Saturday, September 25, 2010

Affleck states Joaquin Phoenix meltdown in I'm Still Here is a hoax

”I’m Still Here” is all a lie. There was mainly a performance done shown within the “documentary” about Joaquin Phoenix’s downward spiral. There was so much talk by film critics about the film. Really soon, though, director of “I’m Still Here,” Casey Affleck, couldn’t keep it in anymore. The movie had anything in it staged. Even the appearance on David Letterman and the rap performances Phoenix gave on drugs were staged. Affleck things that “I’m Still Here” shows how good Phoenix is in her career. Phoenix may just have ruined his career though. Affleck can jump on that bandwagon too. Article source – Affleck says Joaquin Phoenix meltdown in I’m Still Here is a hoax by Personal Money Store.

Calling it the Phoenix mockumentary

The New York Times showed an interview with Casey Affleck and Michael Cieply Thursday talking regarding the contrived “I’m Still Here”. The movie allegedly documented the deterioration of the mind, body and spirit of Joaquin Phoenix after he received an Academy Award nomination for his portrayal of Johnny Cash in “I Walk the Line.”. Phoenix performed for two years for this. He grew a scraggly beard. He gained weight. Even the TV host on David Letterman was completely fooled by his character in a 2009 appearance. Affleck told the Times that he had to speak out following the extreme negative response to the film by critics and also the public. The Letterman Show has invited Phoenix back to talk to. This can be happening September 22.

Media works for making it more known

A choice motive may be in Affleck’s mind as he admit that Joaquin Phoenix was in “I’m Still Here” as a mockumentary. He may just be trying to get more viewers. Washington Post bloggers Jen Chaney and Liz Kelly said Phoenix and Affleck are letting everyone in on the joke now hoping for making individuals more likely to determine the film and understand correctly what they were trying to achieve. The movie doing well does not really matter, they say. What is significant is that society sees that any person can become self destructive in public, even Academy Award nominee.

Deception triggers Hollywood backlash

There aren’t that numerous people interested within the objectives of the filmmaker. Patrick Goldstein, a Hollywood reporter for the Los Angeles Times, said the “I’m Still Here” ruse will backfire on Affleck and Phoenix. Goldstein shows the opinion of show-biz insiders. They feel the movie is “self-important, exercise in foolishness, concocted by two knuckleheads who seemed peeved either because they did not have successful A-list careers or because they thought the industry was too dull and mindless to allow them to take the kind of bold risks that real artists take.” Goldstein had a source say in response to Phoenix’s appearance on Letterman here soon, “Boy, if Letterman was not in on the joke, he is really going to take that poor guy to the cleaners.”

Additional reading

New York Times

nytimes.com/2010/09/17/movies/17affleck.html?_r=2

Washington Post

voices.washingtonpost.com/celebritology/2010/09/joaquin_phoenix_yes_it_was_a_h.html

Los Angeles times

latimesblogs.latimes.com/the_big_picture/2010/09/will-casey-affleck-end-up-in-movie-jail-after-admitting-im-not-here-was-a-hoax.html



No comments: