The Deal (2008)

35K
Share
Copy the link

The Deal: Directed by Steven Schachter. With William H. Macy, Meg Ryan, LL Cool J, Elliott Gould. A Hollywood producer starts with his nephew’s script on Disraeli, Jewish PM in 1800s UK, and ends filming in Cape Town with a black action star. Will a movie be made? Will he score Deidre/Meg Ryan?

“Bill Macy, Meg Ryan, Elliot Gould, and LL Cool J star in u0026quot;The Dealu0026quot; from 2008, directed by Steven Schachter and written by Macy and Schacter.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eMacy plays another loser, this time Charlie Berns, who has a couple of producer credits on his resume, but theyu0026#39;re not recent, and he canu0026#39;t get arrested. His nephew (Jason Ritter) gives him his script about Benjamin Disraeli to read. Heu0026#39;s not interested in it but then he sees an article about a major star in adventure films, Bobby Mason (LL Cool J) who has converted to Judaism and wants to do a film with a Jewish theme for his next project.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eCharlie manages to convince a studio that he has Bobby Masonu0026#39;s next kick your butt film and a studio executive, Deidre (Meg Ryan) is assigned to make it happen. Soon u0026quot;Bill u0026amp; Benu0026quot; is being filmed, with Bernsu0026#39; heartbroken nephew screaming, u0026quot;Thereu0026#39;s not one word of my script in this.u0026quot; Then Bobby Mason is kidnapped and held for ransom, and the studio doesnu0026#39;t want to pay. But Deidre has an idea.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eWeu0026#39;ve seen these behind the scenes getting a movie made before, and this is absurd but quite good. And how absurd is it? Probably not far off. Macy is excellent as Berns, who has been around the block a few times and knows how to talk his way into and out of trouble. This movie took a while to get made, so thereu0026#39;s no doubt Macy knew what he was talking about when he wrote the script – Iu0026#39;m sure it wasnu0026#39;t a new experience for him.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eRyanu0026#39;s role could have been played by anyone, but at 47 and once the ingénue du jour (as Rene Zwelleger, Reese Witherspoon, Julia Roberts, Susan Sarandon, and Sally Field once were), she has a problem. While leading men are leading men from the time theyu0026#39;re in their twenties until death, pert, pretty young actresses have a limited shelf life, and the transition to lead woman not only is difficult, itu0026#39;s often not even worth it since that doesnu0026#39;t last long either. Today things are much better — at least 30 is no longer the cut-off like it was in Bette Davisu0026#39; day — but the fact remains, unless your name is Meryl Streep, youu0026#39;ll be in character roles by the time youu0026#39;re 55. If you have a job. So I canu0026#39;t blame her for doing this role.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eGood, enjoyable movie, especially if youu0026#39;re a writer and know what happens to scripts in Hollywood.”

Comments

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *