10 Hush-Hush Facts About “L.A. Confidential”

Mathew Jackson and Mental Floss present 10 Hush-Hush Facts About L.A. Confidential.  Here are three of my favorites…

1. THE SCRIPTING PROCESS WAS TOUGH.
Writer-director Curtis Hanson had been a longtime James Ellroy fan when he finally read L.A. Confidential, and the characters in that particular Ellroy novel really spoke to him, so he began working on a script. Meanwhile, Brian Helgeland—originally contracted to write an unproduced Viking film for Warner Bros.—was also a huge Ellroy fan, and lobbied hard for the studio to give him the scripting job. When he learned that Hanson already had it, the two met, and bonded over their mutual admiration of Ellroy’s prose. Their passion for the material was clear, but it took two years to get the script done, with a number of obstacles.

“He would turn down other jobs; I would be doing drafts for free,” Helgeland said. “Whenever there was a day when I didn’t want to get up anymore, Curtis tipped the bed and rolled me out on the floor.”

 

3. JAMES ELLROY DIDN’T THINK THE BOOK COULD BE ADAPTED.
Though Wolper was intrigued by the idea of telling the story onscreen, Ellroy and his agent laughed at the thought. The author felt his massive book would never fit on any screen.

“It was big, it was bad, it was bereft of sympathetic characters,” Ellroy said. “It was unconstrainable, uncontainable, and unadaptable.”

 

10. ELLROY APPROVED OF THE MOVIE.
To adapt L.A. Confidential for the screen, Hanson and Helgeland condensed Ellroy’s original novel, boiling the story down to a three-person narrative and ditching other subplots so they could get to the heart of the three cops at the center of the movie. Ellroy, in the end, was pleased with their choices.

 

“They preserved the basic integrity of the book and its main theme, which is that everything in Los Angeles during this era of boosterism and yahooism was two-sided and two-faced and put out for cosmetic purposes,” Ellroy said. “The script is very much about the [characters’] evolution as men and their lives of duress. Brian and Curtis took a work of fiction that had eight plotlines, reduced those to three, and retained the dramatic force of three men working out their destiny. I’ve long held that hard-boiled crime fiction is the history of bad white men doing bad things in the name of authority. They stated that case plain.”

Twilight Zone: “The Changing of the Guard” [Season 3, Episode 37] / Z-View

Twilight Zone: “The Changing of the Guard[Season 3, Episode 37]
Original Air Date: June 1, 1962

Director: Robert Ellis Miller

Writer: Rod Serling

Starring: Donald Pleasence, Liam Sullivan and Philippa Bevans.


The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…

Professor Ellis Fowler upon being forced to retire feels that he hasn’t had the impact he hoped his career would bring.  Fowler decides to commit suicide but before he goes through with it, he is visited by people from his past.

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JoBlo.com’s Awesome Art We’ve Found Around the Net

Once a week Joblo.com posts Awesome Art We’ve Found Around the Net.  As you can imagine, they post awesome art that they, well, you get the idea.

I always enjoy seeing what JoBlo has found because with each post they list the artist’s name and a link to more of his/her art.  If you check it out you’ll discover amazing artists like Dave Rapoza who did the Lobo piece above.

Twilight Zone: “Cavender is Coming” [Season 3, Episode 36] / Z-View

Twilight Zone: “Cavender is Coming[Season 3, Episode 36]
Original Air Date: May 25, 1962

Director: Chris Nyby

Writer: Rod Serling

Starring: Jesse White, Carol Burnett, Howard Smith and Donna Douglas.


The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…

Harmon Cavender [White] is an angel who has yet to earn his wings.  He’s given one last chance by improving the life of woman [Burnett].

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Howard Chaykin’s The Divided States of Hysteria is Coming This Fall!

Howard Chaykin has a new –

I’m in.

But you don’t know what the comic is about.  You don’t even know what it’s called.

I’m in.

Listen –

Ok, tell me.

THE DIVIDED STATES OF HYSTERIA is set in the aftermath of a dirty bomb that wipes New York City off the map, as what will come to be known as the Second American Civil War shatters the domestic landscape in isolated pustules of violence…and a team of five private contractors is charged with stemming this tide of rage and bringing the bombers to justice.

Guess what?

What?

I’m in.

Source: Bleeding Cool.

15 Big Facts About “Sanford and Son”

Roger Cormier and Mental Floss present 15 Big Facts About Sanford and Son.  Here are three of my favorites…

5. FOXX WORE MAKEUP TO LOOK OLDER.
Foxx, who was nicknamed “Chicago Red” because of his hair color, was only 49 years old when the series began; Fred Sanford was 65. He complained that a lot of people assumed he was Fred’s age.

8. FOXX BASED THE HEART ATTACKS ON HIS MOTHER.
“Fred Sanford is Mary Sanford, who is my mother, but you can reverse personalities into male or female,” Foxx told Sammy Davis Jr. on Sammy and Company. “My mother would do the same thing … she would have heart attacks when I was a kid, I remember. When she wanted something done she could hardly breathe—she had emphysema, she had cancer, she had lumbago, she had whooping cough.”

9. LAWANDA PAGE WOULD HAVE BEEN FIRED IF IT WASN’T FOR FOXX.
LaWanda Page was the only actress Foxx wanted to play Fred’s sister-in-law, Esther. Page was too nervous to give an audition producers liked, but Foxx insisted. “They were going to let me go,” Page told Jet magazine in 1977, “but Redd said, ‘No, you ain’t gonna let her go. That’s LaWanda and I know she can do it! Just give me some time with her.'”

Twilight Zone: “I Sing the Body Electric” [Season 3, Episode 35] / Z-View

Twilight Zone: “I Sing the Body Electric[Season 3, Episode 35]
Original Air Date: May 18, 1962

Director: William Claxton and James Sheldon

Writer: Ray Bradbury

Starring: Josephine Hutchinson, David White, Vaughn Taylor and Veronica Cartwright.


The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…

George is a widower raising three children on his own.  When George decides to purchase a robot that in all aspects looks like a grandma to assist with the children.  Two of the three children accept the robot but the third child rejects her with terrible results.

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Twilight Zone: “Young Man’s Fancy” [Season 3, Episode 34] / Z-View

Twilight Zone: “Young Man’s Fancy[Season 3, Episode 34]
Original Air Date: May 11, 1962

Director: John Brahm

Writer: Richard Matheson

Starring: Phyllis Thaxter, Alex Nicol and Wallace Rooney.


The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…

Alex Walker and his new bride arrive at the home in which Alex grew up with his clinging mother.  Alex’s mom recently died and they are there to sign papers to sell the home.  Alex begins to have second thoughts much to the despair of his new wife.

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Kill or be Killed by Brubaker, Phillips & Breitweiser is Coming This Summer!

Ed Brubaker, Sean Phillips and Elizabeth Breitweiser have a new crime comic series coming out this summer called Kill or be Killed

KILL OR BE KILLED is the story of a troubled young man who is compelled to kill bad people, and how he struggles to keep his secret, as it slowly begins to ruin his life and the lives of his friends and loved ones.

Deal me in.

Source: Bleeding Cool.

Kaare Andrews Talks Up Renalto Jones!

Kaare Andrews is a movie and television director, a writer and artist.  Talk about a renaissance man!  Andrews has a new six issue comic series, Renalto Jones, coming out this summer.  Here’s how Kaare describes the series…

KA: Here’s the big conceit of the series: As you said, it’s about a man who hides amongst the super-rich and makes them pay for their super-rich crimes. But he doesn’t just hide in that world, he lives in it. So I can have a great time drawing gold plated Lamborghinis and huge estates, while still being able to get some payback. The book isn’t saying that all rich people are evil (remember, this is fiction), it’s saying that there is a certain kind of evil that’s untouchable because it hides behind wealth. To get at them, it’s going to take one of their own.

 

What’s interesting for me on a character level is that Renato isn’t really who he appears to be. ‘Renato’ is Italian for ‘Rebirth’ and that plays a big part of his character. Who is he? Why is he doing this? It’s not about revenge, but restitution. That’s important to Renato. He’s not getting even with the super-rich, he’s making them pay.

Check out Rich Johnston’s Why Kaare Andrews Is Focusing 100% On The One % at Bleeding Cool for the full story.

24 Things We Learned from Ben Affleck’s “Gone, Baby, Gone” Commentary

Rob Hunter and Film School Rejects present 24 Things We Learned from Ben Affleck’s Gone, Baby, Gone Commentary.   Here are three of my favorites…

7. Affleck worried about a shot of Jerry Springer on Helene McCready’s (Amy Ryan) TV thinking it might be too cliched, but “literally one in every two houses that I went into had Springer on while we were scouting in the afternoon.”

8. The extra with the hole in his throat was in the bar when they arrived for shooting so Affleck just asked him to stay. The man moving quickly behind him is actually Affleck who was passing by unaware they were grabbng the shot. Stockard wonders if this is Affleck’s stab at a Hitchcock cameo, but the director denies it.

3. One of the changes they made from the novel was adjusting the private eyes’ ages from being in their 40s to being in their 30s, “but that presented its own challenges,” says Stockard.

Twilight Zone: “The Dummy” [Season 3, Episode 33] / Z-View

Twilight Zone: “The Dummy[Season 3, Episode 33]
Original Air Date: May 4, 1962

Director: Abner Biberman

Writer: Rod Serling based on a story by Lee Polk

Starring: Cliff Robertson, Frank Sutton and George Murdock.


The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…

Jerry Etherson is a very good ventriloquist.  The only thing holding him back from the big time is his dummy… who is very evil and very alive.

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