Hoffman, Mann on “Luck”; review

Santa Anita is fantastic,” says Michael Mann of the iconic horse race track in Arcadia, Ca. “It’s beautiful, a great-looking race track; why would you choose any other place?”
That’s high praise from the filmmaker responsible for the TV and movie versions of “Miami Vice,”  the seven-time Oscar nominee “The Insider,” and the cult favorite “Heat.”
“Santa Anita is such a beautiful atmosphere; it would be crazy not to honor it,” adds David Milch, Phi Beta Kappa and Summa Cum Laude graduate of Yale. Milch went on to be an Emmy-winning writer of “Hill Street Blues” and then co-created “NYPD Blue,” for which he won a Humanitas Prize and a record 26 Emmy nominations in the first season, and created the HBO series “Deadwood,” winner of Emmys, a Golden Globe, and a Peabody Award.

Scott Hettrick

Scott Hettrick

Mann and Milch, unlikely partners as two of three executive producers of the new HBO series about the underbelly of horse racing called “Luck” (9 p.m. ET/PT on Sunday nights beginning January 29) joined the show’s two highest-profile stars, Dustin Hoffman and Nick Nolte, on a panel during HBO’s presentation at the Television Critics Association tour Friday in Pasadena.
<Story continues along with review of all nine episodes of “Luck” below the following 85-second video interview with Hoffman and Mann…>

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Series creator and writer Milch, a longtime race horse owner and self-confessed near-obsessive race track bettor has a reverence for Santa Anita that is conveyed visually in the pilot directed by Mann and throughout each of the nine episodes of the series.

My father took our family to a movie in 1969 starring Steve McQueen called “The Reivers,” an adaptation of the William Faulkner novel, featuring slow-motion scenes of horses racing that Dad thought represented some of the most impressive cinematography he had ever seen.
I think he would have thought the same about the powerful scenes of horse racing at Santa Anita in “Luck.”

But even some of those who follow horse racing and are familiar with Santa Anita expressed disappointment with the one-hour pilot that HBO showed as a sneak preview last month. Too many characters and too much insider jargon that combined to make it a little hard to follow, and nothing much of significance happening which made it feel a little slow and not very engaging. Providing even more challenge in the pilot, most of the characters are degenerates and criminals who don’t initially exude much charisma or humor, though they do each have personalities that will eventually emerge.

For those viewers who were not bowled over by the pilot, I recommend sticking with it with a few more episodes; the second hour ramps up considerably, even if it is still not “The Sopranos.” In fact, mob-like violence eventually creeps in during later episodes, particularly as Hoffman’s character, who is being released from prison in the first scene of the pilot, becomes entangled by episodes four and five with a yacht-residing heavy rival for Hoffman’s Ace character played by Michael Gambon (the polar opposite of his avuncular Professor Dumbledore in the “Harry Potter” movies).
It is that juxtaposition of the seedy side of horse racing set against the idyllic ambiance of Santa Anita that offers the primary intrigue and focus of the show. Milch described it as the “double-ness” of Santa Anita, the real world and the “Santa Anita of the mind.”

The momentum of the mid-series episodes, including a mild earthquake tremor that literally shakes up the motley crew while dining at the local “Rod’s Grill” near the track, tends to stall a bit before regaining energy in the final installment.

Along the way, despite the multitude of characters already in place, new high-profile actors like Gambon continue to be added, such as Joan Allen. Her role as a persistent horse welfare activist (a la Bo Derek?) and her motivation is as vague as many of the other characters, but she appears to become a potential romantic interest for Ace.

Another actor gaining screen time after the pilot is Hall of Fame former jockey Gary Stevens (“Seabiscuit”), whose story arc carries him through a recurrence of his battle with alcoholism that threatens his career. Stevens displays an impressive and extensive range of acting skills that his prior acting roles had not allowed.

For Hoffman, the series presents a new opportunity to work unencumbered by studio executives.
“I’ve not had this experience before,” he said. “You can’t get a shot at doing your best work in the studio system.”
HBO does not have committees analyzing and making recommendations, he said. He also enjoys having three cameras filming at the same time to catch different angles so that actors don’t have to repeat the same shot multiple times.

Also somewhat unique to this HBO series is the wide variance in running times of each “one-hour” episode by as much as 20-minutes.” Each episode has a different director and some run about 45-minutes while others run 50-plus minutes and 60-plus minutes, including the 66-minute finale.

Hoffman and the producers all expressed interest in seeing the expensive series be picked up by HBO for several more seasons.
Maybe that would give Milch time to write in a visit to Santa Anita from Tony Soprano or even Carrie and friends from that other former HBO series “Sex and the City.”

– By Scott Hettrick

HBO’s “Reagan” docu debut 2/7

It may seem like the celebration of President Ronald Reagan’s 100th birthday has been going on for nearly that long in the last couple weeks, but HBO has one more memento to mark the occasion, the network’s Feb. 7 debut (9 p.m. ET/PT )of Eugene Jarecki’s documentary “Reagan” that premiered Jan. 23 at the Sundance Film Festival.

President Ronald Reagan

The two-hour “Reagan” is a remarkably comprehensive and objective view of the seemingly simple man who actually was a complex person with many faces, shifting from actor to pitchman to politician with as much ease as he moved from being a liberal Democrat to a conservative Republican.

Jarecki tells the life story unimaginatively chronologically yet deftly interweaves news footage and comments about Reagan’s personality throughout to create a deeper perspective on the man, and dwelling perhaps the longest on the Iran-Contra arms-for-hostages scandal that marred his Presidency.

Son Ron Reagan gets the most screen time and offers a very honest and loving perspective of his father, puzzling about why the President had trouble accepting certain realities like homosexuality until his friend Rock Hudson died of AIDS, expressing his disappointment in his father’s decisions about Iran-Contra but saying the President was doing it with the best intentions of serving the public, and praising his political savvy and good looks. The movie also closes with Ron’s eulogy at his father’s funeral.

Others provide fascinating reflections as well, including former Chief of Staff James A. Baker, former White House senior advisor Pat Buchanan, Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger, and several economists who remain mystified about the illogic of Reaganomics, which sparked many of the economic divides the country is still suffering from decades later.

“Reagan” is entertaining, informative, and a worthwhile reminder of the many sides of the President who has become so revered since his death after suffering through Alzheimer’s.

The movie replays  at 7:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Feb. 11, 2:30 p.m. and midnight Feb. 16, 12:30 p.m. Feb. 21, 6 p.m. Feb. 24, and 3:45 p.m. feb. 26

– By Scott Hettrick

Alexi on “Two Escobars”

One of the most high-profile stars of the historic 1994 World Cup soccer tournament in the U.S., Alexi Lalas, was just a few days from heading to South Africa for the debut of the 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa when he stopped by ESPN Zone Wednesday (May 19) to watch a media preview of the upcoming ESPN Films’ “30 for 30″ documentary about a fateful match against Columbia during the first round of that World Cup in ’94.

Scott Hettrick

Scott Hettrick

“The Two Escobars” tells the riveting, fascinating, and impactful overlapping stories of Columbian drug lord Pablo Escobar and the star/captain of the Columbia National team, Andres Escobar. Creating a wave of national pride unknown to the drug-torn country in decades, the Columbian team was considered one of the favorites heading into the match against the underdog U.S.

(Story continues below following 3-minute video interview with Lalas and highlights from the event.)

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Unbeknownst to Lalas and most others, as the team prepared for the match several players and the coach were hit with death threats from their countrymen over allegations involving Pablo Escobar.
Playing under stress and without a key player specifically targeted by the threats, Andres Escobar compounded the problem on the field when he made a shocking mistake during the game, accidentally deflecting a kick by U.S. midfielder John Harkes into his own goal.

A week later the soccer star Escobar was gunned down in a parking lot back in his home country.

Lalas was watching the movie for the first time. Immediately afterwards he told HollywoodInHiDef.com/3DHollywood.net that learning about the murder immediately cast a different perspective on the otherwise triumphant feeling by the U.S. team for their historic victory that propelled them to the second round. It was odd waking up feeling like somehow the U.S. played a small role in the murder of a global star soccer player, he said. But, as the film points out, there is reason for Alexi and his teammates not to feel any sense of responsibility.

In fact, the film by brothers Jeff and Michael Zimbalist provides an abundance of important details and context as it expertly interweaves the stories of these two men and their home country that most of us remember from the 1980s as nothing more than the drug and murder capital of the world.

HiDef images certainly heightens the impact but it is the exhaustive number of new interviews blended with a remarkable amount of archival audio and film and news footage, including some with Pablo playing soccer with the team while in prison, amongst other personal movies of the drug kingpin, that creates the biggest and most lasting impression.

“The Two Escobars” is one of the strongest entries in the “30 for 30″ series that has already set the bar high with programs such as Mike Tollin’s look at the first pro football network covered by ESPN, “Small Potatoes: Who Killed the USFL?”

Lalas, who later became general manager of the Los Angeles Galaxy, joined ESPN in 2009 and will be the network’s studio analyst for the entire 64-match World Cup schedule being televised live in HiDef by ESPN from June 11 – July 11.

“The Two Escobars” is one of two terrific new World Cup movies that will inspire great interest in the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, and the other movie even features a World Cup based in South Africa, but it’s not soccer/futbol but about the 1995 Rugby World Cup. Click here to read my review of the new Blu-ray release of Clint Eastwood’s “Invictus,” the inspirational docu-drama of the team that helped Nelson Mandela restore pride to South Africa.

– By Scott Hettrick

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