Friday, February 02, 2007

What Fresh Hell Hath Harvey Wrought?


Factory Girl opens in NY today and, like most local critics, David Edelstein could barely condescend to spit out a coupla hundred dismissive words. But his final line caught my eye: "Factory Girl does suggest a resonant topic for future cultural-studies classes: the evolution of the downtown film scene from Warhol to Weinstein."

Obviously, Edelstein's not seriously trying to do much more than jab at Harvey for ordering a rush job on what would still probably end up a bad film. But really: how odd, to equate cultural relevancy with zip code. Beyond the easy joke, the sentence itself doesn't make any sense: no one engaged in serious scholarly pursuit would suggest that Harvey Weinstein shares any kind of common ancestry with the Anthology Film Archives set.

A more interesting case could be made linking Weinstein back to Warhol, not in the context of geogrphical center, but as birds of a feather -- culture vultures, born manipulators; insecure men with sharp eyes for talent and a tendency (or compulsion) to overshadow the stars they create. But I'd argue that what Harvey lacks in ingenuity or vision, he makes up in loyalty. This is a man who is by all accounts unbearable to be around, and yet filmmakers tend to join up with him for life. For all of the Harvey Scissorhands lore that goes around, filmmakers as varied as Kevin Smith and Anthony Minghella can testify that box office success aside, once you've learned how to work for Harvey, Harvey will always give you a place to work. Unlike Andy, who famously sucked his "friends" dry only to discard them, leaving them, as Edelstein puts it, "trapped in—and destroyed by—their roles." Moth men might have shared an instinct to conquer lesser personalities, but ironically, Harvey managed to turn that into a business model by being -- and this is the kicker -- a nicer guy.

Edelstein seems to imply that Harvey has somehow killed the underground film scene, but of course that's not it at all -- he was never interested in "underground," or even "art". Any attempts he's made to find unknown talent have only been in the name of keeping up front costs down so as to maximize returns. I'm no Weinstein apologist -- I've been as harsh as anyone on the post-Miramax output, and I haven't seen Factory Girl, and I probably won't. But to give the impression that Harvey Weinstein is somehow more exploitative than Andy Warhol is just lazy.

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Wednesday, December 27, 2006

Morning Links, 12-27-06


  • Hey, Factory Girl opens in two days -- in Los Angeles only. Harvey apparently thinks he can get Sienna an Oscar nom is he keeps this debacle away from the NY press. Sienna is seen above reacting to the news with something less than enthusiasm. [via MCN Indie]
  • Perfume, which I haven't seen, is getting shitty reviews. The ever-astute Ed Gonzales rants at Slant: "That Jean-Baptiste takes to women so strongly would suggest that he has some sort of sex drive, but in failing to show [actor] Whishaw's cock during a crucial scene, does Tykwer, in pandering to the censors, also mean to imply that the perpetually sweaty Jean-Baptiste is either a eunuch or has never taken a whiff of his own spunk? An unlikely story."
  • Matt Dentler, the king of SXSW film, has canvassed the film community and is posting their (our?) picks for the best albums of 2006 every day between now and New Year's. I'm honored to have my lineup wedged between the lists of Steven Cantor (co-director of the excellent Pixies doc loudQUIETloud) and Bob "Mr. Show" Odenkirk.

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Thursday, December 14, 2006

"Bob Dylan", or just Harvey in a skinny suit?



I've read this on twelve blogs today, most recently The Reeler: Bob Dylan is trying to get an injunction on Factory Girl, The Weinstein Company's Edie Sedgwick biopic, because it portrays a character based on him as having something to do with Sedgwick's drug-fueled death. The producers have said the character, which Hayden Christensen plays in his first post-Skywalker stretch, is a composite of Dylan, Jim Morrisson and Mick Jagger; Bob Dylan's lawyer has seen the trailer, and he begs to differ:
"You appear to be laboring under the misunderstanding that merely changing the name of a character or making him a purported fictional composite will immunize you from suit. That is not so. Even though Mr. Dylan's name is not used, the portrayal remains both defamatory and a violation of Mr. Dylan's right of publicity."
Factory Girl has essentially been in production since the day Edie Sedgwick died, and even though it's due to come out on December 27, everyone says it isn't finished, and most of us who have watched the trailer suspect it won't be very good. I have to wonder: did Dylan's lawyers act alone, or did Harvey call in a favor to buy him the time he needs to abuse director George Hickenlooper into abandoning the project so it can be shelved indefinitely? Stranger things have happened.

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