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New Whit Stillman Film Acquired by Sony

Z. Bart

about 1 year ago

“The first film in well over a decade from Whit Stillman has been picked up for distribution and may see release this year, it was announced today. Sony Pictures Classics has acquired Stillman’s Violet Wister’s Damsels in Distress, starring Greta Gerwig and Adam Brody. Sony’s press release describes the project as ‘a comedy that follows a trio of beautiful girls who set out to revolutionize life at a grungy East Coast university.’

Roscoe

about 1 year ago

>finger down throat gesture<

I’m so glad that Sony has acquired it. They can have it. I give it to them. It is all theirs, along with the rest of Stillman’s vile filmography.

Z. Bart

about 1 year ago

Yeah, I had a feeling you’d be the first to respond. Predictably, I might add. The only thing more rote than your abhorrence for Stillman is your monthly Criterion announcement day lament for Andrei Rublev.

Roscoe

about 1 year ago

I’m funny that way. I’d rather see a masterwork get the Criterion DVD/Blu-ray release it deserves than see Whit Stillman’s shit flicks get anything but a good dousing with gasoline and a lit match.

Z. Bart

about 1 year ago

I’m starting to think Roscoe and I, on our opposite sides of the aisle, are the only ones who care about this news.

Dimitri​s Psachos

about 1 year ago

Aye for Gerwig, nay for Brody (I know, it’s the Adam guy), aye for a Stillman comeback because I did like (in my own peculiar way) Metropolitan but nay to the fact that he has acquired a sort of cult status when all of his short filmography is (I suspect) an anti-cult exercise on dialog’s manipulation.

Dennis Brian

about 1 year ago

better a new Whit Stillman than a new Wes Anderson. I appreciate all of Whit’s work so far (the name works)

Nathan M.

about 1 year ago

I am actually really excited about this. I’ve enjoyed all of Stillman’s films quite a bit, and another one is welcome in my world.

Malik

about 1 year ago

I feel like I’ve seen all his films, but I can’t remember a thing about them.

Miasma

about 1 year ago

Hooray!

Sarah Karina-​Bogart

about 1 year ago

Yayyyy!!! Love him!

MICHAEL

about 1 year ago

I’ve only seen The Last Days of Disco but I liked it. Good news.

Marko

about 1 year ago

I can’t even express how much I’ve been looking forward to his new film.

Dennis Brian

9 months ago

from variety: sounds good

A film that raises laughs even with its end credits, Whit Stillman’s whimsical campus comedy “Damsels in Distress” is an utter delight. Making a welcome return to helming after a long sabbatical following 1998’s “The Last Days of Disco,” Stillman proves he still knows how to write crackling, articulate dialogue for quirky preppie characters whom he loves laughing at as much as with. Pic’s young cast, led by Greta Gerwig, features enough upcoming names on its roster to pull in a younger demographic to supplement Stillman’s older fan base, which should rescue “Damsels” from the niche, upmarket margins.
Sweet-natured Violet (Gerwig, “Greenberg”) and her coed coevals Rose (Megalyn Echikunwoke, “24,” “That ’70s Show”) and Heather (Carrie Maclemore, “Gossip Girl”) are college students on a mission. Dedicated to making Seven Oaks U., their alma mater, a more fragrant and pleasant place, they seek to combat the Neanderthal male populace’s body-odor problem by promoting good hygiene, and stoically accept it’s their lot in life to date frat boys far more stupid and less good-looking than themselves. After all, as Violet says in one of the pic’s many quotable lines, “The tendency, very widespread, to always seek someone ‘cooler’ than yourself (is) always a stretch, often a big stretch. Why not instead find someone who’s frankly inferior?”

Among their other projects (Violet’s lifelong ambition is to invent a new dance craze) and philanthropic enterprises, they run the suicide-prevention center on campus where the donuts are free, but only to anyone verifiably depressed. Accompanied by Lily (Analeigh Tipton, “Crazy Stupid Love,” “America’s Next Top Model”), the newest addition to their clique, they’re willing to rush to the aid of anyone “in a tailspin” after a recent break-up, their survival strategies usually revolving around the advisability of dating uglier, stupider men than oneself.

Violet’s help backfires on her when one student, Priss (Caitlin Fitzgerald), takes up with Violet’s own intellectually challenged b.f., Frank (Ryan Metcalf), a frat boy so dim he literally doesn’t even know the color of own eyes. At least he can identify colors, though, unlike his buddy Thor (Billy Magnussen, superb), who has been educationally handicapped by his pushy parents’ insistence that he skip kindergarten. Later, Violet connects with Charlie (Adam Brody), one of Lily’s beaus, who like Violet is not all he seems and has a gift for reinvention.

Pic is chockfull of daft digressions and sweetly silly subplots, but the ensemble goes at it all with such deadpan rigor, it plays like vintage screwball comedy minus the pratfalls, apart from what must be one of the most uproariously funny suicide attempts in recent film history. Positively boiling with sharp, almost casually dispensed zingers, repeated phrases (Rose is constantly on a suspicious vigil against “playboy or operator types”), and dialogue that might not be so funny when repeated in isolation but is hilarious in context, Stillman’s screenplay is a thing of beauty.

Helmer’s comic timing is likewise right on the money, but in a largely self-effacing, quietly efficient way that recalls the old-school craftsmen of Hollywood’s golden age, like Howard Hawks in a breezy mood. Given the pic’s retro feel, it’s entirely appropriate that the climax tips its hat to Fred Astaire with a dance scene modeled on the Astaire-Joan Fontaine rug-cut from “A Damsel in Distress” (1937). One can’t help but wonder what Stillman would do with the budget for a full-on musical, but even though this unfolds in the same well-heeled milieu he’s previously explored, there’s a freshness here that suggests his 13-year hiatus from directing hasn’t done him any harm. Those inclined to dislike Stillman’s work won’t be persuaded otherwise by “Damsels,” but fans will be more than satisfied.

Shot on HD, the pic doesn’t have the same glossy, glassy prettiness of Stillman’s earlier film-shot work like “Metropolitan,” “Barcelona” and “The Last Days of Disco,” but it’s still executed with pro polish by lenser Doug Emmett. Extra credit is due costume designer Ciera Wells and “special fashions” by Kristen Blomberg for kitting Violet and her friends out in just the right kind of prim but interesting A-line frocks and neat accessories that endow them with a pleasing mix of glamour and ladylike dowdiness.

Camera (color, HD), Doug Emmett; editor, Andrew Hafitz; music, Mark Suozzo, Adam Schlesinger; production designer, Elizabeth J. Jones; art director, Brian Goodwin; set decorator, Emmanuelle Hoessly; costume designer, Ciera Wells; sound, Mikhail Sterkin; re-recording mixer, Tom Paul; choreographer, Justin Cerne; special fashions, Kristen Blomberg; stunt coordinator, Anthony Vincent; line producer, Jacob Jaffke; assistant director, Curtis Smith; casting, Kerry Barden, Paul Schnee, Amy Britt, Anya Colloff. Reviewed at Venice Film Festival (closer, noncompeting), Sept. 10, 2011. (Also in Toronto Film Festival — Special Presentations.) Running time: 99 MIN