What Just Happened | |
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Promotional poster |
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Directed by | Barry Levinson |
Produced by | Art Linson Mark Cuban Robert De Niro Jane Rosenthal |
Written by | Art Linson |
Starring | Robert De Niro Sean Penn Catherine Keener Stanley Tucci John Turturro Robin Wright Penn] Moon Bloodgood Kristen Stewart Michael Wincott Bruce Willis |
Music by | Marcelo Zarvos |
Cinematography | Stéphane Fontaine |
Editing by | Hank Corwin |
Distributed by | Magnolia Pictures (USA) Pathé (UK) |
Release date(s) | January 19, 2008(Sundance) October 17, 2008 (United States) |
Running time | 104 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $25 million |
Box office | $6,710,888[1] |
What Just Happened is a satirical comedy-drama directed by Barry Levinson & starring Robert De Niro.
What Just Happened is an independent film, produced by 2929 Productions, Art Linson Productions and Tribeca Productions, and was released on October 17, 2008.
The film is based on the book, What Just Happened? Bitter Hollywood Tales from the Front Line, by Art Linson, about his experiences as a producer in Hollywood.[2]
This film was shown at the Cannes Film Festival on May 25, 2008.
Contents |
Ben (Robert De Niro), a Hollywood producer, witnesses a poor test screening for his new film, Fiercely, mostly caused by the fact that its ending features its main character (played by Sean Penn, who plays himself elsewhere in the film) being graphically shot dead, along with his pet dog.
Ben and his maverick British director, Jeremy Brunell (Michael Wincott), drawing a comparison to Amores Perros, plead their case to studio executive Lou Tarnow (Catherine Keener). She insinuates that the shots of the dog's killing were planted only as a "bargaining chip" (i.e, not intended for the final cut, but simply to make it easier to negotiate retention of other problematic scenes), and threatens to pull it from Cannes and take over editing unless at least the dog's death is removed. Jeremy adamantly refuses, throwing a tantrum.
Adding to Ben's problems, he is having trouble making a clean break from Kelly, his second wife, and Bruce Willis is refusing to shave the large, thick beard that he has grown, which will result in the studio pulling the plug on their new project, and in turn put a certain end to Ben's career. Any attempt to reason with Willis inevitably meets a violent, foul-mouthed response.
The situation with Fiercely is eventually remedied when Jeremy relents and re-edits the final shots to have the dog running up to Penn's character after Penn is fatally wounded instead of before, and ending without the dog being harmed. Another problem arises when Ben discovers that his wife is also having sexual relations with Scott Solomon, a married screenwriter who Ben has previously worked with. Scott has a screenplay that he's trying to get off the ground, to which Brad Pitt later becomes attached. Ben tries to get Willis's agent, Dick Bell, to reason with him and get the beard removed, but his efforts only get Bell fired. Nonetheless, Willis does eventually shave his beard off, and the film goes ahead.
A week later, Ben, Lou and Jeremy attend Cannes, hopeful that they might take a Palme D'Or award. Unfortunately, Jeremy has re-edited the film again without the knowledge of Ben or Lou, and the third version of the ending not only features Penn's character and the dog being killed, but is made even more violent with the addition of nearly a full minute of bullets being shot into their bodies. However, the response is not entirely negative, and despite abuse being shouted by some audience members, many eagerly applaud the final version of the film, as does Penn (although any chance of a Palme d'Or is now obviously gone). Lou on the other hand is not impressed, and immediately flies out of Cannes on the studio's private jet, leaving Ben stranded in France.
Ben eventually does make it back home, in time for a photo-shoot of Hollywood's top thirty producers with Vanity Fair, although after the magazine's publishers hear about the debacle in Cannes Ben is relegated to the far edge of the photo, meaning he won't be on the magazine's cover and will be barely noticeable in the larger inside version. Ben's voice-over, as the film ends, comments that this represents him nearly, but not quite being pushed out of Hollywood.
During the film's postscript as narrated by Ben, he reveals that Fiercely turned out to be a major blockbuster but its success doesn't stop Jeremy from having a run-in with the law. Emotionally unstable Jeremy is revealed to be holding drugs in his suitcase and he's stopped at the airport, which he is sentenced to rehab. But Jeremy, according to Ben, is considering several offers to direct other projects after Fiercely's success and Ben would work with him again. Lou Tarnow becomes the recipient of a major award for ushering in maverick talent like Jeremy and putting out successful, cutting edge material although this previously contradicts her dislike of Jeremy's work. Meanwhile, Brad Pitt dropped out of the film project that was written by Scott, who falls into a deep depression and starts drinking heavily while living with Ben's ex-wife. He is subsequently kicked out for this behavior. Dick Bell, on the other hand, still suffers from excruciating stress-induced stomach pain that prompts him to pull over to the side of the road while on a date.
Based on 113 reviews collected by Rotten Tomatoes as of February 7, 2009, the film has received an overall "Rotten" rating of 53 percent, with a weighted average score of 5.8/10.[3] In describing the critical consensus, it stated: "What Just Happened has some inspired comic moments, but this inside-baseball take on Hollywood lacks satirical bite."
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