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For sale: Home where ‘Deep Throat’ was filmed

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The shaded Coconut Grove house was once the setting for an infamous film.

By Laura Vescey, Zillow

There are homes where famous films were shot that still enjoy a kind of real estate celebrity status all their own. But quite unlike the family-friendly Chicago house used for “Home Alone,” a Miami area property where one of the “classics” in adult film history was created is a little less celebrated.

In fact, the listing notes for this Coconut Grove real estate market oddity reflect the notion that the best remedy for it might be, well, a bulldozer. After several price reductions, the 1961 modern is currently priced to sell for $1.75 million, with much of the value resting in the .62 of an acre of land.

Not that one can’t imagine there might be a buyer out there who?would actually enjoy remodeling the house where scenes for “Deep Throat” were filmed. According to Miami New Times, the listing photos reveal that rooms where at least two scenes were filmed are clearly visible, including a grotto-like wine cellar:

“Deep Throat, the pioneering 1972 porno film, was partially shot in various places throughout Miami-Dade, and now an infamous mansion that was the setting for two of the film’s most infamous scenes is for sale. It can be yours for the price of $1.75 million.

Built and owned by bon vivant Baron Joseph “Sepy” De Bicske Dobronyi, the eccentric house is for sale after the “Baron” died in 2010.

The film follows the plight of Linda Lovelace (playing a fictionalized version of herself), a sexually liberated woman who … visits a doctor, and well, what do you know? The doctor apparently keeps his office in one of the mansion’s cottages.”

While the main house needs significant updates, it is an interesting structure with glass walls and unique interior spaces. The property is actually two separate lots, and has a free-form pool that sits below heavy foliage that creates a very private setting — which makes sense, given the property’s cinematic past.

According to Zillow’s mortgage calculator, a monthly payment on the Deep Throat home would be $6,441 a month, assuming a 20 percent down payment on a 30 year mortgage.

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The 5,413-square-foot home has 4 bedrooms and 4 baths.

Zillow

A free-form pool is also on the property.

See more photos of the home on Zillow.

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Interview: McG Talks Populist Filmmaking … – Film School Rejects

This Means War is, as McG puts it, exactly what you think a McG movie is. It?s as commercial and open as a movie can get, something the director has no shame about. Plenty scoff at the idea of loving the tag of a ?populist? filmmaker, not McG. Clearly he sees his films as being more than dumb fun, though, and strives to make sure they?re not that.

Films similar to This Means War usually don?t strike audience members as being a ?personal? project in some fashion. That doesn?t seem to be the case for McG, as he puts it. This Means War has a scene featuring two of the leads discussing Alfred Hitchock, and you can just feel the director taking the opportunity to talk through his characters. It?s a fanboy touch, and he came off as the most energetic kind in our conversation.

Here?s what McG had to say about embracing the title of a populist filmmaker, leaving behind med school for music and film, and reflecting on Terminator Salvation:

Have you been looking at the word-of-mouth screening reports anxiously?

The word-of-mouth screening reports are fantastic, but the critics are mixed. I?m disappointed. I mean, it?s never going to be the film that?s fun to say how much you loved it. To me, the success of the film is its originality. You can?t look at it and say, ?Oh, it?s just like this and that.? It?s its own animal, and that?s hard to do. I wish people would put more focus on that. You know, I read things about people kicking me because of my name. You know, ten or twelve years into this, that?s frustrating. It?s just the name I was given when I was born. Like, give me a break?

I don?t think you should take those opinions too seriously.

Yeah, but they?re out there. The voice is the voice. Look, I?m a populist filmmaker, and there?s no doubt about it. I don?t apologize for it. You know, you?re in an art form that?s designed to be seen by many people. It feels better when people respond to your material than when they respond negatively.

Did you know early on that you wanted to be a populist filmmaker?

Not necessarily. It?s just who I really am. I can?t be someone I?m not. I?m raised on all movies, and I certainly make no apology for enjoying E.T., Star Wars, Back to the Future, and Forrest Gump, films I thought were magical. And the films of David Lean. I would look at Doctor Zhivago?and I would dream about Russian landscapes [Laughs]. Just other worldly films were just what I was raised on. Between that and the music I?ve been exposed to my whole life, it?s just the path that I?ve walked. What you see is what you get. I feel like This Means War is a McG movie, you know what I mean? It?s like we all know what a Woody Allen movie is or a Quentin Tarantino movie or a Wes Anderson movie or a Michael Bay movie, and I think there?s such a thing as a ?McG movie.? It?s certainly the privilege of the audience to like that or hate that, but this is who I am. I like action, romance, and comedy very much. And I like honesty in what it means to be out there and be alive.

You can see the love for certain films in your work. I was watching Charlie?s Angels: Full Throttle the other day and I was surprised to see a reference to Cape Fear, with the score [Laughs].

[Laughs] Of course. I mean, that movie changed my life. Whenever I can, I have a guy getting out of jail [Laughs]. Yeah, I grew up in the home video age, so I had the opportunity to see every movie ever made. Everyday I would watch two or three movies, and I would just absorb them. I would look at Rope from Alfred Hitchcock, and I?d look for where he hid the cut and how it was achieved. I would watch Citizen Kane every week. Then I?d go see Tootsie three times over at the theater over the weekend. I?m just from the heart of the hearts. I?m just a genuine film enthusiast. I love movies, and I think because my life is boring and small. I grew up in a track housing community in the suburbs, and all I had was the movies to offer transport.

Is that where the personal side of populist filmmaking comes from, making homages to the movies you love??

Yeah, that to me? the movies are designed to work on different levels. For those who choose to pay a little more attention, there?s always cookies. Be it the Hitchcock references, the Gene Wilder references, or the fact that there?s a girl dancing to Montell Jordan?s ?This Is How We Do It,? while also watching Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. That?s two things: one, a very cool choice for a girl to be watching, so who doesn?t love that girl? And two: it?s obviously a metaphor for what Chris and Tom are experiencing through the movie. Yeah, that?s what I?m trying to do. It?s frustrating sometimes, because I don?t think many people notice that.

You also have a nod to Titanic.

Well, I have a nod to Titanic because the man who shot Titanic, Russell Carpenter, shot this movie. The irony of a movie within a movie amuses me. Again, it?s a lonely amusement because I don?t think there?s a whole lot of people coming out of the multiplex who make that connection. I mean, just the fact that Russell shot that shot being yelled at by Jim Cameron with Leo and Winslet up there on the ship, and now, in this, there?s a character watching that. And that?s just the art imitates type of thing that amuses me. I find that very fun and cheeky.

[Spoiler Alert]

That character, FDR, is a jerk for most of the movie, so it?s interesting to have his humanizing scene to be watching Titanic [Laughs].

We had to work very carefully that that character seemed worthy of her choice in the end. Hardy is so fundamentally empathetic and a guy at a moment of reflection in his life. Pine is just sort of this guy who wants to run around with super models, until he meets Reese. He thinks, ?Wait a second, I?d throw it all away, to have her at my side,? and I think Reese represents that in real life. I mean, you and I are two guys talking, and she?s just, for a lack of a better way to put, is wife material. She?s certainly pretty enough, intelligent enough, would keep you on your toes, let you get away with anything, and she?s just a dimensionalized, highest-quality woman.

What other endings did you have?

We had an ending where Tuck got the girl. We had an ending where neither got the girl. I wanted to hold on to the track race, the bitter, bitter last moment. I felt like I did that when I showed the movie to Reese in the editing room. Literally, we were 90 minutes into a 100 minute film and she looked at me and said, ?I don?t know who I?m going to choose.? At that moment I thought, ?Okay, I?ve done it: I?ve presented both characters fairly and you invest.?

[Spoiler Over]?

I could buy them neither getting the girl. It was ironic the day I saw the movie, in my writing class, we talked about contrasexuals, and I think Tuck and FDR are definitely that.

That?s interesting. Where do you study?

I?m at a community college. I?m going to Maryland next semester.?

Oh, that?s great. What city are you in?

Bethesda.

Oh, okay, I know it well. I spend a lot of time in DC. I?m in and out of your neck of the woods, with New York and Philly.

Did you go to film school?

No, I went to school to be a doctor, in fact. I was studying psychology and was getting ready to go to med school, until I realized my love was for music and film. I mean, I?ve been into music and film since before I have memories. I?m the youngest of three. My dad would listen to jazz, my sister would listen to disco, and my brother was listening to hard rock, Led Zeppelin and what have you. I grew up in this cacophonous house of people competing for sound space. Then we?d go to the movies and we?d watch whatever movie came on television, with great regularity, and that was just my life.

As soon as I figured out I was going to med school for all the wrong reasons, I said I was going to immerse myself in music and film, and I went for it. I started my own record label in Orange County, California. I was friends with Gwen Stefani and this kid Zack de la Rocha who was Rage Against the Machine. I knew a bunch of kids who were rock and rollers, so I started making their records and we wrote songs together. Because I was a still photographer, I had taken all the pictures for the band. In the age of music videos, I started shooting all their videos without knowing that?s what I was doing. It was just a way for me to develop my visual signature and putting a lot of film through the camera and keeping it moving.

That must have been a pretty big whiplash going from med school to that.

Sort of. All through med school I was super into the music scene, and I was into it in high school as well. I mean, I had orange dreadlocks down to my ass. In college I was always into it, but I felt pressure of staying the course of school, because I come from a very academic family. It wasn?t until I summoned enough courage to branch out on my own. My parents thought I was crazy and I was broke doing it. By the hair on my chinny chin chin, I pulled it off, got it together, and started making music videos in the golden age of music videos, when it was me, Spike Jonze, Hype Williams, David Fincher, Mark Romanek, and Michel Gondry. We all sort of came up in that period and carved out our niche.

It must have been a tough life decision, at the time.

It was a tough life decision, because I don?t have a rich uncle in Hollywood. I don?t have shit. You know, I had to bite, scratch, and kick. Actually, the first video I ever made I hid in a pizza box and had it delivered to the head of Atlantic Records, hoping he would think it was a pizza and be barely amused enough to watch it, and he did. It worked out. Nothing ever came easy, I promise you that.

Do you still have that feeling? Obviously it?s not easy getting a movie made, especially now.

Making movies is getting tougher and tougher because they?re very expensive and people have so many alternatives for entertainment. I mean, there?s so much quality television on, with Showtime and HBO and the networks. Video games are photo realistic. The net is amusing, and you can find anything you want on YouTube. The malls all look like Disneyland, so they?re fun to walk around in. There?s much more going on.

I?d imagine today you?d probably not be able to get We Are Marshall made at a studio.

I doubt it. I mean, it?s a very secular, Americana type of movie. I made that movie for personal reasons, because I was afraid of flying for about 15 or 20 years. That movie being about a plane crash was the equivalent of me walking into the bat cave and letting the bats fly all over me and just facing my fears. I had to fly into that airport, Huntington, West Virginia, where that plane crashed on approach. There was a very, very personal movie for me.

Did you also see it as setting a challenge for yourself, doing something very different compared to?Charlie?s Angels movies?

Yeah, I just wanted to expand my horizons. No matter what movie you make, people are going to try to put you in a box, and I?ve always fought against being put in a box. You know, to me, We Are Marshall was as antithetic as I could hope it to be from Charlie?s Angels. It was a very calm, very specific kind of movie that wasn?t ultra-colorful or bouncy. It was a drama that was about humanity and overcoming immeasurable grief, which, naturally, were not the themes of Charlie?s Angels [Laughs].

[Laughs] I was probably one of the people bashing the idea of that movie when it came out, but I just rewatched it and I think it works.

I hope so. I thought the girls were at the right place in the right time. You know, it was novel at the time to bring in Hong Kong wire-work that nobody had really done with women. The only powerful female action characters were what Sigourney Weaver did in Alien and, of course, Sarah Connor. I just though, ?Hey, why not?? I thought we?d have the girls own their beauty and still kick ass, and we?d have a good time doing it. It just seemed like the right thing at the right time.

When you got offered that ?

I didn?t get offered that. I had to beg, fight, and bite. I didn?t get offered shit. They said no seven times before I could go in there and get a meeting, to pitch what I thought was the film. I had to do the film in real time and the only person who was protecting me was Drew [Barrymore]. The studio wanted nothing to do with me at the time, but reluctantly they went for it.

What made you go after it like that?

I just really wanted to make a movie. I felt that I understood the tone of the movie. For This Means War, it was meant to be funny, action packed, contemporary, funny, aspirational, escapist and filled with joy and heart, and there?s are all the touch words of why critics hate the material. Like I said, I just can?t apologize for who I am. I am who I am, and I gotta stay the course now.

Tonally, they both go for that cool vibe: good-looking people doing cool things.?

Well, yeah, unapologetically so. I come from the world of movie stars. I like Cary Grant, Rock Hudson, and movies that are larger than life, like The Sound of Music and even Pretty Woman, for God?s sakes. I have no problem with perpetuating the idea of aspirational, beautiful filmmaking, and I like that. It?s a very unchic thing to say, but I like those movies and I?ll continue to see those movies. I always want intelligence to be there. If anything, my hope is to be smart fun. Nothing?s worst than boring, bad jokes and humor that?s not clever, and that?s decidedly not fun [Laughs]. There?s an element of subversive filmmaking in the choices I make and I try to keep it lively. For those who choose to look a little deeper, I think there?s always something to be discovered.

Obviously making films of this scope, how do you maintain a level of respect for a big audience?

I definitely respect the audience. I?m not interested in seeing films behind closed screening doors. I go the multiplexes all over the nation and all over the world. When I sit in the theater, I listen to the rhythm of the audience. I like to watch movies that I produce or I?m behind in any way, and watch it through the lens of an audience because I?m still that kid in the audience dreaming about the movies. You know, I would argue the most prolific filmmaker in history is Steven Spielberg, and he tries to do the same thing. Spielberg is a film fan first. He?s a fan. I?m a fan. I mean, Martin Scorsese?s a fan and Quentin Tarantino?s a fan, and those were the two strongest supporters I got when I made Charlie?s Angels. Quentin Tarantino and Martin Scorsese told me how much they like the movie, and I thought they were pulling my leg. I nearly fell over. That gives me a lot of courage.

Will you go see This Means War Friday night with an audience?

Always. I do that every time I make a movie. I?ll go tomorrow night when it sneaks on Valentine?s Day.

Do you find that never-wracking?

Yeah, because you want it to play well. You know, I just enjoy it and let the truth be the truth. We?ll let the chips fall where they may. I?ve sat in many theaters with this film and I?ve heard it play, and it?s a real crowd-pleaser. I think the jokes are very funny, I think Chelsea works well, and the chemistry between the two guys are great. You can believe in Tom Hardy and Chris Pine. As a guy, you can be excited about what those guys are doing. One guy?s Kirk and one guy?s Bane, for God?s sake.

[Laughs] It?s an interesting transition going to This Means War from Terminator Salvation, which, in popcorn movie terms, was bleak. Was it a conscious decision to make something lighter?

Yeah? listen, Terminator is one of those ones ? I like the movie, but I would change the ending a little bit, if I could. I thought that movie was of the highest-quality. I thought Bale and Sam were amazing. I thought the movie worked very, very well. I?d like to sit and watch that movie with people who didn?t like it and genuinely ask, ?What is it about this movie you?re not responding to?? I like the action, the idea of how this is how Skynet came to be, Sam?s character, what Helena Bonham Carter did, and I definitely like what Bale was up to. I thought the action, the fun, and the grit was killer. I think that cameo we got out of the computer generated hybrid Arnold? I mean, I did everything I could to honor the hardcore fans, which I am one. Nobody can look at me and say, ?I?m more into Terminator than you are.? The irony is, as people shat all over Terminator Salvation, don?t we all wish there was another one coming out this summer with Christian and Sam? I do.

I think some people were thrown off by the structure, where you weren?t really sure whose story it was.

That?s fairly put. I wish I could have shown you a rough cut early on and you could have brought that to my attention.

[Laughs] Did you test the film? Don?t you usually find that stuff out during that process?

Sometimes. I mean, for a big movie like, you don?t really test as much as I?d like to because they?re afraid of all the linking online. In retrospect, I would?ve tested the movie to find that feedback you spoke of. That would?ve been tremendous and valuable. You just get lost in the editing room, where you get mono-vision. I mean, you?re so close to the picture and it?s difficult.

With that movie, you also face the problem of what fans envision as that future. Every fan had an idea of what they want to see from that war, so that must have been a challenge.

I mean, it was difficult to please? you know, the movie made like 400 million dollars, so it?s not like it took shit. People liked it, it did well, and the reviews were mixed, and I wish it was an overwhelmingly positive thing. I wish we were making two more right now that Christian and I planned on making, but the rights got tied up with some crazy legal thing. We?ll see.

I know a lot of footage was cut from that movie. Do you think there?s a longer or different cut out there that could please fans who were more mixed on it?

Maybe. I mean, I?ve definitely got the footage to tell the story in a different way. I also have the black ending, which is where? let?s just put it this way: Skynet wins.

[Laughs] I read that leaked report.

[Laughs] So, you know, that?s out there. Maybe one day we?ll put that DVD together. Well, I?ll put that version together, since I don?t think DVD?s going to be around much longer.

Have you talked to Warners about releasing that cut?

Yeah, we?ve talked about it. When the time is right, we?ll do it.

Great. To end on and bring it back to This Means War, you could argue what the characters are doing is very selfish and pretty questionable. Did you ever think that the dilemma could easily become mean-spirited?

No, I think all the characters bring such good-will to the cinematic experience that they can getaway with it. I mean, some may frown on a woman dating two guys at the same time, but we all know Reese to be such a good person, and not a manipulative person. You benefit from that. She does it in a way that?s reluctant and Chelsea Handler?s pushing her into it. I think it becomes okay and just in the spirit of fun. Ultimately, it?s a good-spirited movie, not a mean-spirited movie. I think people just immerse themselves in the fun of what?s going on.

This Means War is now in theaters.

Source: http://www.filmschoolrejects.com/features/interview-mcg-this-means-war-jgiro.php

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Documentary makers spur calls to action at Sundance (omg!)

PARK CITY, Utah (Reuters) – Each year documentaries at the Sundance Film Festival are among the best movies here, and in 2012 nonfiction works on subjects from the healthcare crisis to the war on drugs and rape in the military are wowing crowds and spurring calls to action.

Sundance is the premiere U.S. film festival for movies made outside of Hollywood’s mainstream studios, and it is among the world’s elite gatherings for documentary makers. Sundance backer and activist Robert Redford, is an avid supporter of the form.

Oscar-winner “An Inconvenient Truth” debuted here, and as it did in boosting environmental causes, many other documentaries also use Sundance to launch social cause campaigns. Succinctly put: when documentaries talking at Sundance, people listen.

“If there’s a well-made film about an issue, it’s not just a great film the festival is showing, but an issue (Sundance) is putting on the front burner,” said writer and director Kirby Dick, whose documentary on rape within the US military, “The Invisible War,” had its world premiere at the festival.

Many of the documentaries here at Sundance 2012, which runs through January 29, tell of struggles facing ordinary and poor Americans. Some, like “Invisible War” shed light on a problem that was little-known before, while others take on broad topics.

Director Eugene Jarecki’s “The House I Live In” tackles America’s long, failed war on drugs. Jarecki, director of other nonfiction films such as “Why We Fight,” critiques drug policies, courts, prisons and their impact on minorities.

Macky Alston highlights the struggles of homosexuality in organized religion in “Love Free or Die” in which he follows the Episcopal Church’s first openly gay bishop, Gene Robinson, and his contentious battle for acceptance in the faith.

And “Escape Fire: The Fight to Rescue American Healthcare” points out that despite rising healthcare costs, the outcomes faced by patients often are worse than they have been in years.

“There’s so much misunderstanding about what’s wrong with healthcare, how we can fix it and how we can move forward,” the film’s co-director and producer Matthew Heineman told Reuters. “The goal of our film has been to clarify these issues — why it’s broken, why it doesn’t fundamentally want to change and people out there who are trying to change it.”

The film’s co-director and producer Susan Froemke hoped the festival might be “a launching point for starting a movement and to understand how to change health in our country.”

“TELL YOUR FRIENDS”

The filmmakers behind “Finding North,” have similar hopes for their documentary, which focuses on the hunger problem in America. Directors Lori Silverbush and Kristi Jacobson implored their audience to take action at the film’s premiere.

“The very first step is you came to see this movie,” Silverbush told the crowd. “Now go and tell your friends because the zeitgeist will fix this. When we get the political will as a nation to end hunger, we will. We did it before.”

With soup kitchens on the rise and one in six Americans not getting enough food, according to the film, “there’s not a lot of action in (Washington) D.C. on the issue and we do hope that this film will change that,” added Jacobson.

In Dick’s “Invisible War,” the filmmaker follows the shattered lives of servicewomen (and a few servicemen) who were assaulted by their fellow soldiers while enlisted. He felt compelled to tell their story for numerous reasons.

“The primary objective is to raise awareness. That’s why we made this film,” Dick told Reuters. “Over 500,000 women have been assaulted in the military and it is shocking to me that so few people know about it. I’ve never made a film where the subject matter was so secretive, so covered up.”

Kirby said he wanted to let “let our county know that the people who are protecting us are not being protected” and to let survivors know that they are not alone. He hopes that the U.S. military, Congress and the White House will “step up and do the things that need to be done to change this.”

With all the pressing issues affecting the U.S., Kirby believes that the voice of the documentarian is an important one and Sundance is crucial for allowing them that platform.

“There’s a sense in this country that things need to change,” he said. “Documentary filmmakers, along with others, are trying to reflect that, to sound the alarm, to put the word out.”

(Editing by Christine Kearney and Bob Tourtellotte)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/news_documentary_makers_spur_calls_action_sundance033533477/44294777/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/documentary-makers-spur-calls-action-sundance-033533477.html

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