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    ‘Never Rarely Sometimes Always’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    Hi. My name is Eliza Hittman. And I am the writer and director of ‘Never Rarely Sometimes Always.’ “I want to spend a few minutes talking with you about your relationships, O.K.? Because they can affect your health. Did you know that?” The scene that you’re watching an excerpt from is the pivotal scene of the entire film. The main character— her name is Autumn. The actor’s name is Sidney Flanigan— has finally reached Planned Parenthood in Brooklyn. And she is going through her intake questionnaire with a counselor before she has an abortion. The scene is shot actually at Margaret Sanger, which is a Planned Parenthood on Bleecker Street. And that level of authenticity was really important for me in shooting the film. And the actress, Sidney Flanigan, is doing the scene not with another actor, but with an actual counselor named Kelly Chapman who I met doing research for the film. “Always.” “Why are you asking me this?” “I want to make sure that you’re safe.” The shooting style of the scene was very simple, intentionally so. I didn’t want to do anything stagy to get in the way of the intimacy of the questions that are being asked. “Your partner has hit you, slapped you, or physically hurt you. Never, rarely, sometimes, always.” So we went for a very stripped down, minimal approach. We used two cameras. One is frontal on Sidney, and one is actually 3/4 profile. And those two cameras were pushed very, very, very close to her. Because we wanted to trap her a little bit to intensify the emotions of the scene. “It’s just a couple more questions, all right?” I spent a lot of time rehearsing the scene, because it was so important. And on the day that we shot, I took Sidney aside. Because, sometimes, when you work on an independent film set, it’s a little like being on a construction site. And I wanted to quarantine her away from all of the commotion. And I found a private office for her to sit in. And she sat for several hours. And I remember, I came in, and she said, I’m ready, let’s do it. And the scene that is in the film, it’s actually the first take. Then after she did it, she said it was cathartic, and she couldn’t do it again. – Has anyone forced you into a sexual act ever in your lifetime? Yes or no. More

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    Coronavirus Movie Is Being Developed by Director Eric Spade Rivas

    The filmmaker, who helmed the ‘Vamp Biker’ series, claims the film project, titled ‘Duke of York’, will be ‘sort of a stand against xenophobia’ and will cover people’s desperation amid this crisis.
    Apr 6, 2020
    AceShowbiz – A coronavirus pandemic movie is in the works from director Eric Spade Rivas.
    The filmmaker, who helmed the “Vamp Biker” series, told the New York Post’s Page Six he’s started filming a project about the COVID-19 crisis – despite his actors being in isolation.
    Rivas said he shot footage of the empty city over the weekend from his car, and the actors – including porn star Ron Jeremy and nightlife fixture Noel Ashman – are sending him clips of themselves performing their scenes, which he’s editing together.
    The film, titled “Duke of York”, is about a dastardly movie producer who tries to trick a director into killing an Asian actor in a misguided attempt to take revenge for the disease.
    “It’s sort of a stand against xenophobia, and also about people’s desperation during this time,” Rivas explained.
    Political and media figures, including U.S. leader Donald Trump, have come under fire for their rhetoric surrounding the global health crisis, with the American President describing COVID-19 as the “Chinese virus” and “Kung flu” – seemingly referencing the city of Wuhan, China, where the outbreak began in December (19).
    A release date for the project remains unknown.

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    Louis C.K. Drops a Comeback Special

    On Saturday, with audiences largely quarantined in their homes because of the coronavirus, and comics putting on a six-hour benefit online, Laugh Aid, to help struggling performers, Louis C.K. completed the last stage of his comeback with the surprise release of a new special, “Sincerely.”It was his first special since he confessed in 2017 to sexual misconduct, which he referred to in the show as a “global amounts of trouble.”In a nod to the timing of the special, he wrote an email to his fans, saying there are two kinds of people: Those who deal with difficult, tragic times by laughing at it and those who choose to approach such times with sober gravity. He said that the new special was for those who need to laugh, but added in a postscript: “It’s not free or anything.” (It cost $7.99 and was available on louisck.com.)The comedian, who wore his usual black shirt and jeans onstage, directed the show himself at the Warner Theater in Washington, D.C., before the pandemic. It began, like the 2019 comeback special from Aziz Ansari, with a scene of the comic filmed from the back as he walked onstage, and ended with onscreen notes thanking the French comic Blanche Gardin, his girlfriend, and a dedication to his mother, Mary Louise Szekely, who died last year.In between, the set was a shorter but very similar version of the performance he gave in Richmond, Va., in November, which I reviewed for the Times. It touched on pedophilia, the Holocaust, being closer to death and his sexual scandals.As for Laugh Aid, which ran on YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and other platforms, technical glitches plagued the benefit, which starred Whitney Cummings, Craig Robinson and other comics. More

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    Thirsty on the Set: Fans Spot Water Bottle Gaffes in ‘Little Women’

    When Greta Gerwig’s adaptation of Louisa May Alcott’s “Little Women” was released last year, it drew widespread acclaim.But recently, the film, which is set in the 19th century, has drawn attention for decidedly more 21st century reasons.Hawk-eyed fans of the movie spotted what appear to be stainless steel and plastic water bottles in the same scene by watching — and in some cases rewatching — the film.This is my third time rewatching little women and I just noticed there is hydro flask and water bottle. pic.twitter.com/v3n4fOuCXV— 𝓔𝓻𝓾𝓯𝓪 (@ladyunagi) March 31, 2020
    Madelyn Rancourt, a TikTok user who describes herself as a big fan of the film, made a video asking if anyone else had noticed the errant bottles, which appear in the background of a scene with actor Timothée Chalamet, who played Theodore “Laurie” Laurence.The silver ring and handle on one bottle and a wrapper around the plastic bottle are blurry but clearly are not in keeping with the kinds of amenities the movie’s characters would have had.For days now, the water bottle blunders have delighted social media users who used them to forge jokes and memes.The production companies behind the film could not be reached on Saturday evening.The bottles’ appearances come nearly a year after “Game of Thrones” had its own errors inspired by misplaced drinks.In one episode, a Starbucks coffee cup was spotted on a table near Daenerys Targaryen. In the finale of the series, a water bottle appeared near Samwell Tarly’s chair as the leaders of Westeros debated their future.After the coffee cup episode, HBO acknowledged the error in a statement: “The latte that appeared in the episode was a mistake. Daenerys had ordered an herbal tea.”It later erased the cup from the episode.The coincidence of errors between the movie and HBO series was not lost on viewers.“The starbucks cup in the background of Game of Thrones and hydroflask in the background of Little Women would make a cute couple I think,” a Twitter user wrote. More

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    'Sonic the Hedgehog' Stars Holding Online Watch Party

    Paramount Pictures

    The cast members of the family friendly movie are joined by director Jeff Fowler and they invite fans to a virtual watch party on social media amid coronavirus outbreak.
    Apr 5, 2020
    AceShowbiz – “Sonic the Hedgehog” stars Ben Schwartz and Lee Majdoub helped give their movie a video-on-demand sales boost on Friday, March 3, 2020 by staging a virtual watch party with fans.
    The actors teamed up with the film’s director, Jeff Fowler, to share behind-the-scenes secrets and on-set tales on Fandango’s Twitter page, while watching the newly-released VOD movie on FandangoNOW.
    “Join me @fowltown & @LeeMajdoub for a live Watch Party of #SonicMovie on @Twitter today at 4pm PST/8pm ET,” Ben wrote on Twitter. “We’ll start the movie together then tweet along w/ the hashtag #SonicWatchParty.”
    The trio shared personal photos from the making of the film and clips as fans chatted along, mainly gushing about their love for Fowler’s movie, which also starred James Marsden and Jim Carrey.
    The hit film debuted on the video-on-demand service on Tuesday, March 31, 2020 and is expected to be among this weekend’s most requested movies for at-home viewing.

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    Tribeca Film Festival Goes Online to Present 2020 Programs After Coronavirus Delays Live Event

    About the drastic move, CEO Jane Rosenthal points out that Tribeca ‘were founded after the devastation of 9/11 and it’s in our DNA to bring communities together through the arts.’
    Apr 4, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Tribeca Film Festival founder Jane Rosenthal has announced the gathering will now take place online after the live event was postponed.
    The 19th in-person annual festival set to take place in New York City mid-month (April) has been postponed due to the coronavirus, but now film buffs will have a chance to experience movies, juries, awards and other elements of the assembly on the Internet.
    “As human beings, we are navigating uncharted waters,” Tribeca Film Festival CEO Rosenthal told Deadline in a statement announcing the online move on Friday (April 03). “While we cannot gather in person to lock arms, laugh, and cry, it’s important for us to stay socially and spiritually connected. Tribeca is about resiliency, and we fiercely believe in the power of artists to bring us together. We were founded after the devastation of 9/11 (2001 New York City terrorist attacks) and it’s in our DNA to bring communities together through the arts.”
    The festival will take place online on The Tribeca Industry Extranet Resource Hub on 15-26 April, the same dates as the original in-person gathering was due to take place.

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    Disney Reschedules 'Black Widow', 'Mulan' and 'Jungle Cruise' After Delay Due to Coronavirus

    Marvel Studio/Walt Disney Pictures

    The Scarlett Johansson-starring superhero movie is pushed back to November and the live-action remake of the Disney classic gets a new November date, bumping other films like ‘The Eternals’ and ‘Doctor Strange 2′.
    Apr 4, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Disney has made some adjustments to its calendar after delaying a bunch of its upcoming projects due to the coronavirus crisis. The Mouse House has announced new dates for the movies which release dates have been affected by the ongoing pandemic, including the highly-anticipated “Black Widow” and “Mulan”.
    The upcoming Marvel film, which was supposed to arrive on May 1, is now scheduled to open on November, taking over the slot which belonged to “The Eternals”. The Angelina Jolie-starring flick now is moved to February 12, 2021.
    The live-action remake of the Disney animated classic was supposed to be due out on March 27, is now occupying the July 24 slot, which originally belonged to Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson’s “Jungle Cruise”. As the result, the action adventure film is pushed back a year to July 30, 2021.
    The cascading effect doesn’t stop there. “Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings”, which was originally in the spot now claimed by “The Eternals”, will now open on May 7, 2021. “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness”, which originally got the May 2021 slot, is now set for November 5, 2021, bumping “Thor: Love and Thunder” to February 18, 2022.
    “Black Panther” is not affected by these shifts, still being set for a May 8, 2022 release. Meanwhile, “Captain Marvel 2” is moved up two weeks to July 8, 2022.
    Disney has also announced new dates for Ryan Reynolds’ “Free Guy” (from July 3 to December 11, 2020), “Bob’s Burgers” (from July 17 to April 9, 2021), Wes Anderson’s “The French Dispatch” (from July 24 to October 16, 2020), and a new “Indiana Jones” film (from July 9, 2021 to July 29, 2022).
    Previously, the studio also pulled “The Personal History of David Copperfield”, “Antlers”, “The Woman in the Window” and “The New Mutants” from their original release dates. New dates for these titles are not revealed yet.

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    How Do You Make a Film for a Museum and Pornhub? Ask Leilah Weinraub

    The moment Leilah Weinraub stepped into Shakedown, a roving lesbian strip club in Los Angeles, she was hooked. It was the winter of 2002, she was a recent college graduate, and Shakedown, which was part of a scene that catered to black lesbians, offered a tantalizing new community. “I had never been in a lesbian space that was full before,” Weinraub said. She immediately breezed her way into serving as house photographer for the parties.Not long after, she realized stills weren’t going to cut it: The action at Shakedown was in the movement — of the sweaty dancers and appreciative crowd, of the charismatic founder and promoter and of the dollars that made their way from performers’ G-strings to their nail appointments and babysitters. She borrowed a camera, began filming and didn’t stop for a decade.The result is a radical and intimate documentary, also called “Shakedown,” that made the festival rounds and was included in the 2017 Whitney Biennial. In March, it became the first non-adult film — although it has plenty of adult imagery — to be released by Pornhub. Next month, it will be broadcast by the Criterion Channel; free options like BoilerRoom.tv will show it in the meantime. It is definitely the only movie with this trajectory, which speaks to both the connections of its filmmaker and a new regard for the labor, and pleasures, of sex workers and women of color.“Everybody wants to be a stripper now,” said one of the film’s stars, Egypt Blaque Knyle. “They all take a pole class. My mom be there with her church heels on.”For Weinraub, 40, who is best known for her work with the cult downtown fashion line Hood by Air, for which she served as a creative director and chief executive, the broad distribution of “Shakedown” affirms her instincts. “There was an audience,” she said. Though she was new to Shakedown when she began documenting it, she wasn’t surprised at how vibrant its culture was. “I was surprised at how late the rest of the world was” to discover it, she said.That confidence marks her vision as an artist, said Christopher Y. Lew, a curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art who helped program the 2017 biennial. “I do think Leilah is one of the rare artists who is deeply in touch with culture as it unfolds in the moment,” he said.In vérité style, “Shakedown” follows the lives of several dancers, like Miss Mahogany, a godmother of the scene who explains how her first time stripping was the result of a wardrobe malfunction. The camera pulls back to reveal her sitting under a giant framed photo of herself in a bra, wad of cash in hand; she has been dancing for more than 30 years. Others describe awakening to their own L.G.B.T.Q. identity, or talk about the distance between their personas on the club floor and off. Egypt Blaque Knyle (Aiisha Ferguson), a former Disney dancer and mother of two, likens herself to a drag queen. “Egypt is a fantasy,” she says, in an interview at home with her girlfriend.Showing the full scope of these women’s lives — their families and living rooms; their careful economies and backstage prep (a blunt is lit; a dancer stands spread-eagle as a female security guard wafts perfume on “all the good parts”) — was a big part of what Weinraub wanted to depict. As she and her editors winnowed 400 hours of footage, she hoped to get the film “to a place where the people in it feel seen,” she said.Shakedown’s founder and M.C., an outsize personality known as Ronnie-Ron, is introduced as she maneuvers her S.U.V. through a self-car wash, proselytizing about how to succeed at business. “A man is supposed to work hard for his money,” she says, “and a wo-man as well. If I lose a job, I’m going to have another one the next day. Hallelujah! Believe it and receive it!” Her goal was to afford a dedicated space for Shakedown, which took place twice a week, year-round — not easy in underground venues that eschewed publicity.The film, which includes NSFW moments of explicit nudity, lap dances and strap-ons, has a moody look — what Weinraub called “this really soft, low-light charm” — partly because she continued using her original camera after video technology had evolved past it. “There was a really long amount of time that this footage was ugly,” she said. “People were like, ‘You need to reshoot all this.’ I’m like, no, these are the moments. I don’t think it’s wrong.”At Weinraub’s direction, Pornhub streamed “Shakedown” on a specially designed site, where, long before social distancing, she included chat boards as a way to simulate the sort of community one might find in a theater. The film had more than 150,000 views in March, a representative for Pornhub said, with about 50,000 users either participating in or viewing chats. (Weinraub did weekly Q. and As.)“The reception has been so overwhelmingly positive,” said Alex Klein, brand director at Pornhub. The company had long wanted to engage with artists; it sponsored a Hood by Air collection in 2016, and has been in touch with Weinraub ever since. “This just really felt like it made sense,” Klein said. (Pornhub has seen viewership increase during the coronavirus pandemic, as millions are trapped indoors.)For viewers not used to representations of themselves onscreen, “Shakedown” was a revelation. “As a black lesbian woman, I have never seen myself anywhere, especially in a way that’s celebrated like that, with a bunch of us around each other,” said Aya Brown, 24, head of events and programming at the gallery Gavin Brown’s Enterprise, which screened the film at its Harlem location in 2018. (Brown, no relation to the gallery owner, was not involved in curating it.)The culture of vogue balls introduced to mainstream audiences in “Paris Is Burning” — an antecedent to “Shakedown” — is fundamental to queer culture, Brown said, but it leans male. “There’s nothing that feels like it’s ours,” she said, calling Weinraub’s film an inspiration. “‘Shakedown’ talks about family in a way that I haven’t really seen. You see a scene with one of the dancers and her girlfriend and a kid, too. You see that we exist in this world in all shapes and sizes, and we can own businesses too, and establishments, and create for each other.”Identity was also intrinsic to the narrative of Hood by Air, the streetwise New York-based fashion line. An openly queer collective led by the designer Shayne Oliver, it played with gender and sought out faces and ethnicities that were otherwise hardly visible on catwalks. Their styles were gothic-industrial and creatively proportioned, and the logo T-shirts they made cost $600. They were a huge hit. (The label disbanded in 2017.)Weinraub, who had a hand in the designs along with the rest of the group, viewed this period of her life as a utopia, one of a few she has experienced. They were all tightly knit to community, she told me in our conversations via phone and FaceTime. She was holed up in a friend’s photo studio in Los Angeles, where she’d recently relocated from New York, waiting out the coronavirus. Once, we talked while she took an anxiety-quelling walk around the empty streets, rubbing her growing-out buzz cut as she told me her theory of utopias: “These little bubbles have to end, for them to kind of pollinate a bigger culture,” she said. “It feels sad, but it bursts at some point.”Weinraub grew up in Los Angeles, around Koreatown, not far from the pioneering L.G.B.T. club Jewel’s Catch One that became a part of her orbit. Her father was a pediatrician and her mother, a textile artist, also worked in his office. Her family — her mother was black, her father white and Jewish — viewed themselves as multiracial; Weinraub, one of four siblings, identifies as black, with a Jewish education — for a time, she attended high school in Israel.She was considering going to a Jewish seminary when her life took a turn. Back in L.A., she was working at Maxfield, a luxury boutique catering to high-end aesthetes. “You’re just supposed to be this soft pillow of a personality for them to brush up against,” she recalled. There, she met the director Tony Kaye (“American History X”). They hit it off, “talking about God,” and she became his assistant as he worked on a documentary. He helped her to college, too, at Antioch, where she studied media and social change.All of that was scaffolding for Hood by Air, with its image-bursting vision of who counted as fashion. “Like Shakedown, Hood by Air was more than just a business,” said Lew, the Whitney curator. “It served as a home for an L.G.B.T. community, created by like-minded folks and presented itself unabashedly.”At Shakedown, too, Weinraub was not an interloper: she was part of that world, and proud of it. The stance she learned there, she said, was “being super unapologetic, and not sanitizing your expressions. People want to see it, how you give it.”It was Weinraub’s attitude that convinced Ferguson — Egypt Blaque Knyle — to participate in the documentary. “She was just a great persuader. She used to call me every day: ‘Want to get coffee or tea?’ And the next thing I know, the cameras were there.”Looking back, Ferguson added, the Shakedown scene was a movement toward acceptance for those on the social fringes. “But at that time, we didn’t know that’s what we were doing,” she said. “We just knew these little clubs, that was our playground, and when we got there, we could do whatever we wanted to do. It was for us.”She watched the movie with her children. “It felt like I finally was fed, because I was starving to see what this was going to be.”Shakedown the party largely ended around the time Weinraub stopped filming — it was never able to find a dedicated home. What did the community lose? Weinraub didn’t want to say.“It’s up to each generation” to create their own utopias, she said. “It’s a pleasure space, so it has to be invented.” The movie, she added, is one blueprint: “This is a document, this is an idea, and you know, go for it. ” More