Tuesday, March 26, 2002
 
 

WILLIAMS' WILD AND CRAZY YEAR

Robin Williams, Interviews by Paul Fischer at the Sundance Film Festival for;

Death to Smoochy,
Insomnia,
One Hour Photo
It's quite the year for Oscar-winning genius Robin Williams: A serial killer in Insomnia, a seemingly quiet but obsessive photo developer in the extraordinary One Hour Photo, a disgraced children's TV show host in the unforgettable Death to Smoochy and to cap it off, a return to his roots in stand up comedy. So will the real Robin Williams please stand up? PAUL FISCHER tried to remove the comic mask in the midst of an unusual locale for Williams: The Sundance Film Festival.

The last place one would expect to find the manic Robin Williams is in the heart of independent film country atop the mountains of Utah: Sundance. He was here to introduce One Hour Photo, a very untypical vehicle for the actor, which opens later in the year. At the top of a Roots store in busy Main Street, Williams is donned thick to the nights in a heavy parker coat and woolen ski cap. After a day of skiing, he announced his arrival by declaring that it "was time to Par-tay." Interviewing Williams is a challenge but here at Sundance, the irreverent performer was able to focus, breathlessly amidst the cold of the back-alley office in which we met. In this much-discussed era of post-September 11, the time was ripe, says Williams, to hit the country doing what he does with effortless energy: Stand-up. And much of his routine bravely treads those 9/11 waters. "It's a lot of talking about that," he said. "Wet burka contests. It's a full gamut, what we've been through, the security measures. It's freeing performing stand-up. Comedy in movies is the toughest of all," he admits. His return to stand-up began as a benefit in Washington, and at that point he knew he needed to return to live comedy. "When we performed that night it was like a great thing to have and the response was huge, actually.

Then I started performing in clubs in New York, at a place called The Comedy Cellar. I thought if any place would be a good test, it would be New York.

The audience is great, and tough. They were saying I had to talk about this stuff and I went, 'Okay, maybe it's time to go back.'."

It hasn't been difficult for Robin to remain comically relevant, as he explains in true Williams fashion. "With George [Bush], it's pretty easy.

I mean the fact that he almost died from a pretzel, the fact that we have hundreds of millions of dollars flying air cover over Washington and he dies from a snack food.

I mean you can talk about everything.

Somebody was on Letterman and he had a great point.

He was saying that they can't find Bin Laden, but he's a 6'5" Arab on dialysis.

 Just look for tracks in the sand." Williams still lives in San Francisco, a city he loves to poke fun of in these uncertain times. "We have the Golden Gate Bridge; defending it is one hummer - and I'm talking about the car -with two National Guardsmen in complete camouflage. They don't get out of the fucking trucks.

They are in complete camouflage but I have one thing to tell them, the bridge is BRIGHT GOLD.

It's kind of like from the Elmer Fudd School of Defense. [Fudd's voice] "Be very, very quiet.

I'm looking for an Arab. Hahaaaaa."

And they'll just sit there. They'll let people go walk across the bridge back and forth and they're thinking that some kid with a backpack is going, "I'm going to take it out."

 And they won't let bicyclists go across - like somebody is going to have something in pants so tight you can tell what religion you are.

It's just insane all this stuff that's going on.

Patting down - I have a friend who's daughter is 7 month old and they patted her down like she's got a grenade in her diaper.

But as we saw with the man who tried with the mid-Air Jordans, you have to be careful. I mean, the guy trying to light up a shoe: 'It's a no smoking shoe section, sir.

Step away, thank you.' "

Williams' rattles off the one-liners with consistent machine-gun like abandon, but when it comes to his upcoming film work, the actor is more focused, knowing that it's his year. First up is Death to Smoochy, which he loudly describes as one "fucking kick-out nasty comedy," portraying a fired host of a children's show who seeks revenge on his replacement, a Barney-like rhino named Smoochy (Ed Norton). This is a dark, comically savage satire on capitalistic bureaucracy directed by Danny DeVito. So where does the bitterness in Williams's sometimes deranged Rainbow Randolph come from? "What the fuck does that mean?" Williams questions with mock anger.

"The bitterness comes from my memory of when they cancelled Mork and Mindy.

Is it inside? Yes, I have a darker memory of television.

Is there a nastiness?

Oh sure, that's why I get to perform on stage so that kind of gets it out."

Williams also gets to sing and dance in Smoochy, and he's having a ball talking about this new career move. "I always wanted to do a musical.

Because I can't skate, the chances of doing Bicentennial Man on ice are really low," Williams quips. The actor revels in the art of self-mockery, unconcerned about the pratfalls he may have taken with such critical duds as Patch Adams, the aforementioned Bicentennial Man, and the forgettable Jakob the Liar. This year, Williams will turn heads in his trio of dark films. "Why so dark my man?

I think because first of all I asked my agent to look for one, but he found three. One Hour Photo was the first one and then Smoochy came through for which I went, 'God, it's Danny and this is nasty funny, and Fosse; I'm in.'

Plus enough sequins to make Liberace go, Shut up. Finally Insomnia showed up and that was with Chris Nolan and Pacino and I went, 'Man these are great choices.

I knew they are all kind of nasty and dark but hey, what else?' "

One Hour Photo was screened throughout January's Sundance, and the crowd was enthused. Here, he is cast as a Wal-Mart-type photo processing clerk who takes way too much interest in his customers, one family in particular. Williams is a polyester-wearing nebbish who is not quite what he seems. It's possible that performance, possibly his best thus far, may throw his fans. "People won't ask for autographs so much," he said. "That'd be great." Discussing the distinction he drew between playing that character and the irreverent psycho in Smoochy, Williams says that Smoochy "was easier to play because you have access, you can explode and kind of get it out, while One Hour Photo is so retentive.

I begin to understand Ashcroft, a man who lost to a dead man if I may say so," he adds laughingly.

 If One Hour Photo is dark in a quiet, ethereal way, Williams' other film, the Al Pacino starrer, Insomnia, from Memento's Christopher Nolan, will represent yet another side to the actor's curious persona. Here he plays a psychotic murder suspect tracked by Al Pacino's cop in a small Alaskan town. "Mr. Method Meets Wild Boy," Williams exclaims. But the actor learned a lot from working with Pacino, he says. "I learned to just stay out of his eye-line," he begins laughingly. "I also learned that for the reputation he has of being 'Mr. Method,' he's pretty funny and really has a good time yet he also stays in character and which is a weird thing.

He knew that I worked differently because I shuffle to the beat of a different drummer yet working with him is a blast because basically it's a seduction; my character is just talking him through, trying to convince him that what I did was all right."

Now, Williams is on the road again, away from the Hollywood spotlight, and the only one he has to face is himself, minus the cocaine that was once his drug of choice, recalling that "Cocaine is God's way of saying you have too much money." He trained for this latest road trip cycling by day and polishing his routine by night at clubs near his home in San Francisco. "It's a bit like being in Switzerland during a nuclear war," said Williams, who lives with his second wife, Marsha Garces Williams, and their two children. "The business is kind of at a distance. I can make raids, go to L.A. but I'm not surrounded by the constant 'How am I doing?' "

Based on what we're seeing from Williams this year alone, he's going very well thank you.

Filmography

One Hour Photo

Release Date: Fall 2002
Summary: An employee (Robin Williams) at a one-hour photo lab grows obsessed with a suburban family who drops off some pictures and begins to stalk them.
The Cast: Robin Williams as Sy Parrish, Connie Nielsen as Nina Yorkin, Michael Vartan as Will Yorkin, Gary Cole, Erin Daniels, Eriq LaSalle, Carmen Mormino as Officer Bravo, Andrew A. Rolfes as Dan Lyon
Directed by Mark Romanek
Written by Mark Romanek
Studio Fox Searchlight.
Genre Thriller
MPAA Rating R for sexual content and language
Filming Location(s) Los Angeles

Insomnia (2002)

Release Date: 24 May 2002
Summary: An Alaskan police officer accidentally kills his own partner and then conceals that information during the investigation into the officer's death. When the main suspect in the investigation discovers the truth, he blackmails the policeman into framing an innocent person for the crime. Based on a Norwegian film.

Starring Al Pacino, Hilary Swank, Robin Williams, Maura Tierney, Martin Donovan, Jonathan Jackson
Directed by Christopher Nolan
Written by Hillary Seitz
Studio Warner Bros
Genre Crime, Thriller
Release Date May 24, 2002
MPAA Rating R - for language, some violence and brief nudity
Filming Location(s) Vancouver, Canada
Web Sites Official Site

Liberace (2001)

Child piano prodigy Wladziu Valentino Liberace was a concert soloist by age 11, and by his teens, he was performing with symphony orchestras. By the 1950s, the musician was known simply as Liberace and was still entertaining audiences with his flamboyant style. Decked out in rhinestones, furs, and sequins, Liberace made several television and film appearances while earning millions of dollars performing each year. Liberace will track his career from childhood through 1987, when he died of AIDS.

Starring Robin Williams
Directed by Phillip Kaufman
Written by Aaron Seltzer, Jason Friedberg, Scott Alexander, Larry Karaszewski
Studio New Line Cinema

Year

Title

VHS

DVD

Domestic BO.

Overseas

(2001)

Lovers, Liars and Thieves

VHS

DVD

TBA

TBA

(1999)

Bicentennial Man

VHS

DVD

$58,220,000

$23.0

(1999)

Jakob the Liar

VHS

DVD

$4,956,000

 

(1998)

Patch Adams

VHS

DVD

$135,014,000

$58.5

(1998)

What Dreams May Come

VHS

DVD

$55,350,000

$27.4

(1997)

Good Will Hunting

VHS

DVD

$133,038,103

$87.5

(1997)

Flubber

VHS

DVD

$92,969,824

$85.0

(1997)

Fathers' Day

VHS

DVD

$28,660,000

$7.0

(1997)

Deconstructing Harry

VHS

DVD

$4,904,940

 

(1996)

Hamlet

VHS

DVD

$4,414,000

 

(1996)

Jack

VHS

DVD

$58,586,000

$29.4

(1996)

Birdcage, The

VHS

DVD

$123,986,000

$61.2

(1996)

Secret Agent, The

VHS

DVD

N/A

 

(1995)

Jumanji

VHS

DVD

$100,200,000

$164.5

(1995)

Nine Months

VHS

DVD

$69,700,000

 

(1993)

Being Human

VHS

DVD

$1,519,000

 

(1993)

Mrs. Doubtfire

VHS

DVD

$219,200,000

$204.0

(1992)

Toys

VHS

DVD

$21,452,000

 

(1992)

Aladdin

VHS

DVD

$217,350,000

 

(1992)

FernGully: The Last Rainforest

VHS

DVD

$24,650,000

 

(1991)

Hook

VHS

DVD

$119,654,000

 

(1991)

Dead Again

VHS

DVD

$38,020,000

 

(1991)

Fisher King, The

VHS

DVD

$41,895,000

 

(1991)

Shakes the Clown

VHS

DVD

$115,103

 

(1990)

Awakenings

VHS

DVD

$52,096,000

 

(1990)

Cadillac Man

VHS

DVD

$15,300,000

 

(1989)

Dead Poets Society

VHS

DVD

$95,860,000

 

(1989)

Adventures of Baron Munchausen, The

VHS

DVD

$8,083,000

 

(1987)

Good Morning, Vietnam

VHS

DVD

$ 123,922,370

 

(1986)

Best of Times, The

VHS

DVD

$7,790,000

 

(1986)

Club Paradise

VHS

DVD

$12,309,000

 

(1984)

Moscow on the Hudson

VHS

DVD

$25,100,000

 

(1983)

Survivors, The

VHS

DVD

$14,000,000

 

(1982)

World According to Garp, The

VHS

DVD

$30,200,000

 

(1980)

Popeye

VHS

DVD

$41,500,000

 

(1977)

Can I Do It 'Till I Need Glasses?

VHS

DVD

N/A

 

DVD

 

Robin Williams

Date of Birth: July 21, 1952
Place of Birth: Chicago, Illinois

Contact Address : Robin Williams,
1100 Wall Road,
Napa CA 94550


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Release Date March 29, 2002
Summary: Robin Williams plays Rainbow Randolph, the colorful star of a popular children's television show, who is fired over a bribery scandal and replaced by a Barney-esque rhinoceros named Smoochy (Ed Norton). When Randolph discovers that Smoochy is having an affair with his ex-lover, Nora (Catherine Keener), a top programming executive at the network, he plots his revenge. The film also stars Danny DeVito as Smoochy's agent and Jon Stewart as the network president..
Starring Edward Norton, Robin Williams, Danny DeVito, Hank Azaria, Catherine Keener, Jon Stewart
Directed by Danny DeVito
Written by Adam Resnick
Studio Warner Bros.
Genre Comedy
MPAA Rating R - for language and sexual references
Web Sites Official Site
David Mamet's Heist is--not unlike many of his previous films--amusing, manicured, and fraught with an awkward tension. If your customers have seen The Spanish Prisoner or House of Games, they're by now familiar with the plot-subverting gambit of the double-cross turned triple- and then quadruple-cross. Heist sticks to the formula, and it's selling!
We congratulate all the wonderful artists who contributed to the O Brother, Where Art Thou? soundtrack, which garnered the best album and best soundtrack awards at this year's Grammys.
2nd Chance
by James Patterson, This is a beautiful work of art filled with shart witty prose and intriguing Ideas. I recommend it fully to anyone with a heightened sensibility for the injustices of this world and the subtle nuances of existence.
 
 
       
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