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Paul Walter Hauser

7.20 Sympathy for CRUELLA De Vil

June 6, 2021 by Steve Norton Leave a Comment

In Cruella, Emma Stone brings the backstory of one of Disney’s most famous villains to life. Well before there were 101 Dalmatians, Cruella De Vil was an aspiring fashion designer. However, when she matches wits against the (even more) evil designer, The Baronness (Emma Thompson), Cruella and her friends Jasper and Horace must scheme to bring down London’s queen bee. This week, Allen Chabot, Mira Ibrahim and TeenFish’ Daniel Collins return to talk about having sympathy for our villains and walking the line between redemption and revenge.

You can stream the episode on podomatic, Alexa (via Stitcher), Spotify or Amazon Podcasts! Or, you can download the ep on Apple Podcasts!

Want to continue to conversation at home?  Click the link below to download ‘Fishing for More’ — some small group questions for you to bring to those in your area.

7.20 CruellaDownload

Filed Under: Disney+, Featured, Film, Podcast, VOD Tagged With: 101 Dalmatians, Cruella, Disney, Disney+, Emma Stone, Emma Thompson, Joel Fry, Mark Strong, Paul Walter Hauser

Cruella: When Black and White Turns Grey

May 28, 2021 by Heather Johnson Leave a Comment

Bold. Complex. Mesmerizing.

And, by far, the best Disney live action yet.

Yes, I am talking about Cruella with Emma Stone and Emma Thompson. Not one who typically flocks to live action Disney features (call me too sentimental for my 90’s animated favorites), this movie blew every expectation out of the water. The tapestry of this story weaves together color, creativity, and character development in such a way that every moment kept me engaged. I’m still sitting here with my mouth agape as I play it all back in my head.

Set against the backdrop of 60’s and 70’s London, young Estella works to be the good girl that her mother encourages her to be. With her uncanny style, unfiltered opinions, and explosive personality, playing nice isn’t exactly second nature to her. But for the sake of the mother she loves, Estella (Emma Stone) navigates both trauma and genius to stay as she is, until Cruella fully emerges from the depths in retaliation of a painful truth. Consumed with taking out her former mentor and now-enemy the Baroness (Emma Thompson – absolutely perfect), Cruella subverts the Baroness’s grip on the London fashion scene with a rock star edge and in-your-face theatrics. With the help of long-time partners in crime, Jasper (Joel Fry) and Horace (Paul Walter Hauser) and a team of nonconforming designers including Artie (John MCrea), Cruella is on the precipice of being unstoppable. But will she survive her own ambition and vengeance?

As an origin story, the set up for the characters and storyline of 101 Dalmatians is well-placed and subtle. Anita and Roger fade in and out just enough to play key roles without overshadowing the heart of this story. We get to the root of Cruella’s obsession with dalmatians, and Jasper and Horace are elevated to relatable characters as opposed to bumbling second-rate thieves.

But this movie has its own heartbeat – one that loves and bleeds – and Stone’s performance is the soul of the film. Her transformation from Estella into Cruella kept me in a state of “is she or isn’t she” the unfeeling villain we’ve seen before now. Against the backdrop of the statement black and white color scheme, there was a grey in-between for me. Behind every villain there is a beginning, and that beginning isn’t always evil. And the other side of that coin is that behind every hero, that beginning isn’t always benign. Morality can get murky depending on a variety of factors and influences, and Cruella really hit that point home.

It’s an exceptional film with layers of development, visualization, ambition, and even heartbreak. And it’s a testament to both the writers and the cast that with every turn I was invested in characters that I’m supposed to define as “bad guys.” Did I close my laptop ready to absolve them of them crimes? No. But did it remind me that our stories are rarely as black and white as we think? Definitely.

Cruella opens in theaters and is available with Disney+ Premier Access on Friday May 28th, 2021.

Filed Under: Disney+, Featured, Film, Reviews Tagged With: Cruella, Disney, Disney+, Emma Stone, Emma Thompson, Joel Fry, John McRae, Paul Walter Hauser

Eat Wheaties!: Finding Yourself in Others

May 7, 2021 by Steve Norton Leave a Comment

Everyone believes that they know the lives of celebrities from their social media. But what if you discovered that you knew one of them before they were famous and wanted to contact them again?

Written and directed by Scott Abrahamson, Eat Wheaties! tells the story of Sid Straw (Tony Hale), an everyman who is frequently shunned by his friends and family for being ‘weird’. When he stumbles onto an old college photo of himself and star Elizabeth Banks, Side feels rejuvenated and can’t wait to tell his friends. Unfortunately, they refuse to believe their relationship and Sid attempts to reach the actress via social media. However, when his quest to reconnect with Banks becomes public, Sid feels the fallout from those around him as they push him even further away.

Balancing silliness and sadness, Eat Wheaties! carries a charm and sweetness that works well. Built on solids performances by its cast, Abrahamson has fairly good impulses about when to let his them shine. Though playing smaller roles, veterans Paul Walter Hauser, Alan Tudyk and the vastly underrated Rizwan Manji all show off their comedic talents when given the opportunity. (Note to screenwriters though: the world always needs more Sarah Chalke.) 

Ultimately however, the success of the film rests on Hale’s shoulders. Regardless of what role he plays, Hale always brings an affability and purity to his characters (even his more villainous ones) and that certainly plays well in this role. As loveable loser Sid, Hale plays him with simplicity but never stupidity. Though frustrated and seemingly unable to connect with others, Sid remains intelligent and innocent and never goes ‘full Bluth’. 

Strangely, the best chemistry he has onscreen is with the elusive Banks as he attempts to reconnect with her. To write these scenes requires a delicate touch as they could easily come off as creepy yet Hale and Abrahamson keeps them from ever straying into that territory. In fact, there’s such an honesty in his online blogging that the film almost plays out as a ‘will they/won’t they’ scenario between Hale and Banks. While there is no romantic tension between the two characters, Wheaties! leaves legitimate question as to whether they will connect and builds anticipation for resolution.

In many ways, Wheaties! is a cry for both community and self-realization. As he struggles to find a place where he fits in, Sid becomes increasingly lonely. Completely undervalued by his family and friends, Sid is looking for anything that might awaken them to his ‘importance’. While the revelation that he was once friends with Elizabeth Banks brings back pleasant memories at first, the negative response that he receives from others taints the experience and causes him to fixate on it. To Sid, his past with Banks becomes a form of justification about his value yet it also drives others away who already viewed him as strange. (Incidentally, Wheaties! also becomes an interesting commentary on our own obsession with connecting with celebrities online. As we message celebrities and beg for retweets/likes, so too do we also reveal our own interest at touching fame, even if many stars pass off responsibility for their social connections.)

However, this social isolation also provides opportunity for Sid to begin to work on himself. As things begin to unravel around him, Sid begins to take charge of his life and break free from the self-doubt that has been holding him back. Though painful, his hardship provides a chance for him to grow and take control of his life for the first time. Meanwhile, he also grows in his ability to maintain healthy relationships. Emotionally healthy himself, he also begins to create a new community that is supportive of him (and that he can support). 

Though funny and charming, Eat Wheaties! also carries an important message. At a time when social networking drives our relationships, the film shows the need we have to connect with one another. However, as a result of Sid’s journey, Abramson’s script shows that there is a mutual need between self-growth and maintaining healthy relationships as well 

Eat Wheaties! is now available on VOD.

Filed Under: Film, Reviews, VOD Tagged With: Alan Tudyk, Eat Wheaties, Elisha Cuthbert, Elizabeth Banks, Paul Walter Hauser, Rizwan Manji, Sarah Chalke, Scott Abrahamson, Tony Hale

Richard Jewell: The End of the Innocence

March 17, 2020 by J. Alan Sharrer Leave a Comment

They’re a common sight around malls, retail stores, and companies these days. They help make sure things go smoothly yet are often ignored or make fun of. Of course, I’m referring to the humble security guard.

Perhaps the most infamous of all security personnel in the past 25 years has to be Richard Jewell. For the younger generation, his name is not one that will likely register as important. Director Clint Eastwood wants to change that with his latest film Richard Jewell. It is a tale of heroism, woe, and frustration that will reward the patient filmgoer and serves as a reminder of life before the world’s innocence was shattered one fateful evening.

Richard Jewell (Paul Walter Hauser) was a rather portly individual who lived in the Atlanta area and had a dream of getting into law enforcement. He was good with guns, extremely good at remembering things, but absolutely lousy in people to people relationships. His track record wasn’t the best either, partially due to the people he was trying to protect making fun of or simply ignoring him.

At the opening of the film, Jewell’s trying to make ends meet as a supply clerk in a law firm. He encounters Watson Bryant (Sam Rockwell), a no-nonsense lawyer who doesn’t take anything from anyone, including elected officials. The two briefly get to know each other over candy bars and a discussion in a video arcade before Jewell takes another job, this time as security detail at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta. There, he helps protect a music venue inside Centennial Park, the hub of action outside the sporting venues.

All is well for the first few concerts until one fateful evening when Jewell spots a suspicious backpack under a bench near the sound and lighting tower. He calls the police over to check (this is an international event, after all) and begins getting people out of the way. Suddenly the backpack explodes, raining fire and shrapnel throughout the park. Two people were killed and over 100 injured, transforming the capital city of Georgia instantaneously. Jewell goes home that evening, content that he helped keep the situation from being significantly worse.

The next day, he discovers that his observation and quick thinking has won him fame in the eyes of the world. People want to talk to him on television, people cheer when they see him, and he becomes an instant celebrity. Meanwhile, the FBI begins to look into who planted the backpack and called 911 with a warning about the bomb. They don’t have any real leads, but after acquiring information from Jewell’s past, they suddenly begin to think he was the culprit, doing it for fame and notoriety. With that, Richard’s quiet lifestyle (he lives in an apartment building with his mother [played by the always excellent Kathy Bates]) is completely shattered as the FBI does everything possible to make him the world’s biggest enemy.

Usually such situations are kept fairly quiet. However, Kathy Scruggs, a rather arrogant and pushy reporter from the Atlanta Journal newspaper (played with realistic smarminess by Olivia Wilde) is able to coerce one of the FBI detectives to inform her who they’re going after. They have a paper to print, you know. When she finds out, she makes the FBI’s intentions known to the world. 

Cue circus music.

Jewell suddenly cannot move more than 15 feet without a reporter yelling questions at him or hearing the shutters of cameras go off. He doesn’t know what to do. At this point, he reaches for the one person who might be able to help him–the lawyer he stocked with candy bars a few months earlier. Since then, Watson Bryant has gone into his own practice and decides to help the poor guy out. The question is whether the mass of humanity descending on Jewell or the FBI will destroy him first. 

Richard Jewell is a film that, for me, hit very close to home. You see, I was at Centennial Park a few hours before the bomb exploded. I played in the fountains and snapped a few 35mm pictures before heading back to South Carolina. That night, my friends and I huddled around a television set, aghast at the video news outlets were showing of the aftermath and thankful to God that we left when we did. I also distinctly remember the media’s evisceration of Jewell and how he was made to look like had the whole bombing planned (in reality, Eric Rudolph confessed to it a few months later). I remember feeling sorry for the guy but had no idea how much his life changed as a result of the FBI and media. Of course, the film shows Jewell as an avid owner of guns and is extremely knowledgeable about security–things the FBI used against him. Bryant tells him to not say anything, but he keeps talking (since he’s so big into law enforcement), making things worse on everyone around him. It’s only after he realizes how the ordeal has hurt his mother that he finally gets the nerve to confront the FBI directly. 

As for the film itself, it’s very good and has some incredible acting. Bates was nominated for a Golden Globe recently for her role as Jewell’s mom Bobi. Hauser and Rockwell are great in their individual roles but magical when they share the screen. You see and feel their relationship build, change, and eventually transform each other. Munn seems to me to be the weak link, but after giving it some thought, she adds a necessary layer to transform the film from ho-hum to must-see. And this is a film that deserves to be seen and its voice heard for past, present, and future generations. 

That evening in Centennial Park, anyone off the street could walk in–there were police around, but no layer of security other than presence. One week later, I returned to Atlanta to see a handball match and found a completely different city. There was a feeling of nervousness everywhere. Security was beefed up considerably. In fact, in order to visit the park again, I had to go through two separate bag checks. The innocence was gone, never to be reclaimed again. 

At one point on this planet, there was innocence and no need for protection. Adam and Eve were sinless at first, having their pick of whatever they wanted to do and to eat. Sure, God warned them not to eat from one specific tree, but there was no security guard around for enforcement. When they finally gave in and tasted of the forbidden fruit, things changed. The innocence was lost. God, after a stern lecture, kicked them out of Eden–and added security detail in the form of a flaming sword so they could never get in again. Sin is costly, but it doesn’t have to rule in us thanks to Jesus and his birth, life, death, and return to life once more. He’s ready to forgive all those who call on him to do so.

Make sure you put Richard Jewell on your must-see list this year. It’s thrilling, harrowing, and a sobering reminder of innocence lost–both individually and as a society.

Special features include both “The Real Story of Richard Jewell” and “The Making of Richard Jewell” with many of the principles (Eastwood, Hamm, Rockwell, Bates, etc.) included.

Filed Under: Film, Reviews Tagged With: Adam and Eve, Atlanta, Bombing, Clint Eastwood, FBI, Innocence, Kathy Bates, Olivia Munn, Olympics, Paul Walter Hauser, richard jewell, Sam Rockwell

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