Saturday, January 31, 2009

"AR" German Review

Thanks Anke for translating! :)

This is just the translated version of the critic's review. The original resource is here.



The film adaption "Adam Resurrected" reveals Adam Stein's inner life hesitantly and in return shows a lot of flashbacks in black and white. In doing so, the movie is more than a film version of the Holocaust: Not only the barrier between man and animal vanishes more and more during the course of the story, also the one between victim and culprit isn't clear oftentimes. Furthermore, the movie is a parable that deals with the philosophical question: "What is man?" It shows that he can be both God's image as well as a further developed animal.

Yoram Kaniuk is seen as one of the most important Israelian writers - even though the novel led to strong controversials when it came out in 1969. The subtle irony and the black humour of the book can be recognized in the film and make this heavy subject bearable in the first place. But, by choosing the different actors, director Paul Schrader - who made histroy with his script for Taxi Driver - created a movie in a different way than the author probably would have done it, namely one that stands for the "solidarity between Germany and Israel and the idea of international understanding." With the team of different denominations, which includes alongside the great international actors Jeff Goldblum and Willem Dafoe national stars as Moritz Bleibtreu, Joachim Krôl or Juliane Köhler, this idea can absolutely be realized.

"May everything, that was, not happen again, and all, what will be, have never happend."

By: Silvy Pommerenke

News: DVD Release and Possible Appearance


DVD Release: VIBES on Feb. 3, 2008

"Vibes" (1988)Pop singer Cyndi Lauper has lots of fun making her movie debut in this happy-go-lucky 1988 adventure comedy about psychics-for-hire hunting for treasure in South America. Co-starring Jeff Goldblum and Peter Falk. Filmed in Ecuador. PG, 99 minutes.

You can pre-order it at Amazon.com.

I have this movie on VHS. It's really good! I'm going to order it on DVD of course! :)

In other news, according to TheState.com, you may see Jeff at the big game on Sunday in Tampa Bay, FL! That means, he'll be in my state! AH! Once again, Jeff will be in my state, and I'll miss him... :(

Photos: Pt. 2 - La Mer & Bettina Zilkha Celebrates Oceana

La Mer and Bettina Zilkah Event to Celebrate OCEANA
Thursday, January 29, 2009

View more photos here!

Photos: La Mer & Bettina Zilkha Celebrates Oceana

La Mer and Bettina Zikkah Event to Celebrate OCEANA
Thursday, January 29, 2009




This is Keith Addis (Jeff's manager)

Friday, January 30, 2009

Video: Naming Mildred Snitzer Orchestra

There's an article (I posted sometime last year) about this is also at the bottom of the video. How sweet! :)

*Thanks Anke for the notice!*



---------------------------------------------------------------

100 Years Young
Palo Alto resident dances across the century mark
By Kristina Peterson / Daily News Staff Writer


For the past 100 years, her motto has been "keep moving or they'll plant you."

On Wednesday, wearing a tiara and beaded slippers, Palo Alto resident Mildred Snitzer celebrated her 100th birthday with a crowd of friends, family and line dancers at Cubberley Community Center's Senior Friendship group, where she taught dancing until the age of 95.

Snitzer moved to Palo Alto from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in her mid-70s, when her sister's husband died, said her niece, Palo Alto resident Diane Balter.

"I thought it would be warm here, but it wasn't," Snitzer said.

Balter said her aunt immediately created a "gigantic, brand-new social life" in Palo Alto.

"She made so many friends that people who had lived their whole lives here said Mildred knew more people than they did," Balter said.

Snitzer has attracted attention before. Actor Jeff Goldblum, a family friend from Pittsburgh, named his jazz band the Mildred Snitzer Orchestra after her, Balter said.

"He named it after her because she was always such a jazzy, spunky person," Balter said.

At the Cubberley Center's weekly Wednesday event, Senior Friendship Day, Snitzer introduced the group to the "Twelfth Street Rag" and "Cab Driver" line dances, said dance instructor Lori Rock.

Snitzer kicked up her heels well into her 90s, until hip surgery made a wheelchair necessary, said her cousin Charles Levine.

"She was literally never standing still," he said.

One relative, Leib Kaminsky, visiting with a large contingent of family members from the East Coast, recalled how when he was 10, Snitzer would run him and his sisters through the "chicken fat" exercise routine. She was the only one who could make it through all the way, despite the fact that she was in her mid-70s, he said.

"She used to come visit and teach my sisters and me the hula dance," said Kaminsky, to which Snitzer made undulating hand movements.

Snitzer's parents immigrated from Lithuania, Kaminsky said.

Born and raised in Pittsburgh, she was the oldest child, with younger twin sisters who lived in Palo Alto and died in their early 90s, Levine said.

Snitzer married twice, but had no children. Both her husbands have since passed away, Balter said.

"She had many boyfriends," Kaminsky noted.

Snitzer worked as a medical secretary for the United Mine Workers in Pittsburgh, before her move to California, where she realized her passion for line dancing.

"She was always willing to do every dance," Rock said.

Snitzer was reluctant on Wednesday to trumpet her longevity, but friends noted that Snitzer never smoked and always maintained an active lifestyle.

When pressed for her philosophy, Snitzer answered concisely.

"Keep breathing," she said.

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Holocaust Films "NOT" Worthy of an Oscar?

January 27, 2009
This is from an article about Kate Winslet, but mentions this:

Also potentially without merit is the Holocaust factor, which seems to be the most popular argument for why Winslet is now a shoo-in to win the Oscar. This is an old favorite for Oscar oddsmakers, but it may not actually apply here. Still, when The Reader made surprise appearances in the Best Picture and Best Director categories last Thursday, one of the first familiar quotes to show up online was “there’s no business like Shoah business.” Yet the Academy already failed to nominate shortlisted documentary Blessed Is the Match, despite its Holocaust subject matter, and they also ignored related features such as The Boy in the Striped Pajamas, Adam Resurrected, Good and Valkyrie (meanwhile Defiance was only recognized by the music branch). So, certainly the Holocaust fetish thing is not a sure thing. It doesn’t even necessarily carry over to Israeli Oscar nominee Waltz With Bashir, as much as people may try to tie that documentary’s favorable odds to its association with the oft-mocked trend (actually could the doc now suffer with pro-Israel Academy members if it makes them think too much about war crimes committed against Palestinians?). Also, Winslet’s role as a sympathetic concentration camp guard should be as exclusive to the fetish as was (her Reader co-star) Bruno Ganz’s brilliant, Oscar-worthy portrayal of Hitler in Downfall. Even if she has told press that she neither liked nor sympathized with her character.


Hollywood just simply stinks!

Saturday, January 24, 2009

"Resurrected" Readings in Berlin

"Resurrected" Readings in Berlin
Jan. 19, 2009
Source: Freiepresse.de Kultur & LifePr.de
Thanks Anke!



The article says that Joachim Krol, the German actor who's in AR, goes on a reading tour to read from the book AR.

Here's the text:

Joachim Krol goes on a reading trip
The novel "Adam R." tells the story of the Berlin Jew Adam Stein

Before the film "AR" opens, actor JK goes on a reading trip in the beginning of February. In Hamburg, Frankfurt and Munich Krol will read from Yoram Kaniuk's novel AR, present film clips and talk to the audience.

The novel AR tells the story of the Berlin Jew Adam Stein, a former circus director and clown, who survives the Holocaust and ends up in a sanatorium in Israel. American director Paul Schrader filmed the movie with Jeff Goldblum, Willem Dafoe and Krol.

"AR" opens February 19 in the theaters. The film will be seen at a special screening on the Berlinale. List publishing reprints the novel for the start of the movie.


Also, this is the new cover of the "AR" book - German edition:



Thanks again, Anke!

Jeff Goldblum Tanking Law & Order: Criminal Intent?

Report: Goldblum tanking Law & Order: Criminal Intent
By: Tim Surette
January 24, 2009
TV.com


Online report says episodes starring new star Jeff Goldblum are “terrible” and caused both delays of new season.

All you Law & Order: Criminal Intent fans out there are probably wondering what the hold up is after USA delayed the drama's season premiere twice, the most recent coming a few days ago. The answer: The Fly.

Technically, the man who played The Fly, according to a report from Fox News. Citing sources inside the Criminal Intent fortress, Fox says that new star Jeff Goldblum's character hasn't exactly been up to par.

"The two episodes they have [with Goldblum] are terrible," the source reportedly said, specifically calling out the Jurassic Park star. Goldblum is taking over for departing star Chris "Mr. Big" Noth.

So terrible that new producer Robert Nathan, the man who worked on Goldblum's half of the episodes (the other half stars Vincent D'Onofrio), has allegedly been axed.

USA Network delayed the show in October and again this week; the program's new season was supposed to begin airing last fall, but was pushed back to early 2009 and then again to summer 2009. USA has given the same excuse for both delays: they want all 16 episodes to air without a break, which clearly makes no sense.

The last season of Law & Order: Criminal Intent premiered in October 2007, but because of the writers strike, the final episode didn't air until last August.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

The Big Chill Cast: Where are they now!?

"The Big Chill" Stars: Where Are They Now?
Classic Reunion Film 25 Years Old
January 21, 2009
The Indy Channel - At The Movies / WRTV Indianapolis
www.TheIndyChannel.com


There have been plenty of class reunion movies over the years, but in 1983, moviegoers heard about one through the grapevine that became an instant classic.

Backed by a soundtrack of classic '60s tunes including Marvin Gaye's "I Heard it Through the Grapevine" and Procol Harum's "A Whiter Shade of Pale," "The Big Chill" not only went on to warm the hearts of moviegoers but earn three Oscar nominations, including Best Picture.

Set at a South Carolina winter house, the film finds a group of seven college friends reuniting for the funeral for a close member of the group who committed suicide.

Co-written and directed by Lawrence Kasdan, "The Big Chill" boasted an impressive ensemble cast, including Glenn Close, Kevin Kline, William Hurt, Tom Berenger, Jeff Goldblum, JoBeth Williams, Mary Kay Place and Meg Tilly.

The film was to also star an actor who went on to become a major film star, but his scenes as friend who ended his own life were ultimately cut from the film.

So what are the stars of "The Big Chill" up to today? Find out where the are now -- including that one actor who seemingly missed a big opportunity -- in our slideshow.

Click to see the slideshow! If you can't view it, click on the link above to the original resource.

FilterMag / Wes Anderson featuring Jeff Goldblum

Jeff Goldblum, Wes Anderson Talk Film
Januaury 21, 2009
FilterMag Staff
Filter-Mag.com


It's no secret that Wes Anderson is an amazing filmmaker...and also an insatiable movie buff. Recently, FILTER spoke with Anderson about the evolution of his work, and specifically, the meaning and importance of his first film, Bottle Rocket. In an exclusive interview (one which appears in Issue 25 of the FILTER Good Music Guide), Anderson discussed his love for his first film on the occasion of a new special edition DVD from Criterion. Here's a quote:

"We wanted to make a movie and [Bottle Rocket] was our idea. The was everything to us. And then you develop your story and when you get into it you become completely fixated on all its different aspects...Everything we were doing was somehow related to Bottle Rocket."

Also, FILTER caught up with none other than Jeff Goldblum to get his take on the Anderson aesthetic. Cast as Alistair Hennessey in Anderson's The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou, Goldblum has had much time to absorb the details of the Anderson approach. Commenting on the similiarities between the end credits of Steve Zissou and those of the cult classic, The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension!, in which he starred, Goldblum says,

"I love Wes Anderson... When we were filming The Life Aquatic, I think he did mention he was a fan of The Adventures of Buckaroo...it could be that the end credits of The Life Aquatic were an homage to Buckaroo. I remember when doing it for Buckaroo, I had some new red cowboy boots, and they were none too comfortable...Life Aquatic was musch easier on my feet!"


To read the full interviews, check on the new issue of FILTER Good Music Guide, out now.

L&O: CI Premiere Summer 2009!?

Law & Order: Criminal Intent Pushed Back to Summer 2009
Jan. 21, 2009
Mickey O'Connor
TVGuide.com



New episodes of Law & Order: Criminal Intent won't air until summer 2009, according to a USA Network spokesperson, the second such delay in four months. The eighth season was initially scheduled to debut in November 2008, just three months after Season 7 aired. Then, in October, the netlet announced the season would shift to early 2009, presumably January, so they could air all 16 episodes in a row — the same reason they cite for this latest push-back.

Season 8 is notable for its casting changes. Chris Noth (Sex and the City), who played Det. Mike Logan, left the show after three seasons, and has been replaced by the Oscar- and Emmy-nominated actor Jeff Goldblum, who plays Det. Zach Nichols. Preview scenes sent to TV critics in the fall showed that Goldblum's performance departed from the stammering intellectual roles for which he is generally known (The Fly, Independence Day, The Big Chill).

The show's spokesperson said that Goldblum's arrival, however, was not responsible for the delays. (Oh, that's good to hear!)


Is anyone else tired of the delays!? Geez!

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Photos: Pt. 4 - Jeff Goldblum Attends Glenn Close's HWF Honor

More "Jeff" photos from the ceremony...

Video: Jeff Seen at Glenn Close's HWF Ceremony

Video: Adam Resurrected Trailer in English!

Has Hebrew subtitles.



Thanks Malcom's Girl! :)

Adam Resurrected at 59th Berlinale

HollywoodReporter.com:

"BERLIN -- Florian Gallenberger's World War II biopic "John Rabe," Paul Schrader's Jeff Goldblum starrer "Adam Resurrected" and Hermine Huntegeburth's adaptation of German classic "Effi Briest" are among the highlights of this year's Berlinale Special program."

The 59th Berlinale runs Feb. 5-15 in Berlin, Germany

Berlinale Special at Cinema Paris
"Adam Resurrected," Paul Schrader, U.S./ Germany /Israel

The complete program of Berlinale Special will be published Jan. 27.

*Thanks Anke!*

DesertSun: Jeff Goldblum Tackles Toughest Role Ever!

Jeff Goldblum tackles his toughest role yet in 'Adam Resurrected'
Stephen Ashton - Special to The Desert Sun
January 17, 2009


“This was hands-down the most challenging part I have ever played,” Jeff Goldblum said of his role as fictional Holocaust survivor Adam Stein.

“Adam Resurrected,” director Paul Schrader's imaginative new film, is a haunting adaptation of Israeli novelist Yoram Kaniuk's acclaimed 1968 novel. The film cuts between scenes of 1930s Berlin to early-'60s Israel, where the protagonist is in a mental hospital for Holocaust survivors.

Goldblum, known for playing quirky, eccentric characters, talked about the life-changing experience of filming “Adam Resurrected.”

The Desert Sun: How did you get the part?

Goldblum: Paul Schrader got me into the film. He said, “Here are 20 movies you should see,” and I saw each of them twice. Films like “Rules of The Game,” “Tokyo Story,” (Michelangelo) Antonioni's “Eclipse,” “Masculine and Feminine” by (Jean Luc) Godard.


DS: How did you prepare for such a complex role?

Goldblum: I had the script and the part for over a year. It was wonderful to have this kind of time. I learned the violin, because the character was a violin player. I went to Germany and visited the extermination camp Maidanek in Poland. I went to Israel for my first time. I spoke with Holocaust survivors. I lost 20 pounds.

DS: Your character goes from Poland to Israel and winds up in an insane asylum. How did you approach that aspect of his character?

Goldblum: It was very emotional for me. At one point Paul (Schrader) saw me crawling on the ground and said, “Try this… eat some dirt!” I wanted fake dirt, you know clean dirt. Paul said, “Just do it!” He reached down and grabbed some and shoved it in his mouth! So I went ahead. I ate dirt.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Photos: Pt. 3 - Jeff Goldblum Attends Glenn Close's HWF Honor






Thanks Michelle for the notice!

Photos: Pt. 2 - Jeff Goldblum Attends Glenn Close's HWF Honor




Poor Jeff. He doesn't even look like he wants to be there. lol

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Photos: Jeff Goldblum Attends Glenn Close's HWF Honor

That's all well and good and congratulations Glenn, but the most important question remaining is... WHERE'S JEFF'S!?



Thanks Michelle for finding the other 2 pictures!

Sunday, January 11, 2009

DH.com: Exclusive Interview: Jeff Goldblum for "Adam Resurrected"

DH.com: Exclusive Interview: Jeff Goldblum for "Adam Resurrected"
By Paul Fischer
Monday, Dec. 22, 2008
DarkHorizons.com
Original Source

Thanks Garth! :)

-----------------------------------------

Never one to repeat himself, Jeff Goldblum thrives on taking risks. Though he’s been seen in many mainstream films, the actor returns to the theater and takes on independent films that take him to places he has never been before.

His latest film is "Adam Resurrected" which follows the story of Adam Stein, a charismatic patient at a mental institution for Holocaust survivors in Israel, 1961. He reads minds and confounds his doctors, lead by Nathan Gross.

Before the war, in Berlin, Adam was an entertainer - cabaret impresario, circus owner, magician, musician - loved by audiences and Nazis alike until he finds himself in a concentration camp, confronted by Commandant Klein. Adam survives the camp by becoming the Commandant's "dog", entertaining him while his wife and daughter are sent off to die.

Years later we find him at the Institute. One day, Adam smells something, hears a sound. "Who brought a dog in here?" he asks Gross. Gross denies there is a dog but Adam finds him--a young boy raised in a basement on a chain. Adam and the boy see and recognize each other as dogs--and their journey begins.

"Adam Resurrected" is the story of a man who once was a dog who meets a dog who once was a boy. Goldblum talked exclusively to Paul Fischer about the challenges of doing a film of such sheer complexity.

Question: Paul Schrader told me that this was a role you were born to play. Do you agree with that? And how do you feel about that?

Goldblum: Well, it’s awful nice of him to say that. And because that was his idea, that’s how I wound up doing it. He really lobbied to have me do it. And thank goodness. Well, I guess I can see the things that I might have been right for. But it was a great privilege to try to do it. And – you know, the movie had been – they’d been trying to make the movie for a while. And Charlie Chaplin wanted to do the part. Orson Welles wanted to do the part and make the movie. And I’m just thrilled that it got to me. And I had a year to prepare with it and work with Paul on it.

Question: Tell me what the preparation was to get into this character. How hard was it to get into the skin of this character? Or the challenges that you faced.

Goldblum: The challenges to prepare for it? Well, luckily, I had it for a year before I did it. And I immersed myself in that year in preparing for it. I teach acting for the last 20 years, whenever I’m not working. I’m always interested in experimenting with how you do things, and craft. And it felt like on this one, that I wanted to learn the most of it early on, like a play. Which I did. And I had my students kind of apprentice me. I have a place in my backyard, a little acting space. And they would come every day and play the other parts. And I would have run-throughs of it with my students and different people. And I’d have run-throughs of it. And that was the beginning of it. And then I went to Israel-- I’d never been to Israel before-- and met with Paul, and we went over it. And I started to take violin lessons, and played violin every day. Started to work with dialogue people. Went to Germany for the first time, to Berlin, and spent a month there and worked on things. Talked to survivors in Los Angeles and Israel and Europe. Went to a concentration camp in Poland called Majdanek, which was supposedly the most intact one, and had a very powerful experience there. Worked with dog people, you know? Cesar Milan, the Dog Whisperer got together with me, and we went through the script. And I started to develop all aspects of things having to do with dogs. And then just looked at as many documentaries of the Holocaust as I could, and fictional movies. And talked to Michael Berenbaum, the guy who designed the Holocaust Museum in Washington. He consulted on Sophie’s Choice. And we went through the script together.

Question: Have you prepared this much for a role ever?

Goldblum: No, I haven’t. I’m usually conscientious, and as soon as I get the part, I figure that’s when I need to start working on preparing it. But I’d never had something for a year before I did it, really. And thank goodness for this one, because I’ve never had a part that was quite as demanding and challenging.

Question: How hard is it to leave a part like this behind at the end of the day?

Goldblum: Well, while I was doing it, for that whole year and for the three months that I did it, it was very emotional, too. And then even after, I knew I was going to have to loop – do some ADR, do some sound. Kind of act it again, the better part of several months later. And we did some re-shooting, several months after that. So I knew I had to keep it alive in me all during that time, and I did. And I got a rough cut of the movie before we did that ADR, and had a daily run-through of it like that, and would go through the whole thing. And then finally, really, after seeing it with several audiences, do I finally sort of feel like I could take a breath, and let it out. But it was life-changing, really. And I think I learned a lot during that year, although scratching the surface on all those events. And people spend their whole lives studying about – but I have a deeper feeling for people who go through things like that. You know? And the movie is about some spiritual things that interested me, too, that really changed me.

Question: Like what, for example?

Goldblum: Well, you know, this character, in a horribly, most horrific and dramatic way, goes through loss. Loses everything. You know, his career, his home, his family. His abilities, his health. And the people he loves. But we all go through things like that. You know, in one way or another. And it either diminishes you, or some say it’s an opportunity for asking yourself, “Who am I?” in a deeper way. And this character finds himself in the middle of the desert, and realizes himself, I think, finally, through the love of this boy. That who he is is something apart from all the trappings of form that have come and gone. And finds a real source of peace, perhaps, and creativity and love. Those are – I love that whole aspect of the movie.

Question: Do you think doing a movie this give you a very different perspective on the way you approach acting, and the film industry? On acting as a tool for you? I mean, given the amount of work that you did. Does it change the way you approach acting?

Goldblum: Oh, yeah. Yes. It was a creative challenge. And yeah I mean, it was so adventurous and risky, and challenging. That just the muscles to get through it, I think, have equipped me in a different way. And then – yeah. When we went into it, I could tell – you know, my approach to things emotional and sort of in preparation – it just taught me a lot.

Question: Will it be hard for you to find something as challenging as this to do in the future? I mean, I can’t imagine you going back and doing a mainstream Hollywood movie after doing something like this.


Goldblum:
I think so. I’m doing now – since I did that, I did this play in London called Speed-the-Plow, the David Mamet show with Kevin Spacey, a brilliant actor. We ran for three months in London. And that’s – I think that’s a wonderful play. But it was commercially successful. And now I’m doing this part on Law and Order: Criminal Intent, which is very kind of mainstream. But I’m enjoying it no end, though. There are very smart people on it, very smart writers, directors, and great actors. And I’m enjoying it no end.


Question:
Would you do another Jurassic Park?

Goldblum: It depends on the script, you know? And the director. I loved working with Spielberg those couple of times, and I would relish doing anything with him. I had a great time on those. And in fact, on those, even though they were very popular, the way Steven approached it felt like in some ways – with the actors, the acting – kind of an independent, adventurous way.

Question: What are you doing next, do you know, Jeff?

Goldblum: Next? Well, I’m doing Law and Order for the next – the whole season. We shoot until late April, in New York.

Question: Who do you play in that?

Goldblum: I play a detective. You know that Criminal Intent show? They alternate. One week is Vincent D’Onofrio, heading this detective team. And then the other week had been Chris Noth. And the character I played took over for him at the police station. So, I’m a detective. I’m a homicide detective named Zach Nichols.

Question: Is it fun to do TV? Are you enjoying that?


Goldblum:
I am, a whole lot. Like I say they’re really smart, and just sort of develop character over a course of time. It feels very creative and challenging. I like, in a way, not having all that much time to prepare for scripts to come in. You have to be instinctive, and not think too much about it. It’s really fun.

Friday, January 9, 2009

Celebrity Sightings: Jeff Goldblum at Crunch Gym in LA - Jan. 1, 2009

According to Access Hollywood's Random sightings in LA – Jeff Goldblum was working out on the elliptical machine at the Crunch Gym in West Hollywood. His new film, "Adam Resurrected" was playing next door at the Laemmle theaters.

It's old news now, but I though I'd share anyway...

Photos - Screen Caps: Jeff Goldblum on Martha Stewart (12/11/08)

Thanks Michelle for capping these!


Video Update: Jeff Goldblum on Martha Stewart (Dec. 11, 2008)

In case you missed the Jeff Goldblum on the "Martha Stewart Show" appearance from Thursday, Dec. 11, 2008; now here's your chance to see it:

Click here!

Thanks for notifying me, Michelle!

Thursday, January 8, 2009

"AR" at Fantasporto International Film Festival

"Adam Resurrected" will be premiering at the Fantasporto (aka Fantas) - Portuguese International Film Festival in Porto, Portugal on Saturday, February 28. For more information, please visit the official website: Fantasporto.com.

Law & Order: CI - Season 8 on Feb 5th?

According to this (look below) & some insiders: LOCI will be starting Feb. 5th. This is not yet confirmed by the USA Network just yet.

TV INSIDER: Goldblum Gives the Skinny on New 'CI'
With the eighth season of "Law & Order: Criminal Intent" just around the corner -- it premieres Feb. 5 -- soon viewers will get to judge for themselves how well Jeff Goldblum follows the tough act of his hugely-popular predecessor, Chris Noth.
Some of Goldblum's own talents are being incorporated into his character, Det. Zach Nichols. The actor tells us, for instance, that Nichols plays jazz piano, and tends to play when mulling questions pertaining to his cases. Goldblum is a jazz pianist in real life. Nichols will have quirks. Wouldn't people be disappointed if there was a Jeff Goldblum character without quirks at this point?


Read more here!

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Photos: 1/06/2009 - Welcome Dinner of "Adam Resurrected"

Jeff Goldblum during the "Welcome Dinner of the movie 'ADAM RESURRECTED' " at the Borchardt Restaurant in Berlin, Germany.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Jeff Goldblum is the most under-rated actor of the 20th Century?

Jeff Who? Why I think Jeff Goldblum is the most under-rated actor of the 20th Century.

Adam Dalton-Wyatt
1/6/09 - Marginalia
(The) BrockPress.com - Online Edition


Jeff Goldblum is the biggest drawing event movie star of all time. I know, a statement like that is a hard one to swallow. It either causes you to stare at the page, mouth agape in disbelief or raise an eyebrow in confusion - the name "Jeff Goldblum" having long ago slipped your mind.

And that's the mystery of Mr. Goldblum: all signs point to him having been the biggest star of the 90s, charming millions with his eccentric, staccato method of delivery (if you've truly forgotten him, imagine Shatner as a stereotypical Jewish man) . And yet his time on top clings to people's memories like the sheerest gossamer. All pretension aside, it is no coincidence that the biggest movies of both 1993 and 1996 featured Goldblum in a starring role.

To trace the beginning of his drawing power you need look no further than 1986's The Fly. As with all his popular roles, The Fly saw Goldblum playing a scientist in a world of science gone mad. Making a mere fraction of his future films' gross at $60 million, The Fly might not seem to be a huge success, but when judging it one must keep in mind just where it was made. Unlike his future blockbusters The Fly was not shot in America, land of huge movie attendance, but was instead a humble Canadian film. 'Nuff said.

As alluded to earlier, Jurassic Park and Independence Day were the highest grossing films of their respective years, and both featured Goldblum in prominent roles. The next "event" movie to be released was 1998's Godzilla, a movie with more publicity than God and one that proved to be an impressive flop. Fresh off the success of Independence Day (then known by the incredibly hip acronym "ID4"), Godzilla's producers decided they would one-up themselves. It must have seemed so simple: combine the monument destroying action of Independence Day with the loose dinosaur thrills of Jurassic Park, add a recognizable name brand to taste and you've got cinematic prime rib. Ten years later it is obvious what Jurassic Park and Independence Day had that Godzilla lacked: Goldblum.

An interesting thing to note about Independence Day is that due to the collective amnesia the world suffers in regards to Jeff Goldblum, it is viewed as a Will Smith movie. However, Goldblum's character is introduced first and he is in fact the focus of the movie for a greater amount of screen time. Will Smith was at that point an untested commodity on the big screen. He had recently ended a wildly successful television run as The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, and co-starred in the buddy-cop movie Bad Boys. The mild success of that movie however can be attributed almost entirely to Smith's co-star, the comedic juggernaut that is Martin Lawrence.
I don't mean to belittle Mr. Smith's appeal as an actor, I happen to enjoy the man and his work. It was Will Smith who made me want to see I am Legend, it was Will Smith who made me want to see I Robot and it was my mistaken belief that he was in it that lead to me seeing I am Sam. The point I am making is simply that he was not the sole draw to Independence Day, and that if it weren't for Goldblum starring alongside him, his career may never have taken off as strongly as it did.

Now let's look at the box office take of Smith and Goldblum's next movies. The classic Will Smith action/comedy Men in Black (1997) made $589,390,539, an impressive amount by any measure. However, that same year The Lost World: Jurassic Park was released and raked in $618,638,999. The Lost World: Jurassic Park is an unobjectively terrible film The moviegoers of 1997 saw it and rushed home to tell their friends not to make the same mistake. Young, old, male, female, white, Asian, there isn't a single demographic that didn't hate The Lost World. And yet it made more money than the superior Men in Black. Why is that? In my opinion, because it had Jeff Goldblum.

Following that, Goldblum never starred in another big event movie. Perhaps he was disillusioned by taking part in such a poor example of the genre, perhaps he was burned out on kicking alien/dinosaur ass, or maybe he thought he had given all that he could, and his exploits would be remembered for all time. If he had only known.
Given his track record, there's no way producers, directors and film studio heads wouldn't have beaten down his door to get him to appear in other, similar films. Unless they, too, suffered from that odd "Goldblum amnesia" that meant one of the quirkiest and biggest box office draws of the 90s never got the credit - or the longevity - he deserved.

Thanks, Adam!

First Hollywood stars in 2009 quarter in Berlin

Tagesspiegel.de / Filmpremieren
Jan. 6, 2008
*Thanks, Anke for the translation!*



English
First Hollywood stars in 2009 quarter in Berlin

Will Smith and Jeff Goldblum are the first Hollywood stars in 2009 who arrive in Berlin to promote their films.

Jeff Goldblum and Will Smith have almost been guests at the same time once before - in September 1996 when "Independence Day" premiered. However, director Roland Emmerich then only arrived with one of the rescuers from aliens, namely Smith, for whom the film was a big jump in his career.

Now both of them are here, but with a different concern.
Will Smith will be seen on the red carpet in front of the "Cinestar" at Potsdamer Platz where the premiere of his film "Seven Lives" is celebrated.
Jeff Goldblum is in Berlin since Sunday. He lives in the "Maritim-Hotel" in Stauffenbergstrasse in Tiergarten and talks about his new movie "AR".

As the "Spiegel" wrote, it's the first Israeli-German production of a holocaust subject - a movie in which Jewish and non-Jewish actors work together. In this movie directed by Paul Schrader Goldblum plays Adam, a patient of a sanatorium for traumatized holocaust victims in the desert [the rest of the passage describes the movie].

Will Smith and Jeff Goldblum both have been several times to Berlin. Will's singing at the premiere of "MIB 2" in the summer 2002 is unforgettable.

Goldblum wanted to come to the Berlinale in 2003 to present his movie "Igby", but the trip was canceled due to the upcoming war in Iraq. 3 years later he shot "Fay Grim" in Berlin. The team was here for 29 days; most of the scenes that were shot here were set in other towns. In the beginning of 2007 Goldblum presented the film on the Berlinale - and accompanied Julie Delpy soulful on the piano during the premier party of her movie "2 days in Paris".



German
Die ersten Hollywood-Stars 2009 quartieren sich in Berlin ein
Mit Will Smith und Jeff Goldblum sind die ersten Hollywood-Stars im Jahr 2009 nach Berlin gekommen, um ihre FIlme vorzustellen.

Fast wären Jeff Goldblum und Will Smith schon einmal gleichzeitig Gäste dieser Stadt gewesen. Das war im September 1996, zur Premiere von „Independence Day", aber Regisseur Roland Emmerich war dann doch nur mit einem der beiden Retter der Welt vor den Aliens gekommen, mit Smith, für den der Film einen erheblichen Karrieresprung bedeutete.

Diesmal nun sind sie beide hier, wenn auch mit unterschiedlichem Anliegen. Will Smith wird an diesem Dienstagabend über den roten Teppich vor dem Cinestar am Potsdamer Platz laufen, wo die Premiere seines Films „Sieben Leben" gefeiert wird. Jeff Goldblum ist seit Sonntag in Berlin, wohnt im Maritim-Hotel in der Stauffenbergstraße in Tiergarten und spricht hier über den Film „Ein Leben für ein Leben – Adam Resurrected".

Es ist, wie der „Spiegel" anlässlich der Dreharbeiten schrieb, „die erste israelisch-deutsche Produktion eines Holocaust-Stoffes, ein Film, in dem jüdische und nichtjüdische Schauspieler gemeinsam vor der Kamera stehen". Goldblum spielt darin unter der Regie von Paul Schrader Adam, den Patienten eines israelischen Sanatoriums für traumatisierte Holocaust-Opfer mitten in der Wüste. In den zwanziger Jahren war er als Clown Star des Berliner Varietés, hatte mit seiner Kunst einem suizidgefährdeten Zuschauer von seinem Plan abgebracht und diesen später im KZ wiedergetroffen – als SS-Mann, der ihn nun zwang, sich wie ein Hund zu verhalten. Im Sanatorium trifft er einen Jungen, der ebenfalls wie ein Hund gehalten wurde, Beginn eines schmerzhaften Weges zurück in die eigene Vergangenheit.

Will Smith und Jeff Goldblum sind beide schon wiederholt in Berlin gewesen. Unvergessen ist Wills Gesangseinlage bei der Premiere von „M II B" im Sommer 2002, ebenfalls im Cinestar.

Goldblum wollte zur Berlinale 2003 kommen, um hier „Igby!" vorzustellen, wegen des bevorstehenden Irak-Krieges wurde die Reise gestrichen. Drei Jahre später drehte er in Berlin „Fay Grim". 29 Drehtage war das Team hier, die meisten hier entstandenen Szenen spielten aber in anderen Städten. Anfang 2007 stellte Goldblum den Film auf der Berlinale vor – und begleitete Julie Delpie bei der Premierenfeier ihres eigenen Films „2 Tage in Paris" gefühlvoll am Klavier.

Monday, January 5, 2009

Hello, Berlin!

Berliner Morgenpost
http://www.morgenpost.de
Jan 5, 2008

My Translation
Jeff flew from London yesterday (via business class) to Berlin, Germany. For 2 days, Jeff will be doing interviews to promote his movie, "Adam Resurrected".


English (thanks, Anke!)
Jeff Goldblum well tempered in the capital landed

New year, new Hollywood glamor in Berlin: Jeff Goldblum (56) stays in the city. Yesterday afternoon the actor arrived from London - good-humoured and in business class. He will give interviews for two days long to promote his latest movie "AR". The film will be in theatres on Feb. 19. In this film Goldblum plays a former cabaret artist who suffers from his holocaust memories.


German
Jeff Goldblum gut gelaunt in der Hauptstadt gelandet
Neues Jahr, neuer Hollywoodglanz in Berlin: Jeff Goldblum (56) weilt in der Stadt. Gestern Nachmittag schwebte der Schauspieler aus London ein - gut gelaunt und in der Businessclass. Zwei Tage lang will er Interviews geben, um Werbung für seinen neuen Film "Ein Leben für ein Leben - Adam Resurrected" zu machen. Der Streifen startet am 19. Februar im Kino. Darin spielt Goldblum einen ehemaligen Berliner Kabarettkünstler, der unter seinen Holocaust-Erinnerungen leidet.

Sunday, January 4, 2009

MySpace Makeover!

I promised changes for 2009 for UJG.com. I cleaned up the website a bit and then I decided to give the UJG.com MySpace a makeover! I added a new layout (flash) and I added pages. Check it out:


http://www.myspace.com/ultimatejeffgoldblum
!

Let me know what you think & please join!

Saturday, January 3, 2009

Official Adam Resurrected Trailer! (in German)

It's in German. Enjoy! Thanks! Anke!

Friday, January 2, 2009

Video: Adam Resurrected Interview - Pt. 1 & 2

Jeff Goldblum is interviewed by Elliot V. Kotek of Moving Pictures (with video by Alexis Madden) and talks about being involved in Adam Resurrected.

MovingPicturesMagazine.com


Part 1


Part 2