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mikkelo · 3 months ago
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The Boston's Finest
FADE IN:
INT. BOSTON - DAY
In cassettes and broken tapes, there lie the cityscape of Boston with ambivalence no matter how distorted it may be. Every bouts of liberty and free spirited wanderings surged along the poster filled brick stone walls where the stifling humidity clouds the painted asphalt road. The Central Square neighborhood where shots of kaleidoscopes spread wide on the walls of Modica Way. The dewy petrichor from the cobblestones of Beacon Hill after the rain. The windowpanes in the porch reflect the teetering memories where life expands in the humble avenue. It is where the clip ends but the soul refuses to relent.
It was the 1980s and the world witnessed an uprising in the cinema industry where Die Hard (1988) and Rambo (1988) revolutionized discourse about on-screen violence, Flashdance (1983) and Purple Rain (1984) transformed the power of melodic storytelling, and David Lynch and the Coen Brothers reinforced the auteur theory of directive control. Before the glamour of the groundbreaking dawn of their careers, Hollywood stars Matt Damon and Ben Affleck once chased their shadows in the pavements with their faces smeared with dirt and splotches of heat in their linen shirts together. With their houses blocks apart from Auburn to Cottage Street, the two crossed paths in the latter’s residence while their mothers, Nancy Carlsson-Paige, an early childhood education professor, and Christopher Anne Boldt, who taught in public school, respectively had a wonderful chat. As they confront the tides of fame together with their youthful ardor, their relationship has become a cornerstone for defining a strong platonic bond, a losing art in the mainstream media, where Boston etched itself as their refuge both in conjoined grievances and relief.
CUT TO:
Title: The Warrior and the Clown
INT. CAMBRIDGE - DAY
One can say that the water holds memories for young Affleck who spent a great deal of his childhood under the fins of humpback whales and the dangers of rushing waves. He began his career as C.T. Grandville, the grandson of Captain Grandville, who was played by the scientist Peter Marston, in PBS educational series The Voyage of the Mimi (1984). For the grade schoolers watching, venturing into this journey was met with no trepidations as the show provided valuable information about the physical and biological processes of the planet. After the series ended, he went on to attend Cambridge Rindge and Latin School, where he would encounter Damon again (calling him Matty D.) since they became fast friends due to their shared interests for baseball and movies.
BEN (V.O.) I was 8, he was 10, he was a big kid, he played baseball, he was really cool, he had a bowl cut—those little feathered ones that we all wanted, of course—and he— And he was, you know, nice to me. And we were both interested in the same things.
Having a tad advantage to his age, Damon showed a more mature and passionate outlook for acting, which gave Affleck the boost to take it seriously. This difference in intensity of the mutual linkage they have gave Affleck the affinity to put Damon in a pedestal, who embodied a total control in his limbs and motions the moment when he was possessed by the role he played. In both admiration to his craft and character, Damon’s words were like ancient knowledge to Affleck who looked up to someone whom he believed had a superior integrity in the art of acting than him.
BEN (V.O.) I would periodically go off and do a little Voyage of the Mimi. So Matt was a little threatened by that. And when I got to the high school, he kind of pulled me aside. He said, “Listen, man! All right? This is the theater. It’s not about your looks, okay? It’s about the work.” And I took that very seriously. I thought that I was hearing something real, like the words of wisdom from a guy who understood it.
Granted, it was not a bond fully realized, yet their childish vigor and innocent wonderment were already the first step of what was anticipated. However, what made their friendship soar in a vast degree was in the January of 1987 when the blade grasses crunched in every step as the soles of leather boots left myriads of trails on the coated pristine snow. A shift in dynamics which catapulted their connection into a newfound nature of commitment where it evolved from baseless competition towards the unequivocal dedication to be with each other in whatever shenanigans one might be.
CONAN (inquiring) I know that you’re from the Boston area as am I, and there’s this reputation that like, Boston guys know how to fight. […] Did you ever get in any fights as a kid? MATT (reminiscing) I’m like you, I really tried to avoid them because there are people in Boston who really do know how to fight and you know if you’re one of them or not. But the last fight I got into, who would’ve been in the mid-80s, and I remember we had a snow day at school so we would all meet in the Cambridge Common and play tackle football because there would be a foot of snow on the ground and so you can’t really get hurt. It was a really fun thing to do and I mouthed off a kid that I knew but he was like your height. He was six-foot six, right? And I might have been 5 (foot) 3 at the time. And I said some—I scorned on him or something, I don’t know—but he came for me and it was like a mountain of a guy came at me and I was like, ”Oh, man.” So before I knew it, I was on the ground. He was above me and I was like, “This is gonna be bad.” And it was right then that little five-foot two Ben Affleck tackled this dude off of me like out of nowhere. I was like a junior and he was like a freshman and he tackled this kid off of me, literally at the risk of his own life. Really quickly, everyone had [broken] it up because they wanted to get back to the football game. That was fun and this was ridiculous and that was the end of it. The kid was reasonable and he was, “God, I’m not fighting. Let’s play.” But I remember, that was like a big moment going like this guy, he will put himself in a really bad spot for me like, this is a good friend.
The proclaimed drama geeks dominated the corners of the school’s theatre department as they consistently turned themselves into a blank slate of a paper vessel where the letters to be imprinted on it gave birth to the soul of the character they portrayed. Once they return to existence after breathing differently through living many lives, they came back as different entities where all the emotions they played amounted to the hope of bringing it on a larger stage. Regardless of how they were perceived in the social circles within the school, they always remained to be thick as thieves for whatever context, which was enough for them.
BEN (V.O.) I’ve established that we were very nerdy and a little weird. We used to have "business lunches,” in what was called the Media Cafeteria, which at the time there was a big ESL portion of our public high school—it was like 2,600 kids—and that was where the ESL kids— I don’t know why that was where we— We liked to be surrounded by people who spoke other languages. I’m not sure what it was. Maybe we didn’t want them to actually hear our business lunch, because no business was conducted. But we plotted things. We planned our careers.
The Cambridge Rindge and Latin School produced and adapted various stories which the department invested their efforts in. Some of the plays the school had in the time period where the two were involved were Guys and Dolls in the Summer '85 where Damon, still a freshman, played one of the gamblers, and The Visit in Fall-Winter '86 where Affleck, now a freshman, played a character as Damon’s son. Additionally, Damon’s “confrontation” with Affleck on how “acting is not about the looks, but the work” happened in this time frame. Another plays they performed were Pippin in Summer '87 where Damon played the lead role and Affleck worked behind the scenes because his voice was not for the audience. And lastly, the Alice in Wonderland in Fall '89 where Affleck took the role of the Caterpillar.
MATT (taunting) Say, Ben, why don't you tell us about the time you played the caterpillar in Alice in Wonderland? BEN (gearing up for a cutting contest) Yup, I was the zany, hookah-smoking caterpillar. I chose to play the role wrapped in garbage bags held together by Scotch tape. Now, if I were to play that caterpillar today, I might do it another way. CASEY (commenting) It was an underrated performance. Those trash bags were a bold choice. BEN (retaliating) So, Matt, why don't you favor us with your version of Morning Glory from Pippin?
After their eventful years inseparably playing various roles in high school, the two would bid each other farewell as Damon decided to continue his education in Harvard University. When Affleck completed his last two years, he attended the University of Vermont because of his attachment in his high school girlfriend who was not even studying in the same university he was in. Nevertheless, the two never broke contact and remained close as ever.
BEN (V.O.) Matt was definitely more… of a kind of achiever. It was inconceivable to him that you wouldn’t get an “A” or do really well. So I did really well [in] my first two years in high school and then when Matt left, I would cut class and… get in all kinds of trouble.”
In retrospect, their escapades as children of theatre might earn them some cringe looks. However, their joint experiences watered the seeds of their dreams they planted themselves, as well as their friendship that helped it to germinate much quickly by always having each other’s back. This was also the time where they made discoveries about themselves that sealed their brand as a person.
JIMMY (pulling out the picture) This is a photo, I think, you sent it to Matt just the other day just to go “Hey! Remember these dudes?” Here’s 17-year-old Matt and Ben in a photo booth. Look at this. BEN (laughing) Now, listen. Hard not to see that those guys are gonna make it. MATT (agreeing) Yeah, those guys clearly have “star” written all over them. JIMMY (amused) That’s awesome. MATT (pointing something out) You know, I think it was the matching puka necklaces that give it away. JIMMY (affirming) Best buddies. That’s BFFs right there. Come on. That’s BFFs for life.
CUT TO:
Title: The Crumbs on the Manuscript: Part 1
INT. UNITED STATES - DAY
It was a paradise for some, but a rabbit hole for those who only have their baggage, a couple of penny, and a dream. Done were the days where the two would cross the suburban homes in Somerville, roaming in the Assembly Square Mall where the big pictures were as avid moviegoers, and frolicking in the Harvard Square; it is the transitional period from their sentimental film reviewing antics to making appearances in wide screens, albeit a small one in their fresh start. This consisted of moving back and forth in different borders of United States for auditioning countless roles. Kevin Costner as Ray Kinsella in Field of Dreams (1989) recalled the remarkable enthusiasm of Damon and Affleck as two of the extras among the thousands in the movie. Even though they were one with the blurry heads and said that they only did it “to go to Fenway,” the sheer exhilaration of partaking in the film gave a lasting impression on what it was like to be in front of the camera.
KEVIN (remembering) They were sitting in the stands, like college guys, and they came up, and they both leaned in at the same time, leaned back at the same time, looked at each other at the same time as we talked. And they had this big enthusiasm. They were on fire. I do remember them, absolutely.
After three years of their first exposure from the said film, the two made their new appearances in School Ties (1992). This time, Damon played one of the antagonists against Brendan Fraser who played the lead role. On the flipside, Affleck played a smaller role as one of the bullies as well who performed violent acts to Fraser’s Jewish character.
BEN (remembering) I knew my nine lines back to front. I loved every day I was on a call sheet, every day I got to come to work. You were there, in Boston. It was one of the best experiences of my life. We literally were next to a dump and thought we were kings. I knew I was playing the one shitty antisemitic bully character, so I figured it was probably not going to be great for me career-wise, but I loved it.
Other films that contributed to their foundation in acting together were first, the college comedy Glory Daze (1995) where Affleck starred as the lead role named Jack, an art student who was driven by the post-college angst of the fleeting whiff of liberty before graduation, and Damon had a non-speaking role as one of Affleck’s former roommates. The other was Chasing Amy (1997), another lead role for Affleck who played Holden McNeil, the love-stricken comic book writer chasing his love of his life that turned out to be a lesbian. Damon had a cameo role and played as one of the executives who helped Affleck’s character pitch a business offer. The contrast in their perception of each other’s fame was intriguing to behold as Affleck jokingly claimed that he and Kevin Smith, a well-known director and believer of the two, were riding the coattails of Damon’s larger stardom, whereas Damon was more laid back about himself and only “tried” to get in Affleck’s films with Smith. Both also revealed to auditioned for Dead Poets Society (1989) but failed to secure a role and worked in a local movie theatre.
BEN (humorously) I slept on Kevin's couch, and it was like, “You got a buddy, this guy Matt, will he be in it?” And Matt was better known than I was. [Smith] was totally happy to exploit Matt’s stardom, for his own benefit, and so was I.
Most notably, the two disclosed the fact that they opened a joint bank account with “RiverP” as the code based from River Phoenix’s rising influence in the film industry. Both Damon and Affleck set forth a new adventure in the incongruous lands of New York where they were repeatedly hustling in the bustling audition sites for various television roles, some Burger King commercials, and local voiceovers that were not documented thoroughly for public viewing. Both their devotion for acting far transcended from only achieving success to also making sure that they were part of each other’s moments of triumph and lament.
MATT (V.O.) It was unusual, but we needed the money for auditions. BEN (V.O.) We were going to help each other and be there for each other. It was like, “You’re not going to be alone. I’m not going to be alone. Let’s go out there and do this together.”
Just like when they were two small naivetes discussing baseball mechanics on a bench of the local park, a candy bar from one will be shared willingly, cheerfully, obligingly with the other.
BEN (V.O.) If either of us needed money he could borrow it from the other. Neither one of us ended up taking. It was never one-sided. MATT (V.O.) If one kid had enough for a candy bar, then the candy bar was bought and split in half—that’s just the way it’s been.
That being said, the two will always be embedded in each other’s life whether they recklessly wallow in the pools of Napa Valley wineries or they open a hotdog stall at the Dodger Games while tracing the stars through their sparkling squinting eyes.
BEN (V.O.) Matt and I had identical interests, so whether we ended up successful or making hot dogs at Dodgers games, we knew we'd end up doing the same sort of thing. The remaining friends part was pretty consistent. We saw each other all the time, we talked on the phone all the time.
CUT TO:
Title: The Crumbs on the Manuscript: Part 2
INT. LOS ANGELES - DAY
While spending his time in the halls of Harvard, Damon conceived an original story that was a waiting ticket for a momentous future. He requested a favor for Affleck to act out the scenes of this story with him in front of the class. Consequently, this project gave him one of the reasons to drop out from college in 1997 in addition to them being unable to get the roles they wanted for themselves. They reckoned that if that was the case, then they could make their own film even if it would only be available in cheap cassette tapes.
BILL (V.O.) Were you guys always okay with you being the lead and him being the sidekick? MATT (V.O.) Yeah. I mean, I started it in college in a playwriting class, and so it was all established by the time—That as my final—My final paper was, I was supposed to write a one-act play. And instead I handed in the first act of a movie. And I said to the professor, "I think I failed your class. This is not what you asked for, but this is what came out and I really like it." He gave me an A in the class. Yeah, it was really cool, because I didn't get a lot of straight A's at Harvard. And he went, "No, wherever this goes—I don't know where it's going, but stay with it." And it was really great, because I didn't think of myself as a writer. I was an actor. And neither did Ben, for that matter.
After starring in various roles and earning their wages, the two promptly rented a house in the neighborhood of Venice Beach, Los Angeles where they reportedly wasted their money away for hedonistic pleasures and decided to get an apartment in Eagle Rock neighborhood. Damon and Affleck lived together as broke in-and-out of role actors after spending a whole lot of their earnings in drinks and taxes. Subsequently, this is where they ultimately decided to work on the script of Good Will Hunting (1997) seriously.
BEN (V.O.) I lived all over the place. I lived in Hollywood, then I moved. [Matt Damon] and I got money from School Ties, and we blew it all in a couple of months. We made $35,000 or $40,000 each and thought we were rich. And we were shocked later on to find out how much we owed in taxes.
Good Will Hunting (1997) turned out to be an opportunity for them to combine their creative outputs and transform it into having a life on its own. They wrote the script largely influenced by their own personal upbringings in Boston through their spontaneous and completely erratic improvised sessions of jotting down details. Writing, even admittedly not their forte, was an intuitive process for them, and just how they meticulously carve the path of Will Hunting’s fate, they were also unknowingly writing a new chapter to their wondrous epic of Hollywood breakthrough.
MATT (V.O.) And so that was in late January, and then in March I came out here [to L.A.] for Spring Break to audition for stuff, and stayed on Ben's couch and showed it to him. I was like, "Hey, I wrote this thing, I don't know what the fuck to do with it." And Ben read it and goes, "I don't know what to do with it either, but we should do it together." And I was like, "Sold! I'm in!" And so that was really the—I trusted no one in my life more than him. And we were just, you know—He was as close a friend as I’d ever had in my life or ever could imagine having. And I respected him, and I respected his taste. I mean, we—Our taste kind of formed together, you know what I mean? Those teenage years where you’re spreading your wings and gaining your own independence: we did that together. And so I know he would read a situation the same way I would. You know what I mean? We were just very compatible, in that way.
The film starred Damon as Will Hunting, the titular protagonist who was a troubled genius working as a janitor in the prestigious Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) alongside Affleck as Chuckie Sullivan, one of Hunting’s closest confidants, and Robin Williams as the therapist Sean Maguire. Damon and Affleck sold the screenplay to Castle Rock Entertainment in 1994 for $675,000 where its president, Rob Reiner, told them to drop the thriller aspect and instead focus on the emotional ties of Hunting and Maguire. However, due to a conflict, Miramax Films bought the screenplay’s rights and put it into production with Gus Van Sant as the director. True to their nature, their earnings from the film were gone in few moments after it became a hit classic and a commercial success.
BEN (talking in front of the curtain) We sold it for $600,000, we split that, $300,000 each, and then the agents got $30,000. So we had $270,000, and we paid about $160,000 in taxes, so we had $110,000, each bought $55,000 Jeep Cherokees, and then had $55,000 left, which naturally we decided to rent a $5,000-a-month party house on Glencoe Way by the Hollywood Bowl, and we were broke in six months.
In their many attempts to rewrite every course of action and applicable dialogues, the crumbs on the shared candy bar remained sitting idly on the many drafts of manuscript, and still was the arrival of the sprinkling mess that was a testament of their love and camaraderie.
CUT TO:
Title: The Fortune Favors the Fools
INT. SHRINE AUDITORIUM - NIGHT
The pillars of Hollywood are where the gods and monsters of the industry were ensconced. Here they carve their legacy in all its pulchritudinous grandeur where they race their cars in Sunset Boulevard and Vine Street. Settled in the Shrine Auditorium, Los Angeles, the commencement of the 70th Academy Awards in 1998 propelled the trajectory of their future in an unimaginable heights. It was a turbulent period in the picture palaces where contenders such as James Cameron stirred the tides of cathartic grief with his poignant depiction of tragedy in Titanic (1997) and Kim Basinger’s seductive charisma in L.A. Confidential (1997) worked like a charm to the mass. Damon and Affleck paved their way into the culmination of the grand clockwork inside the movie industry along with the elite A-listers who took their seats on the fine cushion chairs. Billy Crystal, with all of his entertaining antics, sang an ode to the honorable artists.
MATT (V.O.) To go from that experience where, you know, we filled out the (Oscar ballot) sheets and we were betting on who was gonna win, to being in the front row of the Oscars together with our moms—in one year—it felt like warp speed. And to have Billy Crystal singing a song about us.
Damon and Affleck, in their plain tuxedos and bow ties, managed to claim their unexpected Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay in Good Will Hunting (1997). The crowd was masked with massive shouts of uproar and sheer delight the moment when Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau presented the award, which can be liken into them, a comedic duo, passing the torch of friendship to the young novices. The two of them were remembered as sweethearts for bringing their mothers as their dates to the said event. Such gesture, even if it was seen as juvenile to some, garnered them an appreciation from the public for looking back at the pioneers among their fans and also their first pillars of hope when they partook in the tumultuous road of acting.
BEN (V.O.) We were sitting next to our moms and we won, and we kind of hugged our moms. And I remember, how everyone had made such a big thing out of it. As if this was such a novelty. And I remember thinking, being insecure, like, “Why? Why is it weird that we’re bringing our moms?” Like, “Who else do you think we would bring?” You know what I mean? There was nobody else that was going to go. That was it. Of course our moms were gonna go. That was, really was innocent and not faked.
Their signature impromptu speech was a blabbering mess and their words were caught up in a maze, yet the innocence emanating from their still neophyte minds inside the logistics of Hollywood was a testament to their authenticity as starting actors in the realer side of the business. Up until the present times, Affleck boasts his pride as he still remains to be the youngest winner to bag this prestigious award.
MATT (V.O.) Ben and I talked about it recently. We were younger than we felt. I was 22 and Ben was 20 when we first started writing it. And then it came out when I was 27 and Ben was 25. I mean, Ben’s still the youngest writer to ever win an Oscar for screenwriting. I’d be the youngest if it weren’t for Ben. Fucking asshole.
In another but shared spotlight, Robin Williams also snatched the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor from the same film. His performance cemented his legacy as one of the most beloved actor-comedians who ever graced the common folk with his winning smile and witty sense of humor. Williams’ roles as Sean Maguire in Good Will Hunting (1997) and John Keating in Dead Poets Society (1989) resonated to the young souls through his earnest warmth of devotion in the form of paternal love. The integrity of his characters, which was molded from his own, poked the bubble of pressure that led to vulnerability.
ROBIN (V.O.) There's an emotional core to Good Will Hunting that came from Ben and Matt. They have this unspoken twins thing. They care for each other, yet they bust on each other. And that was a great bass line to work with. I'm very proud of this movie. It has a resonance.
The accolades for Good Will Hunting did not stop in its tracks as it emerged victorious in other award-giving bodies. Damon and Affleck also won the Golden Globes Award for Best Screenplay - Motion Picture and the Critics’ Choice Movie Award for Best Original Screenplay. The disbelief hung in the air but the emblems of their cherished faith in their line of work brought a newfound admiration in each other’s professional work.
MATT (V.O.) It’s been really helpful to check in with Ben throughout this whole surreal process over the last 25 years. I think the shock of becoming famous is so… I mean, that messed me up for a couple years because the whole world just starts to treat you differently. And so your subjective experience changes. It’s like somebody rewrites your code in the Matrix, but just your code. It’s like, “Oh, my whole experience has been altered in this really overwhelming way.” And so to have somebody who I’ve known my whole life, who I can be like, “Hey man, is this happening to you? Are you…” And to check in with him, it was really, really helpful. Stabilizing.
All of a sudden, they climbed up the ladder of prestige and in the throes of loneliness at the top, they basked in the presence of one another.
CUT TO:
Title: The Best They Ever Were
EXT. THE STREETS - DAY
As they walk in the arduous path they earnestly tread on, Damon and Affleck solidified their careers as one of the most prolific actors and filmmaker collaborators. Their fates were sealed in a fervid turmoil after that eventful night while carrying their early designed bulky cell phones in one hand and the golden trophy statuette in another. Time went on and success found its way running towards them in multitudes. Damon then had won the Screen Actors Guild Awards (SAG) for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture in the movie The Departed (2007) with the cast, as well as two Critics' Choice Movie Awards for Best Actor in The Talented Mr. Ripley (2000) and Best Actor in an Action Movie in The Martian (2016). On the other hand, Affleck won the Screen Actors Guild Awards (SAG) for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture in the movie Shakespeare in Love (1998) shared with the cast, another Academy Award for Best Picture as a producer in Argo (2013), and Santa Barbara International Film Festival’s (SBIFF) Modern Master Award for Argo (2013). Furthermore, the two also accepted the award for Guys of the Decade at the 10th Annual Guys Choice Awards in 2016.
The nature of their relationship has always been a sweet spot for breeding malice and amusement of many, yet both are secured enough to define what they are for each other amidst the public’s scrutiny.
WOMAN IN BLACK (gesturing with her hands) I didn’t know what your relationship is with Ben. Seeing you or to get, you know, known him your whole life— MATT (standing on the stairs) He’s my hetero-lifemate.
It goes to show how the concept of platonic bond is subjected to different interpolation because of how malleable and loosely defined its boundaries are. Moreover, histrionic commentaries over cultural norms and prejudices thrive in competitive capitalism where journalists are put in a game of catch to get a scoop on celebrity scandals with twisted headlines.
ELLEN (sitting cross-legged) So we're going to talk about it. I just heard it this morning, if you want to address it somehow. It's like when we do interviews, you say something and then people write it and it depends on—it’s out of context and it gets twisted around and something you said is getting twisted around and I want you to address it. MATT (sitting on the opposite couch) Yeah, it was just an interview with The Guardian that I just literally found out. I was talking about [how] actors are more effective when you know less about their personal lives and was talking about it in the context of when Ben and I first started, and people wrote all these articles when Good Will Hunting came out that we were gay because it was two guys who wrote the script, and feeling like “Oh, we can't even—.”Then you have to address it and then you would and then it's like, I’m not going to throw my friends under the bus who are gay and act like it's some kind of disease, you know. How do you even address it? […] I said this thing in The Guardian and it got turned into—I was just trying to say [that] actors are more effective when they're a mystery, right? And somebody picked it up and said gay actors should get back in the closet, which is, like, it's stupid. It's painful when things get said that you don't believe.
The mere fact that both Damon and Affleck remained to withstand the tribulations of exploitative industry, where privacy is compromised, speak volume to their commitment and loyalty towards each other. Writing their bond as a simple romance where they fit the conventional bill of being one is reductive in its essence because it takes away all nuances and intricacies of an outstanding platonic bond. Their relationship is supposed to remodel the foundation of a healthy friendship as it is a connection that is not codified through marriage contract or sexual attraction, but a shared mutual interest in something where both can celebrate and be dismal together. However, the public is not in the same page in terms of appreciating this kinship that rivals the so-called be-all and end-all type of love that is romance.
Decades passed through thousands of sunsets and millions of seconds, and their bodies had changed to match their shifting attitudes. However, their reverence and love for acting continue to stand unwavering in the midst of tempestuous conjectures and flashes like lightning strikes in their very faces. Currently, Damon lives in Brooklyn Heights, New York in a penthouse with the top two floors of a building spanning over the stunning views of the Manhattan skyline where he lives with Luciana Barroso and their daughters. Affleck, on the other hand, lives in a mansion in the Beverly Crest area of Los Angeles with Jennifer Lopez that stretches over 38,000 square feet, including a 12-bedroom main house and other amenities. The endless fields and valleys in between their locations were irrelevant against their will to collaborate again and screen write The Last Duel (2021) and co-found a studio together, the Artist Equity, to produce Air (2023).
BEN (sitting cross legged) I find the most wonderful thing about it was I loved coming to work everyday. I loved seeing Matt. I love—first of all, he's a genius. Having him as your anchor of your movie just makes it— MATT (gesturing Ben) See, 40-something-years it took you to— BEN (cont’d) No, I didn't use to think this. But that just makes it so easy, and it was just so much fun. It kinda felt like just us and getting to do the thing that we wanted to do. I did. I loved it. I miss it everyday since. It was the best work experience of my life. In fact, that's the beautiful thing about this. It's that happiness was being able to be here everyday in Los Angeles, where my children are and see them everyday and have them come visit the set, work with my best friend my whole life. There's nothing more that I want in my life. I thought, well, this is it. This is what I've always wanted, you know. And then I thought that might mean I'm about to die. MATT (laughing) I literally had the same thought. I was like this is it. We've actually reached the mountaintop.
Though their milestone launched them into separate houses of big screens and magazine covers, all America’s crossroads and thoroughfares and boulevards and avenues attempt to intersect at one point despite their convoluted systems to lead their lavish vehicles together in taking the high road.
BEN (V.O.) Yeah. It is bizarre to have gone this far. And definitely a lot of—I don’t think I would be sane—or as sane to the extent that I am—had I not had somebody who was from where I grew up, and who was my best friend, and who was going through the same thing. So you could— Because I’m sure you guys all know: there are these moments in this business where you look around and go like, “Is this completely insane? I feel as though I’m coming unglued.” And having that, someone share that perspective—and then so, as we went on and on, so finally got to a place where—like with The Last Duel—it was like, “Why haven’t we just—? We had so much fun! Every day on that set was so much fun! Let’s just do this: let’s just do movies together and with people we like.”
No matter how high the altitude of their dreams had come to, the streets of Boston will always have a perpetual flame into the hearts of two actors fueled by their shared ambition. Their eyebrows are the Storrow Drive with the way they are on fleek, their lips are the undulating waves in Plymouth's Fresh Pond when they curve upwards, and their torso is the Fenway Park where the Boston Red Sox is. When they gaze into each other’s faces, the two natives would recall all their hilarious mischiefs and lasting jubilations as if they are themselves the incarnation of the place they will always call home.
GRAHAM (pointing Matt) And what was the phrase? There was a phrase that you heard. Was it in a movie you heard a phrase? “There goes...” MATT (realizing) Oh, yeah. Yeah, I said it to my mother. This is funny. I said—in the movie, The Natural, Robert Redford, and it's based on something the baseball player Ted Williams once said. But so his character, Roy Hobbs, in The Natural says, “All I want is to walk down the street, you know, and when I walk down the street for people to say 'There goes Roy Hobbs, the best he ever was,'” And my mother—and I love that movie—and I love Robert Redford, asked me one day, “What is it that you want, Matthew?“ and I said, “Look, all I want is to walk down the street someday and have people say, 'There goes Matt Damon, the best he ever was.'”
The streets will be just like the way they rode their Jeep Cherokee Sport once. Only this time, the babes with their mothers and the strangers in all varying places will notice what the glint in their eyes is. And here, in the venerated bastion of media, there goes the finest of them all, the best they ever were.
FADE OUT.
THE END
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madsworld15 · 5 months ago
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How Queer as Folk Created the Blueprint for Current Queer Television
For the last few months, I have been working on an article centered on how the show Queer as Folk opened the door for the queer television examples of today. Please read my feature article and enjoy!
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unitydruid · 6 months ago
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ano07 · 1 year ago
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auoki · 2 years ago
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mythoughtsandotherthings · 2 years ago
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“The Consensus of Media”
Mark Duffett, the author of the book titled, ‘’Understanding Fandom’’, undertakes a deep study of the modern-day, media fan culture, Fandom is a sociocultural phenomenon, largely associated with modern capitalist societies, electronic media, mass culture and public performance. The term fan first appeared in late seventeenth-century England, where it was a common abbreviation for “fanatic”. It became significant in the United States a century afterwards, where it was used by journalists to describe the passion of baseball lovers and spectators. The term was later adopted to describe dedicated audiences for films and music. Later, during the nineteenth century, the advent of photography, sound recording and airwave broadcasting laid the foundations for the electronic media business that supported vast audiences and fan phenomena that dominated much of the twentieth century. As sociologists, Ferris and Harris explained “there would be no fame if there were no fans and there would be no fans if there were no media”. It is widely believed and accepted that fans' demands have helped shape much of Hollywood and the other film industries worldwide to a large extent. Similarly, the comic book genre, which began as a supplement to newspapers, contributed to the fan-following traditions. As young people began to be a recognised population segment, fandom gradually became more identified as a youth phenomenon.
Over decades, actors, dramatists, singers, comedians, politicians, authors and other celebrated personalities of the day have carefully cultivated young people as their fans, who constituted a prominent demographic and often the most visible section of the media audience. The Beatles, Blues, James Bond films, Rock-n-roll group, Star Trek sci-fi movie series, Alfred Hitchcock suspense movies and Comic-Con are a few examples of old iconic music, songs, films and television series and comics, which have inspired fans from each succeeding generation of listeners, viewers and readers. In the late 1990s, with the advent of non-linear media platforms like video games, fans began to expect a different entertainment experience, giving rise to the trend of narrating the same story to fans, through different electronic media. This gave rise to the commercial exploitation in a systemic manner of fan following, leading large corporations to offer frenzied fans, their favourite subject of following in extended versions and genres spanning movies, music, games, television, merchandising outlets and lifestyle brands. Computers had been a domestic fixture for over two decades by the end of the twentieth century and they were already integrated into the entertainment industry. A large mass of fans used the internet since its earliest days, playing interactive theme-based games in multi-user fan groups or debating their favourite singer, film, musician, actor, politician, author, television show, game etc on bulletin boards, chat rooms and other electronic fora. The fandoms created fan pages, posted fan fiction and set up virtual fan tours and shrines of their favourite celebrity personality.
Alongside accessing news and information, many computer users also began to upload, stream and share video files in the new era of the internet. This led to the turning point of the development of fandom as a shared social experience. Video uploading sites such as YouTube, which gained mass popularity since the mid-2000s, allowed free instant access to vast archives of uploaded footage that included clips, old footage and amateur productions by a multitude of fans, giving further boost and momentum to nostalgic fandoms. This also gave rise to amateur producers and prominent fans who developed their troops of fans. In the new In era of digital extravaganza, novel cultural forms blossomed. For example, ‘bloggers’ and ‘new age influencers ‘ have claimed their own space as citizen journalists and commentators and command a loyal army of fans.
 Fandom has become more visible, prominent, mainstream, normal, respectable and importantly formidable today. In this environment, fans today wield considerable influence in all spheres of life and dictate policy formation, country and local politics, intellectual consensus, consumer preferences, legal and business practices and all economic and commercial activities. Challenging the old stereotype, fans have emerged as thoughtful, productive and powerful creative people.
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davidmahlercomics · 15 days ago
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I'm so proud to share that an article I wrote for Animation Obsessive! When I was living in the Netherlands last year I had to opportunity to interview animation director Piet Kroon about the shelved Disney animated feature Fraidy Cat. I spent an afternoon with Piet breaking the story and collecting leads, and the following five or six months chasing them all down and breaking the story. It was a huge endeavour, and I'm so grateful to Piet for his time and to John from Animation Obsessive for the trust and guidance. I'm so proud of this piece and I hope you enjoy.
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hiraya-vesperine · 9 months ago
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i'm something of a comedic genius, actually
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jessicatherrien · 1 year ago
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Recipe for Green Bean Casserole with Pumpkin Seed Crumble Eat Clean for Thanksgiving Eating clean during Thanksgiving is so easy with this green bean casserole that's tossed in quick roux and topped with pumpkin seed crumble. 1 tablespoon minced garlic, 1 package baby portobello mushrooms stemmed and roughly chopped, 1/2 cup pumpkin seeds, 2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil divided, 2 teaspoons extra-virgin olive oil, 1 tablespoon sea salt, 2 tablespoons white whole wheat flour, 1 pound fresh green beans trimmed, 1/2 teaspoon ground white pepper or to taste divided, 1/4 cup whole wheat panko bread crumbs, salt to taste, 2 tablespoons whole milk
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rhanebalod · 1 year ago
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Tulo ng dugo
Iyak nang iyak si Alexandra  sa kaniyang kwarto dahil pinagalitan siya ng kaniyang ina dahil nakita niya ang mga sugat ni Alexandra sa kaniyang kamay.
Bata palang noon si Alexandra ay mabigat na ang kaniyang dinadalang mga problema. Ang kaniyang tatay ay palaging nasa inuman at ang kaniyang ina naman ay palaging nasa sugalan.
Ayon sa Department of Justice (DOJ),  ang mga batang may mga di magandang magulang ay nagiging ribelde lalo na kapag hinde nabibigyan ng oras ang kanilang mga anak dahil hinde napapalabas ng mga bata ang kanilang mga problema at naghahanap ng mga tropang kayang ipalabas ang kanilang mga problema sa kanila.
Kapag iniisip ni Alexandra ang kaniyang mga problema, palagi siyang naglalaslas, sugat sa kamay na ginagamitan ng mga matutulis na gamit, isa na dito ang blade na palagi nilang ginagamit sa paglalaslas.
Habang si Alexandra ay naglalaslas, siya'y nakita ng kaniyang nanay. Laking gulat ang kumorte sa mukha ng kaniyang nanay. Mabilis na tumakbo si Alexandra sa kaniyang kwarto habang sumisigaw ang kaniyang ina.
Ayon kay Ciara Jean Palacios, isang bata na naglalaslas kapag may problema, ang paglalaslas ay ang kaniyang susi upang makalimutan ang kaniyang mga problema. Sabi niya na ang paglalaslas ay nakakatulong sakanya magpakalma sa kaniyang sarili kapag siya'y inaatake ng kaniyang mental breakdown.
Nung nakita ng kaniyang nanay ang mga sugat ni Alexandra, kaniyang napagtanto na sobrang nagkulang sila sa kanilang anak. Mabilis niyang tinawag ang kaniyang asawa at humingi ng kapatawaran kay Alexandra. Inabot ng halos 15 minuto bago binuksan ni Alexandra ang pinto dahil siya'y nagtampo. Ngunit, pagkatapod ng 15 minuto, kumalma na si Alexandra.
Pagkatapos nito, sinabi ni Alexandra kung gaano ka bigat ang kaniyang dinadalang problema sa kaniyang mga magulang. Gulat na gulat ang kaniyang mga magulang pagkarinig nila nito. Ngunit, dahil sa mainit na puso ni Alexandra, kaniyang pinatawad ang kaniyang mga magulang. Sa mga sumusunod na araw silay'y palaging magkasama, kumain, magsimba at iba pa. Pagkatapos ng pangyayaring ito, sila'y nagkaroon ng isang masayang pamilya.
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carrstairrs · 1 year ago
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Green Bean Casserole with Pumpkin Seed Crumble Eat Clean for Thanksgiving Eating clean during Thanksgiving is so easy with this green bean casserole that's tossed in quick roux and topped with pumpkin seed crumble.
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sunderwight · 5 months ago
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What if the plant body hadn't worked out, and the Holy Mausoleum solution had actually taken a long time to sort of "fix" Shen Qingqiu's body and fully call his soul back to it, so that hundreds of years passed and civilization in PIDW/SV world progressed to the point of something like the "modern era"?
Imagine Luo Binghe trying to delicately introduce his shizun to such strange concepts as smart phones and credit cards, while Shen Qingqiu is just desperately trying to figure out how dumb he should play this. Would it be believable for him to get everything on the first try? There have to be some differences between what he knows and this world's versions, right, because of the demons and cultivators and things? Right?? But it's not like any of this actually IS difficult for him to grasp!
Luo Binghe: Shizun already discerned how to type using a keyboard...?
Shen Qingqiu, sweating bullets: what, like it's hard?
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neyomiyi · 2 years ago
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Back to Black
The Iconic “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” of Audrey Hepburn is Still Paving!
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A lot of people are still remaking and doing inspired outfits by Audrey Hepburn’s iconic outfit in her film “Breakfast at Tiffany’s.” 
Many people are still wearing sleeveless black dresses with their black long gloves and black heels. Pairing it with the big necklace, earrings, and a tiara. 
Audrey Hepburn is known for being an icon in the fashion industry but a lot of people do not know that she is more than a fashion icon. 
Her original name is Edda van Heemstra Hepburn-Ruston. Her mother changed her name Audrey into Edda as she thought that her daughter’s name could be a problem for the occupiers in the war. But she took her name Audrey back as her government name again and soon enough to change her last name to Hepburn. 
She is known for her gracefulness as she had a beautiful poise and elegant beauty. She became a role model of the women in the 1950’s, she is known for being modern but still what she does is still attainable for people who wanted to be like her. She thinks anyone could be beautiful like her. 
She was born in Ixelles, Brussels, Belgium on May 4, 1929. She has been exposed to war since she was little as her father is one of the governors of their place. She suffered from malnutrition as the war continued and they had to hide from places  near the war. She enjoys dancing and she knows how to do ballet. She studied ballet as a teenager and became a model and a dancer in her early 20’s until she was casted in a movie as her acting career was the job she chose. 
She is known for roles in Roman Holiday (1953), Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961), and My Fair Lady (1964). And she admitted that she likes clothes and fashion that’s why she is known in the fashion industry as she contributed a lot until now. 
She tends to keep her life private but the media won’t let her. All of her relationships were seen to the media and they all saw how it ended. A lot of people meddle with her relationships and what she was up to. It made her struggle as she wants to protect her children and her family but the situations won’t let her.
After being in the film industry for years, she finally stopped filming and went to Switzerland. She does not have a husband and just lives a soft life in her garden. She is with her best friend, Robert Wolders, who stayed and helped her when she was working in UNICEF. Her socializing, empathizing, and caring characteristics were more seen when she was helping kids who have malnutrition in Africa. She was serving people until she died of cancer at the age of 63. 
Audrey just wanted to feel love as she lived. She lives for loving people. She dreams of feeling the hole in her heart that her parents gave her but she had her broken heart twice. She wanted peace so she decided to stop looking for a husband. She decided to help children instead. She wanted to help people and she had faith in changing the world as she poured the love she has in her heart. 
Many people love her for her contributions in the film and fashion industry. But people know she is more than just an icon. She was a loving person who only wanted love and peace not only for herself, but also to the world.
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ano07 · 1 year ago
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wfmrish · 2 years ago
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The Real Implication Behind Transformation of Nerds 
When protagonists of shows or movies are nerds, they typically go through a ‘transformation’ within the first half of the plot. This transformation is purely physical and superficial in the sense that their looks are completely changed. A prime example of this is the famous movie The Princess Diaries. In that movie Mia Thermopolis, a 14 year old high school student finds out she's actually a princess of a small kingdom. She refuses to believe that her grandmother is a queen and that she would grow up to rule a country one day. This all changes when the royal stylist gives her a makeover and her otherwise frizzy curly hair is changed to be more sleek and manageable. Her glasses were removed and the stylist put makeup on her which served to make her look more beautiful. 
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The issue with such scenes in popular movies and shows is the message it sends to young children who watch and consume such media. It basically creates a standard of beauty on screen and if anybody in the audience doesn't reach that standard, they tend to feel bad about themselves. The prevalence of insanely high beauty standards in the society is fuelled by these movies and shows that show physical transformation is the only way an ‘ugly’ character can become desirable. 
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‘Nerdy’ fashion is often related to having a quirky and weird dressing sense. Anything which isn't the mainstream trend is cast out and grouped as ‘other’. The style transformations are usually, hence, from quirky fashion into more trendy styles. These also help with the capitalization of trendy outfits because viewers want to dress up like their favs and are more likely to buy such clothes. 
Although there is nothing very unrealistic about people changing their fashion styles as they grow, the fact that these scenes are specifically made to downplay some aspects of people’s looks that society has deemed less worthy of appreciation makes me question whether the physical makeover is necessary at all. It serves no purpose for the movement of the plot and deepens the beauty standards in society. A character will still have their development arc if they continue to dress up the same so why waste time and effort into the so called beautification.
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fanlore-wiki · 1 month ago
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Featured Article: Rose Tyler
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Today we are featuring Rose Tyler, the first companion of the 2005 reboot of Doctor Who.
Portrayed by Billie Piper, Rose was the first companion that many young fans met, and is also a teenager with a regular-girl background, which made her relatable and take on a special significance to lots of fans within the fandom.
Though some fans felt that Rose was portrayed as a Mary Sue, and disliked the focus the show had on her romantic attraction to the Doctor, she is also popularly shipped with multiple incarnations of the Doctor.
Have you enjoyed watching Billie Piper’s portrayal of Rose? Go check out the Fanlore page to learn about the fandom surrounding the character.
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