TORONTO '08 CRITICS NOTEBOOK | Veteran Filmmakers Stand Out With "Last Stop" While Newcomers Deliver "Power" and "Deadgirl" by Steve Ramos (September 7, 2008)
A scene from Marcel Sarmiento and Gadi Harel's "Deadgirl." Image courtesy of the Toronto International Film Festival.
British director Nigel Cole, best known for the popular art-house comedies “Saving Grace” and “Calendar Girls,” introduced his latest film, the father/son road drama “$5 A Day,” by explaining to the Toronto International Film Festival audiences at its Saturday night premiere its qualifications as a classic independent feature. Cole, also a veteran of television sitcoms and nature documentaries, emphasized the film’s low budget, short shooting schedule and salary sacrifices made by the cast and crew. More importantly, he singled out his lead actor, Christopher Walken, a marquee name of independent features and the standout feature of Cole’s by-the-numbers; surprisingly unfunny film. When it comes to the Toronto, the most important fall event for generating Oscar momentum and attention, there is strength in cast awareness and a filmmaker’s track record. Audience anticipation is a given for someone like Cole with critical and audience favorites to his name. First-time directors, like Jeffrey Levy-Hinte with the exuberant concert documentary “Soul Power” and co-directors Marcel Sarmiento and Gadi Harel, the visionaries behind the brutally frightening boys-behaving-badly horror “Deadgirl” have to generate their awareness from scratch. One of the few festival acquisitions so far was “$5 A Day,” which Image Entertainment acquired North American distribution rights from Capitol Films. It’s easy to understand the commercial value of the film with a likable cast including Sharon Stone, Amanda Peet and Alessandro Nivola as son Flynn Parker and Walken as his con artist father, Nat. But with the exception of a sequence where Walken crashes a company party—one in which he displays his much-admired dance skills with another man’s wife—“$5” fails to build consistent laughs or a single surprise. Amanda Road dramas, especially those involving an estranged parent and child who quickly reconnect, are tried and true. Walken fans, the core audience for Cole’s film, will leave disappointed due to the lack of surprises and emotional payoffs from screenwriters Neal H. Dobrofsky and Tippi Dobrofsky. Without a script equal to its high profile cast, “$5 A Day” looks to achieve better success on home video instead of in cinemas.
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