Anyone familiar with Francis Ford Coppola knows the guy can hold forth with the best of them, as he demonstrated to film students at the Institute of Contemporary Art the other night. Ostensibly in town to screen a new documentary shot by his wife, Eleanor, the three-time Oscar winner was happy to chat with the adolescent auteurs -- so much so that when ICA director Jill Medvedow tried, politely, to call a halt to the proceedings, Coppola objected. "My schedule? I don't have a schedule," he said. "I don't even believe in reality." The legendary director doesn't believe much in the movie business, either, criticizing studio execs for producing pablum and passing it off as art. "Every time I go to the movies, I say, 'I've seen this before,' " he said. "They just keep making the same movie." (Ironic talk for someone who made three "Godfather" films.) For financial reasons, Coppola said the truly creative directors -- he mentioned Wes Anderson, Spike Jonze, and David O. Russell, in particular -- can't do what they want. "[ 'Boys Don't Cry'] Director Kim Peirce . . . Where's her second film?" he grumbled. Thanks to the success of Coppola's California winery, he no longer relies on studios, and instead makes "personal films" that he produces and pays for himself. (His latest, "Youth Without Youth," costars our man Matt Damon.) "I'm 68," Coppola said. "I'm making art films." The audience included composer Osvaldo Golijov, who scored Coppola's latest, as well as gallery owner Bernie Toale, and restaurateur Christopher Myers and his wife, Joanne Chang. Coppola and Golijov dined afterward at the Federalist.
Making a bid to be Tinseltown east
The state's once-fractured film community joined with Governor Deval Patrick and State House leaders yesterday to bring more movie production to Massachusetts. "[The state] has an awful lot going for it. Wonderful locations . . . and a long tradition of great movies," said Patrick. "We can't stand still in the face of stiff challenges from other states." The Legislature will now take up a proposal to lift a cap on tax incentives for filmmakers. Directors Sam Weisman and Dave McLaughlin made the scene, as did Teamsters Local 25 president Sean O'Brien.
Better late than never on Chatham
The cast of "Chatham" is long gone, but the crew that worked on the indie film is only receiving its final wages now. Word from the Cape, where the period piece was shot this spring, is that West Wind Productions ran out of money before finishing the film last month, and is now drawing on a security bond to cover its payroll obligations. (The romantic comedy about three 70-something sea captains competing for the affection of a younger woman stars Rip Torn, Bruce Dern, and David Carradine.) The good news is that the film's trailer has just been posted at cinemavault.com , and it looks promising.
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