Jason Reitman in conversation
Jason Reitman is not only a gifted director, but a forthright and thoughtful one. After three features ("Thank You for Smoking," "Juno" and "Up in the Air"), he has achieved, at the age of 34, firm standing on the A List.
He visited Chicago on Jan. 29 to appear on the Oprah program, and stopped off at my house on his way to the airport. Having only just discovered the video capability of a new camera, I took these videos. They are hand-held, shaky and need editing. But what Reitman says is perceptive and worth sharing.
Also in the room: My wife Chaz, off camera to the left. Reitman's wife, the actress Michelle Lee, to his right. Chicago publicist Janet Hillebrand on the sofa in front of the windows. The voice on my MacBook is sometimes heard.
The sculpture is "Warrior Woman," which Chaz and found in a London gallery that holds an exhibition called "Not in the Spring Exhibition," for works not accepted in the annual show of new works by the Royal Academy of Arts. In other words, Refuseniks. Jason and Michelle are standing in front of an abstract by the British expressionist Gillian Ayres. RE
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
21 Comments
Leave a comment
The Webby Awards
Person of the Year
Best Blog: Natl. Soc. of Newspaper Columnists
One of the year's best blogs -- Time
Last 12 months, 108 million views at RogerEbert.com.
Year's best blog: Am. Assn. of Sunday and Feature Editors
Roger Ebert
Search
About this Archive
Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.
Buy from Barnes & Noble
Buy from Borders
___________________
Buy from Amazon.com
Buy from Barnes & Noble
Buy from Borders
___________________
Tweet / Facebook
Pages
- "Anna Nicole The Opera" ~ Covent Garden's cups runneth over
- A Monty Python Christmas
- Guys: Danger signals on a date
- recent Two Thumbs Up® reviews
- The birthday of the cinema
- The long-lost 1970 reunion video of the "Beyond the Valley of the Dolls" director, cast and writer
- the Your Movie Sucks™ files
- Who goes there? A map of science-fiction
- Animation
- Archives
- Art in many forms
- Being here
- "Best Society," by Philip Larkin
- A photo of a little girl, and memories of two beloved aunts
- Hitchens is eloquent in the face of death
- How to be alone
- Let's get together and feel all right
- My master thinks this is art
- Oprah remembers our big date
- Talking to people on the subway
- The bonono apes can listen and learn
- To be young and mixed in America
- West Virginia 8th grade test in 1931
- C'est moi
- Best films 1967-2009: Siskel & Ebert & Scorsese
- Helicopter crashes in our house!
- I didn't notice that was Ron Galella. Is he everywhere?
- I have no arms and I must play
- I read these in my bedazzed youth. Now it's the covers I love.
- I will never, ever, ever, do this
- I'll be honest and fight sqare
- If you were a kid in the 1950s, you remember...
- It's hard to believe it's been 12 years, Gene. I miss you.
- It's like so uncool to like sound like you know what you're like talking about
- Matinees and horse manure
- My drinking days, recalled in a noirish oil
- My other neighborhood on Red Arrow Highway
- My talk at TED 2011
- Oprah remembers our first date
- Portrait of the critic at home
- Reflections after 25 years in the dark
- Shel Silverstein wrote my own damn song
- Siskel & Ebert & Stern
- Siskel & Ebert's 1980s Holiday Gift Guides
- Cooking
- CyberWorld
- Directors
- A conversation with Atom Egoyan
- At home with Bernardo Bertolucci
- Claude Chabrol, RIP. The master at midpoint
- Herzog looks ahead to the Cave
- Jason Reitman in conversation
- Louis Malle: A do-it-yourself interview
- Manuel de Oliveira is 102: A tribute
- The heart of the world and other organs: The singular cinema of Guy Maddin
- The secret of Jacques Tati
- Ebert Club
- Ebert Presents
- Ebert presents at the movies
- Ephemera
- Film Festivals
- Film classics
- Funny
- A personal letter from Steve Martin
- Aid rushed to movie overdose victims
- Are waitresses hitting on you? Onion undercover
- At this point, we all need a good laugh
- Attack of the Second-Rate Monsters
- Avengers Assemble! Superheroes need health care
- Buddy Hackett: Up at drama, down at comedy.
- Dan and Dan: The Daily Mail Song
- David Mamet's "Lost Masterpieces of Porn," with your host, Ricky Jay
- Do the Creep!
- Down memory lane: Nic Cage goes batshit
- Dr. Tongue's Evil House of Wax in 3D
- George W. Bush and Mike Tyson in "The President's Speech"
- Harpo Marx, the most articulate brother
- Haven't I seen him somewhere before?
- Helen Mirren's breasts are the answer to everything
- Henny Youngman: "Doctor, it hurts when I do this!"
- How Michael Caine Speaks
- How to fill a glass with water
- How to get a guy to notice you during sex (nsfw)
- I don't know WTF it's saying, but thumbs up!
- I know every single word. So do you.
- I love it when I'm quoted correctly
- Laurel & Hardy & The Gap Band
- Push the dragon's head, and the marble runs down here, and...
- The 1982 Tron Holiday Special
- The 5-year-old who wrote "Fast Five"
- The helpful Robert Benchley
- Walken the Walk, by Walkin' Walken
- When Harry met Sally 2, with Billy Crystal and Helen Mirren
- Who cut the cheese?
- Yes! I won the New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest!
- Literature
- "Fight Club," by Jane Austen
- "In Love with Raymond Chandler," by Margaret Atwood
- "The Premature Burial," by Edgar Allan Poe
- Gatsby in Scott Fitzgerald's handwriting
- In memory of the memories of W. G. Sebald
- Jack Kerouac: 3/12/22 - 10/21/69
- Kurt Vonnegut's chalk talk on the shape of a story
- On 4/13/1906, Samuel Beckett started waiting
- Studs and Algren and Patterson, N.J.
- The Black Mask Boys
- The books everyone should read
- The enigmatic case of the oddly persistent mystery writer
- Vladimir Nabokov meets Gregor Samsa
- Walt Kelly, an immortal
- Why is film criticism important?
- ♫ Deck us all with Boston Charlie ♫
- London
- Meaning of it All
- Movies
- "As Penny Chenery's youngest son..."
- "Man in a Blizzard," by Jamie Stuart
- "Rosebud" was a rather tawdry device
- "Sharks on a Plane: The Movie"
- "The most beautiful film ever made"
- "Whose birthday, Lou?" "Yours, Bud!" "Mine?!? Waitaminit! You were born before me." "That's why your birthday is first." "Who's second?" "You. I was born first."
- 100 Great Moments in the Movies
- 36 Hitchcock death scenes all at once
- A blind film critic reviews "Scre4m"
- A double feature every day!
- By popular demand, my review of "3D Prison Girls" (1973)
- Faster Pussycat! Kill! Kill!
- I could watch a Fellini film on the radio
- If Hitchcock had made the trailer for "Inception"
- Jeff Bridges: The Starman within
- John Waters Unplugged: The Transcript
- Marni Nixon: The secret voice of Hollywood
- NYFF48: Film's evolution and man's progress.
- Nick & Nora's hangover cure
- Revenge on "Revenge of the Sith"
- Richard Harris: Don't let it be forgot
- Robert Duvall: "Napalm, son. Nothing else in the world smells like that"
- Rock Hudson's secret
- S&E review River Phoenix's last film
- Siskel & Ebert on how to be a film critic
- Siskel & Ebert recommend great summer movies
- Street scene: Movie theater, snow, rain, promise
- The Akira Kurosawa Song
- The Bechtel Test
- The Blanche DuBois Death Match: Vivien Leigh v. Woody Allen
- The Duke on Rooster: "My first good part in 20 years"
- The Kowalski Smackdown: Marlon Brando v. Diane Keaton
- The shower scene
- When Lynch met Lucas & Werner saved Joaquin
- Why Pauline Kael never saw a movie twice
- Movies free online
- "Alma," award-winning short by Rodrigo Blaas
- "Breathless:" Modern movies begin here
- "Inspired by Bret Easton Ellis," by Matthew Ross
- "Magritte Moment," by Ian Fischer
- "Out of Sight." A magical anime
- "The Kid," by Charlie Chaplin
- "The Whales of August"
- Buster
- Chaplin: "The Circus," "The Kid" and "The Gold Rush"
- Cocteau's "Beauty and the Beast"
- Freddie Mercury: The Untold Story
- Harold Lloyd in "An Eastern Westerner"
- Pauline Kael's favorite film: "Menilmontant"
- Peter Cook and Dudley Moore in Richard Lester's "The Bed-Sitting Room"
- Some documentaries of Werner Herzog
- Ten great films about horror
- The Haunted World of Ed Wood, Jr.
- The Naked Civil Servant: John Hurt as Quentin Crisp
- Music
- "Chanda Mama" around the world
- "Making Giant Hands," by Dog and Panther
- "Redemption Song" around the world
- "Swan Lake" by the Great Chinese Circus
- "What'll I do?" by Julie London
- A Farm Aid concert from 1985
- A Labor Day concert
- A spy at the Bank of America protest
- A xylophone in a forest
- Bob Dylan must be Santa
- Bob Marley: One Love around the world
- Concert for an uncertain world
- Did Leonard Cohen save my life?
- Do you know the wonderful Lucy Foley?
- Ella: It don't mean a thing if it ain't got that swing
- Esperanza Spalding. Yes.
- Four-year-old Jonathan conducts conducts the Chandler Symphony Orchestra
- Freddie Mercury vs. the Platters & Wayne's World
- Gene Siskel covers Paul McCartney in 1976
- George Shearing, 1919-2011
- Happiness is being on the road again
- Hazel Dickens, the Rebel Girl
- I went to school with Andy Cohen
- I'll never smoke weed with Willie again
- I've never loved Paul Simon more than after seeing her tears of joy
- Jammin' cellos: Stjepan Hauser and Luka Sulic
- Joan Baez: There is a clearing where one is almost happy
- John Prine: A concert in Ireland
- John Prine: American Legend
- Jonathan is three and loves great music
- Joni MItchell: "Big Yellow Taxi"
- Julie London: The torch is burning
- New Year's with Steve: In tribute to a great heart
- Nikki Janofsky: The future is hers
- Phoebe Snow, R.I.P.
- Que sera, sera
- Roy Orbison: Say you'll stay with me!
- Sing a song of newspapers
- Smile : )
- Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee
- Still Bill: The life and songs of Bill Withers
- Sweet Dreams, Baby: For Patsy Cline
- The Platters perform "The Twist"
- The greatest music video ever made
- The night Hank Williams came to town
- The ukulele orchestra of Great Britain
- Tom Waits serenades New York harbor
- We need Punk Vaudeville. Jarmean?
- Won't you ride in my little red wagon?
- Your Christmas morning concert
- ♫ Don't know much about history... ♫
- ♫ My funny valentine, sweet comic valentine, you make me smile with my ♥
- ♫ Nestor Torres and the spirit in the music
- New Yorker captions
- Newspapers
- O'Rourke's magazine
- Oscars
- Pages for Twitter
- People
- "By the age of 50, every man has the face he deserves."
- "It's not like Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," Cher said.
- Bill Mauldin, American
- Bob Hope: Thanks for the memories
- Bronson: Coming of age in Scoop Town
- Dorothy Dandridge: In Memory
- Dustin Hoffman can't stop laughing
- Falling in Love Again: Marlene Dietrich
- Keanu thought his two years were running out
- Kirk Douglas: I've killed so many Romans, so many Vikings, so many Indians...
- Lars von Trier, meet Klausi Kinski
- Leslie Nielsen, RIP. "And don't call me Shirley"
- Liza, when all was still ahead
- Mae West and Rock Hudson: "Baby, It's Cold Outside!"
- Maria Schneider comes to America
- On the 69th birthday of the greatest
- Orson Welles sells peas
- Pete Postlethwaite: 1946-2011
- Robert Mitchum remembers Marilyn Monroe
- Some Robert De Niro gossip I hadn't heard
- Susannah York, 1939-2011
- The last days of Tiny Tim
- What Oscar Wilde taught Stephen Fry
- Zuppke of Illinois: A football coach
- Photos in need of a caption
- Photos in need of comment
- Poetry
- "Hell is a Lonely Place," by Charles Bukowski
- "Hollywood Jabberwocky," by Frank Jacobs
- "Love 20¢ the first quarter-mile," by Kenneth Fearing
- "The Charge of the Light Brigade," by Tennyson
- "The Day the Saucers Landed," by Neil Gaiman
- "The Machines Mourn the Passing of People"
by Alicia E Stallings - "You being in love," by e. e. cummings
- 'Twas the Night Before Pogo
- All the world's a stage
- Dylan Thomas goes not gently
- Emily Dickinson: My life closed twice before its close
- Evening Prayer
- Good-bye to All That
- Gray's "Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard"
- I love this sweet grandmother
- In Just-Spring, when the world is mud-luscious...
- Marilyn Monroe and Carl Sandburg
- On the worthlessness of internet snipers
- Remembering Bukowski
- Samuel Taylor Coleridge
- Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?
- So anyway, Charles Bukowski, Errol Morris and Roger Ebert walk into this bar...
- So much depends upon a red wheel barrow
- When icicles hang by the wall
- William Blake: Of innocence and experience
- e. e. cummings lives in a pretty how heaven
- e. e. cummings talks dirty (nsfw)
- Politics
- "If you think it's a socialist plot, give up your federal health care"
- Christopher Hitchens at length on BBC's Newsnight
- John Lithgow: The Gingrichburg Address
- Pogo says it for the very first time
- Saul Alinsky comes to the Tea Party
- The Battle Hymn of the Tea Party
- The financial crisis explained (nsfw)
- The rich are waging war on America
- Update on the TSA breast milk incident
- Will Rogers on unemployment
- Willam F. Buckley was not an Ayn Rand fan
- Satire
- Science and not
- A reality far beyond my imagination
- Ants have built-in pedometers
- Do Creationists make good science students?
- Drive a car with the power of your mind
- Jeez, Dr. Feynman, I'm sorry I asked
- Our beautiful, awesome, terrifying universe
- Snakes on mathematical planes
- Starting with one cell, we arrive at Prof. Hawking
- The God Gene. A breakthrough
- The python's dinner
- The real reasons why our health care costs are so high
- We are part of all worlds
- Why HAL 9000 sang "Daisy"
- Sex and stuff
- Strange
- "Jean-Luc," a cartoon not about Godard (I think)
- "The Tell-Tale Heart," by Edgar Allan Poe
- At last, a trailer that doesn't give away the whole story
- Do I dare to eat a peach?
- Fifteen minutes of my life, gone forever
- Forms of sychronized swimming without water
- Sigmund Freud's friendly couch
- Take my hand, I'm a stranger in Paradise
- The Man Who Foretold the Future
- Top 10 reasons I want to be cremated
- Train a performing goldfish
- Television
- "I Love Lucy:" The long-lost pilot
- Jack Benny, 1894-1974: The man who was funny just by standing there
- Johnny Carson and the uncanny potato chips
- Jones, Jonze, Spike & Co.
- Letterman: "The lovely & talented Siskel & Ebert"
- OK, already! I PLAYED a video game! Now are you happy?
- Playboy After Dark was pretty good. Yes.
- Siskel & Ebert on home video in 1988
- The Orson Welles Program
- Tom Shales lunches with Siskel & Ebert
- When Siskel & Ebert were on "Sneak Previews"
- When television had a brain in its head
- Young Jon Stewart interviews George Carlin (1997)
- Trailers
- Videos
- What could go wrong?
Categories
- 3D (3)
- Best film lists--and worst (12)
- Books and reading (3)
- Books and such (3)
- Cannes 2009 (10)
- Cannes 2010 (10)
- Darwin, My Hero (9)
- Deeper into movies (28)
- Film festivals (2)
- Just for Twitter (1)
- My Life and Times (42)
- My Old Gang (13)
- People (23)
- Political (22)
- Popular entries (17)
- Specific films (26)
- Supposedly funny (12)
- The Immensity (24)
- The Seasons (3)
- The Webopolis (5)
- The show (3)
- Toronto 2009 (11)
Monthly Archives
- May 2011 (6)
- April 2011 (3)
- March 2011 (4)
- February 2011 (4)
- January 2011 (7)
- December 2010 (6)
- November 2010 (4)
- October 2010 (7)
- September 2010 (12)
- August 2010 (5)
- July 2010 (5)
- June 2010 (5)
- May 2010 (13)
- April 2010 (6)
- March 2010 (5)
- February 2010 (4)
- January 2010 (7)
- December 2009 (9)
- November 2009 (4)
- October 2009 (7)
- September 2009 (15)
- August 2009 (9)
- July 2009 (7)
- June 2009 (6)
- May 2009 (13)
- April 2009 (7)
- March 2009 (7)
- February 2009 (10)
- January 2009 (6)
- December 2008 (6)
- November 2008 (8)
- October 2008 (6)
- September 2008 (6)
- August 2008 (6)
- July 2008 (4)
- June 2008 (5)
- May 2008 (11)
- April 2008 (4)
Thanks, Eeb.
These are great, Roger!
Nice reminded me of James Laxton.
Jason Reitman is such an interesting person. Thanks for uploading the videos! I really hope he can keep up the quality...loved his work so far and I'm definetely looking forward to his next projects.
Thanks for asking about the prospect of filming Catcher in the Rye. The subject has long been a fascination for me. It should get made, and in the right hands it could work. Jason Reitman seems like a very nice man, but I see this project in the hands of a more subversive director. I'm thinking of Gondry or Lynch. And maybe Jeremy Sumpter or Jacob Kogan as Holden.
Ebert: Lot of buzz about Michael Cera. All academic, because the movie will never be made.
Isn't it interesting that no author's death in years has caused as much discussion? This is that rare book almost everybody read at just the right age.
this was all really good but i have to say my favorite part was when he asks, "what is this stuff for roger?"
Thank you sharing these Roger. Jason Reitman seems like he knows what he's doing. I love watching natural conversations like these.
Gee, I wish Jason Reitman would stop by my house before going to an airport. He really seems like an awesome guy.
Nice cinematography in your videos, Mr. Ebert.
Dear Jason,
LOL. Thanks for confirming what I thought and said recently on another thread, three film arc indeed. Here's why “Up In The Air” doesn't work all that well (for me) – a major chunk of your emphasis is on the “evil corporation”, just because you make the evil corporate entity the backdrop supported by minor characters, doesn't mean that its influence will not seem pervasive; the way you address it, is by turning the persecutor into the persecuted, a risky move and it could've worked, should you have not made him enjoy “the life” so much. As it stands, the character is unintentionally contradictory and the reason why your “millionth mile” set piece isn't as effective as it should have been. Yes, you've also got the “out with the old guard, in with the new”, but, you've made the new so jaded, that her turning a corner isn't believable.
I like the female identity crisis juxtaposition. Farmiga was brilliant, her acting as Roger pointed out seems deceptively effortless and is very effective. Kendrick's brief was tough, she didn't pull it off. There're very few things Clooney can't do, bopping to hip-hop clearly is one of them. I get the feeling he held back, maybe because a topic or two in the film hit a little too close to home.
Your pacing was spot on in “Thank You For Smoking” and “Juno”, it was off in this. You're right it is complex making a film about identity in a land where corporate intrusiveness is ubiquitous. Well done on trying to make a good film. I don't think you made a bad film. I loved the “troubled waters ahead” segue, when the smooth, suave executive dives in after the “cardboard cutout” couple/family option, that was a very nice touch, quite subtle.
On “improving” Salinger – David Lean filmed “Great Expectations” and he didn't “improve” it – it remains one of the best films I've ever watched.
On “District 9” – aliens: discovery – oppression – salvation. Come on, be serious.
Good luck on your next film, I hope they're at least as good as your first two. Also, at the next awards, remember – you're on camera – crestfallen doesn't do your countenance at the Globes sufficient justice. At least you didn't walk out like Will Smith. You'll have other chances. I'll be surprised if you don't win an Oscar for one of your future films.
My best to Michelle.
Sincerely,
Indian Idiot (H.W.)
P.S. Roger, saw what you wrote about “Avatar's” Oscar aspirations. Justice is done. Thank you. Also, cool 'droid voice dude, I hope Cereproc do a good job restoring your old organic one.
Ebert: Lean's "Great Expectations" is in my Great Movies Collection. A masterpiece.
Thanks a lot, Mr. Ebert. I really admire Jason Reitman's work and this was a pleasure to watch.
A few pleasures in watching these videos.
One is the frank, reflective comments about a person's work and abilities. Reitman is so frequently dressed in flannel or sweatshirts, and it seems to reflect a casual, yet appropriately serious nature (rather than shopping mall fashion choices). I enjoy listening to people enjoy what they are doing, in that sense of "vocation."
The other is the sense of the participating spouse (i.e. the team). There is this sense that in his work she is his cheerleader, his critic, his cushion, his sounding board...his partner.
The third is the sense that the above two points apply to the people in front of the camera *and* to the people behind the camera.
Omer M
Thank you for these, Roger. Keep up the amazing work.
Oh come on Rog, you know as well as I do, that there's "shot by shot" and then thematic inferences which can be drawn from clear markers, such as the colour scheme of "Schindler's List".
In the corporate world 51% is a majority - in "Up In The Air" Clooney is wearing a suit for the first 77 minutes of the film, which, of the running time of 109 minutes, is somewhere in the region of 70% of the film, therefore the backdrop of the evil corporate entity is pretty firmly established. In fact, when Clooney is not in the shot, the suit is probably not off him for longer than 12-15 minutes in the entire film.
Just saying..
Indian Idiot (H.W.)
Thanks indeed for sharing these.
The possibility of Jason Reitman directing "A Confederacy of Dunces" made my eyes pop out of my head! Next time you see him, ask him all about that one. What killed the idea? Is it something he might still get around to doing one day? I wonder who one would cast as Ignatius J. Reilly.
Rog, I think Reitman won't be dropping by again. Poor guy comes to chill and ends up being recorded in a stalker-rific manner.
Ebert: He knew I was taping, and, more importantly, I wouldn't have used anything that put him in a negative light. I think he comes across as the smart, decent, sincere person he is.
Who do think should direct and star in Catcher in the Rye? I would love to hear your opinion.
p.s - You have a fan in Israel.
Roger said: "Lean's "Great Expectations" is in my Great Movies Collection. A masterpiece."
I wholeheartedly concur. I read it awhile back and upon hearing of the passing of Jean Simmons, revisited a few of her films, Lean's "Great Expectations" was one of them. I also reread your essay and enjoyed your thoughts on it, as much as I did the film itself. I cannot for the life of me imagine anyone else playing Estella as well as she did. You're right, "Black Narcissus" was her best performance, watched that again recently too.
It has been a sad decade for cinema, bereft as it is of so many of its greatest and polluted by so much utter drivel.
Oh well..such is life..
Indian Idiot (H.W.)
P.S. Did you know that if you bisect the word concur, you get one very rude French insult and one mildly rude English one? Just noticed that today I did. They don't much respect Latin the French youth these days. Shame.
..was wondering how best to respond to this "A real human being.." and decided to leave the response merely at two amused musings, out of respect for you, despite a certain transgression by..well, I'm sure you know who..anyway, here goes -
am I to suppose you do not think much of the epic classic Beowulf, regardless of "dark and scary" imagery contained therein, considering the fact that the writer of said work remains anonymous?
I was under the illusion that the aesthetic within which a work is created, matters inherently more than the creator itself, or the detritus which she/he is liable to create, but then again I wouldn't know much about such strange things, being as I am, an anonymous dehumanised internet phony..
Ebert: I wasn't calling you a phony. I was talking about people on promo tours who are on autopilot.
When I'm tempted to post an anonymous comment somewhere, I ask myself why. All depends on the snswer.
He is a very charming man.
Jeez, us Canadians are great. Funny though, Reitman is from Canada, I am from Canada, and I don't know him.
God bless you Roger. I pray some day God restores that voice of yours so you can do interviews just like the old times...but man, even with a computer droid voice you are still unstoppable --- up there with the likes of Larry King and Charlie Rose.