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The Dying Gaul

 
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The Dying Gaul

  • Director: Craig Lucas
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Psychological Drama
  • Themes: Infidelity, Filmmaking, Self-Destructive Romance
  • Main Cast: Patricia Clarkson, Campbell Scott, Peter Sarsgaard, Robin Bartlett, Ebon Moss-Bachrach
  • Release Year: 2004
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 105 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

An artist who compromises his work for money finds his heart and soul are also being toyed with by his new patrons in this drama. Robert (Peter Sarsgaard) is a playwright who has recently lost his longtime lover and business partner, Malcolm (Bill Camp), to AIDS-related illnesses. Robert has written a screenplay about their relationship, called "The Dying Gaul," and is interested in selling the project to powerful producer Jeffrey (Campbell Scott). However, while Jeffrey likes the script, he tells Robert that he's not about to spend money on a film about a gay couple -- though he'll give him one million dollars for the screenplay under the condition he turns the character of "Maurice" into a woman so the film will be easier to sell. While Robert is secretly appalled by the idea, he's also deep in debt and wants the film to be made, so he agrees to make the changes. Robert is soon invited into the inner circle of Jeffrey and his wife, Elaine (Patricia Clarkson), herself a talented screenwriter until their marriage put an end to her career. Jeffrey finds himself fascinated by Robert, and soon begins seducing him both physically and intellectually, while Elaine is also deeply attracted to him. As Robert and Elaine become close friends, she also begins pursuing him in on-line chat rooms, playing on his emotional weaknesses as she fashions a story of her own. The Dying Gaul was the first directorial credit for playwright and screenwriter Craig Lucas. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Cast

Bill Camp - Malcolm; Linda Emond - Dr. Foss; Elizabeth Marvel - Kelli; Kelli O'Hara - Liz; Thomas Jay Ryan; Dee Dee Flores - Emad; Ryan Miller - Max; Faith Jefferies - Debbon; Don Jonson - Male Guest

Credit

Victoria Ruskin - Art Director, Kimberly Reiss - Associate Producer, George W. Scott - Boom Operator, Douglas Aibel - Casting, Douglas Aikean - Casting, John Machione - Co-producer, Daniel Glicker - Costume Designer, Danny Clicker - Costume Designer, Mike Booke - First Assistant Director, Craig Lucas - Director, Andy Keir - Editor, Joel Posner - Executive Producer, P.J. Posner - Executive Producer, Elba Luis Lugo - Executive Producer, Jerome Swartz - Executive Producer, Joseph Caruso III - Executive Producer, Jerome Schwartz - Executive Producer, David Newman - Executive Producer, Paul E. Cohen - Executive Producer, Jonathan III Caruso - Executive Producer, Shawn Fitzgerald - Executive Producer, Paul Manafort - Executive Producer, Inc. Muvi Films - Executive Producer, James Barber - Location Manager, Lisa Zimble - Line Producer, Steve Reich - Composer (Music Score), Linda Cohen - Musical Direction/Supervision, Simone Almekias-Seigl - Makeup, Simone Oliver - Camera Operator, Vincent Jefferds - Production Designer, Bobby Bukowski - Cinematographer, Haley B. Sweet - Production Manager, Campbell Scott - Producer, George VanBuskirk - Producer, Ira Spiegel - Sound/Sound Designer, David Waelder - Sound/Sound Designer, 701 Sound - Sound/Sound Designer, Kevin Sorenson - Sound/Sound Designer, Chad Birmingham - Sound Editor, Craig Lucas - Screenwriter, Alan Caudillo - Second Unit Director Of Photography, Simone Oliver - Second Unit Director Of Photography, Steven Flynn - Production Assistant, Lexi Andross - Production Assistant, Margorie Baer - Production Assistant, Nicole Cramer - Production Assistant, Mariusz Glabinski - Sound Effects Editor, IDPR - Publicist, Maxim Edward Neal - First Assistant Camera, Jamie Heintz - Grip, Tony P. Jerrels - Grip, David Harold Leite - Grip, Dwayne Platz - Grip, Timothy Jipping - Grip, Robert Barone - Grip, John S. Robertson - Key Grip, Art Bartels - Key Grip, Mariusz Glabinski - Music Editor, Kelley Cribben - Post Production Supervisor, Celeste "Cece" Healy - Production Supervisor, Jane Gulick - Properties Master, Martin Czembor - Re-Recording Mixer, Jeanne Byrd Hall - Script Supervisor, Janell Sammelman - Second Assistant Director, Kenny Chaplin - Second Assistant Director, Lewis Jacobs - Still Photographer, Neil Jacobs - Still Photographer, Marlena Grzaslewicz - Supervising Sound Editor, Erika Munro - Assistant Costumer Designer, Rusty F. Tinder - Assistant Location Manager, Nick Staller - Assistant Location Manager, Joan Johnson - Assistant Production Coordinator, Micki Krimmel - Assistant Properties, Edward B. Bernstein - Best Boy Electric, Christopher A. Zwirner - Best Boy Electric, Sean Del Ruth - Camera Loader, Deborah Maxwell Dion - Casting Associate, Stephanie Holbrook - Casting Associate, Dayton Nietert - Chief Lighting Technician, Barry Gross - Chief Lighting Technician, Steve Morey - Construction Coordinator, Claudia Wick - Costumes Supervisor, Bruce Kitzmeyer - Dialogue Editor, Edward R. Gutierrez - Dolly Grip, Jim Saldutti - Dolly Grip, Alan Colbert - Electrician, Nathan December - Electrician, Edwin E. Lool - Electrician, Dixie Webster - Extra Casting, Soo Jin Yoon - Key Hairstylist, Heather Plott - Key Make-up, George Karnoff - Leadman, Davis Priestley - Personal Assistant, Gavin J. Behrman - Production Accountant, Matthew A. Del Ruth - Second Assistant Camera, Pete Washburn - Set Dresser, Jake Stone - Set Dresser, Nelson Hull - Set Dresser, Ross A. Parker - Set Dresser, Seth William Meier - Set Production Assistant, Erin Kane - Set Production Assistant, Joshua Gallegos - Set Production Assistant, Lucky Larry Levine - Transportation Captain, Stephanie Ziemer - Set Decorator, Craig Lucas - Play Author, Tim Song Jones - Cable Person, Daniel R. Jewell - Construction Foreman, Linda Gordon - Craft Service/Catering, Limelight Catering - Craft Service/Catering, Carlos Guel - Craft Service/Catering, John C. V. Wright - Craft Service/Catering, Billy Kane - Driver, James Lee - Driver, Guy J. Graves - Driver, John L. Grissom - Driver, Harry Bchakjian - Driver, Curt Adam Butram - Driver, Bruce Leo Cumtois - Driver, Audrey Fitzgerald - Driver, Philip W. Henderson - Driver, Anthony John Mignano - Driver, Vito San Filippo - Driver, Magic Film & Video Works - Negative Cutter, Jeff Gardner - Set Medic/First Aid, Sandy Townsend - Set Medic/First Aid, Title House - Title Design, Ilana M. Gordon - Art Department Coordinator, Misako Shimizu - Assistant Editor, Nanci Cascio - Department Head Hair, Ed Lindsey - Properties Maker, Craig Mercer - Properties Maker

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Wikipedia: The Dying Gaul (film)
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The Dying Gaul

Original poster
Directed by Craig Lucas
Produced by Campbell Scott
Written by Craig Lucas
Starring Patricia Clarkson
Peter Sarsgaard
Campbell Scott
Music by Steve Reich
Cinematography Bobby Bukowski
Editing by Andy Keir
Distributed by Strand Releasing
Release date(s) November 4, 2005
Running time 105 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Gross revenue $345,041 (Worldwide) [1]

The Dying Gaul is a 2005 American drama film written and directed by Craig Lucas. The screenplay is based on his 1998 off-Broadway play, [2] the title of which was derived from an ancient Roman marble copy of a lost Hellenistic sculpture.

Contents

Plot

In 1995 Hollywood, novice screenwriter Robert Sandrich has written an autobiographical script inspired by his lover's death by AIDS-related cerebral tuberculosis. It impresses both studio executive Jeffrey Tishop and his wife Elaine, but for commercial reasons Jeffrey is willing to greenlight the project only if Robert changes his protagonist from Maurice to Maggie and shifts the focus of his plot from gay to straight people. Robert initially refuses to compromise his principles, but when Jeffrey threatens to make the film without his participation, he decides to accept the $1 million paycheck he's been offered and make the requested edits.

Both Jeffrey and Elaine find themselves attracted to Robert, who becomes a frequent guest in their Malibu home and soon drifts into a sexual relationship with the manipulative producer. The connection Elaine feels to the grieving young man is more emotional and cerebral than physical and, after discovering Robert is addicted to Internet chat rooms, she tracks him down online and engages him in conversation while posing as a gay man. Using information he has revealed to her in person, she eventually manages to convince him he is communicating with his dead lover. Complications ensue when Robert reveals he's having an affair with his boss, forcing Elaine to face the truth about her seemingly perfect marriage and prompting a confrontation that leads to tragedy.

Cast

Distribution

The film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2005 and was shown at the Miami Gay and Lesbian Film Festival, the Seattle International Film Festival, the Provincetown International Film Festival, the Philadelphia International Gay and Lesbian Film Festival, the Montréal World Film Festival, Film Fest New Haven, the Rio de Janeiro International Film Festival, and the Austin Film Festival before opening in eleven theaters in the United States on November 4, 2005.

Critical reception

Stephen Holden of the New York Times called it "a boldly expressionistic, proudly theatrical film" and said Craig Lucas "makes an auspicious, nervy debut as a screen director." [3]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times thought "there are implausibilities in the plot devices that lead the movie to its ultimate conclusion. And then the final developments themselves, I think, are wrong in both theory and practice. There is some ambiguity about why a final event takes place, and that's all right, but the way in which the movie reveals it is, I think, singularly ineffective. It leads to one of those endings where you sit there wishing they'd tried a little harder to think up something better." [4]

Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle observed the film "has the best kind of story in that it unfolds as a series of surprises, and yet every step, twist and turn seems inevitable in retrospect. Just in terms of plot, it's a meticulous piece of construction, with key information gracefully planted and nothing extraneous. On mechanics alone, it would qualify as satisfying entertainment. Yet The Dying Gaul is hardly a mere mechanical construction . . . Lucas' insight into the subtleties of interaction - and the churning depths that those subtleties suggest - is of a whole other order than that of most film directors. In this psychological thriller, the psychological isn't neglected; it's intrinsic." [5]

Peter Travers of Rolling Stone rated the film three out of four stars and commented, "Lucas the director serves Lucas the playwright beautifully, giving the film a seductive gleam that only enhances the shock when he reveals the toxicity underneath. The actors could not be better. Sarsgaard, Scott and the luminous Clarkson negotiate the film's razor-sharp laughs and bone-deep tragedy with resonant skill. Lucas' powerfully haunting film gets under your skin." [6]

Awards and nominations

Craig Lucas was nominated for the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival. The National Board of Review cited the film for Special Recognition For Excellence In Filmmaking.

DVD release

Sony Pictures Home Entertainment released the film on Region 1 DVD on March 21, 2006. It is in anamorphic widescreen format with an audio track and subtitles in English. Bonus features include deleted scenes and an alternate ending.

References

External links


 
 

 

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