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People

We lost Chris Farley 19 years ago today. May he be resting in peace.

THE BIG, FUNNY, TRAGIC LIFE OF CHRIS FARLEY

Chris Farley, who died in 1997, at the age of thirty-three, from an overdose of opiates and cocaine, was the greatest physical comedian of his generation, a manic cannonball who could appear surprisingly athletic one moment and perilously ungainly the next, as likely to pull off a nifty cartwheel as he was to obliterate a piece of furniture. He was always big—plainly and dangerously overweight, owing in part to his genes and in part to his massive appetites for food and alcohol—and his thick neck and huge gut, stacked atop a pair of comparatively dainty legs, were a central part of his appeal. He shouted big, sweated big, laughed big, and fell down big.

These gifts were perhaps most obviously on display in the famous “Saturday Night Live” Chippendales sketch, from October, 1990, during Farley’s first season on the show. In it, he plays an aspiring dancer, squaring off against Patrick Swayze for the last spot in a male revue. Dancing to the Loverboy hit “Working for the Weekend,” Farley tore off his shirt and matched Swayze move for move—flying pirouettes, proto-twerking—to the shrieking delight of the audience. The joke of the sketch, as it was, came in the final moments, when a panel of judges bluntly confirmed what was obvious from the start: they were picking Swayze’s character because of his great body. Farley’s character, meanwhile, had the “sexiest moves,” but was judged too “fat and flabby” for Chippendales.

The documentary, “I Am Chris Farley,” frames the sketch as an unqualified triumph, the moment when Farley became a national star. But in the book “The Chris Farley Show,” a rich and illuminating oral history compiled, in 2008, by Tanner Colby and Farley’s older brother, Tom, it is the source of controversy among those who were there. Jim Downey, who wrote the sketch, insisted that Farley’s dancing ability elevated it, so that the audience was celebrating his audacious performance rather than merely mocking his appearance. People were laughing with Farley, not at him—that distinction being one of the essential tensions of Farley’s career. Bob Odenkirk, though, who was a writer on the show, recalled the entire thing as “weak bullshit,” and said that Farley “never should have done it.” Chris Rock, a cast member at the time, viewed it as a dangerous turning point for Farley. “That was a weird moment in Chris’s life,” he said. “As funny as that sketch was, and as many accolades as he got for it, it’s one of the things that killed him. It really is. Something happened right then.”

It was probably all of those things. A subtler but still outrageous showcase for Farley’s physical brilliance came three seasons later, when he appeared as a hapless motivational speaker named Matt Foley, hired by suburban parents to scare their marijuana-smoking teen-age children straight. This is Farley at full bore, his knowing Midwestern verbal dexterity paired perfectly with his outlandish physical gifts; Foley’s repeated catchphrase, “living in a van down by the river,” soon entered the cultural lexicon. The sketch was new to national viewers, but it was a holdover from Farley’s days with the Second City improv group, in Chicago. It was written for Farley by Odenkirk, also then at Second City, and the documentary includes grainy video footage of Foley’s first incarnation. The character was all there from the beginning: we see Farley onstage in his low crouch, like an offensive lineman, bellowing out his misguided attempts at motivation, as he moves his hands back and forth wildly to hoist up his sagging pants.

But before Matt Foley went on national television, the sketch was given a new twist, as the writer Robert Smigel explained in the oral history. Near the end of the sketch, as Farley reaches the pinnacle of his deranged spiel, he trips and flings himself face down on a coffee table. It is shocking and funny, earning what is certainly the biggest laugh from the studio audience, and forcing Farley’s scene-mates to cover their faces to hide their own laughter. Smigel said that he regretted adding it. “It worked really well, but it inaugurated this trend of Chris being really clumsy and falling down a lot…. That sort of broad clumsiness was actually the opposite of what Chris’s talents as a physical comedian were.”

As the years went on, and the pratfalls mounted—writers had discovered the shortcut to a sure laugh—Farley’s physical comedy became more and more a form of self-flagellation: when he’d play at being angry with himself for saying or doing something inappropriate, he would pull his hair and slap his face hard enough that it must have hurt; when he took one of his recurring falls onstage, he did it for real, without anything other than his own body to soften the blow. This kind of thing helped cement his legend as being willing to do nearly anything for the good of a joke, to get and give the biggest laugh possible. It was gutsy and funny, but also gruesome, and more so in hindsight. In 1997, two seasons after he’d been fired from the show, Farley was invited back to “S.N.L.” to host. He was spiralling out of control by then: he lost his voice during the dress rehearsal and was breathless throughout the live broadcast, a loud and wheezing shadow of his former self.

Near the end of his life, Farley is said to have become cynical about the basis of his broad appeal, lamenting that “fatty fall down” was his only reliable crowd pleaser. During what would be his last appearance on “Late Show with David Letterman,” in 1996, Farley, sweating, unkempt and barely able to catch his breath, shouted out, “They’re applauding ’cause I’m fat!” But Farley didn’t live long enough to free himself from the kind of comedy that made him famous. In the oral history, Sarah Silverman remembers Farley once asking the “S.N.L.” writer Jim Downey, in a childish voice, “Hey, Jim? Do you think it would help the show if I got even fatter?”

This kind of heedlessness led people to compare Farley to another “Saturday Night Live” force of nature turned comedy martyr, John Belushi. In the documentary, Lorne Michaels says that Farley was “the child that Dan Aykroyd and John Belushi didn’t have.” Farley himself was said to have been drawn to the Belushi mythology, as well. In the oral history, the writer Tom Davis recounts a conversation that he had with Farley:

I said to him once, “Chris, you don’t want to die like Belushi, do you?”
And he said, “Oh, yeah, that’d be really cool.”
And I actually started crying. I wept for him.

Chevy Chase said that at one point near the end of Farley’s life, he cornered him and “read him the riot act,” saying, “Look, you’re not John Belushi. And when you overdose or kill yourself, you will not have the same acclaim that John did. You don’t have the record of accomplishment that he had.” But the Belushi-Farley connection only became stronger after Farley’s death. Both men died from an overdose of heroin and cocaine. Both were just thirty-three when they died.

The documentary is mostly a celebration of Farley’s short life, with clips of his performances mixed in among two dozen or so fond interviews with people who knew him, including Lorne Michaels, Mike Myers, Adam Sandler, and David Spade. It spends a good chunk of time on Farley’s happy, prank-filled childhood in Madison, Wisconsin, and doesn’t dwell on the grim particulars of his final days. It serves as a welcome reintroduction to some of Farley’s best moments as a performer, but you can’t help but notice that Chase was ultimately correct: Farley, in his brief life, turned in just a handful of classic sketches and one very funny movie (“Tommy Boy,” a modest box-office hit turned cable-TV classic). The story of Chris Farley, then, as the documentary hints, is to a significant degree the story of what he might have done next. In the smaller, quieter parts of his performances, we find some clues. In what is likely the best of his “S.N.L.” sketches, a bit called “The Chris Farley Show,” he played an exaggerated version of himself, subjecting celebrities to a series of earnest and inane questions. The best of these was with Paul McCartney. Dressed in a blazer and khakis, like a reporter for a prep-school newspaper, Farley stammers and gasps for breath. Those who knew Farley insist that this was the clearest expression of the real person: shy, nervous, almost childlike in his reverence for the people around him. (The comedy writer Tom Schiller called him a “secret, angelic being.”) At the end of the sketch, he asks McCartney, “Remember when you were in the Beatles, and you did that album ‘Abbey Road,’ and at the very end of the song, the song goes, ‘And in the end, the love you take is equal to the love you make’? You remember that? Is that true?”

There was also a menacing counterbalance to that endearing sweetness, which occasionally came through. It is said that David Mamet was interested in writing Farley the lead role in a biopic about the silent-film comedian and pratfall master Fatty Arbuckle, whose career was derailed when he was charged with rape and manslaughter in the mysterious death of an actress named Virginia Rappe.

There are other what-ifs. Just last week, a clip surfaced online featuring a snippet of voice recordings that Farley made in the months before his death for the title role in the animated movie “Shrek.” (Mike Myers later stepped in to take over the part.) In the scene, Farley, as Shrek, says, “People see me and they go, ‘Baa, help! A big, stinky, smelly, ugly ogre. I’m so scared!’ They judge me before they even know me.” It is perhaps too much to look for meaning about Farley’s life in this stray line from a children’s movie. But his voice, in the clip, sounds clear and composed, and communicates a gentleness that he rarely revealed onstage. Spared the requirements of physical performance, Farley sounds as though he’s discovering a quieter place with just his voice. Near the end of the documentary, Bob Odenkirk says of Farley, “You can’t walk around being funny all the time. You have to be yourself sometimes, and you have to be alone sometimes. You can’t be on the stage all the time.” It is greatly sad, for his audience as well as for his own sake, that Chris Farley never got the chance to be small.

Categories
Star Wars

Right now!! I want more STAR WARS movies now, please!!

Star Wars dates: Here’s when the next 3 movies are released

Just saw Rogue One and want more Star Wars action? Well, you’re going to get more – at least three titles. But when, specifically, will each new film be released? Below is Disney’s plan along with what’s currently known about casting and storylines. Obviously, these dates are subject to change. Thankfully, no Bothans died to bring us this information …

Star Wars: Episode VIII
Written and directed by Rian Johnson
Starring: Mark Hamill, Daisy Ridley, Oscar Isaac, John Boyega, Adam Driver, Gwendoline Christie, Carrie Fisher, Laura Dern, Benicio Del Toro, more
Release: Dec. 15, 2017
Logline: Unknown. Boyega claimed the script was “darker” than the first, while Johnson has said the movie starts “zooming in on the characters and getting to the heart of them, challenging them, and pushing them deeper,” and Isaac has said “Rian is definitely going to places and investigating things that haven’t really been done in the Star Wars universe.”

Untitled Han Solo Anthology Film
Directors: Phil Lord and Christopher Miller
Written by: Lawrence and Jon Kasdan
Starring: Alden Ehrenreich, Donald Glover, Emilia Clarke
Logline: “How young Han Solo became the smuggler, thief, and scoundrel whom Luke Skywalker and Obi-Wan Kenobi first encountered in the cantina at Mos Eisley.” Lawrence Kasdan has said, “you have to imagine [Solo] 10 years earlier [than in the first film] in his early 20s. What was he like before he hardened up? Before he had some setbacks? Before he put on this cynical coat? What got him there?”
Release: May 25, 2018

Star Wars: Episode IX
Director: Colin Trevorrow
Writer: Rian Johnson
Starring: Not yet announced
Logline: Unknown. Trevorrow has said, “We want to channel the invention and just the raw creativity and the boldness that George [Lucas] brought to these films and not being afraid that we’re going to embarrass ourselves by doing something that might be crazy… I just want to embrace that kind of invention and creativity that he brought to it.” The director also reportedly wanted to shoot some footage in actual outer space.
Release: 2019

Hey, weren’t there more Star Wars movies on this list last year? Yes, there were. Like the Boba Fett one. But more stand-alone films have reportedly been put on hold until after Rogue One is released to give Disney a chance to access audience reception to a film that takes place outside the regular franchise titles. So we’ll have to wait and see if the rather futuristic-sounding year of 2020 gets us another Star Wars film.

Categories
Movies

I saw ROGUE ONE twice this week and really enjoyed it both times.

Box office report: Rogue One rockets to Number 1 with $155 million

Continuing its forerunners’ legacy of making bank at the weekend box office, Rogue One: A Star Wars Story rockets to the top of the domestic chart, earning an estimated $155 million across its first three days in theaters.

Though it trails last year’s Star Wars: The Force Awakens’ massive opening by nearly $100 million, the film still tallies the second biggest December opening of all time in North America. The picture’s opening weekend audience was comprised of 59 percent men and 74 percent adults, with 62 percent of all ticket buyers purchasing seats for 2D screenings as opposed to 38 percent who opted for 3D viewing. The film also earns an A grade on CinemaScore from polled moviegoers.

The franchise flick picks up an additional $29.2 million from 708 IMAX screens, registering the second biggest December IMAX opening of all time, just behind The Force Awakens. In terms of total global numbers, Rogue One amasses $290.5 million, opening at No. 1 in all markets around the world. Internationally, the film’s $135.5 million gross notches the fourth highest December opening of all time. Still on the film’s docket are openings in heavy-hitting territories like China and Korea.

Falling to No. 2 after three weeks on top of the domestic earners list is Disney’s Moana, which adds an estimated $11.7 million to its healthy $161.9 million total. Combined with Rogue One’s grosses, Disney handily leads the North American box office, slotting titles in the top two positions, further growing its record-breaking year at the box office.

At No. 3, Paramount’s Office Christmas Party loses a few guests, as the ensemble comedy — featuring Jennifer Aniston, Jason Bateman, Kate McKinnon, and Olivia Munn — dips around 50 percent for an estimated $8.5 million finish. The film sees a larger-than-average fall for a winter comedy. Its genre brethren — including last year’s Sisters — tend to descend slowly into the holiday stretch, with the Tina Fey/Amy Poehler comedy actually gaining 1.9 percent over its second weekend without adding any locations to its screen count.

Will Smith’s latest big-screen venture Collateral Beauty notches the worst wide debut in his multi-decade career on the big screen, mere months after he starred in the top-grossing title in his filmography, Suicide Squad, which made $325.1 million this summer. Despite a stellar ensemble cast — including Edward Norton, Kate Winslet, Helen Mirren, Naomie Harris, and Keira Knightley — the film suffered dismal reviews and a muddled marketing campaign, and consequently opened to a paltry $7 million this weekend. This marks the second year in a row Smith has fronted a holiday underperformer, with his Concussion premiering to an underwhelming $10.5 million in December 2015.

At No. 5 is Warner Bros.’ Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, the J.K. Rowling-penned Harry Potter spin-off. The film dips an estimated 51.7 percent to around $5 million for the three-day period, bringing its domestic total to just under $207.7 million after five weekends in theaters.

Outside the top 5, Casey Affleck’s Manchester by the Sea takes an estimated $4.2 million in its first weekend in wide release after expanding to 1,208 theaters Friday. The Kenneth Lonergan-directed picture has earned $14 million to date as it picks up awards season steam (it earned several Golden Globe and SAG Awards nominations this week).

Best Picture frontrunner La La Land storms the top 10 this weekend as well, averaging $20,100 per-theater as it adds 195 locations for a $4 million finish.

In the hunt for awards season glory and audience dollars, too, Denzel Washington’s Fences — adapted from the August Wilson play of the same name, for which Washington and his Broadway and film costar Viola Davis both won Tony Awards in 2010 — takes warmly to the specialty market, earning an estimated $128,000 from four theaters, for a decent location average of $32,000. Though the opening is strong when compared to other limited debuts, it registers a softer per-screen premiere than fellow Oscar-bound titles like Jackie ($55,743), Manchester by the Sea ($64,125), and La La Land ($176,221), though it bests Lion ($30,840) and Nocturnal Animals ($13,315). The picture opens wide Christmas Day.

Year-to-date box office is up 4 percent from the same frame last year. Check out the Dec. 16-18 domestic estimates below.

1. Rogue One: A Star Wars Story – $155 million
2. Moana – $11.7 million
3. Office Christmas Party – $8.5 million
4. Collateral Beauty – $7 million
5. Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them – $5 million
6. Manchester by the Sea – $4.2 million
7. La La Land – $4 million
8. Arrival – $2.8 million
9. Doctor Strange – $2 million
10. Nocturnal Animals – $1.4 million