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Hollywoodland

(Redirected from Truth, Justice, and the American Way)

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Hollywoodland
Hollywoodland:Hollywoodland film
Directed by Allen Coulter
Produced by Glenn Williamson
Written by Paul Bernbaum
Starring Adrien Brody
Diane Lane
Ben Affleck
Bob Hoskins
Molly Parker
Robin Tunney
Distributed by Focus Features (USA)
Miramax Films (non-USA)
Release date(s) September 8 2006
Language English
IMDb profile

Hollywoodland is a biopic/docudrama directed by TV alum Allen Coulter (his feature directorial debut) about a down-on-his-luck detective, Louis Simo (Adrien Brody), investigating the suspicious suicide of actor George Reeves (Ben Affleck), the star of television's Superman. Toni Mannix (Diane Lane), the wife of MGM studio executive Eddie Mannix (Bob Hoskins), had been in a long romantic relationship with Reeves, who had ended the affair and had become engaged to a younger woman, an aspiring actress Lenore Lemmon - (Robin Tunney).


Contents

Plot

George Reeves has a long, successful career from the late 1930s, starting with a small role in Gone With the Wind and ending soon after Adventures of Superman. Despite his fame, he is discontent with being typecast as Superman and cannot find major roles. Reeves is also having drinking problems and has engaged in an affair with Toni Mannix, the wife of MGM VP Eddie Mannix.

When Reeves is found dead from a gunshot wound to the head in the early morning hours of June 16, 1959, the police rule it a simple suicide, but Reeves' mother becomes suspicious and hires private detective Louis Simo to find out what has really happened. As Simo learns Reeves' life story and tracks down details of the case, he finds that the evidence is much more ambiguous than most of the police are willing to admit.

The film presents several possible scenarios for Reeves' death, but it does not introduce any new theories, resolve the murder, or point to any particular theory as being "right."

Cast and characters

CharactersCast
Louis SimoAdrien Brody
Toni MannixDiane Lane
George ReevesBen Affleck
Eddie ManixBob Hoskins
Leonore LemmonRobin Tunney
Laurie SimoMolly Parker
Helen Bessolo Lois Smith
Evan Simo Zach Mills

Box office and critical reception

Hollywoodland generated solid responses from viewers and critics, garnering a 68% fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes. Ben Affleck earned the Volpi Cup for Best Actor at the Venice Film Festival for his performance as George Reeves. He is now considered a contender for the Best Supporting Actor Academy Award.

Hoskins and Lane (who was willing to be made to look considerably older than her actual age, 41) have also been applauded for their performances. Critics at The Wall Street Journal and Vanity Fair called the film 2006's Brokeback Mountain and an Oscar contender.

But the box office figures for the film plummeted quickly. Shot on a budget of less than $14 million, 'Hollywoodland' grossed $14,426,251 as of October 26, 2006.

Historical innaccuracies

Hollywoodland takes liberties with actual historical events for dramatic purposes. Several events and places are condensed to fit into the film. Some examples follow:

Warner Bros. Rights Issues

During its production, Hollywoodland went through many rounds of getting clearance from Warner Bros. Pictures to use different aspects of George Reeves's "Superman" persona to reflect the actual nature of his career. Warner Bros. is the parent company of DC Comics and as such has all final say in the depiction of characters or indicia relating to their properties.

At first using the title, Truth, Justice, and the American Way, Superman's well-known patriotic catch-phrase, Warner Bros. threatened legal action unless the film's title was changed so as not to associate the classic slogan with Reeve's death--especially as they were banking on their own Superman reboot, Superman Returns, for that summer. The film-makers changed the title to Hollywoodland, not as a reflection of the ailing Hollywood Sign, but in reference to the general milieu of "movieland" itself.

Hollywoodland:Focus Features is forbidden from showing the Superman 'S' in promotional materials.
Enlarge
Focus Features is forbidden from showing the Superman 'S' in promotional materials.

The next hurdle for the filmakers was in regards to the opening of the film, and one in which they had intended to use the opening of the classic George Reeves series to play their credits over. Warner Bros. refused the filmakers the right to do this, and as such the film opens on a re-shot approximation of the credit sequence to the George Reeves show.

Arguably, the largest hurdle for the production was over the usage of the Superman "S" symbol, one of the most iconic of superhero symbols, and a seemingly obvious requirement for the costume Affleck had to wear when portraying Reeves shooting Adventures of Superman. Originally reported that the Superman costume in the film would be missing the "S" because Warner Bros. owns the film likeness of Superman, on July 6, 2006, the website Ain't It Cool News broke the news[1] that while Focus Features couldn't use the logo in promotional materials, the costume would sport the iconic letter "S" in the film, which it does.

Trivia

See also

References

  1. ^ Ben Affleck will be SUPERMAN, not UPERMAN in HOLLYWOODLAND!!!. Ain't It Cool News (2006-06-06).
  2. ^ Milo Speriglio, detective, 62 (2000-05-29).

Categories


Semi-protected | 2006 films | Miramax films | Focus Features films | Superman films | Drama films | Period films | American films | Neo-noir

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