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Not Fade Away Trailer ( SSC) (Read 1,126 times)
Paranoid Android
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Not Fade Away Trailer ( SSC)
Oct 6th, 2012 at 7:45pm
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It sorta  looks like an American version of Killing Bono""...(a really good film)...

http://theinterrobang.com/2012/10/coming-soon-not-fade-away/
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Re: Not Fade Away Trailer ( SSC)
Reply #1 - Oct 6th, 2012 at 8:02pm
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The music might be good but frankly I'm too old to give a crap about a story of a bunch of kids who think they're special.   Are you fucking serious?
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Re: Not Fade Away Trailer ( SSC)
Reply #2 - Oct 7th, 2012 at 12:37pm
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Nice to see some wannabes back then. I like it and I'm gonna see that movie for sure
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« Last Edit: Oct 7th, 2012 at 1:03pm by Voodoo Chile in Wonderland »  

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Re: Not Fade Away Trailer ( SSC)
Reply #3 - Oct 7th, 2012 at 4:52pm
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that looks to be a very good movie...
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Re: Not Fade Away Trailer ( SSC)
Reply #4 - Oct 7th, 2012 at 5:44pm
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I'm going to see it too, I never get tired of these stories of kids forming bands in Stones style with Soprano Tony in the lead, he makes a great lead actor, this must be the late 60's/early 70's when long hair, & no tie & suit on was a crime.
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Re: Not Fade Away Trailer ( SSC)
Reply #5 - Oct 7th, 2012 at 7:56pm
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I agree...it looks to be a fun movie...
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Re: Not Fade Away Trailer ( SSC)
Reply #6 - Oct 7th, 2012 at 8:01pm
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Yeah, that trailer definitely piqued my interest. Love the song, the guitars were all ace, and it's got James Gandolfini. 


Period movies which don't get the guitars right really bug me.
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Re: Not Fade Away Trailer ( SSC)
Reply #7 - Oct 8th, 2012 at 9:17am
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'Sopranos' creator David Chase rocks on with 'Not Fade Away'

He changes course by writing and directing a rock 'n' roll tale that
has just premiered at the New York Film Festival. But it's set in
familiar Chase terrain.

...

By Steven Zeitchik, Los Angeles Times
October 7, 2012, 9:20 p.m.
NEW YORK — Ask David Chase why he chose a coming-of-age rock 'n' roll movie with few household stars as his first post-"Sopranos" effort and you'll receive an unexpected answer.

"It was sort of inflicting punishment on myself to do the hardest thing you can do," he said. "It's a complicated psychological thing. There's something perverse about it, really."

Five years after he wrapped up his HBO show in controversial fashion, Chase has finally returned to the American screen. He has written and directed "Not Fade Away," a story about a 19-year-old drummer named Douglas (John Magaro) living in the rock 'n' roll's heyday of the mid-1960's and the complicated relationships Douglas has with his bandmates, his unforgiving father, Pat (James Gandolfini), and his teenage crush Grace (Bella Heathcote).

Proving Chase's point about the degree of difficulty, "Not Fade Away" (the movie takes its title from a Buddy Holly song that the Rolling Stones covered) has an abstract, digressive quality; one understands it via a series of vignettes more than a linear narrative.

"Not Fade Away" is concerned with gaps — generational and cultural gaps, but also the chasm between a band's aspirations and its realities. Though lacking the crime backdrop of "The Sopranos," it shares some similarities with the Emmy winner, particularly in its exploration of family dynamics. (Gandolfini's Pat and Magaro's Douglas reprise, in a way, the fraught father-son relationship Tony Soprano had with son A.J. and various proteges.)

There are other "Sopranos" echoes. Steven Van Zandt, who of course played consigliere Silvio Dante on the series, served a key role on the movie, helping the actors with their instruments and supervising the music. (He is credited as an executive producer.)

And "Not Fade Away" is set in familiar Chase territory: an Italian American immigrant community in suburban New Jersey.

But the specter of "The Sopranos" also creates an impossible standard for Chase.

"I read one of the early reviews that said 'Not Fade Away' 'doesn't live up to the promise of "The Sopranos,"'" the director, 67, said in his characteristically thoughtful but direct way. "No kidding," he added, giving a small laugh. "So I should do nothing?"

The filmmaker is sitting in a lounge at the Lincoln Center complex, where "Not Fade Away" had its world premiere at the New York Film Festival on Saturday ahead of a Dec. 21 theatrical release from Paramount Pictures.

Though he resists the idea that the movie is directly autobiographical, Chase acknowledged that a number of elements line up with his own life. Chase is also music-obsessed and was in a band. He was roughly Douglas' age in 1964, growing up in a similar New Jersey town. A key line from Grace was also uttered by the woman who would become Chase's wife. Chase gave up music to pursue a screen career, as Douglas contemplates.

And maybe most important, Chase also clashed with a parent who came from another era.

"My father really didn't like my appearance. He was fanatical about it," Chase said. "His parents were immigrants, and all he wanted to do was assimilate. And here I was doing something that made me stand out."

(It should be said that the movie pokes fun at rock 'n' roll preciousness as much as it does parental stodginess. When told by an older relative that rock music keeps you young, Douglas snobbily retorts, "Rock 'n' roll is an art form. Does Dostoevsky keep you young?")

Perhaps because of the weekly fix "The Sopranos" gave fans, it seems like a lifetime ago since Chase produced something for the screen. In fact, he took off only about a year, during which time he didn't write and simply thought about the idea for "Not Fade Away." The remaining four years were devoted to writing, shooting and editing the movie, which made it through the Hollywood gantlet thanks not only to Chase's post- "Sopranos" stock but also to his longtime friend and associate, Paramount chief Brad Grey, and the veteran Hollywood producer Mark Johnson.

The years since "The Sopranos" have been personally difficult, Chase admitted.

"All that fame and adulation is very, very addictive," Chase said. "I didn't care about it for a long time. Even at the end I didn't want to be at the Emmys. But you go and it of course feels good, and after the show was done I thought, 'How do I repeat that experience? Where's the dealer for that? How do I shoot that up again?'"

One way he has opted not to do that is by refraining from revisiting his hit series on the big screen--despite the clamor of millions of fans.

"The idea of a 'Sopranos' movie is interesting to me," Chase said. "It's not something I would have done coming out of the experience, and it's probably not something I will ever do. But the idea, the notion, of it, why would that not be appealing to me?"

(He said that on the slight chance any movie was ever made, it would take the form of a prequel; he would never want to extend the story beyond the show's famed diner finale.)

Mainly, though, Chase is contemplating movie ideas — "mysteries, not whodunit mysteries, but the mysteries of the universe, like Kubrick did with '2001' or 'Barry Lyndon.'" He said he could perhaps "combin[e] it with a genre element."

One thing Chase doesn't talk much about these days is television. There's an irony in a man who helped redefine the small screen now expressing very little desire to be there. Chase said he doesn't even watch much television — mainly "Boardwalk Empire" and "Mad Men," and even then only because the people behind them are friends.

In fact, Chase, who before "Sopranos" had written for shows as diverse as "Northern Exposure" and "The Rockford Files," said he is pessimistic about the medium.

"Invariably the people at the networks and, I think, even in cable, will cook the vitamins out of anything. All the nutrition is gone. The string beans are damp. They're limp and not crispy."

Pressed about whether he thought TV producers had admired "The Sopranos" to the point that they wanted to continue its legacy, he said, "I don't think so. I don't watch enough television to know. But I don't think that 'The Mob Doctor' is going to do it."
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Re: Not Fade Away Trailer ( SSC)
Reply #8 - Oct 8th, 2012 at 9:24am
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'Not Fade Away' movie shows Rolling Stones' influence on the film's characters

ROLLING STONES  OCTOBER 7, 2012

BY: CARLA HAY

...

"Not Fade Away," the first feature film directed by "The Sopranos" creator David Chase, was somewhat
shrouded in mystery before its world premiere, but what was known about the basic story was that it was
set in the 1960s and it was about a struggling New Jersey band that was greatly influenced by the Rolling
Stones. Steven Van Zandt is an executive producer of the film and the producer of the film's soundtrack.
On October 6, 2012, I attended the world premiere of "Not Fade Away," which was held at Alice Tully Hall
in New York City, as part of the 2012 New York Film Festival. "Not Fade Away" opens in U.S. cinemas on
December 21, 21012.

...

Chase, Van Zandt and "Not Fade Away" stars John Magaro and Bella Heathcote
appeared on stage when Chase did a brief introductory speech before the screening.
Chase said that even though the movie's main character, Douglas Albano (played by
Magaro), is a drummer in a New Jersey band (just like Chase was in his youth), the
story in the movie is not autobiographical or a docudrama, because all of the main
characters are fictional. Chase noted that the only other true-to-life similarity in the
movie is when Heathcoate's privileged and popular Grace character (Douglas' love
interest) says to Magaro's Douglas character, "Time is on your side." Chase said
that his future wife had said that to him at a time when they were dating and had
broken up.

"The Sopranos" star James Gandolfini plays Douglas' stern father, who disapproves of his Douglas' decision to drop out of college and be a full-time musician. Molly Price plays Douglas' high-strung, worrisome mother. Other cast members include Jack Huston, Brahm Vaccarella and Will Brill as the other musicians in the band. They all attended the premiere, except for Gandolfini, who could not attend the premiere or after-party since his wife is due to give birth. Billy Connolly, Richard Schiff ("The West Wing"), Richard Belzer ("Law & Order") and "The Sopranos" alum Aida Turturro were among those who were also at the premiere. The after-party was held at A Voce restaurant, and attendees included "Not Fade Away" cast members and filmmakers, as well as those who were not involved in making the film, such as Anjelica Huston (Jack's aunt) and Lorraine Bracco ("The Sopranos").

In his speech at the movie's premiere, Chase also thanked Paramount Pictures (which is releasing "Not Fade Away" on on its Paramount Vantage label for smaller-budgeted films) for distributing the movie at a time when he said that most major film studios these days "don't release movies like this."

Chase also said the reason why he did "Not Fade Away" for his feature-film directorial debut (he also wrote the movie and is one of the film's producers) was because he always wanted to make a movie about a time when "rock'n'roll was the most important thing in my life ... Now it's one of the three most important things in my life."

"Not Fade Away" (which takes place from 1963 to 1967) is a drama that isn't just a story about a band that struggles to find fame and fortune. It's also a romance. It's a story about friendships. And it's a portrayal of the generation gap and the changing social times, when the Vietnam War, civil rights for African-Americans, and sexual liberation were all hot-button issues.

The movie, which makes excellent use of the rock'n'roll hits from that era, has its quirky moments. For example, there are some close-up shots that are unusual, such as when the camera lingers on Douglas' ear in one scene or when the crash of drum cymbals is seen from the perspective of the drums. It's also not a movie that ties up the story in a neat little bow at the end. People will either love or hate the ending. And the original songs performed by the band in the movie might be considered somewhat forgettable.

Douglas has an open-minded younger sister named Evelyn and nicknamed Evy (played by Meg Guzulescu), who is the narrator of the film, and she drifts in and out of the story. Some critics might not like the inconsistency of this narration. The other criticism the movie might get is that with the exception of Magaro, the other actors playing the band members look too old to be playing characters that are supposed to be in their late teens and early 20s.

However, the movie accurately portrays that period of time in the 1960s, when men having long hair was still considered dangerous in society, and when trying to make a living in a rock band was still considered outlandish to the average American family.

The band in the movie goes through different name changes and lineup variations. Douglas goes from being a misfit in his high school who desperately wants to join the band to being the band's drummer to being the band's Bob Dylan look-alike lead singer and eventual band leader.

There is a scene early on in the movie that recreates Mick Jagger and Keith Richards as school boys bonding over their mutual love of blues records at a train station in Dartford, England. (This meeting is considered by many to be the birth of the Rolling Stones.)

The Rolling Stones songs in the movie are the band's cover songs that the Stones did early in their career, such as "Not Fade Away," "Time Is on Our Side" and "The Last Time." There is footage of the Stones' first U.S. TV show performance, singing "I Just Want to Make Love to You" on the "The Hollywood Palace" and host Dean Martin's disdainful reaction to the band. "Not Fade Away" is a relatively low-budget movie and presumably could not afford to license the Rolling Stones songs that were written by Jagger and Richards.

The Beatles are also shown as an influence on the band in the movie, although the Beatles are not as influential to the band as the Rolling Stones are. For example, one of the band members is transfixed when he hears the Beatles' "I Wanna Hold Your Hand" on the radio, but it's the Rolling Stones' appearance on "The Hollywood Palace" that ignites Douglas' desire to be a musician in a rock band. John Mayall's 1966 album "Blues Breakers With Eric Clapton" is featured prominently in a couple of scenes. And the Small Faces' "Itchycoo Park" is part of a pivotal scene.

Toward the end of the movie, Douglas sees Rolling Stones drummer Charlie Watts (played by an actor, of course) at a Los Angeles party but doesn't get to talk to him because Watts is too far away, surrounded by an entourage, and eventually Watts leaves in a car.

Chase and Van Zandt (another alum of "The Sopranos") are longtime Rolling Stones fans, so it's no surprise that "Not Fade Away" captures the essence of what the Rolling Stones meant to young people in the '60s who loved the blues and rock'n'roll.


http://www.examiner.com/article/not-fade-away-movie-shows-rolling-stones-influen...
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« Last Edit: Oct 8th, 2012 at 9:26am by FPM »  

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Re: Not Fade Away Trailer ( SSC)
Reply #9 - Oct 9th, 2012 at 10:27pm
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it does look good!

but not as good as this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qiSAbAuLhqs
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Re: Not Fade Away Trailer ( SSC)
Reply #10 - Oct 10th, 2012 at 5:04am
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Starbuck wrote on Oct 9th, 2012 at 10:27pm:
it does look good!

but not as good as this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qiSAbAuLhqs


Never knew this was coming. I'll go see that.
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“What rap did that was impressive was to show there are so many tone-deaf people out there,” he says. “All they need is a drum beat and somebody yelling over it and they’re happy. There’s an enormous market for people who can’t tell one note from another.” - Keef
 
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