‘The Room’: Tommy Wiseau On His Cult Hit, Broadway And Why Fans Are Finally Starting To ‘Get It’

Tommy Wiseau

On a recent humid night, a woman stopped outside the Ziegfeld Theater in Manhattan to ask someone what he and hundreds of others outside the theater were waiting for. “The worst movie of all time is about to play in there,” the boy said, pointing to the Ziegfeld’s closed doors. “And the director is coming.”

Fifteen minutes later a limo appeared. A roar went up. “That is not Tommy Wiseau!” came a voice through a megaphone. It belonged to Adrian Spencer, a former D.C. theater manager who used to screen Wiseau’s “The Room” until he became Wiseau’s right-hand man. “Yes it is!” someone shouted back. The limo turned the corner — for suspense, Spencer later told me — and emerged again. A pale man with long inky hair stepped out. As the crowd chanted his name — Tommy, Tommy, Tommy — he jogged awkwardly down the line, slapping hands and quoting lines on command with the strained obedience of a large dog that might snap.

This was Tommy Wiseau, writer, director, producer and star of “The Room.” In the accidental cult hit, Wiseau plays a virtuous man named Johnny who loses faith in life after his fiancee Lisa sleeps with his best friend. It is a slow and surreally-flawed production, with cancer diagnoses and actors lost halfway through.

On one side stand the movie’s fans, thousands who’ve gathered in Chicago, London et al armed with the necessary tools to mock it – plastic spoons to throw when framed pictures of silverware appear onscreen, tuxedos to reference a vestigial wedding-picture-day scene, footballs to parody an ongoing device in which Johnny and his friends throw a football back and forth about five feet (two characters are inexplicably injured during a “game,” including my personal favorite, the “me underwears” guy). These fans have the twisted affection of a bully for a repeat victim; like Wiseau, who has a mysterious accent and a naturally sinister laugh, the movie’s an easy target. Alone on the other side is Wiseau, a noted fan of Welles and Brando who believes no matter what the crowd says or does, “The Room” is popular because it is fundamentally very, very good.

For a novelty item released eight years ago, it is, if nothing else, weirdly potent. Wiseau says so far more than a million people have “experienced” “The Room” (there are no box office or DVD stats; it’s not a “real” movie as such). This was its second showing in six years at the Ziegfeld, the city’s last single-room theater. The regular movie in rotation at the time was “The Help,” for which ticket sales on a good night hit around 80. “The Room,” by contrast, had pre-sold 500 tickets, with 200 more expected at the box office (the first time around, it sold 1000). One concierge told me though the Ziegfeld isn’t exactly chummy with Wiseau — who’s apparently the only personality besides Oliver Stone to insist on visiting in advance (Stone wanted to check the sound; Wiseau wanted to set up a table to sell posters) — they aren’t about to excise a cash cow.

This fall Wiseau and Spencer are hoping to further milk “The Room,” with dreams of a 2012 run on Broadway and a pitch for a reality show about casting it. The movie’s already live in a modest way, showing as a play later this month at the American FIlm Institute in D.C., where the movie version’s been screened since 2010, and scheduled to run through December in cities like Chicago and Portland (no strangers to ironic live shows). Greg Sestero (“Sestosterone”), the actor who plays Johnny’s treacherous best friend, is signed on.

I spoke to Wiseau after the Ziegfeld screening, hoping to understand how he reconciles the franchise with a creation he thinks is great. I knew not to expect too much. Though critics tend to like him these days, in line with early legitimizers like Tim and Eric (Wiseau directed a 2009 “Awesome Show” episode called “Pig Man”), he’s a notoriously tough nut to crack. Read on for this strange star’s take on his strange success story, and why he says people are finally starting to “get it.”

At these midnight screenings, do you stick around to watch people watching your movie?
Sometimes I’m watching, sometimes I’m not.

What do you think about the crowd’s reaction?
I like everything. Express yourself, don’t hurt yourself. Move on next question.

The movie was clearly a personal venture for you, given that you wrote, directed and starred in it. What inspired the plot?
I inspire myself.

Have you experienced infidelity?
I been in similar relationships. Not hundred percent but we all experience experiences with people.

Do you think people understand what you were trying to do?
Aha! Great question. I give you A- for that question. Minus because you were not sure. You were hesitating. Yes, for the past two years I noticed that the public much more appreciate “The Room” and they really really want to do what I was saying, to have fun with it. Mainstream media they’re much more kind to “The Room,” as well as theater owners, some of the producers, etcetera etcetera. They didn’t grasp at the beginning.

If it’s actually a serious movie, then why do you think it’s been interpreted the way it has?
The true story is we..I don’t know why I did certain things, but some things happen and that way you open the bad door and the good door at the same time. Like we had some conflict with crew. That’s why we had to replace Peter as Steven. People ask like, why did you replace Peter. But he is a different character. He does not take the place of Peter. So you may argue that it worked out. It is what it is. I suggest you see it few times because you do have subliminal messages. I got complimentary statements about “The Room” when I went to Harvard University last October.

Why were you at Harvard?
It was a question and answer session. They showed it and then people asked me questions about it and they really gave very good answers that show they’re starting to get it.

Can you give an example of one of the questions they asked?
Oh you know, they asked about the character’s life. Who they are? Are they real people actually living in the planet Earth? I have a Q&A in L.A. as well and people ask some really challenging questions. Somebody ask for example what happened to Peter. He went to the hospital because he couldn’t catch the football. People do not understand layers of the subliminal messages but also words behind the words. Is it OK to be with two person, three person if you go into relationship? You think we are very far away from Egyptians. I would say no. Relationships it was the same thousands years ago. It was about jealousy. Compare Cleopatra and Lisa for example.

You think they’re similar?
Yes. Okay, move on next question.

When you were young, what did you dream you’d be?
When I was little kid I used to want to be a rock star. I actually have 800 pages book that will eventually be published.

What’s the book about?
I don’t want to talk about that now!

Are you happy with where you’re at now, in your life?
I am very happy. Like I say. I’m going to do more movies and travel. I want to actually show the people that actually we can put “The Room” on Broadway.

Do you have investors lined up?
Why? Do you have money? Let me know! (laughs) Let’s put it this way, we’re happy where we are.

WATCH the official trailer for ‘The Room,’ featuring the ex post facto “black comedy” tagline:

Steve Martin, Jack Black And Owen Wilson Star In ‘The Big Year’; Actors Lead In New Comedy

Steve Martin, Jack Black And Owen Wilson

Steve Martin does well in a trio. He show off his comedy genius in the beloved “Three Amigos” and now he’s teaming up with Owen Wilson and Jack Black to see if they can recreate the magic.

In “The Big Year,” the three funny fellows–one a successful businessman, another a recovering divorcee, the other a jobless slob–are growing increasingly wary of their lives and decide to drop everything and go on an exotic bird-seeking adventure.

Here the stars try to rediscover the meaning in their own lives but, in the process, get into a whole lot of whacky situations.

“The Big Year” hits theaters October 14.

 

Move Over Leonardo DiCaprio: Even BIGGER Star Joins ‘The Great Gatsby’

Leonardo DiCaprio

In the extravagant nature of Jay Gatsby himself, Baz Luhrmann’s 3D film adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel is once again upping the level of grandeur and star power to an even higher level. Even if you don’t quite realize it yet.

Warner Bros. and Village Roadshow Pictures announced the beginning of production on Luhrmann’s Australia-based adaptation of “The Great Gatsby,” touting stars such as Leonardo DiCaprio, who plays Gatsby; Tobey Maguire, who plays Nick Carraway; Carey Mulligan and Joel Edgerton, who play Daisy and Tom Buchannan; and Isla Fisher, as well. That’s a lot of Hollywood experience, indeed, but all their films put together can’t come close to touching the filmography of their latest co-star.

Buried deep in the studios’ press release was the news that Amitabh Bachchan was added to the cast, to play Meyer Wolfsheim, shadowy gambler and troublemaker. It’s a small role, but a significant development. Bachchan is one of the most revered actors in Indian history, a king of Bollywood with unparalleled success. He’s received countless Filmfare Award nominations — India’s equivalent to the Academy Awards — and has taken home 11 of those trophies.

Bachchan’s filmography boasts over 175 films since he began his career in the late 1960s, and he even was elected to public office for a number of years in the mid-1980s. At the age of 70, this will be his first Hollywood movie, and should significantly expand the international audience for the $125 million production.

As for the rest of the cast, Edgerton recently told The Huffington Post that they’ve been undergoing some serious education to get ready for to take on the all-time classic novel, which is set in the 1920s.

“I’ve got research materials on every angle of the movie, from the crime of the era to… books on the Yale football club, because Tom is the star quarterback,” Edgerton said. “I’ve been playing polo, we’ve got reams of music from the era and pictures and all sorts of documentaries and stuff. Baz likes to surround you 360 degrees in the world of the movie.”

Here’s the full press release from Warners and Village Roadshow:

BURBANK, Calif.–Principal photography began this week on Warner Bros. Pictures’ and Village Roadshow Pictures’ “The Great Gatsby,” the new big screen adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel from the uniquely imaginative mind of writer/producer/director Baz Luhrmann. The filmmaker will create his own distinctive visual interpretation of the classic story, bringing the period to life in a way that has never been seen before. Leonardo DiCaprio stars in the title role.

“The Great Gatsby” follows Fitzgerald-like, would-be writer Nick Carraway as he leaves the Midwest and comes to New York City in the spring of 1922, an era of loosening morals, glittering jazz and bootleg kings. Chasing his own American Dream, Nick lands next door to a mysterious, party-giving millionaire, Jay Gatsby, and across the bay from his cousin, Daisy, and her philandering, blue-blooded husband, Tom Buchanan. It is thus that Nick is drawn into the captivating world of the super rich, their illusions, loves and deceits. As Nick bears witness, within and without the world he inhabits, he pens a tale of impossible love, incorruptible dreams and high-octane tragedy, and holds a mirror to our own modern times and struggles.

Academy Award® nominee DiCaprio (“Blood Diamond,” “Aviator”) plays Jay Gatsby, with Tobey Maguire starring as Nick Carraway; Joel Edgerton and Oscar® nominee Carey Mulligan (“An Education”) as Tom and Daisy Buchanan; Isla Fisher and Jason Clarke as Myrtle and George Wilson; and newcomer Elizabeth Debicki as Jordan Baker. Indian film legend Amitabh Bachchan will play the role of Meyer Wolfsheim.

Oscar® nominee Luhrmann (“Moulin Rouge!”) directs the film in 3D from a screenplay co-written with frequent collaborator Craig Pearce, based on Fitzgerald’s book. Luhrmann produces, along with Catherine Martin, Catherine Knapman, Lucy Fisher and Academy Award® winner Douglas Wick (“Gladiator”). The executive producers are Barrie M. Osborne and Bruce Berman.

Two-time Academy Award®-winning production and costume designer Catherine Martin (“Moulin Rouge!”) also designs with the director. The editors are Jason Ballantine, Matt Villa and Jonathan Redmond, and the director of photography is Simon Duggan.

Luhrmann said, “Fitzgerald loved the movies and was a passionate believer in the power of cinema. “The Great Gatsby” has been adapted for the screen no less than four times. Fitzgerald’s story defies time and geography. The vision and the goal of our remarkable cast and creatives is to do justice to the deftness of Fitzgerald’s telling, and illuminate its big ideas and humanity. This is our challenge and our adventure.”

“The Great Gatsby” is being shot in Luhrmann’s native Australia. The filmmaker stated, “The opportunity to make the film in Australia with the Bazmark creative team is very important to us; the assistance from Screen Australia and the NSW Government has made that possible.”

The film will be distributed in 3D and 2D by Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company, and in select territories by Village Roadshow Pictures.

Madonna: Exes Guy Ritchie, Sean Penn Encouraged Filmmaking For ‘W.E.’

Madonna

Madonna is, of course, a transcendant pop music star, nearly unparalleled in her success in that industry. But while she won a Golden Globe for her starring role in Evita, the Material Girl’s film experience, as a whole, is thin at best. So when she decided that it was time to direct her second movie, she needed some help.

Luckily, she’s a bit chummy with a couple guys who’ve spent some time in the movie industry.

Speaking at the Venice Film Festival in a press conference for her British royal period drama, “W.E.,” the superstar thanked ex-husbands Guy Ritchie and Sean Penn for helping her with the ambitious production.

“I am and was attracted to very creative people which is why I married Sean Penn and Guy Ritchie, two very talented directors,” Madonna said. “They both encouraged me as a director and as a creative person to do what I did, and they were both very supportive.”

The film, about the drama between would-be King of England Prince Edward and Wallis Simpson, the American divorcee for whom he abdicated his chance at the throne. She also told the press that she identified with Simpson, especially.

“I identified with her in that I think it’s very common when people become celebrities or public figures or icons that we are often reduced to a soundbite and that you’re given a few attributes and then you’re not allowed to have anything more than that,” the director said.

“W.E.” has received mixed reviews, including this largely cool one from The Hollywood Reporter.

Kate Winslet Talks ‘Carnage’ Projectile Vomiting

Kate Winslet

VENICE, Italy — The most memorable scene in Roman Polanski’s new film “Carnage” belongs to Oscar-winner Kate Winslet.

Just ask her kids. Winslet says they haven’t forgotten about the day she had to projectile vomit on set.

“My kids came to work for the vomit day, and I am so thrilled that they were there because they literally have not stopped talking about it since. It was hysterical,” Winslet told a news conference Thursday ahead of the world premiere of Polanski’s latest film in competition at the Venice Film Festival.

Based on the play by Yasmina Reza, “The God of Carnage,” the film is a sort of “Lord of the Flies” for the adult set – where civilized intentions go horribly awry as each character reveals their baser sides.

The satire packed with comic moments stars Winslet and Christoph Waltz as husband and wife Nancy and Alan, appearing opposite Jodie Foster and John C. Reilly as Penelope and Michael – two sets of parents who meet to sort out the details of a playground fight that left one of the boys with swollen lips and broken teeth.

The parents manage to maintain the appearance decorum as they niggle over whether Nancy and Alan’s son was armed with a stick, or just holding one. But rigid Penelope’s assertion that the parents of the alleged bully lack interest in their son’s behavior was more than Winslet’s Nancy could stomach, literally.

Fittingly, Nancy projectile vomits the cobbler they have been eating – all over Penelope’s cherished and rare art books.

Though the stunt required Winslet to operate a complex apparatus, Reilly disputes that Winslet had the toughest job.

“While Kate was the one who threw up, Jody and I had to clean up the vomit, so we had the more disgusting involvement with the vomit,” Reilly said.

The all-star cast said they got on famously, and were united in praise of Polanski, who skipped the premiere.

“If Roman Polanski invites you to join in any project, you really don’t say no,” Winslet said. “I had seen the play in New York so I was already very much a fan on the piece. I just felt extremely fortunate to be included.”

Polanski’s movements are restricted by an Interpol warrant in effect for 188 countries for extradition to the United States to face sentencing for having sex with a 13-year-old girl in 1977. He moves freely between Switzerland, which refused to extradite him, and France, which has a blanket policy of not extraditing its citizens.

“Carnage” is set in Brooklyn, but shot on a soundstage near Paris over six weeks. Most of the action takes place inside an apartment, which was constructed to allow the actors to move seamlessly through the space. Brief exterior shots show the boys fighting at a riverside park – and later give the film a bittersweet postscript.

“The use of space was actually a very precise and confined and minimal and detailed affair,” Waltz said. “But that is exactly Roman’s forte. The precision, the detail, the exactitude. The microscopic way of working.”

Polanski had the actors rehearse the script like a play, memorizing the entire screenplay and then doing run through after run through. While the screenplay was similar to the script, Winslet said the tone and rhythm were different – creating a unique piece.

“The whole thing was actually shot in story order from start to finish, which I don’t think any of us have ever experienced in film before,” Winslet said.

‘Big Dead Place’: James Gandolfini Developing Antarctica Memoir To HBO Show

James Gandolfini

Having bossed the crime underground of New Jersey, James Gandolfini is, believe it or not, headed to perhaps an even crazier secret world.

The former “Sopranos” star is set to executive produce and most likely star in a TV series adaptation of “Big, Dead Place,” Nicholas Jones’ memoir about his time spent working in the US’ Antarctic Program. The series, Deadline reports, is set up at HBO and will have an all-star cable lineup working behind the scenes, including Peter Gould of “Breaking Bad.”

The book paints a much different picture of what one might expect of a science institute in the desolate, freezing wilds of the last unexplored continent. From the Publisher Weekly’s review and synopsis, via Amazon:

When Johnson went to work for the U.S. Antarctic Program (devoted to scientific research and education in support of the national interest in the Antarctic), he figured he’d find adventure, beauty, penguins and lofty-minded scientists. Instead, he found boredom, alcohol and bureaucracy. As a dishwasher and garbage man at McMurdo Station, Johnson quickly shed his illusions about Antarctica. Since he and his co-workers seldom ventured beyond the station’s grim, functional buildings, they spent most of their time finding ways to entertain themselves, drinking beer, bowling and making home movies.

Gandolfini has kept busy with a number of projects since “The Sopranos” ended; he starred in the military satire “In The Loop,” had a supporting role in “The Taking of Pelham 1-2-3,” featured in “Welcome to the Rileys” and appeared in HBO’s “Cinema Verite.”

Johnny Depp’s ‘The Thin Man’ Signs Writer David Koepp

Johnny Depp

Set to premiere his second Hunter S. Thompson book-to-film adaptation this fall, Johnny Depp is moving forward on bringing another famed author’s vision to the big screen.

According to Deadline, Depp’s Infinitum Nihil has hired David Koepp to pen the remake of “The Thin Man,” a film series based on Dashiell Hammett’s novel. A classic noir book about a man hired to track down the mystery behind an eccentric inventor’s disappearance — and his ex-wife’s possible connection — it was originally made into a hit six-film saga, with the first debuting in 1934. The films starred William Powell as Nick Charles, the role Depp would play, while Myrna Loy played his wife, Nora.

Depp has worked with Koepp before, as he directed him in “Secret Window.” He’s got a long line of blockbuster hits to his credit; he’s written, among others, “Jurassic Park,” “Carlito’s Way,” “Mission: Impossible,” “Spider-Man,” the most recent “Indiana Jones” film and the upcoming “Men In Black III.”

The development is good news for Depp, who is currently trying to revive his lavish “The Lone Ranger,” which Disney recently halted production on due to costs.

Chris Pratt: I Was Too Fat For ‘Moneyball’ Role

Chris Pratt

Chris Pratt is best known as Andy Dwyer, the hilariously dim yet lovable Mouserat singer on “Parks and Recreation,” but the actor will be seen in a new light come this fall. Pratt will co-star in “Moneyball,” the story of the statistical analysis revolution pioneered in baseball by Oakland A’s general manager Billy Beane, who will be played by Brad Pitt. Pratt will be playing the film version of real life ballplayer Scott Hatteberg, the catcher-turned-first baseman that was the poster boy for the movement, with the film offering him a chance to show off his dramatic side.

But before he could flex his dramatic acting muscles, he had to hit the gym for some dramatic weight loss. Pratt told Movieline about his audition process for the film, in part detailing the bad news he received after his first audition, and how it made him change his ways entirely.

“My agent called me and said, ‘Chris, they really thought you were good, but they think you’re too fat,'” Prat remembered. “I was like, ‘F*ck, really? That sucks. OK, well, I can lose weight. Did you tell them I could lose weight?’ ‘Yeah, we told them. They haven’t offered it to anyone else. There’s no guarantee, but…’… It was another three months before I found out I got the role, but in that three months I think I dropped 30 pounds. I was bound and determined to become Scott Hatteberg whether they cast me or not.”

Pratt talks about how the role allowed him to take a break from all the physical comedy he had been doing on “Parks and Rec,” something he talked to Vulture about earlier in the year.

“I think it started out when I kept pushing the writers to put me on rollerblades. Because I think any man over 250 pounds rollerblading is instant hilarity,” he said. “There’s nothing funnier than a giant, grown man rollerblading. So they started doing that and it got laughs.”

Unsurprisingly, he decided to go back to the big man comedy laughs for his next film, the reunion flick, “10 Year.”

“I went from 220 pounds that I cut down for ‘Moneyball’ to almost 270-280 pounds for ‘Ten Year,'” Pratt remembered. “I gained — s*it, like 50 pounds to play this fat, alcoholic character. That made it really fun. I would drink dark beer every night. I would have a double order of pancakes every morning. Burgers for lunch. Fries, snacks, candy. I ballooned my weight up. It was probably very unhealthy, but it was so fun.”

Steven Soderbergh Retiring: Director Confirms Career Shift After Three Films

Steven Soderbergh

With the story line beginning to resemble his multi-strained masterpieces, Oscar-winning director Steven Soderbergh, in a roundabout, hedging way, confirmed a rampant rumor that he once denied.

Speaking with The New York Times about his upcoming film, the virus disaster story, “Contagion,” Soderbergh acknowledged that he was planning on retiring from Hollywood and focusing on a different art form.

“I’m interested in exploring another art form while I have the time and ability to do so,” he told the paper, speaking from his painting studio. “I’ll be the first person to say if I can’t be any good at it and run out of money I’ll be back making another ‘Ocean’s’ movie.”

Soderbergh directed the action-heist film, “Oceans 11,” and its two sequels. In fact, it was one of the stars of that trilogy — and the lead in “Contagion,” that first made mention of the director’s longterm plans.

“He wants to paint and he says he’s still young enough to have another career,” Matt Damon told the Los Angeles Times in January. “He’s kind of exhausted with everything that interested him in terms of form. He’s not interested in telling stories. Cinema interested him in terms of form and that’s it. He says, ‘If I see another over-the-shoulder shot, I’m going to blow my brains out.'”

Soderbergh hinted at retirement back in a 2009 interview with Esquire, saying, “I’m 45 now. When I turn 51, that’ll be 25 years. And that’s a lot of time to do one thing. And it’ll be, like, 30 movies. And that’s enough. I don’t want to have that falloff. I want to go out with ‘Abbey Road.'”

However, just last month at Comic-Con, the director laughed off what Damon had said.

“Matt Damon is apparently as discreet as a 14-year-old girl,” he said (via Movieline). “I had this drunk conversation with him while shooting ‘Contagion’ and four days later, I read about it in the paper. And he read it verbatim. […] Nobody in this economy wants to hear about someone quitting a good job. That kind of got blown out of proportion. And that’s Matt’s fault.”

Retiring or not, Soderbergh has a few films left to make. He is now in the process of making “Magic Mike,” the male stripper movie based on the experiences of a young, pre-fame Channing Tatum; a film adaptation of the 60s show “The Man From U.N.C.L.E.,” a project from which George Clooney just pulled out; and a biopic about Liberace that is due to star Michael Douglas and Damon.

Soderbergh won the Oscar for Best Director for “Traffic,” and earned a nod in the same category for the Julia Roberts-starring “Erin Brockovich.”

Angelina Jolie: Vanity Fair October Cover, Talking ‘In The Land Of Blood And Honey’

Angelina Jolie

Already an Oscar-winner and one of the highest paid, most bankable actresses alive, Angelina Jolie is branching out into writing and directing. And she couldn’t be more scared.

Her screenwriting and behind-the-camera debut, the film is titled “In the Land of Blood and Honey” and, set against the Bosnian Civil War of the 1990s, has provided Jolie with a new level of professional and artistic risk taking.

“I’ve never felt more exposed. My whole career, I’ve hidden behind other people’s words,” Jolie tells Vanity Fair in their October cover story. “Now it’s me talking. You feel ridiculous when you get something wrong.”

Luckily, she has a rather accomplished Hollywood hand living with her that was able to give some advice — whether she found it valuable or not.

“He’d come in and say what he liked or what he didn’t understand,” she says of partner Brad Pitt — whom she says she has plans to marry at this time. “Like any woman, I would listen to most of it and fight a few things. He’s been so supportive. But it’s hard to separate the person that loves you from the critic, so I don’t think he’s a fair judge.”

At one point, the film had a harsher set of critics.

In Bosnia, The Association of Women Victims of War, the powerful advocacy lobby working on behalf of those that suffered unspeakable mistreatment in mass rape camps set up during the war, protested the film, leading to the revocation of Jolie’s permit to film within the country. Eventually, Jolie clarified her intent and viewpoint, and re-secure the permit, and shooting took place in Sarajevo; Hungary also served as one of the primary backdrops for production, especially while the permit was suspended.

The film, which was picked up for distribution by FilmDistrict, will hit theaters on December 23rd, right in the middle of prestige movie season and in time to qualify for Oscar consideration.