8, Dustin Lance Black’s
all-star benefit stage play (George Clooney! Brad Pitt!) about the successful
court battle against California’s Proposition 8, the law that repealed marriage
equality in that state, is moving closer to a big screen adaptation thanks to
director Rob Reiner (When Harry Met Sally). Reiner’s production company,
Castle Rock, is working with Black on the script phase, which, according to
Black, will expand the courtroom drama to include more personal information
about the plaintiffs. Smart move, because sitting 20 feet away from a live
benefit performance featuring Clooney as he reads courtroom transcripts might
be exciting for the privileged attendees, but multiplex audiences need a little
more to grab onto besides their popcorn. When it all finally comes together,
expect Milk and Brokeback Mountain levels of attention from a political climate
where same-sex marriage makes the daily news almost as often as the weather
forecast. The iron’s hotter than it’s ever been. Time to strike, Hollywood!
Bomb Girls blowing up soon
Sexy lesbians working in a
World War II-era bomb factory? Yes, it happened, there just haven’t been a lot
of Steven Spielberg movies made about the subject. Because while the heroism of
those who served during World War II is the subject of countless movies, books
and TV shows, there are simply fewer stories told about the courage of those on
the home front. Bomb Girls looks to fill in a bit of that gap. A Canadian TV
drama that already aired there earlier this year, Bomb Girls tells the
stories of a group of women who work in a munitions factory during the war and
co-stars Academy Award nominee Meg Tilly (Agnes of God). Meanwhile, in
keeping with the real social upheaval caused by the mass influx of women into
the American wartime workforce, the series will indeed feature a lesbian
character (played by Canadian TV star Ali Liebert) and her relationship with a
co-worker (Charlotte Hegele). Already picked up for a 12-episode second season
in Canada, the six-episode first season will debut this fall on cable’s
ReelzChannel.
Much ado about Sean Maher
Hey everybody, guess what
Sean Maher’s doing next? That’s right, he’s going to co-star in the new Joss
Whedon (The Avengers) movie, a modern-day adaptation of Shakespeare’s Much
Ado About Nothing. Oh, wait, you have no idea who Sean Maher is? Well, that’s
your own fault, but here’s a quick recap: he’s the cool, openly gay character
actor, already a household name in nerdy, Whedon-following, Firefly and
Serenity-obsessed households, who’s been off the radar for a bit thanks to
two years of stay-at-home Dad detail. So a return to work is welcome for both
him and audiences who appreciate the everyday working actors out there who
don’t let their sexuality turn into an endless tabloid-based wild goose chase
(*cough* Latifah-Travolta). Most importantly, though, it’ll be refreshing to
see what the witty Whedon does with Shakespeare, and the film will also star
Firefly colleague Nathan Fillion, so the news on this one just keeps getting
better.
The best rumor of right now:
a Downton Abbey movie
As the third season of
Downton Abbey shoots, gearing up for a fall telecast in the U.K. and a
January bow on America’s PBS, the hottest Emmy-hoarding British import on
television is now the subject of rumor after rumor, most of them false. The
most frightening one, of course, was the cruel idea that one-liner machine
Maggie Smith would soon depart the series (untrue, says Smith and creator
Julian Fellowes). But here’s the best one: a theatrical film, probably capping
the series’ eventual end on TV (those Brit shows never wear out their welcome
with too many seasons, a lesson American series could stand to learn).
Fellowes, of course, isn’t confirming but he’s also not denying, choosing
instead to address the issue with vague talk of "talks." In other words, it
could happen. So where’s the Facebook petition? We’ll sign it.
Romeo San Vicente understands that Mr. Bates is the sweetest, most gentle convicted murderer on TV, but, truth be told, it’s really all about Lord Grantham.