes to what she really wants: For them to nominate her to win a trip to see a talk show in L.A. hosted by Zazzy Tims (Eva Longoria). When she accidentally gets left behind on a planned outing to see a show, Claire reaches her breaking point and — in a kind of Home Alone in reverse — she decides to drive across the country to get to the show herself.

    Written and directed by Michael Showalter (The Idea of You), and co-written by Chandler Baker (who wrote the short story on which the film is based), the movie never establishes any kind of enjoyable rhythm. Each of the characters, including competitive neighbor Jeanne (Joan Chen), is assigned a character trait that becomes their entire personality, with none of them allowed to evolve into something deeper.

    The filmmakers lean hard into the idea that Claire is a person who always puts her family first and receives very little in return, but the evidence presented in the story is sketchy at best. Every situation shown in the film is so superficial that tension barely exists, and the (over)reactions by Claire give her family members few opportunities to make up for their failings.

    The most interesting part of the movie comes when Claire actually makes it to the Zazzy Sims show. Even though what happens there is just as unbelievable as anything else presented in the story, Showalter and Baker concoct a scene that allows Claire and others to fully express the central theme of the film, and for a few minutes the movie actually lives up to its title.

    Pfeiffer, given her first leading role since 2020’s French Exit, is a somewhat manic presence, and her thick Texas accent and unnecessary voiceover don’t do her any favors. It seems weird to have such a strong supporting cast with almost nothing of substance to do, but almost all of them are wasted, including Danielle Brooks in a blink-and-you'll-miss-it cameo. The lone exception is Longoria, who is a blast in the few scenes she gets.

    Oh. What. Fun. is far from the first movie to try and fail at becoming a new holiday classic, but the pedigree of Showalter and the cast make this dismal viewing experience extra disappointing. Ironically, overworked and underappreciated moms deserve a much better story than the one this movie delivers.

    ---

    Oh. What. Fun. is now streaming on Prime Video.

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