The blog of author Dennis Cooper

Brad Renfro Day *

* (restored)

 

‘Brad Renfro’s whole career started, improbably enough, because as an 11-year-old fifth-grader, he’d been difficult in a Drug Abuse Resistance Education class taught by a retired policeman. “He was absolutely your problem child,” says Dennis Bowman. “The very first day, I kicked him out of class.” Bowman grew to like Renfro but said that “he was still a piece of work as far as being out of control.”

‘By many accounts, he came from a troubled background. His dad, a factory worker, and his mom split up when he was a toddler, and his mom deposited him on the Knoxville inner-city steps of his paternal grandmother. Says Bowman, “The grandmother was trying her best to raise a kid who was taking advantage of the situation and creating a lot of stress on her.”

‘At the time, the late casting director Mali Finn was conducting a search for a kid to star in “The Client,” the movie version of the John Grisham legal thriller about a Southern trailer-park kid who winds up embroiled in a Mafia hit. “We wanted that kid in the principal’s office. That endearing, mischievous boy that may be lying to you, may not be telling you the truth, but you’re still charmed by him,” says casting director Emily Schweber, Finn’s associate at the time. When one of Finn’s letters describing their search arrived at the Knoxville Police Department, Bowman immediately thought of Renfro.

‘After auditioning him in her hotel room, Finn called Schweber and said, “I found him.” Both Finn and Joel Schumacher later called J.J. Harris, who now manages such stars as Charlize Theron, to check out their child lead. Harris flew to the North Carolina set to watch Renfro work and was charmed. “You just wanted to take care of this boy. He was a gorgeous little boy. Rough-and-tumble. Very self-aware,” she says. “He’d say things like, ‘Nobody can put up with me ’cause I’m too hot to handle.’ ”

‘Adds Harris, “He was just obviously screaming for someone to establish some kind of boundaries for him, something that never happened in his life.”

‘When Bowman finally saw “The Client,” he thought Renfro “wasn’t acting. Brad played himself. He had these street smarts and the swagger of a 19- or 20-year-old. If you met somebody like that now, your first reaction would be, ‘What a punk.’ But you scrape away all these layers, you think this is a 12-year-old trying to act tough.”

‘Even then there were signs of addiction issues. Renfro could be sneaky. As one who knew him well noted that any bottles of booze would invariably disappear when Renfro was around. Still, he managed to launch his career, flying from Knoxville to Los Angeles, often by himself, for auditions. The assistants at his agency, United Talent Agency, would drive him to meetings with casting directors, and the rest of the time he’d mostly cruise the agency halls and flirt with all the women. “This wasn’t a bad kid – this was a really emotionally abandoned person,” says Harris.

‘His vulnerability combined with a tough persona entranced Hollywood. He was cast as a compassionate roughneck who befriends a kid suffering from AIDS in “The Cure,” and as Huck Finn in “Tom and Huck.” “He was exactly what you would expect – a brooding, intense, rebellious fellow,” says “Tom and Huck” producer Larry Mark. “He got a kick out of not going the straight and narrow.”

‘In “Sleepers,” Barry Levinson’s drama about four neighborhood kids who are abused by sadistic guards in juvenile prison, he played the younger version of Brad Pitt’s character. Knowing of his wildness, Levinson mandated that Renfro be accompanied by a minder 24 hours a day. Levinson later told a reporter, “He was fraught with demons and needed help.”

‘In “Apt Pupil,” Renfro’s last major studio movie, he played a compassionless A-student entranced by a former Nazi commandant – played by Ian McKellen – living incognito in the suburbs. “I knew he’d been wrestling for years with different problems,” says director Bryan Singer. “But on workdays, he was always focused and into it. Quite professional.”

‘But off-screen, there could be a manic energy and a radiating neediness. “You could tell he didn’t have any sort of adult guidance. People couldn’t help themselves but become unofficial guardians of him,” says producer Don Murphy.

‘In 1998, the year “Apt Pupil” was released, Renfro was busted for cocaine and marijuana, beginning what became a long odyssey through the legal system, with a half-dozen arrests.

‘Although Clark had a minder staying with Renfro during the “Bully” production in the summer of 2000, the actor climbed out a second-story window and stole down to a nearby marina. According to Clark, Renfro “met some coke dealer and got (messed) up.” He hot-wired a yacht and gunned it – except he forgot to untie the boat. Renfro was arrested and charged with grand theft. He ultimately pleaded out and was sentenced to a fine and two years’ probation. But, Clark says, “He was so good you would kind of forgive him for being a (screw)-up – for a minute.”

‘Yet, after causing a delay on “Bully,” it became hard for Renfro to get insurance, says Harris, and hence harder for him to land parts. “It got to a place where I ran out of options,” says the agent, who’d seen him through two stints at rehab and numerous futile conversations about staying clean.

‘To those in Hollywood, he inevitably seemed worse when he returned from his home in Knoxville. Or when he wasn’t working, and there wasn’t a Hollywood-designated minder watching over him. “He wasn’t good at that going-home bit, going back to his life” after the social activity of a movie set, adds Guy Ferland. As an associate producer on “The Client,” Ferland would help keep Renfro healthily occupied in off hours, and he also directed him in “Telling Lies in America.” “I’m not sure Brad really liked being alone. There was always some party, whatever he needed to do to keep the energy going.”

‘Renfro quit J.J. Harris around 2001 and never spoke to her again, although he continued to work on smaller films, little seen, sometimes low-rent indies such as “Deuces Wild” and “The Job.”

‘In 2006, he spent 10 days in jail for DUI and heroin possession. “He was very conscious that he was alone in the world and didn’t have the kind of family and support system that others had,” says his former lawyer Blair Berk.

‘As recently as last June, a judge declared he’d violated his probation by not enrolling in a long-term drug-treatment program, which he subsequently did. “We thought he turned the corner over the last six months. He’d been clean,” says another of his lawyers, Richard Kaplan.

‘Renfro died from an accidental overdose of heroin, Los Angeles County coroner’s officials said. A Los Angeles roommate found him dead in his bed. Two days earlier, he’d had an obscene tattoo applied to his chest.’ — Rachel Abramowitz

 

_____
Stills





















































 

____
Further

Brad Renfro @ IMDb
Hollywood Wanted An Edgy Child Actor. When He Spiraled, They Couldn’t Help.
BRAD RENFRO LAID TO REST IN HOMETOWN FUNERAL; ACTOR REPORTEDLY HAD A SON
An interview with Brad Renfro on the occassion of his passing
Communicating with Deceased Actor Brad Renfro
Brad Renfro: Some celebrities fall into cycle of destruction
Susan Sarandon on Brad Renfro
Actor Brad Renfro left out of Oscar memorial tribute
‘Twilight’s’ Robert Pattinson turned down James Franco’s Brad Renfro tribute movie
A Glimpse Into Brad Renfro’s Life Via MySpace
BRAD RENFRO BY JOHNNY KNOXVILLE
BRUCE LABRUCE, Brad Renfro w/ His Grandmother (Toronto), 2000

 

____
Extras


Brad Renfro Playing Guitar


Brad Renfro h264


James Franco – Brad Renfro Forever


Brad Renfro Last Interview October 2007

 

_________
Interview (1998)
by Dennis Cooper

 

Dennis Cooper: Your agent said you’re not feeling well.

Brad Renfro: It’s just stress. Being in L.A. does this to me.

DC: You live in Knoxville, which looks very nonstressful in pictures.

BR: Yeah, it’s cool, but it’s getting violent these days.

DC: What’s up?

BR: Well, this guy got shot last week outside a club, and he died. A friend of mine works at this café right by there. Luckily, she wasn’t there at the time, but the café’s windows got shot out. So it’s not too scary to live there yet, but for such a small town, that seems pretty hard-core.

DC: So where would you move, if you moved?

BR: Not here, that’s for sure. You can be young and stupid anywhere, but staying in Knoxville keeps me away from the business itself, the whole grind—everybody going out to eat and such. It keeps me real. ’Cause out here, there isn’t much reality. There really isn’t. That’s why Tennessee Williams stayed in the South.

DC: So you don’t have any Leonardo DiCaprio envy?

BR: No, no. He’s a great actor, and now he can’t do anything. It used to be I’d see him all over the damn place, and he wouldn’t get too bothered. But now, phew. Man.

DC: Talk about demystifying fame.

BR: No shit. I don’t know if the money would be worth it, either. Because he does make bank. He makes a lot of money. Hell, I haven’t even made a million dollars. But is $20 million worth no life? I don’t think so.

DC: You and he are both top dogs in the Tiger Beat scene. Does that have any value for you?

BR: No. I’m quite flattered, but I don’t know what to think of it. I don’t strive to be a teen idol, you know? But the teen-idol thing is probably why I’m able to pick and choose the movies I want, because I have those fans. Who says those teens don’t have the right idea? You’re always going to have those who look at you because you have interesting looks or whatever.

DC: It’s not like your films cater to that audience. For the most part, they’re fairly heavy. I guess Tom and Huck is kind of the oddball in your oeuvre, as it were.

BR: Yeah, well, I don’t regret making that movie, because my little sister loves it. It’s just that I thought I was making an American classic, and it was very Disney family. If you really watch, you can see that I’m not in the same damn movie as the other actors. I’m all hard-core and shit, and it seems like I’m bigger than the rest of them. There’s an edge there that doesn’t really fit, but to me, that was Huck. Who’s to say it was tobacco in his pipe, you know?

DC: Disney didn’t want a hard-core Huck?

BR: Not at all. It was constant friction. I just did it and got through it, because it was my job. But, you know, I maybe showered six times the whole damn shoot. That’s where I got this bad reputation, you know. How I’m, like, whatever…

DC: Trouble.

BR: Yeah, trouble.

DC: But you’re not?

BR: No, I’m not. I’m real. Real only seems like trouble if you’re not real yourself. Honest to God.

DC: You seem drawn to characters who have moral dilemmas.

BR: As in, like…?

DC: I think I’ve seen all your films, and from The Client through The Cure, Telling Lies in America and now Apt Pupil, you seem to play the wide-eyed kid with a secret dark side.

BR: Well, that’s me, but that’s also mankind. Someone asked me about Apt Pupil—you know, “Brad, are you saying people are evil?” And I go, “All people have evil natures.” And they go, “What about babies?” And I go, “What about when babies turn two and start fighting in the crib over a toy?”

DC: Babies are purely selfish beings.

BR: Exactly. They are purely selfish. I love children, but….It’s human nature to constantly be in a fight with your own being.

DC: So Apt Pupil must have played into your interests.

BR: Definitely, definitely. I was really excited to get that part. It was the only really cool film at the time. Well, there was that and American History X, as far as what was available to someone my age. And Bryan Singer’s great. Ian McKellen’s a genius to me.

DC: Your styles are so different, though. His acting is so capital-B British, really organized, and—

BR: I’m so off the wall? Yeah, I learned so much from Ian McKellen, but it wasn’t like I could learn the craft of acting. I’m sure you’ve heard of doing something and not knowing how you do it? That’s pretty much where I come from. What interested me about him was how he handled people. He makes everyone feel so comfortable. I tried to learn that from him, because that’s something I need to learn.

DC: How do you approach acting?

BR: Just saying the words and believing them. I literally believe what’s going on is really happening.

DC: Is it like fantasizing?

BR: Pretty much. I’m a person who doesn’t show a ton of emotion until it’s time. I ball too many things up—to the point where I cry for no reason. And I have to sit down and go, “What the hell is this for? Oh yeah, right.

DC: So I guess I have to ask you about the whole Apt Pupil shower-scene controversy.

BR: I was there.

DC: A number of the extras, who are basically your age, said they were ogled by gay crew members during the shooting of that scene and consider it a form of molestation.

BR: I was there. I didn’t notice anything.

DC: So you don’t support the boys who brought the lawsuit against the film?

BR: No. As far as I know, it got thrown out of court anyway.

DC: Are you into politics?

BR: No. I don’t care.

DC: So you have nothing to say about the whole Clinton-Lewinsky thing?

BR: Oh, I can say a little something about that. I think the only place where Clinton went wrong was in being married. I just think he’s a man of the times. Fuck it. If I put myself in his shoes, I would have lied like a motherfucker too. And there’s the whole “If she only swallowed, none of this would have happened” jokes. But I shouldn’t get into that, I guess.

DC: Are you religious?

BR: I’m a firm believer in God. I wouldn’t be where I’m at if it wasn’t for God.

DC: You never question that?

BR: Okay, here’s a great Bible verse. Jesus is sitting and eating with politicians and sinners, you know, one of them asks one of his disciples, “Why does Jesus sit there and eat with sinners and such?” And Jesus turns and says, “He who is not sick has no need for the physician, and vice versa.” I think when we’re all at our rock bottom, there’s nothing else but God. But I think all Christians have questioned Him at one time or another.

DC: Did you ever investigate Buddhism?

BR: I think any religion’s okay, except Satanism. I can’t think of anything in Satanism that could benefit you.

DC: But there’s something flashy about Satanism, don’t you think?

BR: I think it’s more powerful in the short term. That’s the trick that the Devil plays on you. It’s like, cocaine’s great the first couple of times, you know? I think that’s just the Devil. That’s how he works. I’m as firm a believer in the Devil as I am in God. I’m just not a supporter.

DC: So do your musical tastes run to Stryper and that sort of thing?

BR: Fuck, no. I’m into blues and jazz. Wes Montgomery, Buddy Guy, Electric blues and old-school, too. You got your Blind Boy Fuller, Robert Johnson, Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee. And I still like punk, of course. Anyone who ever liked punk will never not like punk. It’s very easy to like. Being punk rock means not caring what people think of you. At one point, I did have green hair when I was 13 or so, but I thought it was more punk rock to be just kind of normal than to go and pierce my dick or nose.

DC: Are you into old-school punk or new-school punk?

BR: I can’t stand new-school punk. It’s so poppy, like Offspring or Green Day or whatever. I’m more into the D.C. bands—Fugazi, the Teen Idols, shit like that. And the L.A. late-’70s scene stuff—Descendents, Black Flag, Germs.

DC: At one point, you wanted to make a film about the life of Darby Crash of the Germs, didn’t you?

BR: Yeah. It’s funny. I didn’t get to do that. Some other guy’s doing it, I guess. It would have been cool to play a totally reckless punk. I think I could do that pretty well, but fuck it. Right now, I’m wanting to write and direct a film about a boy in a mental institution. He doesn’t speak, and the film’s about his theory that dogs are superior to humans and how there’s really no need for conversation in a perfect world, because everything would be about unconditional love. You wouldn’t have a need for verbal communication. I haven’t written it yet, but I have the thought.

DC: Do you write?

BR: I write poetry and stuff but not scripts. I just have to sit my ass down and do it. It seems a bit overwhelming, like writing a book of haiku or something. It’s a weird form.

DC: Do you have favorite actors?

BR: Steve Buscemi, definitely. I love him, because he just does his thing. Jack Nicholson, Chris Walken. Those cats are cool. I’d love to work with them. But, hell, I’d even work with Ann-Margret, you know? Who’s to say she’s not a genius? You never know.

DC: Do you ever approach actors or directors you like and ask to work with them?

BR: Just the normal shit. I mean, I don’t go, “Hey, I want to work with Stanley Kubrick. I’m going to chase his crazy ass down.” I don’t send fan letters. I don’t make picture collages and shit, like little strips from a magazine. “I’m Brad. I want to work with you.” No.

DC: I guess I’ll end this by clearing up a really common rumor about you. Did Joel Schumacher adopt you when you were making The Client with him?

BR: Fuck. That’s not true whatsoever. When I was 11, I made a joke that he was going to adopt me, or some shit, but that’s all. I think I liked the idea back then, ’cause my life was kind of hard or something. I live with my grandparents, pretty much always have.

DC: A lot of people think the rumor’s true.

BR: What a bunch of dipshits. These rumors, man. I’m like the [rumor] magnet; I don’t know fucking why. Supposedly, I’m doing some movie with Natalie Portman and Liv Tyler called The Little Black Box. I’ve never heard of that in my life. I think Milos Forman is directing it. It would be fucking cool as hell, but it isn’t real.

DC: I heard you were in the Star Wars prequel, too.

BR: Oh, yeah. Go. I’m all over the place. That’s cool. Wait a second. Ouch.

DC: What’s wrong?

BR: Shit, I’m getting a stress cold sore. [pulls out his lower lip] Look at this.

DC: Charming.

BR: Exactly. I’d better go do whatever with this.

DC: Well, thanks.

BR: Yeah. Have a good day, sir.

 

_________________
16 of Brad Renfro’s 31 roles
_________________
Dempsey Tillman Collector (2008)
“Collector” is a 14-minute piece about a troubled young man trying to get a grip on reality in the midst of hallucinations and the pressure of proving himself capable of being a father. Tillman shot the film on Nov. 4-5, 2007. Renfro died Jan. 15, 2008, in Los Angeles. ‘One of the first things filmmaker Dempsey Tillman learned about the star of his short film, “Collector,” was how much actor Brad Renfro connected with the main character. “During the rehearsal, I would stop them (Renfro and co-star Matthew Boylan) often because I had some ideas I wanted to have them mull around in doing some lines,” Tillman recalls. “Brad said, ‘This story’s really close to me. I have a kid that nobody knows about.’ I knew that’s where he was drawing from for the character.”‘ — Go Knoxville


the entire film

 

_______________
Gregor Jordan The Informers (2008)
‘If there is one name that’s synonymous with over-generalized ’80s ennui, it’s Bret Easton Ellis. From his initial literary phenomenon Less than Zero to the publishing scandal that was American Psycho, this so called savant has obsessed on the hedonistic decadence of the Greed Decade to the point where he’s literally blurred the lines between truth and taboo. Indeed, most of his stories seem shocking in their lack of human connectivity and with their rampant descent into sex and violence, he appears numb to the normalcy of individual existence. Now comes The Informers, a planned “satire” that was sidetracked by a studio wanting a more studied period piece. What they wound up with instead is a scattered, frequently intriguing omnibus that makes the audience work too hard to find something satisfying.’ — Pop Matters


Trailer


Excerpt

Watch the film here

 

______________
Bobby Moresco 10th & Wolf (2006)
‘“You’re a disgrace to your heritage,” seethes a drug kingpin’s wife to mobster Joey (Giovanni Ribisi) toward the conclusion of 10th & Wolf, a statement that couldn’t be further from the truth: Just like virtually every aspect of Robert Moresco’s directorial debut, Ribisi’s clichéd crook—a murderous loose cannon with an enormous ego and unswerving loyalty toward his friends and family—is dutifully faithful to his gangster film ancestors. Avoiding the amped-up racial paranoia of his Academy Award-winning Crash script in favor of moldy tough-guy tawk and introspective narration used to spoon-feed character motivation, Moresco’s based-on-real-events saga tracks the 1991 return of disgraced U.S. Marine Tommy (James Marsden) to his Philadelphia hometown after having been blackmailed by Brian Dennehy’s F.B.I. agent to infiltrate his beloved cousin Joey’s illicit operation. The government’s goal is to bust a heroin smuggler with whom Joey is on the verge of partnering (or, potentially, warring), though Tommy’s objective is to save Joey, as well as his younger wannabe thug brother Vincent (Brad Renfro), from the hammer of justice. 10th & Wolf‘s aim, however, is to revisit familiar Mafioso movie themes and plot points, a goal it uncreatively achieves throughout its listless Godfather-meets-Donnie Brasco tale of undercover surveillance, blood allegiances, and wrenching betrayal.’ — Slant


Trailer

 

_______________
John Maybury The Jacket (2005)
The Jacket is a 2005 American psychological thriller/horror film directed by John Maybury and starring Adrien Brody, Keira Knightley, Kris Kristofferson, Brad Renfro, and Jennifer Jason Leigh. It is partly based on the Jack London novel of the same name. Massy Tadjedin wrote the screenplay based on a story by Tom Bleecker and Marc Rocco. The original music score is composed by Brian Eno with Roger Eno and the cinematography is by Peter Deming. The narrative is a time slip fantasy in which an Iraqi war veteran who suffered a death or near-death experience while on active service returns to the United States where he is blamed for the death of a policeman, and incarcerated in a hospital for the criminally insane. Subject to experimental treatments there, which involve him being shut inside a morgue casket while tied in a straitjacket, he eventually learns to travel through time and is able to offer help to various people.’ — Wiki


Trailer


Brad Renfro The Jacket Premiere Interview

 

________________
Jordan Brady American Girl (2002)
American Girl just doesn’t work at all; the characters are obnoxious, the directorial style is bland, and the pacing is off (way off). American Girl contains a surprisingly adept cast, with rising star Malone delivering yet another impressive performance (despite the fact that she’s essentially riffing on her now-patented tortured teenager persona). Renfro, playing exactly the sort of slow, dim-witted character he seems to have cornered the market on, doesn’t fare quite as well and it’s impossible not to wonder if the actor is even capable of hitting any other notes.’ — Reel Film Reviews


Excerpt


Excerpt

 

________________
Terry Zwigoff Ghost World (2001)
‘Recounting the “Ghost World” plot, such as it is, doesn’t do the film justice. The pleasure here is not in the story but the telling; watching lovingly created characters interact, and getting dewy-eyed over Zwigoff’s immaculate recreation of late adolescence. An erstwhile documentary maker, much-praised for 1994’s “Crumb” – a look at the life of underground comic book writer Robert Crumb – Zwigoff has an ear for truthful dialogue, and an eye for the detritus of teenage life. The performances are universally superb. Buscemi was born to play Seymour, a nerdy, strangely endearing obsessive not quite comfortable in his own skin, while even bit players like Brad Renfro leave a lasting impression. The standout is Birch, a compelling blend of aggressive wit, tender vulnerability, and ungainly beauty. Our journey with Enid may be slow and somewhat meandering but, as a funny and moving paean to adolescence, this certainly beats hell out of “American Pie 2”.’ — BBC


Excerpt


Excerpt

 

________________
Larry Clark Bully (2001)
‘Shooting Bully wasn’t exactly Apocalypse Now but we had our share of adventures. The boat was just the start of it. The boat was a 45-foot yacht that Bully’s male lead, Brad Renfro, attempted to steal from a Fort Lauderdale dock the night before shooting was scheduled to begin. It was an incident that could have sunk the film, had Renfro – a deep southerner with a staggeringly high IQ and a penchant for quoting the Bible – only remembered to untie the vessel before trying to thieve it. Requiring a $10,000 bail and eventually resulting in two years’ probation, it was the second bust for Brad after his 1998 arrest, when police discovered two packets of cocaine and marijuana in his pocket whilst out joyriding with his cousin. Coming to the public attention as a wide-eyed prepubescent in films such as The Client and Sleepers, Renfro is the undisputed king of the Anti-Breakfast Club; a Robert Downey Jnr-in-waiting who, when not in rehab, is one of the most in-demand actors around. Bully co-star Bijou Phillips, however, has a rather different take on him: “He’s just a big kid,” Bijou says, explaining why she demanded a separate hotel from Renfro and the rest of the Bully cast. “When we made Tart [a little-seen Scream-like horror affair] together, he’d come over to my room and want me to put him in the bath and get him sober. Or he’d cut himself and we’d be in the hospital at four in the morning and we would have to shoot at six. It was just too much. I needed my space.”‘ — The Guardian


Excerpt


Excerpt


Bully – B Roll Inside Marty’s House

 

________________
Daniel Waters Happy Campers (2001)
‘Daniel Waters guaranteed himself a place in cinema history with his debut screenplay “Heathers”, one of the sharpest, blackest and downright original films of the second half of the eighties. Yet in the meantime he has seemingly enjoyed his well-paid limbo in hackville, churning out scripts ranging from the what-was-he-thinking (yes “Hudson Hawk”, we mean you) to the sublime (the second and best installment in the Batman franchise). Thus the phrase “Daniel Waters’ directorial debut” immediately raises expectations, will it be a twisted and perverted return to his “Heathers” world view? The answer is yes. It’s not a great film, in fact it is a very flawed one, but it is never anything but ambitious and frequently very funny.’ — Carnival of Souls


Excerpt


Excerpt

 

______________
Tamra Davis Skipped Parts (2000)
‘Trimark has its work cut out for it in pushing this late-summer clunker, which hits wrong notes from the start and only gets more sour as it goes along. Fans pulled in by a sharp cast will be displeased by how poorly their faves fare. And anyone looking for a witty or insightful chronicle of growing up in the early ’60s will be more than disappointed. Most auds will simply skip “Parts” altogether.’ — Variety


Trailer

 

_______________
Michel Gondry Rolling Stones – Gimme Shelter (1998)
‘French director Michel Gondry directed a music video for the song, which was released in 1998. The video features a sixteen-year old Brad Renfro, playing a young man escaping with his brother from a dysfunctional home and the abuse they suffered at the hands of their abusive alcoholic father, and then from society as a whole.’ — tfcf

 

_________________
Bryan Singer Apt Pupil (1998)
‘”Apt Pupil” uses the horrors of the Holocaust as an atmospheric backdrop to the more conventional horror devices of a Stephen King story. It’s not a pretty sight. By the end of the film, as a death camp survivor is quoting John Donne’s poem about how no man is an island, we’re wondering what island the filmmakers were inhabiting, as they assembled this uneasy hybrid of the sacred and the profane. The movie is well made by Bryan Singer and well acted, especially by Ian McKellen as Kurt Dussander, a Nazi war criminal who has been hiding in American for years. The theme is intriguing: A teenager discovers the old man’s real identity, and blackmails him into telling stories about his wartime experiences. But when bodies are buried in cellars and cats are thrown into lighted ovens, the film reveals itself as unworthy of its subject matter.’ — Roger Ebert


Trailer


Excerpt


Brad Renfro 1998 Interview

 

_______________
Guy Ferland Telling Lies in America (1997)
‘”It don’t matter how you get it … as long as you get it,” says Kevin Bacon to an astonished 15-year-old who has just discovered he has lost his virginity to a prostitute. That’s how Karchy Jonas’s rites of passage are bought and sold in Telling Lies in America, a screenplay by Joe Eszterhas that has taken 15 years to migrate from page to screen. Set in Cleveland in 1961, the film plots the fortunes of a Hungarian immigrant who is picked on at high school until he lies himself into a job on a local radio station with a slick but corrupt disc jockey, Billy Magic (played by Kevin Bacon), up to his neck in payola. Those were the days when managers passed over fat brown envelopes to get their clients’ songs played. Remarkably, this autobiographical film cost $4m [pounds 2.5m] and took 24 days to make. That’s not far off what Eszterhas alone usually gets paid for a script. What sets it apart is a display of character acting by Bacon and his young co-star, Brad Renfro, that gives the screenwriter’s bitter take on the American Dream – you’ve got to lie to get places – a startling authenticity.’ — The Independent


Excerpt

 

_______________
Barry Levinson Sleepers (1996)
‘Unlike The Boys of St. Vincent, Sleepers offers no insights into the torment of men like Nokes. The film’s concern is for the abused boys, superbly played by Brad Renfro as Michael, Joe Perrino as Shakes, Geoffrey Wigdor as John and Jonathan Tucker as Tommy, who rightly dominate the film’s first hour. As in Diner and Avalon, Levinson shows a keen eye for the pangs of adolescence. Michael Ballhaus’ luminous cinematography polishes those days of talking sex and playing stickball until Hell’s Kitchen shines like a concrete Camelot. Idealized? You bet. That’s why the loss of this world must be avenged with the same broad strokes that you’d expect from the Count of Monte Cristo. “We lived inside every book we read, every movie we saw,” Carcaterra wrote. “We were Cagney in Angels With Dirty Faces. . . . We were Ivanhoe on our own city streets.” These words are the key to Sleepers‘ vaultingly romantic style and its core truth. No one challenges Carcaterra’s previous nonfiction book, A Safe Place, in which he learns, at 14, that his father had served time for killing his first wife. It’s public record. Sleepers, for all the doubts it raises, is the work of a man who speaks for absent friends and “for the children we were.” It’s his secret heart. Leave the matter of getting away with murder to Carcaterra and his conscience. Onscreen, in the faces of these lost children, the pain is real.’ — Rolling Stone


Excerpt


Excerpt

 

__________________
Peter Hewitt Tom and Huck (1995)
‘Jonathan Taylor Thomas (HOME IMPROVEMENT) stars as America’s greatest teenage hero — Tom Sawyer! No boy ever had so much fun, got into so much trouble, or had so many outrageous adventures! Disney’s magic touch now turns Mark Twain’s masterpiece into “An outstanding classic adventure film” (Kids News Network). Tom and his rebellious friend Huck (Brad Renfro) witness a midnight killing. They swear not to reveal what they saw — but that causes a real problem. If Tom doesn’t speak up, an innocent friend may be hanged. But if he does tell the truth, the real killer, knife-throwing Injun Joe, will come after him! TOM AND HUCK has it all — a treasure hunt, a haunted house, a courtroom showdown, a scary chase in a cave, and a valuable lesson for young Tom: when a friend’s in trouble, you don’t run away!’ — vudu


Excerpt

 

_______________
Peter Horton The Cure (1995)
‘There are three moments of perfect truth in “The Cure.” There are several passages that are very moving. And then there’s an impossible story that plays like a cross between a Disease of the Week movie and “The Goonies.” It’s possible that moviegoers in their earlier teens – the target audience – will like it a lot. I was derailed by the silly stuff, and by the movie’s conviction that it’s funny to play practical jokes about death.’ — Roger Ebert


Trailer


Brad Renfro Interview Of The Cure

 

______________
Joel Schumacher The Client (1994)
‘Held up by a supporting casting including heavyweight actors like Tommy Lee Jones, Mary-Louise Parker and Anthony LaPaglia, the film itself isn’t afraid to pack a punch, but the whole movie, however, balances on the performance of Brad Renfro, who truly is astounding in the role of Mark. Being cast at the tender age of 10 years old, he really is a force to reckoned with and really holds his own up against the huge names he was working with. It did seem that his career was there for the taking and he ended up starring in some really interesting projects but, sadly, like many child stars in Hollywood, his story did not have a happy ending. In his case, he became addicted to drugs and died at the age of 25 from a heroin overdose. You need to look no further than this film to see the talent he had.’ — Den of Geek!


Trailer


Excerpt


Excerpt

 

 

*

p.s. Hey. I’m repeating this from yesterday in case it helps: If you’re finding yourself locked out of commenting because of the Cloudflare human checkbox, try updating your browser and disabling any browser extensions that may interfere with the captcha (e.g., ad blockers, VPNs, privacy extensions.) You should be able to disable ad blockers for this site only, the blog doesn’t have any ads. Please let me know if this solves the problem or if it doesn’t. Otherwise, apparently the Cloudflare thing cannot be disabled. It is built into my hosting site’s security system. Cloudflare is aware that there’s a bug in the verification thing and say they are working to debug it as soon as possible. ** jay, Hey. The Richard Farina novel seems to be out of print, which kind of surprises me. Re: ‘Cat’s Cradle’, I was going on distant memories when I chose it, so you could be right. Oh, understood about the concert situation problem. It seems like there would be some kind of VR version of her show somewhere, but I don’t know if that would work? I’m on the manga thing. I’m big on Guro too. I’ve done a few Guro posts here, and it’s probably time to do another. ** _Black_Acrylic, ‘Vurt’ would have been a good choice, you’re right, based on my memory of it. It just slipped my mind. ** Lucas, Hi. No, the producer is never going to stop turning everything around him into hell. He has no other way of being. We did come up a possible proposal yesterday that, if he accepts it, would calm things down a little at least. We’ll see. Right, I think my main knowledge of estrogen application is from US friends. I have diabetic friends who need to inject themselves regularly, and they say it becomes second nature and no big pretty quickly. Hopefully it would be the same for you. Yesterday was better because we came up with the proposal idea, but now we need to submit it to fuckhead, so from here on is crapshoot. It’s really just unbelievable how much complete and totally underserved shit Zac and I have to go through for our film. Never again. I personally really like the pale, sickly look, but I’m not normal, goodness knows. Trust your instincts? That’s a great collage! You’re so good! Awesome! Everyone, Go check out Lucas’s great new collage, why don’t you? It’s here. Corey Heiferman responded to your collage if you didn’t see it. I hope your weekend is way more up than it is down, and maybe even up up up. ** Nasir, Hey there! It’s a pleasure to get to greet you again. Oh, sure, yes, I can do that recommendation letter. Do you have my email? If not, it’s [email protected]. Happy to help if I can. ** HaRpEr, ‘Nog’ is great. Rudy Wurlitzer is great in general. My favorite of his is ‘Drop Edge of Yonder’. Brautigan has a very particular style. It’s worth at least giving him a skim. He’s one of those writers who either tickles your fancy or doesn’t. I agree about acid trips being more successfully depicted in writing than in visuals, although an exciting or even dumb flagrant visual depiction can trigger personal acid trip memories sometimes, and I don’t think written trips have that effect. I love that Spacemen 3 album. Hm, maybe you’re right about music being the ultimate trip representer/triggerer. Yeah, that makes sense. Thanks for the fill-in about the means of taking hormones. I carry a nicotine patch in my pocket wherever I go. You never know when elevator or metro car is going to get stuck. ** nat, Oh, well, a hearty hi right back to you. Have a sweet weekend. ** Alright. I’ve restored the blog’s old Day about Brad Renfro for some reason. It features an interview with Mr. Renfro by yours truly. I suppose that’s something unusual about it. See you on Monday.

11 Comments

  1. Nasir

    Oh my god, thank you so much!! That’s like the best thing to happen maybe ever. I’ve shot you an email with all the details, feel free to take your time with it, but I look forward to hearing from you.

    Unrelated to what’s going on, but related to today’s post: Bully is like a personal favorite of mine and Brad was such an underrated performer!

    See ya 🙂

  2. Corey Heiferman

    On your previous post my reply to Lucas went through but my actual comment didn’t. Weird. I was wearing a Cloudflare t-shirt when I wrote it. Got it as a giveaway at a conference. What was the context of the interview? In general, how would you prepare for an interview?

    What’s new in Paris now that summer is over? Sorry to hear about your earache and film production woes. I made sesame noodles, sending you those vibes.

    I went back to getting up around 6:30 every day. Makes everything easier. I started editing my Paris footage again. I don’t know Adobe Premier well and I don’t have a set agenda, so I’m literally experimenting, just playing around with knobs and dials to change the image.

    I hope to finally get to my backlog of guest posts: Marco Vassi, Early Digital Demo Reals, and the artists Sasha Laskowsky + Alesya Veter.

    I’m bingeing Emily Dickinson this weekend. I just found out that her letters are similar to her poems.

    Have you spent much time in Poland? I’ll be going to the Tatras mountains on the Slovak border at the end of the month, also some time in Krakow and Warsaw. I’ll be seeing my Polish Temenos friends there. Still need to plan my Japan trip too.

    • Lucas

      hi corey, thank you for your comment on my collage yesterday — I make my collages with procreate on my old ipad, just using photos I’ve saved from pinterest and adding filters and arranging them. it’s not always super ideal but it gets the job done for me 🙂

  3. jay

    Hey Dennis!!! This is so interesting, I’ve never actually heard of this guy. I’m always a bit obsessed with child actors who go a bit off the rails. I don’t know if you watched Midsommar, but there’s a scene in that movie where an ex-child actor who had a pretty rough time plays a man who gets his face bashed in, which I found pretty beautiful in a weird way, inasmuch as it’s him reclaiming/destroying his on-screen image. I think he was Swedish, I’m sure you know who I’m talking about.

    Yeah, VR concerts are probably fun, I should maybe look into that. I’ve never actually tried VR, I think it’s possible it’d just make me totally disconnected from reality. I am writing a short story about it though, that’s sort of spiralled out into something a bit longer – about that kissing-machine thing you mentioned a month or so ago. I’m sort of writing VR as an alternate, othered plane of existence, like that film From Beyond, if that makes any sense at all.

    Umm, not much else going on. I’m still sort of reworking through 120 Days, in preparation for watching the Passolini adaptation, which I’ve been told is excellent. Oh, that’s another one of those child-actor movies, that’s kind of neat. I’m also seeing Mysterious Skin tomorrow, my theatre’s showing that for some reason.

    Oh also, as a diabetic who has also done hormone injections, hormone injections are weirdly more painful. The needles are often way longer, and you typically have to inject more. I’m used to diabetic injection, but I’ve never gotten used to HRT injection, weirdly. Anyway, it’d be cool to see a guro post from you, you’re probably kind of an expert I imagine.

  4. _Black_Acrylic

    Brad Renfro was fab in Bully and Ghost World so thank you for filling in the gaps via this day.

    Last night I streamed Muscle, a grim tale about a Newcastle office drone who gets dangerously into bodybuilding. Recommended via Phillip Best’s Letterboxd account (which is itself highly recommended), it’s intensely bleak and is pretty good.

  5. Bill

    Good to see the Brad Renfro day again, Dennis. Such a tragic story. He was so good in Apt Pupil, Bully, and Ghost World. Love the interview you did.

    Thanks for the heads-up on Gisele’s show. It opens before I leave, will try to make it. Wish I could get to the opening, but I’m playing a little gig myself that night. Just noticed a show at KW with Paul P and Jimmy DeSana, definitely on my calendar as well. Other than that, my days are packed with new music concerts and art, and catching up with friends, many of whom I haven’t seen since COVID.

    Bill

  6. kier

    Hey D. i love brad renfro, your interview with him is lovely. how did he seem to you? i caught up on bryan singer on wikipedia and there seems to have been a bunch of allegations of assault on minors over the years since that first shower scene thing. also nice day friday! i was shocked to find that brautigan book at my library so i’m gonna get that when i have the chance.

    i get testosterone injections, and i only get them every 3 months, but my doctor does it. it’s a depot shot of this thick viscous liquid so it can be pretty painful, although over the years it’s as if my body’s started to filter the pain out.

    hah yeah it’s true 27 degrees isn’t that much, but i think the warmest it got this summer was 30, thank god. how hot did paris get? i got a physical therapist appt on tuesday, which is a big relief, ’cause the first place i called they told me i had to go private if i wanted a quick appointment, and when i said i can’t afford to they put me on a waiting list behind more than a hundred other people. the past two days my back pain has been constant and pain killers aren’t doing much. something really weird happened last night too, i woke up with an insane stomach cramp, like some of the worst pain i’ve experienced, and went to the bathroom for pain killers. i passed out and woke up when my face hit the floor, cut my nose up bad and bumped my head really hard. then i tried to get back to bed and i passed out again and woke up mid-fall again only that time i fell all the way down the stairs. it was dark, and i was like half conscious and it was really scary. i crawled to bed and fell asleep. today i’m pretty banged up. nothing serious i don’t think, but i’m gonna try to see my doc tomorrow just in case. i feel pretty shaken up today, but a friend came over for coffee and that was good.

    friday i went to a birthday party which was great, one of my best friends, we just ate and hung out. yesterday i was exhausted and had a lot of back pain so i just tried to zone out and distract myself. gonna try to play some video games today, i started playing resident evil code veronica on ps2. it’s the oldest game i’ve ever played actually, from 2000. and the controls are so simple and limited it’s frustrating but i’m getting used to it and the game’s kinda cool.

    i’m sorry about your neverending producer nightmare. did the weekend bring anything nice? bisous

  7. Dominik

    Hi!!

    The blog’s commenting disease had caught up with me, too. Let’s see if this one goes through. I really hope so because I’d like to let you know how amazing today’s post is!

    How have you been these past week?

    Love becoming any of your body parts for 24 hours, Od.

  8. Lucas

    oh I had no idea you had interviewed brad renfro. what did that feel like for you? I have like, a few photos of him when he was young saved on my pinterest and such but I don’t think I’ve seen any of his movies. but how was your weekend? sorry again to hear about the producers awfulness — hopefully that didn’t take up too much of your time these last two days. it is totally so unfair that you and zac have to go through so much shit because of this guy. my weekend was more or less okay, tried to get some things done at least. tho still not my hair, but maybe tomorrow. obviously I also have class tomorrow but I’m still not really adapting well to my new school, though everyone’s super nice there, it’s just that it’s brought up a lot of stuff that is really hard for me to deal with mentally so that’s why I haven’t been doing great. I’ll be ok I guess I just felt the need to clarify. what I’m looking forward to this week is this like group meeting my gender therapist organized with other trans teenagers on wednesday I think it’ll be nice to meet people in another environment. are you doing anything exciting this week? since paris is probably fully reawakened by now. I saw that you’re doing a reading in new york in early october, that’s really cool, I wish I could go check it out.

  9. Charalampos

    Hey Dennis. The other day the day before you did the Lsd post I got an auditory signal that said Carlos Castaneda. And looked for him immediately and saw him the next day here. Are his books worthy as writing or dated stuff?
    I got curious why I got him in my ear without knowing him just faintly I was thinking about other sources helping you in your way when I did… very strange

    I started reading Flunker but got stuck in the first story for one two days. I liked it very much. I related very much to the way you write and explored the story for a while instead of moving to the next immediately. I can’t wait to see it on Dunce codex too. We are buddy there I will have one poem and drawing I am excited.
    For me you do this thing so often of having some transcendental lines that in my romantic mind every reader has a different one as portal but when I see a line that works that way to me the piece becomes something else closer to my heart and think of it obsessively after if it makes sense and then move on but still have it in the back of my mind
    So when you say “i am also that kind of useless human also called flâneur. that’s where you come in” That was the thing that made me fall in love with the piece Face eraser so I saw you the writer, GAYbreeel and I saw also me as flâneur but while I do all that others come to my direction so I am not that different and all that entails
    I spell out what I felt because it made me after look at the story many times and feel
    Anyway Loved Face eraser
    May your producer problems vanish and all go well and as you want
    Love from Chania

  10. HaRpEr

    Hey. Hope you’re staying sane with all the bullshit you and Zac are going through with the film.

    Yeah I think the hormones may be getting to my emotions. I cried earlier over something really dumb and only realised how stupid it was after I stopped. Other than that, I’m just kind of discombobulated and confused. It’s difficult to tell what is actually happening because of the hormones and what I’m just reading too deeply into. Generally I’d say I’m happier, but I’m still totally losing it over trying to find a place to live. But there’s always something like that I guess. Anyway, I’ve decided that tomorrow is going to change everything. I’ll manifest it.

    I’m working on my first video for that youtube project I was telling you about. I guess it’s like an introduction video more than anything else. The premise is ‘amateur mime has a breakdown’. It’s only like two minutes or something but I’m still tinkering with the editing quirks. Going forward I want there to be really little editing, but this is really just a thing I’m fucking around with before I find my footing. In general I want the channel to be mostly random ideas, so I suppose there’s no bad place to start.

Leave a Reply

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

© 2024 DC's

Theme by Anders NorénUp ↑