| Bobcat
Goldthwait called me yesterday with some exciting news:
Magnolia Pictures has picked up his outlandish Robin
Williams comedy "World's Greatest Dad," a
delightfully raunchy and subversive work that served
as my guilty pleasure earlier this year at the Sundance
Film Festival.
Goldthwait said that Magnolia will release the film
on VOD prior to a theatrical release in late August,
following a model the company employed most recently
with the Joaquim Phoenix drama "Two Lovers."
The story of a single high school teacher (Williams)
who cashes in on his newfound popularity in the wake
of his teenage son's suicide, "World's Greatest
Dad" dares to turn personal tragedy into a punchline.
Williams outshines all his performances in recent
studio comedies, mainly because the material allows
him the freedom to be subversive.
But the movie doesn't take an experimentally humorous
route à la the Coen brothers or stay consistently
gross in the vein of the Farrellys. Instead, it applies
a twisted premise to a seemingly innocuous dramedy
about family ties, and therein lies its appeal. To
some people.
Goldthwait's background as a standup comic and actor
in the "Police Academy" movies tired him
out a few years ago, so he started writing screenplays
and discovered his real passion as a filmmaker. His
low-budget 2006 feature " "Sleeping Dogs
Lie" centered on a woman's inability to confess
that she fellated her dog in college.
Although it has somewhat stronger production values,
"World's Greatest Dad" continues in a similar
vein with uncomfortable situations and unpredictable
outcomes. Given the hard-R nature of the material,
Goldthwait said he's glad that Magnolia bought the
movie, rather than a less risky distributor.
"I'm not afraid they're going to market it as
a family comedy," Goldthwait said. "That
would be the biggest mistake." He's friendly
with Magnolia president Eamonn Bowles and trusts his
judgement. "Over the years, I have received his
input," Goldthwait says. "At this point
in my life, I just want to work with people I like."
The movie's biggest asset, of course, is Williams.
The actor, one of Goldthwait's closest pals, had heart
surgery on March 13, but Goldthwait hopes Williams
can still help promote the movie. "He's on the
high end on the curve to recovery," Goldthwait
said. "When I saw him the other day, he had a
lot of color and looked great. He's really supportive
of the movie."
Williams's celebrity stature obviously could help
"World's Greatest Dad" find an audience,
but some people are already turned off by the edgy
nature of the movie's content. Goldthwait fumed about
a recent decision by the Minneapolis/St. Paul International
Film Festival to drop the movie as its opening night
title, possibly due to complaints after news of its
presence in the lineup leaked online.
"It's kind of insulting," Goldthwait said.
"I figured out why the Coen brothers left that
state. It's like getting uninvited from the wedding
because I nailed the bride."
Nevertheless, the movie will screen at several other
regional festivals before its August release, including
the Syracuse International Film Festival, which takes
place in Goldthwait's hometown. Meanwhile, he's keeping
busy with standup work and a new screenplay that sounds
far more ambitious than his earlier films: It's an
adaptation of The Kinks's 1975 album "Schoolboys
in Disgrace."
"I want to make a musical out of it," Goldthwait
said. "It's an album I've loved all my life."
He recently met with Kinks frontman Ray Davies to
discuss the project. "I got in the room with
him and sweated like I was on the Chris Farley Show,"
he joked, referencing the classic "Saturday Night
Live" sketch where the actor got nervous around
movie stars.
I told Goldthwait I get that way around him when I
think about "Police Academy." He laughed.
"I already sold out at an early part of my career,"
he said. "I'm trying to move away from that."
This article was published April
09, 2009. By Eric Kohn, The Wrap. |