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Salinger (film)

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Wikipedia article




'Salinger' is a 2013 American documentary film about the reclusive writer J. D. Salinger directed and produced by Shane Salerno. The film tells the story of Salinger's life through interviews with friends, historians, and journalists. The film premiered at the 40th annual Telluride Film FestivalHammond, Pete (September 2, 2013). [https://deadline.com/2013/09/telluride-weinsteins-salinger-world-premieres-to-strong-response-on-fests-last-day-576456/ "Telluride: Weinstein's 'Salinger' World Premieres To Strong Response On Fest's Last Day"]. 'Deadline Hollywood'. and had a second premiere on the opening night of the Toronto International Film Festival.

'Salinger' was one of the top-ten highest-grossing documentaries of 2013, with the highest per screen average of all the films that were released on its opening weekend. Two million viewers watched its broadcast on 'American Masters' on PBS.

Production history



According to Salerno, the project initially started as a feature film, with Daniel Day-Lewis as his choice to play Salinger.[https://charlierose.com/videos/18516 "Filmmaker Shane Salerno describes his fascination with the enigmatic author, J. D. Salinger, and the events that led to his documentary, 'Salinger', and its companion biography."]. 'Charlie Rose'. PBS. September 3, 2013.

Buddy Squires, Emmy-winning and Oscar-nominated cinematographer, was hired to shoot the film.

On January 29, 2010, the website 'Deadline Hollywood' first reported on the documentary, which had been kept secret for five years. Michael Fleming, the first journalist to view the film, called it "arrestingly powerful and exhaustively researched". Additionally, Fleming announced that Salerno had co-written a 700-page biography on Salinger with 'New York Times' bestselling author David Shields. On February 4, 2010, 'Entertainment Weekly' detailed the elaborate security surrounding the film.

When 'American Masters' executive producer Susan Lacy read about the project, she began a three-year pursuit to acquire the television rights to the documentary. On January 27, 2013, Lacy and PBS 'American Masters' concluded a deal for the domestic television rights to 'Salinger' for a low-seven-figure sum. Lacy said: "Shane's film is an extraordinary piece of work; the more recognition Salinger received, the more reclusive and enigmatic he became, refusing all interviews and trying to block all coverage. With the embargo finally lifted, it is my intellectual and emotional thrill to bring the inimitable J. D. Salinger into the 'American Masters' library. I cannot envision a more appropriate subject for our 200th broadcast in January."

On February 27, 2013, it was announced that producer Harvey Weinstein had acquired the documentary for theatrical distribution after being the only studio head to see the finished film following the 85th Academy Awards. Weinstein stated: "Shane Salerno has created a haunting piece of documentary filmmaking in 'Salinger'. We are in awe of the painstaking detail used in depicting a man who created truly timeless works of literature, but otherwise remained an enigma for so many years."Fleming, Mike, Jr. (March 21, 2013). [https://deadline.com/2013/03/toldja-weinstein-company-confirms-deal-for-shane-salerno-docu-salinger-sets-september-6-release-459059/ "TOLDJA! Weinstein Company Confirms Worldwide Rights Deal For Shane Salerno Docu 'Salinger'; Sets September 6 Release"]. Deadline Hollywood. The theatrical purchase price was $2 million and the release date of September 6, 2013 was chosen so that the film could be a candidate for the 86th Academy Awards.Fleming, Mike, Jr. (February 27, 2013). [https://www.deadline.com/2013/02/salinger-documentary-movie-harvey-weinstein-oscar-season-release/ "J.D. Salinger Documentary Acquired By Harvey Weinstein"]. Deadline Hollywood. It did not receive a nomination.

Cast



* Stephen Adly Guirgis

* Tom Wolfe

* Gore Vidal

* E. L. Doctorow

* A. Scott Berg

* John Guare

* Philip Seymour Hoffman

* Edward Norton

* John Cusack

* Martin Sheen

* Judd Apatow

* Danny DeVito

* Elizabeth Frank

* Margaret Salinger

* Robert Towne

* Joyce Maynard

Soundtrack



The film score was composed by Grammy Award-winning composer Lorne Balfe. It was released on September 17, 2013 by Decca Records, part of the Universal Music company.

Reception



'Salinger' received mixed reviews. On Rotten Tomatoes it has an approval rating of 36% based on 88 reviews, with an average rating of 5.40/10. The website's critics consensus reads: "A so-so documentary about a fascinating personality, 'Salinger' has moments of insight but is too often bogged down by reenactments and a lack of attention to the man's actual writings." On Metacritic it has a weighted average score of 40 out of 100 based on 28 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".

Peter Rainer from 'The Christian Science Monitor' called the film both "fascinating and infuriating".

When 'Salinger' premiered at the Telluride Film Festival, Pete Hammond of 'Deadline Hollywood' noted that the "riveting and stunning" film "caused a stir" at the festival. Ken Burns moderated the post-screening panel discussion and called the film "extraordinary." The first official reviews from the Festival both were grades of "B+", with Eric Kohn of 'Indiewire' calling 'Salinger' "unquestionably enthralling," adding that it "capably strips away the fanaticism associated with his books to create the impression of a human being," and Chris Willman of 'The Playlist' calling the film a "compelling mystery yarn." Marlow Stern of 'The Daily Beast' also wrote a piece after the Telluride premiere, saying "it is truly unbelievable how much research went into the making of this film, and it shows on screen," adding that 'Salinger' is "equal parts fascinating and exploitative, but one cant deny the astounding level of comprehensiveness on display."

Claudia Puig of 'USA Today' gave the film three out of four stars, saying "insightful gems are unearthed throughout the flawed but engrossing 'Salinger'...it's an exhaustively researched look at a compelling subject." Michael Ordona wrote in 'San Francisco Chronicle' that "'Salinger' overcomes some melodramatic moments and hit-or-miss cinematic devices to present a fascinating picture...a complex portrait of a complex man." Richard Roeper of 'Chicago Sun-Times' wrote that 'Salinger' is a "valuable and engrossing biography of the author of arguably the most beloved American novel of the 20th century." In the 'Los Angeles Times', Kenneth Turan stated that "the photographs and information Salerno unearthed over all that time are impressive" and that the documentary is "energetic, informative and at times over-dramatized." Mike Scott of 'The Times-Picayune' gave the documentary four out of five stars, calling it "comprehensive, authoritative and exhaustively researched...on the whole, 'Salinger' is an engrossing and eye-opening film." In the 'Seattle Times', Soren Andersen wrote the film is "rich in anecdote and visually arresting."

By contrast, writing in 'The New York Times', A. O. Scott found the film "garish and confusing," as well as "sloppy in matters of judgment and craft." Scott found that it "does not so much explore the life and times of J. D. Salinger as run them through a spin cycle of hype." In 'Vanity Fair', Bruce Handy called the film "awful," "breathless," "humid" and "overheated." Handy cited its many re-enactments, dubious use of personalities such as Martin Sheen as Salinger authorities, and "unforgivable use of corny cinematic devices to fill in the gaps and goose its own drama." He concluded, "In elevating Salinger into a gothic superman, the Dr. Doom of letters, it reeks with simple-minded grandiosity, a kind of inverse narcissism."

"'Salinger' proceeds in an order that's neither chronological nor thematic," wrote Dana Stevens in Slate.com, "making the film as a whole feel shapeless and pointlessly long." She thought it "no goddamn good," a "tabloid undertaking" and filled with "solemn, literal-minded vulgarity," concluding that Salinger's aura of "mystery is certainly hardy enough to withstand the voyeuristic onslaught of this self-aggrandizing, lurid documentary, which leaves the viewer feeling that we've been given a tour of Salinger's septic tank in hip waders without ever getting to knock on his door and say hello." Calling the film "the ultimate invasion of the author's privacy," Odie Henderson from RogerEbert.com found it "stalkerish," featuring "a creepy parade of people who were willing to hunt Salinger down in the hopes of getting answers to their psychological issues." Henderson wrote it was "a relentless assault" and concluded, "'Salinger' tells us almost nothing we don't already know." David Denby of 'The New Yorker' found 'Salinger' to be "self-important, redundant, and interminable." He compared the film to "a monstrous balloon that keeps re-inflating. If Salinger were around, he would reach for a pin."

Despite some "fascinating stories" and "undeniably interesting" material, wrote Jocelyn Noveck 'The Huffington Post', the film is "exhaustive, exhausting and overly hyped," characterized by a "kitchen-sink approach" and "needless dramatizations" that "will make some viewers feel queasy." Also in 'The Huffington Post', Marshall Fine thought the film "an overblown, overlong documentary about a famous writer, with little that is either truly revealatory or earth-shaking, at least if you've been paying attention at all for the past, oh, 50 years." He concluded, "If secrets were dynamite, this movie wouldn't have enough of them to blow its nose." In 'The Washington Post', Stephanie Merry found that "the film is much longer than it needs to be" and "riddled with overly evocative music, some of which sounds like it belongs in a thriller."

Despite "a few genuine gems" of information, wrote Andrew Barker in 'Variety', the film is marked by a "restless, ill-fittingly bombastic style," "jumpy cuts" and a "wildly inappropriate score" that is "almost comically out of sync with the subject, full of Zimmerian sub-bass pulses and saccharine string swells."

References




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